Corpus of Modern Scottish Writing (CMSW) - www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/cmsw/ Document : 131 Title: Betty Author(s): Bell, Mr John Joy BETTY BETTY BY J. J. BELL Author of ' Wee MacGreegor,' 'The J. J. Bell Reciter,' &c. LONDON : 38 Soho Square, W.1 W. & R. CHAMBERS, LIMITED EDINBURGH : 339 High Street Printed in Great Britain. W & R. CHAMBERS, LTD., LONDON and EDINBURGH, TO G. E. LEWIS CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE 1. HERSELF . . . . . . . 9 2. ROMANCE . . . . . . . 15 3. SMILES . . . . . . . 22 4. PRESENCE OF MIND . . . . . 28 5. THE PICTURES . . . . . .. 34 6. A PROPOSAL . . . . . . 40 7. BOOKS . . . . . . . 46 8. POLITICS . . . . . . . 52 9. PEACEMAKING . . . . . . 58 10. COOKERY . . . . . . . 65 11. LUCK . . . . . . 71 12. PLUS-FOURS . . . . . . 77 13. MR BOGGIE . . . . . . 83 14. MICE . . . . . . . 90 15. THE HEAT-WAVE . . . . . 96 16. FED UP . . . . . . . 102 17. THE TONIC . . . . . . 108 18. SLANG . . . . . . . 114 19. WANGLING IT . . . . . . 121 20. GOING ON HOLIDAY . . . . . 126 21. ON HOLIDAY . . . . . . 132 22. NICE BOYS . . . . . . 139 7 8 CONTENTS. CHAPTER PAGE 23. STILL ON HOLIDAY . . . . . 146 24. A LOVE-LETTER . . . . . 152 25. A BIRTHDAY . . . . . . 158 26. THE DRAMATIC SOCIETY . . . . 165 27. A COMMITTEE MEETING . . . . 172 28. AS PLAYWRIGHT . . . 179 29. THE PLAY . . . . . 185 30. SCANDAL . . . . . . . 191 31. OPPOSITION . . . . . . 196 32. VANITY . . . . . . . 202 33. THE PERFECT PRESENT . . . . 209 34. DISCUSSION ON ROMANCE . . . . 215 35. SANTA . . . . . . . 221 36. DRESS REHEARSAL . . . . . 230 37. STAMPS . . . . . . . 237 38. THE RING . . . . . . 243 BETTY 1. HERSELF. WHEN I had finally decided to write my biography I thought it best to inform my boss—the postmaster, stationer, and tobacconist of Tullypawkie, N.B. It didna seem honest to keep him in the dark, especially as he would be frequently mentioned in the work. His name is Mr Blue, his nature being much the same, but he has always treated me fair. His reply to my announcement was as follows : 'Well, Betty, folk usually waits till they're up in years afore they commence a job o' that sort. Still, the less you ken about life, the easier you'll write about it. Personally, I have no objections so long as you dinna let it interfere with your duties here, and dinna compile your notions on Government stationery.' 'I hope I can afford,' I said, 'to biograph myself on nicer paper than the post-office supplies.' 'It wouldna be difficult,' he admitted. 'But, in any case, the biography will maybe keep you out of more frivolous mischief; and, if you stick to the truth, you'll never get writer's cramp.' Reader, you will be suspecting already that Mr Blue is a cynic. He freely admits it. He declares that no man that spends his days betwixt a rotten Government and a putrid Public can help becoming anything else, sooner or later ; and he has been at it twenty years. I have been at it only eighteen months, and there is moments when I fear I indulge in cynicle smiles. But I canna yet describe myself as a complete cynic. Maybe it will come. But, leaving Mr Blue and his ways for another chapter, I will now attempt to describe myself. My name is Elizabeth Cairnie, and I am usually called Betty. My parents are the best ever—both noble characters—my father being the sole joiner in Tullypawkie. He might have won fame in Dundee or London, but preferred a rural country life. My only complaint against my parents is that they didna have me christened Gladys Muriel. It wouldna have made any difference to my appearance, of course; but I would have felt more beautiful, which is near the same thing as being it. I am the youngest of seven—the perfect number, as my parents used to say when we was all asleep, and Tullypawkie was free of measles, mumps, etc.—and the only one left at home. My brothers and sisters are earning honest livings in the city and abroad. I am not saying an honest living canna be earned in Tullypawkie, but there is very little in it besides the honesty. When I left the school my intention was to be a movie star; but mother threw up her hands, and father put down his foot; so, with a few shrugs of my shapely shoulders—I am putting that in with a cynicle smile—I resigned myself to the P.O. Still, even now, in my dreams I hear the bursts of laughter and the rending sobs of a crowded audience watching me on the screen; but alas! the next thing I hear is mother's voice: 'Betty, you lazy thing, get up, or you'll be losing your job at the post-office!' Such is life! My age at the present moment is seventeen and a half, my height medium, my breadth the same. Being inclined to plumpness, I have made a vow to avoid sweets on week-days, Wednesday (the half-holiday) and Saturday excepted. Though I have no ambition for the figure of a telegraph pole, I shudder to think of resembling a barrel at forty, like some of the one-time belles of Tullypawkie. Fat is a most invidious thing for growing on one! Day by day there seems to be nothing doing; but oh, what a difference at the end of a year! Fortunately, my ankles shows no tendency to obsequity—especially as very short skirts is so fashionable. My hair is dark, neither curly nor leeky. I had it bobbed when I started at the P.O. Oh, my parents was wild! But the deed was done, and I canna admit that the result is unbecoming—makes me look grown up, yet youthful. Providence has blessed me with a nice clear complexion, but not much colour. It still blushes too easily, but time cures everything. My eyes, which have been said to resemble dark-brown velveteen, seem to have a certain charm for members of the masculine gender, though that may be due to an optical delusion. My mouth, too, appears to have some attraction, but I have never used it for anything but eating and drinking. No chased salute has ever reached these lips, not but what such a thing has been attempted and landed elsewhere. As for my nose, I really never took much notice of it till Robbie Proudfoot, at the Hogmanay dance, declared it was pretty—and he is a strict abstainer. 'Oh, Betty,' he said, you've got perfectly beautiful features, especially your nose. It's that neat, neither turned up nor down, and it's such a perfect fit to the rest o' your face. It really looks as if you had been born with it attached, whereas the majority of human noses looks as if they had been stuck on afterwards.' I told him not to be a silly goat, but it was no use. It's gospel truth,' said he; 'and oh, Betty, I fondly hope you'll never deface it with nasty powder.' 'Not unless it turns glossy,' I said to satisfy him. It could never do that,' he cried ; but if it ever did, Betty, I would sooner see you apply bath-brick.' Alas, how true it is that the best of men seems to have something savage in their natures! Well, maybe that's enough about my personal appearance. I confess to colouring slightly on reading over what I have wrote. But my mother always used to tell us girls to make the most of what Providence had given us. She used to drive Maggie, my eldest sister, wild with saying that; for Maggie was always striving to make the least of what Providence had given her, which was about By. three stones too much. Poor Maggie, when I think of her I could refuse the biggest box of chocs. in this weary world. However, her last letter was more hopeful. She said the unhealthy life in Glasgow was slowly but surely reducing her, and she scarcely grudged the penny a day to the weighing-machine at the railway-station, though she wished it nearer at hand. Of course, this news put father and mother into a state of terrible anxiety; and now father is sending her a dozen new-laids every Monday, and mother a pound of fresh butter twice a week—and poor Maggie simply canna resist fresh butter. Well, as some genius has said, we canna have it both ways. 2. ROMANCE. THE older I grow — I'll be eighteen in September — the clearer I see that romance isna confined to any particular profession or trade; and that there may be noble characters engaged in weeding turnips as well as in rescuing beauteous maidens from burning houses on the screen. No doubt the romance in performing for the movies is of richer quality than what you obtain in serving in a wee country post-office; and I admit the P.O. sort is apt to be what you might call secondhand. Still, it's there if you like to look for it — I dinna mean on the p.p.c.'s ; and in these times we should be thankful for small mercies. I discussed it the other day with Mr Blue, the postmaster, and my boss. The afternoon mail was late, and we had both got fed up with pretending to be awful busy. Mr Blue, as I have said in the first chapter of this biography, is a cynic, and I expect to become the same in the course of my postal career; but in the meantime him and me differs a good deal in our ideas on romance. 'But, Mr Blue, when you think on all the love-letters you must have handled and, maybe, delivered to the blushing addressees, do you not feel a little romantic?' 'When I think on the millions o' tax-papers, funeral notices, account rendereds, etectera, etectera, that has passed through my hands,' he replied, canna but conclude that the P.O. is a curse to mankind. I daresay it suits womankind well enough.' I felt annoyed, but let it pass, and held up a wee cardboard box with silver edges which had come with the morning mail and was waiting to be called for. 'Surely, Mr Blue,' I said, 'you won't deny there's romance in this!' He took it and looked at it with a smile that would have withered an everlasting. 'H'm! Wedding cake! Well, Betty, I've received and dispatched plenty like this in my time.' He put it to his nose. 'Reminds me of my youth,' he said. 'That's better !' said I. 'Brings back my schooldays, Betty!' 'Was you romantic even then?' I inquired, feeling quite hopeful. 'I had a notion for poetry in those days,' he said, and this packet calls to mind The Lays of Ancient Rome.' He sniffed at it again. I suddenly wondered if he was taking leave of his onion. 'The confectioner that conglomerated this cake,' he said, 'had more sense of humour than smell. There's a bad egg in it.' 'Oh, horrors!' I observed. 'I would like fine to have been present— as a non-combatant—at that wedding,' he remarked, 'merely to see the guests trying to swallow this cake and be polite at the same time. Ay, Betty, you're right. There's a deal of romance in this cake—enough to give a cat dreams of matrimony.' Before I could think of a reply the motor arrived with the mail. Alas! when I come to consider it I canna resist a cynical 1 smile at the thought of the guests trying to look pleasant. Mr Blue blames the P.O. for his cynicality; but I sometimes wonder. Was it some blighted affair in his youth, or has it been in his system since infancy? Judging from my own experience, I canna call him a mysiologist, or woman-hater; but it's perfectly clear that he has no notion for the conjugial state. At least, it's perfectly clear to everybody, except the senior spinsters of Tullypawkie, which do their bests to ensnare him with their voluptuous charms. Their 1 I appologise for misspelling this word previously. prospects of success is far from crimson, but their motto seems to be 'where there's life there's hope.' Ah me! they might as well recite poetry to a rhinoceros and perform deeds of kindness on a deceased tortoise. This is the sort of thing that sometimes happens in the shop, early in the afternoon, when there's nothing doing. Enter Miss M'Gibbon, the dressmaker, which has a nice wee cottage of her own and a nice wee business. She has likewise the temper of a monkey with the earache, but she compresses it in Mr Blue's presence. She is very massive, owing to her sedimentary occupation. When she enters I get busy so that Mr Blue has to attend to her. 'Lovely afternoon, Mr Blue,' she says, with the smile of a bumbee at the close of a successful day. 'I dare say I've seen a worse,' says Mr Blue, advancing on leaden feet. (You'll have guessed by this time that I read the best literature!) 'Coming along the road,' she says, 'I could have swore I felt spring in the air, Mr Blue.' 'Ay; we're due another cold snap,' says he, striving to be polite. Is it a postage-stamp you're wanting, Miss M'Gibbon?' 'You've guessed it! But oh, it's fine to feel the spring in the air! Renews your youtheh, Mr Blue?' (No answer.) 'The snow-drops and crocuses is now appearing in my little garden, Mr Blue—as much as to say, "There's life in the old dog yet!"' (No answer.) 'And very shortly the birds'll be commencing for to warble again and get ready for their matrimonial pursuits, happy as the days is long, bidding us humans to go and do likewise.' (A wheezy cough from Mr Blue.) 'Ah, Mr Blue, the birds is an example to folk not to let slip their opportunities for happiness—' 'Did you say a three-ha'penny stamp?' says Mr Blue, at the limit. 'Na, na! A tippenny stamp, if you please. I've just received payment of an important account, so I hope you can change a five-pound note, Mr Blue.' 'I think I can manage it,' he replies, and I hear him saying 'dammit' into the cash-box. For, you see, if he didna manage the change she would ask me to run round the village till I got it, and his second condition would be worse than his first. 'I'm exceedingly gratified, Mr Blue,' she says, counting the change five or six times. If every man in Tullypawkie was as obliging as you, the world would be a better place, Well I must be getting along. When you're passing, Mr Blue, drop in and view my snow-drops and crocuses. Good-bye for the present.' And with another bumbee-like smile she does her exit. 'Dash her crowdrops and snocuses!' says Mr Blue, forgetting my presence. Then he carries the five-pound note to the door to make sure it's genuine. The other spinsters is not so poetical as Miss M'Gibbon, but they mean the same thing. I have room for but one example— Miss Dobie, which had money left her by an aunt which she looked after, which she is reputed to have killed with kindness, including apple dumplings and jam roley-poleys. She is more modest than Miss M'Gibbon and buys her stamp at the start, putting down the exact money. Then she begins to speak of all the sickness in Tullypawkie, and tells Mr Blue he is not looking so robust as this time last year. She earnestly hopes he is taking care of his health, though she fears a busy man like the postmaster can have little leisure to attend to his mortal coil, especially when he is a bachelor. (N.B..—Mr Blue's day's work, if it was continuous, would be finished in about two hours.) Then, with a look of smelting coyness, she presents him with a parcel of soda-scones, and goes on to chat about all the delicious things she can bake. To tell the truth, I have felt my teeth watering at her remarks on pastry, but Mr Blue stands there like an image of misery, blowing his nose to cover his embarrassment—or the bad words—and holding the parcel as if it contained deadly serpents. Such is romance in the P.O. at Tullypawkie. Second-hand, maybe, and pretty one-sided; but I am thankful for small mercies, and Mr Blue, I am sure, would be thankful for none at all. 3. SMILES. THE population being only four hundred and one, Tullypawkie canna support a picture-house. But you must not think that Tullypawkie is much behind the times. It gets the Daily Mail every morning and the 'flu every spring. Silk stockings and face powder is frequently observed. Some girls do up their lips—much need—one is reputed to monkey with her eyebrows. As for the boys, many indulges in gum for the hair, and some uses cigarette-holders. The sale of cigarettes at the post-office would amaze you. You should see me, on Saturday afternoons, handing over packet after packet to our young Dougies! It would mean a splendid profit to Mr Blue if he didna smoke so many himself. The other Saturday, when the rush was over, he said to me, 'Betty, I dinna see the necessity for you smiling so copiously at those young buffoons. I never see you smile at an old wife buying a stamp.' 'The young buffoons,' I replied, 'could get their cigarettes at the grocer's next door; the old wife would have to tramp five miles to find another P.O. Smiles never yet sold a stamp, Mr Blue.' 'True,' he said; 'but you're young enough yet to be putting a commercial value on your smiles—if that's what you're really doing.' 'What other sort of value did you think I would put on them?' I asked with superb hauteur. 'Ask your conscience,' he said, lighting another cigarette. 'Do you imagine that I smile to attract attention to myself?' I demanded ironically. (I wish I could demand ironically without getting red.) He looked at the patch on the ceiling, where the rain came through last summer, and his smile was cynical. So was mine as I said, 'Say the word, and, when next Saturday comes, I'll put out my tongue at your customers.' 'There's no need to go to extremes,' he replied. 'I would merely suggest that you modify the alluring business before the shop gets a bad name.' 'Is this an insult, Mr Blue ?' 'It's a compliment. But, at the same time, I happen to ken that one or two of the young buffoons canna afford to spend so much on cigarettes—' 'I wish I had gone on the movies!' I exclaimed pettishly. 'Ay, you would have got work for your nice teeth there,' said he; 'and that's another compliment, Betty.' I tossed my head. 'Probably,' he said, 'you are unaware how it looks to a hard-biled cynic like myself; but it's a mistake even to seem to make yourself cheap—especially when I'm about to raise your wages.' Well, of course, little remained to be said just then, except thanks for the increase; but on the Monday I remarked, 'Mr Blue, I wouldna wonder if you was right about the smiles. Watch me next Saturday!' He looked sort of alarmed. 'It's only moderation I'm asking for, Betty,' he said. 'No need to meet the young chaps as if you had become toothless in the night. A certain amount of toothfulness is advisable when receiving cash.' 'Leave it to me, Mr Blue,' I replied. And during the week, in my spare time, I practised a calm, cold smile. According to the mirror it was quite attractive, though not encouraging. Anyway, there was nothing 'cheap' about it. Well, Saturday afternoon dawned, and our young Dougies began to appear. The first lot was three, all engaged to girls in Tullypawkie, and I suddenly realised that they wouldna have noticed if I had had a carbuncle on my nose and a gumboil on each side. Love is blind! The calm, cold smile was entirely wasted. Then Johnny Davison came in, threw a shilling on the counter. Fine day, Betty— two packets of the usual.' With a calm, cold smile I gave him the wrong sort. 'Are you losing your memory?' he said, pushing them back, and named his favourite. With another calm, cold smile I gave him them and his change. 'Thanks,' he said.'What's wrong with your face? Stiff jaw, eh? Mind the east wind. So long!' I canna say it was a promising start— fortunately Mr Blue was actively engaged in selling a post-card—but I persevered. Peter McQueen entered and got what he asked for, plus a calm, cold smile. He gaped and went out. Next came Willie Fairlie and Jamie Donald. It wasna easy with them, for they're often at our house; still, they had to get the same as the others. They both went into fits. 'Come off it, Betty !' cried Willie. And Jamie said, 'Dinna let it slip till I fetch the photographer!' I had to laugh to cover my confusion. and I was aware that Mr Blue was smiling at the patch on the ceiling. Then Tommy Fletcher, which I've known all my days, came in, and, after trying to make himself agreeable, told me I was a snotty thing,' and went off in the huff. And Robert M'Farlane grabbed back his money and left, saying he was dashed if he would be treated like dirt. That was a nasty one for me; but, happily, Mr Blue was engaged in trying to explain to Mrs Tweedie, which is hard of hearing, that he couldna pay a postal order because it was crossed, and that he personally—he couldna speak for the P.M.G.—had no desire to diddle her. I was really quite thankful when I saw, bashfully approaching, Roddy White, the last of the regular customers for cigarettes. At the same time it was embarrassing for me, because Roddy, I regret to say, had conceived a deep regard for me which I couldna reciprocate. For one thing, he is too juvenile. I could never indulge in a grand passion for a man that shaved himself but once a week— not that I would indulge the same for a man merely because he shaved himself three times a day. Still, it was a chance for a real test of the smile. 'Oh, Betty,' he groaned, laying down his sixpence, 'it's lovely to see you alone!' I gave him his packet, etcetera. He stared, groaned again, and went out. This is better!' I was thinking, when lo and behold! he was back, laying down a second sixpence. 'Another packet!' I exclaimed. 'Ay—but oh, Betty, I wish—' With a third groan he went out. 'This looks like bringing custom instead of turning it away,' I was saying to myself when he returned once more. 'Another packet, please,' he whispered, 'and oh, Betty, for goodness sake, dinna look at me as if I was a plate of cold meat on the third day.' I was so filled with complunction for him that I tried to give him an ordinary kind smile. But it wouldna work, and he retired as if I had stabbed him. 'Poor infatuated fathead!' I sighed, unaware that Mr Blue was standing beside me. 'That's his name, and he canna afford to smoke,' said Mr Blue. 'What for are you looking at me like that, Betty?' he asked, recoiling. I suppose it was the calm, cold smile. It took me near a week to get quit of it. 4. PRESENCE OF MIND. IN my last year at the school us big girls was given an essay to write on Presence of Mind, and we was told to include an account of the finest specimen of presence of mind we had ever observed. Now, when you are asked for a thing like that, isn't it wonderful how you get stuck! I could have given heaps of splendid examples of non-presence of mind, especially about my Aunt Bethia, but the only proper anecdote I could think of was one about my Uncle William—and I do not like to seem boastful about the cleverness of my relations. However, there was nothing for it but to write down the anecdote as follows: My Uncle William and some other men had been repairing the roof of a pretty high house, and they had all come down safely, except one poor old man which had slipped on the slates and was hanging by his fingers from the very edge. The others was all staring up in horror, expecting every minute to see him drop, when suddenly my Uncle William showed his marvellous presence of mind! Assisted by the others he managed to get the big rain-water barrel shifted right under the unfortunate suspender who, in due season, fell into it. He fitted the barrel so well that he was near drowned before they could extract him. But his life was saved, and his first words, not counting the bad ones, was: 'Why did ye not shift the ladder so that I could get my feet on it?' My Uncle William was so annoyed at the ingratitude that he went abroad. Things like essays never happen at the right time. If the essay had happened now I could have given a still finer example, and without seeming to boast about a relation. Yesterday afternoon, trade being dead, as usual, I was assisting Mr Blue in filling up some silly returns for headquarters. Mr Blue, as usual, was smoking cigarettes and making unkind remarks about his postal superiors, while I was near asleep, thanks to one of mother's celebrated dumplings for dinner, when —what do you think ? A cow walked right into the P.O.! If it had been the P.M.G. himself, Mr Blue and I could not have been more nonplussed. The cow came in quite calmly and stood swinging its tail reflectively. I looked at Mr Blue. His cigarette fell from his lips. He was as pale as porridge. His gaze kept furtivating between the cow and the new consignment of china souvenirs of Tullypawkie, all nicely arranged on a shelf about level with the creature's horns. I was on the eve of subsidising below the counter, for, though a country girl, I dislike cows at close quarters, when Mr Blue hoarsely whispered, 'Dinna swoon, Betty. The danger is not immediate. The beast has still to realise that there isna room for her to turn round in.' 'When she realises it,' I answered in a low voice, 'do you think she'll back out?' Mr Blue scratched his nose, saying, 'I canna recollect that I've ever seen a cow walking backwards. Can you?' 'I wish I could,' I fervently replied. 'Was you thinking to coax her to back out?' 'I'm not so foolhardy,' he said. 'She would probably rise on her hind legs, and that would mean farewell to the souvenirs. Then she might get excited and wreck the entire shop.' Then what's to be done?' I inquired in hushed tones. 'Sit tight, keep a stiff upper lip, and wait till she dies of starvation—eh?' 'This is not the time for being funny,' he said huskily. 'Let me think of some presence of mind.' He picked up his cigarette and put the hot end in his mouth. Apart from a hiss he made no remark that could have offended the cow's ears. The cow looked at us, but we both avoided its glance. It exclaimed 'Moo!' and we both jamp. 'Dinna alarm it,' said Mr Blue. 'I'll try not to,' said I. The cow, with her tail, removed a dozen p.p.c.'s from the counter. 'Oh, help!' I cried. 'Whisht!' said he ; 'I've got an idea.' 'It's you for the brain,' I returned. 'What's the wave?' He put his mouth to my ear, so that the cow wouldna hear, and murmured, 'Betty, slip along into the back room, get out by the window, and fetch me a turnip.' 'Can I fetch a loaf of bread for myself?' I inquired; but he ignored it. 'Haste ye! She appears to be getting restless, but I'll try to soothe her till ye return.' Thinking of the precious souvenirs, I hasted to obey his bequest. As I slipped through the window I heard him calling the beast 'poor pussy.' Well, I was soon back with the turnip. With a sigh of relief Mr Blue clutched it. Then he crept round the end of the counter and very cannily offered the vegetable to the cow. The cow, smelling it, came forward, and Mr Blue tempted her into the back room, where there was plenty of space for her to turn in. And then he tempted her out. I'll never forget the sight of him tempting her past the souvenirs, with the perspiration pouring down his face. Out on the road he gallantly presented her with the turnip, which I think she deserved. What presence of mind! How different from my Aunt Bethia. I happened to be in her house one afternoon, when she was devouring dates, her being warmly attached to the oriental delicacy. She had just inserted a couple in her mouth when there was a knock at the door, and, as she was expecting the coalman, she didna trouble to remove them. But it was the minister, and, though it happened years ago, I vividly remember her bringing him into the parlour and trying to say it was a lovely day for the season of the year. She was too flustered to think of making an excuse for retiring on some domestic errand, and she sat down opposite him and insisted on doing her bit of the converse. I have since tried to chat with two dates in my mouth, and they dinna help the flow. Try it — especially with a inister— more especially with a minister that expects you to laugh hearty at his jokes. My aunt's first laugh was such a peculiar fiasco—she tried to perform it with her mouth shut—that the minister stared at her. Then, instead of telling the truth, she made a long story about a gumboil in the bud, which prevented her eating and opening her mouth copiously. I suppose the dates was gradually growing less, but now she was terrified of swallowing the stones, especially after the falsehood, and the minister didna depart a second too soon. 'But what else could I have done, lassie?' she cried when I demonstrated with her. 'You could have given him some dates,' I replied, and put him in the same boat.' 'Oh dear, how stupid I am!' she cried. Then she smiled and shoved the box into my hands. 'Quick, lassie! Run after him!' 5. THE PICTURES. BETWEEN Tullypawkie and the nearest picture-house there is five long and weary miles—at least they are long and weary if you get the wrong company coming home. Personally, I canna complain; my society being in considerable demand by the young Dougies of our neighbourhood—not that I would boast of my miscellaneous attractions. At the same time, the number of young Dougies is limited, and, in most cases, their brains is ditto; and I foresee the day when I'll be fed up with the lot. But let us not forebode. Let us follow the example of the bumbee, and make hay while the sun shines. Until the other day my esteemed boss, the postmaster, had no use for the pictures. He hadna seen any for twelve years, at which date I was, of course, a mere bud. 'Apart from their derogatory depreciation of the human optic,' he remarked, 'my objection to the pictures is that they arena true to real life.' 'My objection to real life,' I respectfully replied, 'is that it isna true to the pictures.' He stared at me. 'Say that again,' he said ; and say it slow.' I repeated it, and added, 'Just fancy if this P.O. was like one I once saw on the movies, Mr Blue! Oh, what fun!' 'Fun! A P.O.!' 'No regulations, no red tape, no work! When the mail arrived the postmaster emptied the bag on the street and left the folk to fight for their letters—' 'And when a mail was despatched?' 'Such a thing never happened. Letters put in the box fell down a shute into the furnace that kept the P.O. warm. Registered letters helped the postmaster to earn an honest living.' 'Splendid! What about parcels?' 'The parcel post was abolished.' 'Great! And telegrams?' 'Telegrams was strictly optional. If he was in the humour the postmaster could send them off in his spare time, leaving out any words that annoyed him. If a member of the public got fractious the postmaster stunned him with a big hammer, with G.R. on it, provided for the purpose, thus obtaining peace to peruse the sporting news. When the piles of public got inconvenient the postmaster poured ink on them, and they revived and went home.' 'It sounds,' said Mr Blue, like a dream o' Paradise.' 'The postmaster,' I continued, 'had a feminine assistant—something like me, except that she was dressed for a dance and her skirts was more abridged.' 'After all, the dream is not quite perfect,' said Mr Blue. 'Had the assistant any duties?' 'She skipped about and supplied the public with smiles and stamps. The stamps was a foot square and gummed like fly-papers. It was most enjoyable when there was a seething crowd at the counter, fondly thinking they was just in time to catch the mail. The postmaster kept egging them on by yelling and pointing to the clock, which worked like a whirligig. Oh, he did enjoy himself, that postmaster!' 'And well he might!' said Mr Blue. 'But that's enough, Betty. Dinna further embitter me against real life! I had no idea that the movies had reached such a lofty moral standard.' 'You should start to patronise them again,' I advised him. He shook his head then, but on the morning of the next half-holiday he said, Betty, I've a notion for the pictures this afternoon, but I'm shy about going alone. If you dinna think me too ancient, and your parents dinna think me too juvenile—I'm forty-two—will you come with me? I'll guarantee you all the sweetmeats you can contain.' Now I had sort of three-quarters promised to let Roddie White escort me; but Roddie gets into such a state of gloom because I dinna take his arm, that I decided to leave him on the plate. So I thanked Mr Blue, assuring him that his age was quite suitable, and that I wasna as capacious as many girls of my size; at which he concealed his gratification very gallantly. To my surprise he had arranged for a farmer friend to drive us in his car. Had I known in time I would have donned my new shoes. But I once walked the ten miles in novelties, and never again! I slipped them off in the picture-house and had the greatest difficulty in resuming them. Well, we started off in grand style, Mr Blue belying his name very much, and Tullypawkie was one great smile—the senior spinsters excepted. On the road we passed Roddie White, and, if looks could have done damage, our four tyres would have went. Boys is the limit! In the town Mr Blue supplied me with enough chocs. to satisfy an elephant—at one sitting, I mean. We entered the picture-house just in time for the drama, which the programme said was a passionate love story thrilling with throbs, or throbbing with thrills —I canna remember which. Anyway, I was terribly afraid Mr Blue would despise it, him being such a cynic; but I was soon relieved on that score. After lighting his second cigarette he became so absorbed that he let it burn a hole in his Sabbath hat, which was on his knees. And when I called his attention to it he whispered hoarsely, 'Never mind, never mind! I doubt the heroine's going to fall into the trap!' At the exciting parts he seemed to have difficulty in adhering to his seat, and at the end he hove a sigh, saying, 'That was great, Betty! I havena had tears in my eyes since that day in June 1908, when I got the golf-ball on my nose.' 'I'm glad you derived such enjoyable emotions from the drama,' I replied, unable to keep from speaking a little formally. 'Will you partake of a sweetmeat?' I said, offering the box; but he gallantly declined. I trust you will derive some amusement from the comedy,' I observed rather anxiously when he was mopping up the moisture on his brow after Episode 13 of 'The Blood-hound Trail.' But the comedy was all right—especially when the heroic comic fell into a barrel of treacle, and then got a cask of flour poured over him. 'Betty,' whispered Mr Blue, 'just imagine if that chap was one of our dashed superior P.O. officials! Real life would be worth living then!' When it was all over we went and had tea. As I couldna capacitate all the dainties he ordered, he insisted on me taking home a dozen or so to envelop at my leisure. 'This is too much, Mr Blue!' I said politely. 'Tell me that in the morning, Betty,' he replied, with a kind smile. I didna tell him in the morning, but maybe my complexion did. . . . The farmer drove us home, and Mr Blue's last words was, 'You was right, Betty. Real life isna a patch on the pictures, and I'm sorry to come back to it.' 6. A PROPOSAL. IREGRET to record that I have had a proposal. I would far sooner not record it, but this biography has got to be as complete as I can make it, and one must take the rotten with the ripe. Besides, there has been talk in Tullypawkie about a certain girl running after a certain boy, and I should not wonder if the talk was started by a certain disappointed suitior of mine. If this should meet his eye he will maybe regret his vile calumnities. No girl with any sense would chase a boy, even in the present scarcity. If she catches him, it will only be for the moment, and she will have to keep on chasing him all her life. Once chased always chased. And if she doesna catch him she will have only herself to kick in after years, for Tullypawkie always remembers things like that. It happened on the last half-holiday but two. I was walking to the town to buy print for a summer frock, and I was alone, because I wanted to think out how I would make it. I had started late in order to avoid company. Alas, I had forgot Roddie White, which has been annoying me with his juvenile attentions ever since I bobbed my hair. I hadna got far on the road when I heard the pursuing footprints of my too-adhesive admirer. Though I knew there was no escape I walked as hard as I could and saved about half a mile from his society. By the time he got up on me I was quite determined to put a stopper on the nonsense. Good gracious!' I exclaimed in well stimulated surprise. When did you sprout?' 'Did you not ken it was me?' he said. 'Did you not hear me crying on you?' 'I was preoccupied with private affairs, but thought I heard a sheep,' I replied. 'I am still greatly preoccupied, and, as you seem to be in a hurry, I'll excuse you passing on.' 'But I was following you,' he said.'I've got something to tell you, Betty.' 'Could you not keep it for Christmas?' 'I canna keep it another day—another hour! Oh, Betty,' he cried, now that all nature is budding and bursting into bloom—' 'You got that out of last week's Fireside Companion,' I said, and he was dumb for a minute or two. Then he began again, 'Well, after all, it doesna matter what nature does—does it, Betty?' 'Not in the least,' I returned, 'so long as it doesna rain before I get home to-night, and me in my white stockings.' 'If you was with me, Betty, I wouldna care if it snowed,' he passionately declared. 'If I was you,' said I, 'I wouldna count on a share of my umbrella.' There was another silence while he seemed to take in my remark. 'Betty,' he said suddenly, why are you so coy?' 'Coy!' I ejaculated. 'I'll coy ye!' 'I didna mean to offend you, Betty. I only meant that—that you never let a chap get a hold of you.' 'I should think not!' 'I dinna mean with my hands—though I wouldna mind that, Betty,' he said, with the look of an expiring giraffe. I tossed my head so scornfully that I had to put my hat straight. He groaned, and I tried to change the subject by asking him if he had observed the monkey with the organ-grinder in Tullypawkie the previous day. His answer was as follows: 'What's a monkey to me when I've got you beside me? What's the music of an organ-grinder when I can hear your voice?' 'I give it up,' I replied. 'Did you hear that one of Mrs Forgie's hens had laid an egg weighing—' 'What's an egg to me when I can look at your face, Betty?' 'Your riddles is too difficult,' I said. 'I'm sorry I didna let you carry on with your recitation about the buds, etcetera. Did you get the whole page by heart?' 'The budding and bursting was merely to give me a start.' He let out a terrible groan. 'Oh, Betty, I didna weep a slink last night!' It was quite evident he was set on declaring his passion, and I couldna think how to prevent him. 'I'll have to step livelier than this,' I said, 'if I'm to get my shopping done.' And I went off at full speed—and near fell on my nose over a loose stone. 'Betty,' he wailed, 'I wish you would be engaged to me.' I canna deny that my face was somewhat rubicund as I replied, 'Roddie White, have you taken leave of your onion?' 'I'm in sober earnest,' he said. 'I've been thinking about it for months. Will you, Betty?' I shook my head, and had again to adjust my hat. 'Aw, Betty, dinna be cruel!' cried my wretched suitior. 'I'm cruel to be kind,' I returned. 'I can manage to stick you as a friend, but as an attaché—oh, no!' 'But you might get to like me, once we was engaged.' 'It can never be,' I said firmly. 'Even if your face was totally changed you would be far too young.' 'I'm shaving twice a week now,' he said. 'A beard to your knees would make no difference. And there's another thing.' 'What?' 'You'll excuse the question,' I said coldly, but in these times nobody can afford to be exclusively romantic. What is your prospects?' I had hoped that would settle him; but not at all! 'I'm expecting a rise in my wages next year,' he said, and then I'll likely commence to save. You're young enough yourself, Betty, to think of getting married for ten years or so.' 'Such an elongated engagement would be out of the question,' I remarked with considerable hauteur. 'Besides, I understand you are doomed to be the sole supporter of your granny.' 'Catch me!' 'Would you let her starve?' 'I could hardly gang that length,' he said, scratching his head. 'I see you have got some slight nobility of character,' I kindly observed. 'Still, she'll be eighty-three in June,' he said suddenly. 'Ye needna let that stand in the way, Betty.' 'I am deeply shocked at your unfilialosity,' I told him. 'I hope your granny lives to be a hundred and five, and I trust you'll never mention the subject again. Farewell!' 'Is that your last word?' he cried. I inclined my head. 'Then, if I gang and drown myself, my blood'll be on your head!' 'See and choose nice fresh water,' I said. 'You're too young for beer.' And with that I left him. Mind you, I was sorry for him; but it was Destiny. 7. BOOKS. BY this time you will probably have guessed from my composition that I am a carnivorous reader. I suppose all writers reads a lot, no human brains being entirely self-supporting. Even biographists like myself canna expect to be original all the time. But I hope I'll never behave like some writers, which pinches lumps out of other writers' books to fill up pages in their own, and is quite barefaced about it. I am not going to mention names; but we have many books of that sort in the wee library of Tullypawkie school-house, which is open two nights a week. The library was given to Tullypawkie, long years ago, by an old gentleman which had found the air good for his something-or-other, and I daresay the books was fashionable in his time—bless him for a kind old thing! He gave a bit of money, too, and there is about five pounds every year for new books, which has to be chose by the minister, the schoolmaster, and a county councillor. I suppose they mean well, but their choices is rotten. We never get any of the up-to-date novels you read about in the papers. I wouldna wonder if the book-case in the Ark contained the same sort of stuff for the Noahs to peruse after a busy day with the beasts. Some of us girls once made a deputation to the schoolmaster about it. Jessie Harvie, being noted for her impudence, was elected spokesgirl. 'Come on, Mr Logie!' she said. 'We're fed up with instruction and elevation. Get us something to keep us awake on the long winter evenings. We're buried alive in Tullypawkie. We need a shake-up, and the novels in the library wouldna excite an old maid at one in the morning!' 'What do you want to read about, Jessie?' said Mr Logic. 'Murder?' 'Murder's slow! Get us some of these novels about dinners, dances, drink, drugs, and divorce.' I noticed him biting off a smile in the bud. 'Can't be done, Jessie,' he said solemnly. 'We could not have such books on the shelves.' 'They wouldna be much on the shelves, Mr Logic,' said Jessie. 'You would see a free fight for them every Tuesday and Friday.' 'I hope Tullypawkie is not so abandoned as all that,' he said. 'Just think of what the minister—' 'Does the minister read all the novels?' 'As a matter of fact,' said Mr Logie, 'it is my duty to select the fiction this year.' 'Well, could you not label the queer ones 'Household Hints,' and 'Fireside Fun,' and so forth ? Come on, Mr Logie!' But it was no good, and the deputation withdrew itself in despair. I spoke to Mr Blue about it. Him being a cynic, I was not surprised to get sympathy. 'Ay, Tullypawkie is hopelessly narrow-minded,' he remarked. In my opinion, the only interesting people in the world is the bad ones. Without them the weekly paper would contain nothing worth reading but the advertisements.' 'I suppose, Mr Blue,' I said, pretending to count the postal orders, 'you peruse a good deal of up-to-date works of fiction?' 'Nearly every night in the year,' he replied, 'I consume a complete novel.' 'Society?' 'More or less.—You might see how we're off for registered envelopes.' When I mentioned this conversation to Jessie, she wondered if Mr Blue wouldna lend us some of his novels. I didna like to ask him straight, but every time he was extra cynical I referred to literature, observing that he must have a great store to keep him in reading at the rate he performed it. He admitted that he had plenty, but didna make the hoped-for offer. At last, egged on by Jessie, I dropped a hint. Alas, it fell with a dull thud on stony ground. 'You're young enough yet, Betty,' he said, 'for such sinister narratives. It's all very well for an auld cynic like me, but I canna encourage a young girl like you to remove the gilt from the gingerbread of life.' 'Are your novels so atrocious, Mr Blue?' said I. He shook his head and shut his face like an elder at the plate on being asked to change a threepenny bit on a wet Sabbath. Jessie was highly chagrined. 'I would give all my hopes of future presentation chocs. for a squint at his book-case,' she declared. 'He must have some fine disrespectable works!' But little did I think then how soon I would be penetrating the secrets of his boudoir. It happened thus, as follows: Though Mr Blue's house was above the shop, with a wee, narrow stair leading to it, I had never once set foot in it. Often I had expected to be sent up for something he had forgot, but he had always went himself. However, in the merry month of May, the poor man got the 'flu. It wasna a very serious case, and the doctor allowed him to sit in his wee parlour, but not to come downstairs. Of course Mr Blue should have wired to headquarters for a man to take his place, but, with his hatred for headquarters, he would as soon have asked for help from the hobgoblin department. I said I thought I could carry on, with the help of Peter, the postman. That seemed to relieve his mind, though, if his brains had been clearer, he might have felt different. For it meant that I was upstairs for instructions several times a day. I hope it wasna dishonourable, but I really couldna help it. Even the sight of the poor soul crouching over the fire in his ulster and blankets, with his feet in carpet slippers all the colours of a bad dream, couldna check my fatal curiosity. And, whilst he groaned his instructions, I studied his book-case, and long before he was better I had as good a notion of his reading as I wanted. I am not going to say very much about it. It was a great shock to me. I am sure there wasna a book younger than thirty years, and the bulk resembled my Uncle Samuel's collection which he got, some time last century, from a man that couldna pay his coals' account. There was books of sermons, books of poetry, and books that looked like prizes, such as 'Familiar Insects,' 'A Visit to Vesuvius,' 'Faithful Annie; or, 'The Toper's Tragedy.' I daresay there was a hundred novels, nearly all in paper covers, and mostly in rags. It was difficult to make out the titles, but among them was 'Lord Fitzsomebody's Heir,' 'The Love of Lucre,' 'Should She Have Married Him?' and 'Susan Brown's Or—' Whether it was Susan's Oranges, Orgies, or Ornaments I couldna be certain. Maybe it was her 'Ordeal,' which is the sort of thing you would expect a Susan Brown to go in for. Since then the word 'book' has never been mentioned between Mr Blue and me. Unfortunately, Jessie knew about me being upstairs, and pestered me for information. As I couldna think to betray the man, I simply rolled my eyes and held up my hands in silence. And now Mr Blue has a terrible reputation in Tullypawkie 8. POLITICS. JUDGING from the biographies in the school-house library, it would seem that no biography could be complete without something about politics. I had intended to have a chapter in this biography, called 'Famous Politicians I have Met,' but I fear the idea must be abandoned owing to my not having met any famous politicians. In Tullypawkie, except at election time, politicians, like crime, is not much in vogue. We have a few specimens which keeps it up all the year round, but nobody bothers about them unless on Saturday nights, when they return from the town filled with renewed patriotic enthusiasm. It is sometimes necessary for the constable to arise from his rosy lair to persuade them to retire to theirs, which they usually do about three hours later. The constable being a total abstainer, they object to him getting the last word. Mr Blue has never been seen or heard in the political area. I once asked him which denomination be belonged to, and he said he was waiting for the Anarchists to form a party. His cynicality is whiles very bitter; still, I canna imagine him going about with bombs in his ulster pockets and a safety gilletto in his sock—if Anarchists wear socks. At the last election he refused to vote, his reason being that, since one candidate was as rotten as another, he couldna take the responsibility of giving the country an extra push in the direction of ruin. When canvassers came into the P.O. he would let them talk for a while, and then he would thump the counter and cry, 'What did Mr Gladstone say in 1872?'—which always seemed to confuse them, till one solemn chap got a brain-wave and replied, 'Will the postmaster kindly give us the exact date in 1872?' But before him and his friends had got their smiles ready, Mr Blue snapped out, 'Seventeenth November, 9.40 P.M.' It is said that the solemn chap spent his next summer holidays in free libraries, seeking for Mr Gladstone's remarks at that particular hour. I suppose I'll have a vote one of those days, and I intend to use it. What's the good of having a thing if you dinna use it? My Aunt Bella, after my uncle, which was a noted experimenter with patent medicines, had passed away, settled down to finish all the bottles he had left. It took her fully a year, but she didna leave a drop. Unfortunately, it had become a habit, and, as my cousin Tom says, it looks as if her nephews and nieces would inherit nothing but empties. Still, voting can hardly become a habit, though Mr Blue declares this country is likely to have an election every six months for the next century or so. At the last election Jessie Harvie and I went to a meeting in the school-house. We didna expect much fun, but we fancied we might get some dress hints from the ladies that came in the motor cars along with the candidate and his masculine friends. Nothing doing! What a cut!' remarked Jessie, referring to a drab costume; 'and I never could stick sports stockings, especially when the ankles is merely so-so. Silk for me every time!" 'Same here,' said I; 'and did ever ye behold such an antique hat, Jessie?' 'It's the lid Mrs Noah wore when she went on board in the rain and wasna particular. Look, Betty!—not a smart pair of high heels in the bunch! I'm sorry for that man, and he's got such a nice kiss-me-quick moustache.' From which ye may suspect that Jessie and me wasna deeply impressed. Possibly the dowdiness was intentional, seeing that the man was to speak about Economy; but it did his cause no good, for in the end he came out at the bottom of the poll. However, we did get some fun before the show was over. Mr Boggie, the farmer, took the chair, and in a few well-chosen, stammering words apologised for being there. He began to tell the folk why they should vote for Mr Tuke (loud cheers), and then remembered that Mr Tuke was one of the other candidates. He explained his forgetfulness by saying that he had been sitting up all night with a sick cow. (Cries of 'moo!' from some of our young Dougies, and loud laughter, in which the candidate joined.) But Mr Boggie got angry and said he hoped every member of the audience had been as respectably employed during the night. (One 'hear, hear!' from Mr Boggie's ploughman, and a voice: 'Hoo's the coo noo, Mr Boggie?') When the disturbance had subsidised, Mr Boggie said the cow wasna much better. (A voice: 'What did ye give her?') Mr Boggie told what medicine he had given the cow, and then half-a-dozen farmers got up and started to give him advice; and a fine argument followed, during which the candidate tried to look interested and at his watch at the same time—for I'm sure the poor man didna ken a cow from a sideboard, while his lady friends looked completely fed up. At last Mr M'Caskie, the tailor, a wee, nervous man, egged on by his companions, got up and, holding out a trembling hand, said, 'Mr Chairman, and ladies and gentlemen, I beg for to move that the cow be now heard.' (Laughter and cheers lasting for a long- time.) His friends having informed him of his little slip, Mr M'Caskie stood up again and, with the perspiration streaming down his face, said, I beg your pardon! I meant for to move that the candidate be now sick.' This brought down the house. Mr M'Caskie, on his second little slip being pointed out, got up and stottered away, and wasna seen again till the third day, when he was observed by a neighbour, at 5 A.M., devouring a turnip in his back garden. As for the platform folk, I thought they would have stottered away likewise, but apparently politicians is not retiring of nature. When we was all too sore to laugh any more, Mr Boggie, which looked as if the cow would have to sit up with him that night, called upon the candidate to address the meeting. After a joke or two at the expense of Mr Tuke and the other absent candidate the affair got pretty slow, and, our toffees being finished, Jessie and me adjourned ourselves. When I related the experience to Mr Blue he smiled coldly and said I was lucky to have got some amusement. 'Will there be stupid things, like the tailor's, said in the House of Commons?' I inquired. 'More so. Only the papers dinna report everything.' 9. PEACEMAKING. TO my mind there is no delightfuller entertainment to witness than a quarrel between two persons both possessing rich vocabularies. We have two ladies in Tullypawkie which can carry on for an hour without repeating themselves; and on getting exhausted they make it up, and all is perfect peace for a fortnight or so. That is as it should be. A thunder-plump, and then the sun shining again! But the sort of quarrel that goes on for years, with hardly ever any dialogues, is no use to me. And such was the quarrel betwixt my esteemed boss, Mr Blue, and Moses Macbeth, the local baker. It started so long before my time in the P.O. that I have had to depend on older folk for an account of its beginning; and the trouble about the accounts of older folk, as a rule, is that they are apt to contain an awful lot of 'extras.' However, by adding up all the accounts, dividing them by five, and reducing the result to ordinary common-sense, I got what seemed likely to be the truth, as follows: One afternoon Moses Macbeth came into the P.O. and bought a dozen stamps, had a pleasant chat with Mr Blue, and went back to his shop. Next day, when he took the stamps from his pocket, he found they was all stuck together. Now Moses has a face like an apple, a beard like his namesake (striking the rock), and the belief that everybody in the world is there to diddle him. He rushed along to the P.O. and accused Mr Blue of selling him damp stamps. Mr Blue replied that he would listen to no bad language concerning the king's portrait, and added that Moses was a damp fool not to think of damp clothes in such damp weather. Which, of course, didna settle anything. Next morning Mr Blue rushed into the bakery, threw a breakfast-roll on the counter, and accused Moses of using black beetles to save flour. And, sure enough, there was a sombre object in the midst of the roll. 'Black-beetle!' cried Moses, as if he had never heard of such a thing. 'It's time ye got specs. That's an extra large size sultana!' and before Mr Blue could say a word he tore the piece out of the roll and devoured it. 'I suppose they 're an acquired taste,' said Mr Blue, with his cynical smile, and walked out of the shop. Which, again, didna settle anything. Years rolled on and these two never exchanged a single kind word. I believe that, for a week or two, Moses got his stamps five miles away, and Mr Blue lived without bread; but in the end they had to come back to patronising each other's shops, though Moses refused to deliver rolls in the morning unless Mr Blue delivered stamps every Saturday afternoon, which, of course, was impossible. When I first started in the P.O. it used to amuse me to see Moses put on his specs. and examine every stamp for dampness—he made a great fuss of the examination when other people was present—and also to see Mr Blue like to burst with annoyance. And for a while it was fun for Jessie Harvie, which assists Moses, to watch Mr Blue cut open his rolls and cautiously inspect their insides, as if he expected something horrible to spring at him, while Moses stood by, his beard shuddering with rage. But Jessie and me soon got fed up with the two silly goats trying to affront each other. 'I wouldna mind if they started to claw and kick each other,' said Jessie one evening; but this is too slow for words.' 'It wouldna amuse a worm,' I replied. 'Still, I fear there is little hope of them assaulting each other, though I wish it would happen, for I believe it would end in them shaking hands. Personally, I object to the misbehaviour of Moses in the P.O. every Saturday afternoon. Strangers has asked me if our stamps was of inferior quality.' 'Ah, but think of my feelings every morning,' said Jessie. There's no doubt that it's keeping down custom, too. The other morning two early cyclists, after watching the postmaster's performance, went out without buying a thing. Moses was in an awful temper for the rest of the day, and I didna get reading a page of my novel. Something's got to be done.' 'Something to bring it to a head,' said I. 'If it came to a scrap, I doubt your Moses would have a poor chance. That beard of his would be too handy for his opponent.' 'I'm not so sure of that,' said Jessie. 'Moses weighs about three times as much as your Mr Blue. A good kick from Moses would decimate him.' 'Mr Blue is light on his feet, and his teeth is his own,' I retorted. 'Ay, but his long nose is his stumbling-block. If once Moses got a sure grip of that nose, your boss would be throwing up the sponge.' 'You're talking nonsense, Jessie Harvie!' I cried. 'Once Mr Blue got a clutch on your employer's beaver, he could slap him to his heart's content!' 'That would be a cowardly thing!' 'To take advantage of Mr Blue's nose would be quite dastardly!' And, before we knew, Jessie and me had quarrelled. But we made it up next day and, after a long discussion, decided against promoting a fight, as the newspapers say. 'Let us appeal to their finest feeling,' I proposed, and Jessie said, Righto!' Well, we thought and thought, and at last Jessie got an idea. To tell the truth, I couldna think of any plan connected with postage-stamps, and so I was perhaps readier to accept Jessie's notion than I would otherwise have been. It was quite simple. From an old schoolbook she cut a wee bit of poetry entitled 'Friendship,' and perfumed it with the powder she used when not on duty. Moses wouldna stick powder in the shop. 'I expect this will touch Mr Blue deeply,' said Jessie. 'I can see his eyes filling and his hand stretched out, trembling, to Moses, who will likewise be visibly affected.' I had my doubts, but I said I was sure her beautiful vision would come true, for I was curious to see what would happen. Next morning I made a point of being at the baker's shop a little before eight—Mr Blue's accustomed hour for buying his rolls. Jessie was all smiles, but a bit nervous; and Moses, which had been up extra early, preparing fancies for a picnic party, was pretty glum. Then in came Mr Blue, nodded to me, and, without a word, laid his three ha'pennies on the counter. Jessie put his rolls in a bag and handed it to him. As usual he took out the rolls, brought out his knife, and commenced to open them, while Jessie and me held our breaths. As luck would have it, the third roll was the lucky one. When he opened it he sniffed and made a face, then saw the poetry. There was a terrible silence till, with a super-cynical smile, he remarked, Owing to scarcity o' black-beetles we are now using waste paper!' 'What!' exclaimed Moses, turning from the shelves, with a loaf in his hand. 'Flavoured with hair-ile!' added Mr Blue, and, losing his head, he shied the roll at Moses. 'You put the dirty paper in yourself!' Moses yelled, and heaved the loaf, which missed Mr Blue and struck the glass case containing the imitation bridescake which had been there from time immemorial. What a smash! Moses picked up another loaf, and Mr Blue grabbed the handiest thing; viz. three cream cookies from a tray for the picnic, and both let fly. Alas! my pen canna describe what followed. I regret to say that Jessie and me joined in the fray out of loyalty to our employers, and the whole of Tullypawkie turned out to behold the battle, which ended owing only to lack of ammunition. At present Mr Blue is getting his bread from the town, Moses his stamps from the same, and two lawyers is being kept busy. Jessie escaped the sack by her presence of mind in securing the guilty roll and its contents, and I—well, no more peacemaking for me! 10. COOKERY. LAST winter there was an evening class for cookery in the school-house, and though it is now midsummer, the population of Tullypawkie is still four hundred and one. I wasna extra keen on the course, though, being the youngest of five sisters, I was pretty ignorant of the subject. But mother said, 'It's always the unlikely thing that happens, Betty, and some day you might get married; so you'd best learn all you can.' And father forked out the fee, with the remark, 'Ay, learn all you can, Betty; but dinna practice on me.' My parents is more celebrated for paying their way than for paying compliments. So Jessie Harvie and me got note-books and started to attend. The first few lessons was rather dull. As Jessie observed, a little music and a few of the softer headed sex would have brightened things up. However, when the teacher got on to the fancy productions we all began to sit up. When I use the word 'fancy' I dinna mean to suggest that we was taught how to make roast turkey, bridescakes, and so forth. Some simple Sweets and Entrées' was what the teacher, as far as I mind, called them on her programme ; and I must say she worked miracles with things like tapioca and semolina under the influence of a spoonful of jam, a pinch of spice, etc. The two engaged girls in the class used to sit with their eyes half out of their heads, and the one that expects to be married in October 1929 used to keep whispering to her less fortunate companion, 'So tasty, and yet so filling!' They was very earnest, and had to get fresh note-books half-way through the course. They made little drawings of everything, and coloured them at home, and showed them to everybody; and everybody, including myself, praised them highly, except Jessie, which, on being shown a picture of 'Pudding à la Dominoes' (or something like that), exclaimed, 'Gosh! I thought it was Ben Nevis with the measles!' I doubt Jessie will not be invited to the wedding in October 1929. But it was the Entrées that appealed to Jessie and me. 'What's the exact meaning of the word Entrée?' Jessie asked me, the first evening. 'It means "Come inside,"' I informed her. 'Then,' said she, 'it's the first sensible French word I've struck in cookery.' The teacher commenced her remarks on Entrées with something like these words—'In nearly every household it frequently happens that after a meal something is left over— 'Never in ours!' muttered Jessie, which has a lot of young brothers. '—and the housewife who studies economy is sometimes puzzled how to dispose of those so-called scraps, precious though she knows them to be.' 'What price a pig—or a lodger?' said Jessie in my ear, and I had to tell her to hold her tongue. 'I have here,' said the teacher, pointing to two plates, some fragments of cold meat and a little cold-boiled cod.' 'No bold coiled bod for this little girl!' whispered Jessie. 'I wonder whose back door she got them at.' 'Jessie, if you canna behave yourself,' I said, 'I must exit. I didna come here to have fits.' 'Silence, please!' said the teacher, and proceeded to work her magic on the scraps. It was really wonderful, as even Jessie admitted, when we all got a taste at the end of the lesson, though she was sure the teacher had had something up her sleeve, which wasna in the recipe. 'I believe,' said Jessie, on the road home, 'she would make a tempting delicacy out of yesterday's white sauce and a bit of orange peel off the pavement.' Another night we had a lesson on curry. Jessie and me was greatly taken up with the dishes, especially the curried eggs, which was certainly beyond a hen's wildest dreams, though, to judge from what Jessie wrote in her notebook, you would have thought she despised them. But Jessie had a way of her own of putting down recipes. I will quote this one from her note-book: CURRIED EGGS. A CHOICE SUPPER DISH. Take any old eggs and boil till quite dead. Remove them to golf-course and putt gently till nude. Carry home and wash in clean water, if available. Prepare curry according to label on bottle, the quantity to be used depending on probable age of the eggs. An experienced cook will always use plenty, and it saves coal. Cook till eggs is permanently nigger-brown, and serve as tidily as possible. Place a large jug of cold water at the patient's bedside. Jessie wanted me to quote another recipe of her own invention entitled 'Compote of Fish à la Cod d'Ile'—but it would be hardly the thing for a high-class biography like this. The girl who expects to be wed in October 1929 declared, after reading it, that she had never seen anything so disgusting in the Sunday paper. I fear Jessie and me was temporally cracked over the curried eggs. We made them at Jessie's house, when her parents was away, and tried them on her young brothers, which was subsequently found lying on the dewy grass, with their tongues out. Then we made them at our house twice. The first time my parents was away at a funeral, which was providential, for, when the dish was ready, I let it fall on the parlour sofa and carpet, and we simply couldna get the eggs entirely free from whiskers. Jessie put one in the fire, but that seemed to bring out the perfume, and, the cat refusing the rest—it didna return home till the third day—we buried them deep in the garden, for we was sure the sight of them would put the hens off laying. The next time it was really mother's fault, and I suppose she wasna thinking when she said, one evening, 'When are you lassies going to show what you learnt at the cookery?' So Jessie and me got eight eggs and curried them hopefully for the supper. Mother managed one and, with the tears running down her cheeks, said it was unprecedented. But father wouldna even taste—declared that the eggs looked too unnatural. Jessie and me had to eat two each—there is not space to describe our feelings—and still there was three left, and father said they would be the very thing for my breakfast. 'It's early yet,' said Jessie hoarsely, when we was fuffing for air in the garden. 'What do you say to take them to the postmaster? They might cure his summer cold.' So we did that, and Mr Blue thanked us warmly then, but never again referred to the gift. A young man returning about midnight from the town observed Mr Blue leaning out of his window gasping for air. Still, I did learn something from the cookery lessons—what to leave alone. 11. LUCK. 'MR BLUE, did ever you dream you was wealthy?' All afternoon he had been brooding over a shortage of threepence in the stamps, and I felt it was time he was distracted. He blinked at me, and in a far-away voice replied, 'In my youth I tried cod-liver ile, monkey nuts, and dumb-bells—in vain!' 'Did you imagine they would make you wealthy?' I ejaculated. 'Wealthy! Oh, I thought ye said "healthy."' He sat up and favoured me with a weary smile. 'You can take it from me, Betty, that no man in ordinary P.O. employment ever dreams of wealth—if he's honest.' 'I wasna thinking of the P.O. It's hopeless, of course,' I remarked, with a smile near as cynical as his. But did you never dream of being left a million pounds or so?' 'The only thing a relative ever left me was an I.O.U. for five pounds, which is not the sort of experience to encourage golden visions.' 'Well, did you never try a sweepstake or a lottery?' I inquired. 'I once put a shilling on a horse which came in twenty-third. Na, na, Betty; I wasna born under a lucky star.' 'You're too young to be saying that, Mr Blue. You never can tell what's coming to you,' I said, and brought out the wee green book of tickets. 'This is a grand prize drawing in aid of the new cottage hospital,' I explained. 'Tickets sixpence each. The prizes is numerous and varied. A gallon of whisky, a box of kippers, a six-months' season-ticket for the cinema, a suit of fashionable clothes, a pair of smart plus-fours, a knitted silk jumper, a barrel of apples, jewellery, etcetera, etcetera—' 'Stop, stop!' he cried, 'I'm surprised at you, Betty!' 'What for? A good cause—in the name o' charity!' I exclaimed. 'In the name o' cupidity, ye mean! I canna think what the country's coming to! Nowadays it seems impossible to get folk to cough up a sixpence for the best of objects, unless you give them a chance of gaining a thousand pounds or so! It's perfectly atrocious! I can see the time coming when the elder at the kirk plate will have to be provided with a lucky-bag! Let me see the tickets!' There is times when silence is best, and I handed him the book without a word. 'Humph!' said he, examining the list of prizes. (I have wrote it 'humph' because 'humph' frequently occurs in oldish books; but I canna say that I ever heard any human being remark 'humph,' or 'phew,' which also frequently occurs.) 'Humph' said he; it's a queer assortment of carnal temptations. I observe certain items of female apparel, calculated, no doubt, to tempt the weaker sex to speculate—' 'I beg your pardon!' I exclaimed with dignity. 'Up to date I've sold far more tickets to men than to girls.' 'I dare say!' he said, with a sardonic laugh. 'By the weaker sex I didna mean the softer sex.' And he handed me back the book, which I received with becoming coldness and in rigid silence, and left him to his pursuit of the missing threepence. Well, I thought that was the end of it, but about a week later, when we was waiting for the afternoon mail, he took out a shilling and said, 'It's against my principles, Betty, but if you've got any of those tickets left, I'll take a couple.' 'Have you been considering it all this time, Mr Blue?' I respectfully inquired. 'Not at all. It came up my back this instant,' he replied, blushing slightly. For a public man he's not very good at falsehoods. However, I let it pass, and he wrote his name carelessly on the counterfoils, tore out the tickets as if they annoyed him, and shoved them into his waistcoat pocket. But, later on, I spied him putting them in the safe as if they was twenty-pound notes. I expect he's coveting the plus-fours,' Jessie Harvie remarked when I told her about his purchase. Oh, I hope I get the knitted silk jumper!' Of course I declared that Mr Blue had taken the tickets merely to please me, and that he had really no cupidious interest in the drawing. I'm a great believer in loyalty. Another week passed, and Mr Blue, in the middle of checking the postal orders, observed very carelessly, 'By the way, Betty, I happened to notice that the prize drawing doesna take place for ten week yet.' 'That's right,' I returned, endeavouring in vain to get his eye to meet mine. 'It seems ample time,' he said. 'I dare say there's folk that'll feel it hang heavy.' 'I wouldna wonder,' I agreed. 'But the longer the time, the greater the number of tickets sold.' 'True,' he said, and stopped to light a cigarette. 'I should imagine that the chance is about a million to one against winning a prize.' 'At any rate, against winning the prize desired,' I remarked. 'I assure you, Betty,' he said, 'I dinna desire any of the prizes. I would be quite affronted if I drew one.' 'You could easy refuse it, or sell it for the benefit of the good cause.' 'True,' he said again, and told me to hurry up and see if there was any late letters in the box. About a month later he asked me how the tickets was selling, and when I answered 'slow,' he said he would take another couple. But for his age I might have flattered myself, for when it came to the week before the drawing he had sixteen tickets in his safe. By this time the whole adult population of Tullypawkie was going about with a greedy look in its eye, and Mr Blue was the bleariest looking total abstainer I have ever beheld. He would come down in the morning looking altogether decomposed. When I sympathised, he said the insomnia was due to this dashed Summer Time. And on the day before the drawing he was such a nervous wreck that he swallowed a sixpenny stamp and paid for it without saying a single bad word. I was pretty excited myself, for, like Jessie, I had a big craving for the silk jumper, which was valued at three pounds. It would have suited my colouring better than hers. However, neither of us was lucky. I have not space to give all the results of the drawing, so far as Tullypawkie was concerned. I will only mention that the plusfours went to my spinster Aunt Bethia, which near swooned at the news; that a gallon of whisky fell to Mr Blue; and that the silk jumper went to Mr Boggie, the farmer, an old bachelor that thinks of nothing but cows. I went to bed that night feeling rather low, and was wakened up about midnight by noises more suitable for the New Year. On peeping out I observed Mr Boggie singing and dancing in the moonlight, and Mr Blue evidently trying to persuade him to go home. In the morning my mother brought me a parcel she had found in the porch. It was addressed in queer writing to Miss Betty Cairnie—me! It contained the silk jumper. Well, what do you think? 12. PLUS-FOURS. IT is curious how some folk loses their heads when anything out of the usual happens to them. In the previous chapter of this biography, which was about the grand prize drawing in aid of the cottage hospital, I mentioned that my Aunt Bethia won a pair of smart plus-fours, causing hearty laughter in Tullypawkie. Now, although plus-fours was not exactly a suitable prize for a spinster, there was no reason for my aunt accepting them as if they was a curse. A few days after the event I went to see her, and found her in a very low state, drinking weak tea and groaning at the fireside. I'm the laughing-stock of Tullypawkie,' she declared. 'Oh, lassie, whatever made me buy that ticket from you?' 'You expected it would bring you a set of aluminium stew-pans,' I replied, 'and I canna see why you shouldna get the stew-pans yet, and something else into the bargain. If I was you I wouldna let these plus-fours go for a penny less than—' 'Oh, dinna name them!' she cried. 'The very name affronts me.' 'I canna but admire your delicacy,' I said, though it doesna seem necessary at the moment. We are quite alone, Aunt Bethia.' 'I feel,' she said, squinting at the parcel on the dresser, 'I feel as if there was a man in the house! Oh dear, oh dear!' 'It's all right. The paper's tough. He canna get out,' I assured her. 'Come, pull yourself together and let's see what's to be done with the plus—' 'No, no!' 'Well, we'll call them the P.F's. Now, as I was about to say, I wouldna let them go for a penny less than thirty shillings—' 'Sell them!' 'What else? Surely you're not thinking of putting them in the glass case in the parlour, along with your stuffed birds,' I said jocularly. There's plenty of the young Dougies of Tullypawkie would buy them. But, mind, Aunt Bethia, dinna have anything to do with them that offers payment by instalments. Life is short and uncertain.' 'But I couldna sell them!' she cried. 'You mean you couldna part with them? Well, of course, if it comforts you to feel there's a man in the house, that settles it! And maybe the feeling is worth thirty shillings—eh?' 'No, no, Betty, I dinna mean that! But if I was for selling them I—I would require to —to show them to the public.' 'Naturally! You canna expect that our young Dougies would buy pigs in pokes, much less purchase P.F's. in parcels.' She drank a bucket of tea and filled up the pot from the kettle. 'Nothing,' she said slowly and solemnly, will ever induce me to open that parcel.' I told her she was the holy limit, and asked what on earth she intended to do with the parcel. She pointed to a spade standing against the wall at the side of the fireplace, and said, The last two nights was too wet and stormy, but to-night looks like being fine, and. . .' I suppose she observed my look of horror, for she hasted to say, 'You can think I'm mad, if you like—' 'You couldna be dottier if you had swallowed a box of dominoes,' I said. 'Well, it doesna matter,' said she. I'm going to bury these P.F's. and be quit of them for ever!' And she drank another bucket— Dutch courage, no doubt. 'Do you expect me to attend the funeral?' I inquired ironically. 'I would be glad of your help at the digging, Betty.' 'Not a dig!' I cried. 'Do you think I would help to put the noose round your neck?' She started. 'Listen to me, Aunt Bethia,' I said. 'Suppose you was removing from this cottage, and suppose the new tenant took a fancy to dig up the garden, and came on the gristly secret —what do you fancy would happen?' 'What?' 'You would have the police down on you, wanting to ken what you had done with the body.' 'The body!' she screeched. 'What body?' In a hoarse whisper I replied, 'The body of your murdered paramour!' It took about five minutes to sink in, but it got there right enough. Oh dear, oh dear!' she began. 'You may well say so,' said I. 'What a scandal, apart from the unpleasantness of the scaffold!' 'But they couldna touch me. I would explain— 'Aunt Bethia, do you really imagine that any judge, especially if he was a golfer—and most judges plays in their spare time—would believe that you had buried a new pair of P.F.'s. merely out of modesty? Such an excuse would simply seal your doom with the jury.' That finished her. I'll burn them!' she exclaimed. 'And the smell will bring along all your neighbours. They'll declare you to be off your onion, and your declining years will be spent in Dottyville.' She then offered me five shillings to put the parcel in the river. 'Not for a thousand pounds,' I replied ; and I'm astonished at you!' She apologised and burst into tears, which, of course, touched me deeply. 'Cheer up, auntie. I'll find a way out. Stick to the parcel till you hear from me,' I said, and, bidding her keep a stiff upper lip, took my departure. Well, I got hold of Jessie Harvie, and between us we prepared a heap of duplicate numbered tickets, which we started to hawk round. They went better than I expected. The young Dougies was quite ready to risk a bob or two. They didna care if the plus-fours was pea-green and made for an elephant. We began selling on a Saturday, and by the following Friday had got in fifty-three shillings! Sales was to cease next day at 4 P.M. and the drawing to take place at 5 P.M. When I told Aunt Bethia about the money she embraced me and called me a wonderful lassie.' On the Saturday morning I got a letter from my sister in Glasgow, asking me to spend the week-end with her. That was too good a thing to miss, so I left the raffle business in the hands of Jessie, who promised to see it through and hand the cash to my aunt. First thing on my return on Monday morning I ran into my aunt's cottage and got another embrace. 'Sixty-three shillings!' she said, shaking the silver in a paper bag. 'Splendid!' said I, and then noticed the parcel still on the dresser. 'Has the winner not called for it?' 'Oh, Betty,' she cried, the colour of turkey-red, 'I canna think what made me do it, but at the last minute I got wee Tommy Duncan to buy me a ticket, and—and . . .' I was feeling angry, feeling as I had swindled the young Dougies, but I managed to keep my temper, and asked her what she intended doing with the plus-fours. 'I had an inspiring dream last night,' she replied. I think I'll get MacAlpine's Stores to exchange them for a nice jersey—unless, dearie, ye would care to get up another raffle.' 13. MR BOGGIE. ABOUT 4 P.M., Mr Boggie, the farmer, came into the P.O. and asked for Mr Blue. 'Mr Blue will be back in a jiffy,' I told him. 'Kindly take a seat.' Of course I knew he would never risk the office chair, which waggles if a child sits on it, and he measures 6 x 3 x 3 feet. Still, we may not get the chance of being polite in the next world. He laid a long envelope on the counter, saying, 'Ye might register that in the meantime;' and, while I did so, he kept shifting from one foot to the other and pulling at his long beard. If his face was turned upside down, Mr Boggie would have a magnificent head of hair. On getting the receipt he said, 'The post-office should think shame of itself, giving a scrap of paper like this for a valuable packet.' 'There's a reason for making the receipts like that, Mr Boggie.' 'What's the reason?' 'They're easy lost.' I was telling him that his letter would not go till the morning, when Mr Blue came in. Mr Boggie pointed to the letter in my hand, saying, 'See and take good care of that packet, Mr Blue. Ye'll never guess what it contains!' 'An order to your wine merchant,' said Mr Blue sardonically. Mr Boggie didna smile. 'It's my will,' he said; 'my last will and testament, signed and witnessed. I'm sending it to my lawyer.' 'Well, well,' remarked Mr Blue. But surely you're not thinking of leaving us just yet, Mr Boggie?' 'I'm not,' said Mr Boggie, and turned a rich plum colour. As a matter of fact, I've decided to take a wife. I may as well tell you now, for she'll be spreading it abroad afore the day's over.' Of course we shook hands with Mr Boggie; and Mr Blue said, 'This is great news! Is the lady known in Tullypawkie?' 'It's Mrs Bane, my housekeeper,' Mr Boggie replied, looking ashamed of himself. Mr Blue and I looked as astonished as we could, considering that for years Tullypawkie had been expecting her to hook him. 'I confess I'm astonished myself,' said Mr Boggie, with a heavy sigh. 'I'm fifty-four, and I've been a bachelor all my life, so I canna yet realise it.' 'Matrimony has doubtless advantages—for a farmer,' said Mr Blue. And, in your case, you're not buyin' a pig in a poke, as it were. For one thing, you ken what to expect in the way of cookery.' 'Mphm,' said Mr Boggie slowly, 'I ken what to expect—and I dinna expect a great deal. To tell you the gospel truth, she's not very great at porridge, and she's hopeless at puddings. Her scones is not bad, but she's very inconsistent in biling eggs; ye never can tell whether their insides will be like nuts or grapes. There's maybe three or four dishes she does perfect, but they happen to disagree with me. Still—' 'As a husband,' said Mr Blue, with a wink at me, 'you'll be in a better position to find fault.' 'I hope so—I sincerely hope so,' said Mr Boggie, and groaned. Once more he pointed to the registered letter. 'I doubt my auld sister, if she survives me, will be annoyed; but Mrs Bane seemed to think it was my duty to leave everything to her—and also to sign the teetotal.' 'Have you signed it?' cried Mr Blue. 'If not, I'll be delighted to witness your sig—' 'I'll maybe trouble you—after I've had a dram. In the meantime I'll be getting home. Take care of the packet' said Mr Boggie once more, and, with the smile of a draper with the toothache, went slowly away. 'He doesna seem entirely happy,' I remarked. I've seen greater rapture,' said Mr Blue, taking the packet and putting it in the safe. 'By the way, Betty, you're aware, of course that once a packet is posted it canna, on any account, be unposted.' 'I'm aware. Do you think he'll maybe change his mind?' 'I wouldna wonder. And I'm reminding you of the regulation because I've now got to gang to the town, and I'm not likely to be back before closing time.' 'I'll attend to everything, Mr Blue,' I assured him, 'Mr Boggie included, though I canna imagine him changing so soon. Give love's young dream a chance!' However, Mr Blue's notion turned out to be the right one. I was just about to shut up the shop when Mr Boggie appeared, puffing and perspiring. On learning that the postmaster was away he blanched, as they say in the novels. 'I'll have to confide in you, lassie,' he said. 'Here's the receipt, and I'll thank you for the packet.' 'I'm sorry,' I said, and told him the regulation. 'But this is exceptional and urgent,' he cried. 'The P.O.,' said I, 'breaks lots of things, but never its rules.' He took out his pocket-book. 'Betty,' he whispered, 'a ten-pound note for that packet!' 'Whisht, Mr Boggie! Would you try to bribe me?' I confess that I spoke more in sorrow than in anger. Ten pounds takes some earning in the P.O. He looked ashamed, and put away his pocket-book. 'Listen, lassie!' he said. 'As you heard me tell Mr Blue, Mrs Bane says it's my duty to leave everything to her and also to sign the teetotal. Now that's a good deal to ask a man before he's been engaged for a round of the clock—eh?' 'It's a bit business-like,' I admitted. 'But that's not all. She now tells me it's my duty to remove my beard!' 'Oh, that's not very delicate, Mr Boggie.' 'It's dashed impiddent! What would I look like wanting my beard?' I could think of nothing but a dismantled easy-chair in my father's workshop, but I didna mention it. 'And if such is my duties afore marriage,' he went on, 'what will they be after?' 'Chiefly boring holes in the earth, I should think,' I replied. 'Mr Boggle, put your foot down before it's too late.' 'Give me the packet and I'll break it off this very night. I darena tell her I'm fed up, but I can tear up my last will and testament afore her eyes. Then she'll flee into a passion and leave my house.' 'But I've told you it's impossible, Mr Boggie,' I said. 'I sympathise with you, for I dinna like Mrs Bane. Could you not tell her flat that you're going to make another will?' 'The most I'm allowed to say at a time is two words.' And the unfortunate swain groaned aloud. 'If you wasna such a nice lassie,' he said, 'I think I would tie you up and burgle the post-office. . . . Ah well, I suppose I'll just have to marry her.' And he started to leave the shop. 'Wait!' I cried. 'I've got a brain-wave!' I rushed into the back room, got a long envelope, and made up a packet like the one in the safe, wasted 4½d. worth of stamps, and scored it across with the blue pencil. 'Now, Mr Boggie,' I commanded, 'say nothing; but write your lawyer's name and address on this.' He did it in writing worthy of a weary hen, and looked at me with his mouth. 'Take it,' I said, 'and go home, and tear it up before her eyes—and be sure to put the bits in the fire.' I had to push him out of the shop. I hardly slept a wink that night, wondering what had happened at the farm. What if Mrs Bane had got hold of any of the bits? On the whole I had little hope for Mr Boggie. In the morning, on my way to the P.O., I was stopped by wee Tommy Duncan, who shoved a letter into my hand and ran away. There was no address on the envelope, and nothing in it but a ten-pound note. 14. MICE. FOR several mornings Mr Blue had come down to the shop looking as if he had spent the night in studying the Turkish language on a stormy sea, and at last I couldna help remarking on his rotten appearance. 'Mr Blue,' I said respectfully, 'you are not in the pink these fine mornings. You really ought to see the doctor and get a tonic.' 'It's a sleeping-draught I need,' he said, and yawned so suddenly that he nearly swallowed his cigarette. His words filled me with alarm. 'Insomnia!' I cried. 'For any sake attend to it before you take leave of your onion!' 'It's not quite so urgent as that, Betty,' he said, with a weary smile. 'But it's bad enough to be kept awake till the sun rises.' 'What keeps you awake, Mr Blue?' 'The continual gnawing—dash it!' 'Then it's the dentist you need.' 'Na, na! It's not pain.' 'Mercy! I exclaimed; 'can it be your conscience, Mr Blue?' 'No such luck,' he replied. 'I've had too slow a life to keep my conscience in training. The gnawing is produced, as you might have guessed, by mice.' 'Mice!' 'Ay, mouse in the plural—very much the plural.' 'Oh, horrors!' I ejaculated. 'A very good name for them,' said he, yawning till he staggered. 'But—' I began, and stopped. I had been going to suggest a cat when I remembered a tragic occurrence which had occurred before my time in the P.O. In those days Mr Blue kept a cat, and one Saturday evening the cat, for reasons best known to itself, went into the safe just before closing time, and got shut in for the week-end. When discovered on the Monday morning the unfortunate creature was no more. Mr Blue, who is humane though a cynic, was greatly upset, and would never have another cat. For many weeks, it is said, the fish-merchant called his wares at the post-office in vain. 'What about traps?' I said, when he had finished yawning. 'I've put traps all over the place. I got my toe in one of them this morning—the sole catch so far,' he replied. 'The fact is, the mice gets fed up at the grocer's next door, and comes to my premises merely to disport theirselves and annoy me. Last night I tried lying with my head under the bolster, but in this warm weather—' 'Surely something can be done,' I said, feeling vexed for him. 'I'll try corks in my ears to-night,' said he, 'if you'll help me to draw them in the morning.' 'Are you trying to be funny, Mr Blue,' I inquired, 'or are you merely delirious?' 'A bit of both, maybe,' he replied. But seriously, Betty, the mice is a great affliction.' 'Are you sure you have got the traps properly set?' 'My toe canna speak, but ye'll observe I'm wearing slippers.' 'And what do you use for bait?' 'Cheese, of course.' I shook my head. 'Cheese doesna seem a severe temptation to mice residing in a grocer's shop,' I remarked. 'True,' he admitted. 'What would you advise, Betty?' 'The difficulty is,' said I, 'that grocery mice will not be easy to please. Still, if you have no objections, I'll consult Jessie Harvie.' 'Is Jessie a mouse fancier?' 'Not exactly; but I remember her telling me of an awful time her folk had with mice some years ago. A mouse in the soup was no novelty, and a couple in the bed of a morning —deceased, of course—was nothing to make a song about.' 'Whisht, lassie!' he said, shuddering. 'Dinna make me nervous! And are the Harvies not troubled with mice now?' 'I've heard Mrs Harvie boast about having no mice in her house.' 'Then I'll be grateful for Jessie's advice, if she'll give it,' said Mr Blue. 'I—I suppose,' he went on, stammering a little, 'you and her wouldna care to favour me with your company at supper—7.15—the meal consisting mainly of meringues, chocolate biscuits, and strawberries and cream. Afterwards we could discuss the mice problem. Would you run along and ask her now?' I'm ashamed to say I hesitated. 'Maybe you're afraid of mice,' he said kindly. 'Oh, not at all,' I replied hastily; and thanked him heartily, saying I was sure Jessie would be delighted. And so she was. 'Mice is nothing to me,' she said; 'and the menu appeals to my finest feelings. Of course we'll favour Mr Blue. I'll be there punc.' 'You understand, Jessie,' I said, 'he wants to ken exactly how your folk got quit of the mice.' 'He'll be welcome to all I can tell him,' she returned. 'I was a kid at the time, but I've got a good memory.' 'Wouldn't it be as well to ask your mother about it?' 'Quite unnecessary.' 'Well, how did you get quit of them?' 'Wait and you'll hear,' said Jessie. Perhaps I ought to have suspected something, but I had to hurry back to the P.O., and there was no chance of seeing her again till she turned up at closing time. And just fancy!—the mean thing had put on her white frock and white silk stockings, and was simply hanging with powder. I'm sure Mr Blue, though he's past forty, was quite embarrassed. However, he took us upstairs, and there was a lovely spread in the parlour. I would have enjoyed it more if I had not kept thinking of a mouse under the table, and if Jessie had not been dressed up and even more forward than usual. When Mr Blue asked her if she was not afraid of mice, she smiled like a girl in a movie comedy and replied, 'Oh no, Mr Blue! Mice never attacks girls with nice ankles. They just sit round and admire.' I was never more surprised than when Mr Blue, without a smile, turned to me and said, 'Then you dinna need to worry, Betty.' I felt better after that, though I had a foreboding that something bad was going to happen. And so it did. When the feast was over and we had talked —especially Jessie—about lots of things, Mr Blue said, 'Well, Miss Jessie, I'll be grateful to hear how your folk got quit of the mice.' 'Oh, it was quite simple, Mr Blue,' said Jessie, with a silly giggle. 'So much the better,' he said. 'And how did you manage it?' 'We removed to another house,' said Jessie. If a million mice had appeared then, I dinna think I would have minded. And it seemed years till Mr Blue burst out laughing. 15. THE HEAT-WAVE. THE oldest inhabitants was declaring that there hadna been a decent summer since their boyhoods; the middle-aged was inquiring for one another's severe colds; and the young had long been in the habit of saying 'Rotten weather!' instead of 'Good morning!'—when the heat-wave arrived. A few hours later the oldest inhabitants was sitting in their gardens, quarrelling about their ages; the middle-aged was slapping their children; the young Dougies was looking semi-boiled; and us girls was wishing it was the half-holiday so that we could get on our light frocks. And next day everyone, except, maybe, the oldest inhabitants, was complaining about the awful heat. In the afternoon Mr Blue came downstairs from his dinner, stottered into the back room, and, before I could yell, sank down on the chair on which I had laid a fly-paper preparatory to hanging it up. 'Oh, never heed,' he said, when I explained my consternation; 'I canna be bothered rising at present. Fancy pea-soup and roley-poley in this weather!' 'Is that what Mrs Forgie gave you?' I said with profound sympathy. 'Ay. Woman's wit, I suppose! But I've sacked her.' Mrs Forgie is the person that comes in to cook for him, and he sacks her once a week. 'Are you feeling unwell, Mr Blue?' I respectfully inquired. 'I havena the energy of a pat of butter,' he replied. 'This heat must be unprecedented, Betty. I wish I had a thermometer.' 'Would a lemon squash not help you more? I could soon make you one,' I said, being thirsty myself. 'Thank you, Betty; but I'm curious to ken the temperature.' 'We've got a thermometer at home,' I told him; 'but it isna entirely reliable, being without the quicksilver. And the grocer has one, but it's attached to a big weatherglass—' 'Which has stood at "Very Dry" for the last ten years. It's wonderful how we cling to the things which is useless!' said Mr Blue. 'And how the things which is useful clings to us!' But he had forgotten the fly-paper, and was asking me what I meant, when Mr Boggie, the farmer, stopped his car at the door to see if the postmaster would like a run to the town. 'The very thing!' said Mr Blue, jumping up. I'll buy a thermometer. You'll manage all right, Betty?' 'I'll endeavour to keep back the crowd till you return, Mr Blue.' He was off before I remembered the flypaper. Mr Blue never mentioned it again; but I understand that, in the town, he was taken for an advertising agent, and didna realise it till some kids asked him for samples. . . . . . Mr Blue hung the thermometer on a nail in the shop, and, during the next few days, inspected it every five minutes or so. I think he was disappointed that it didna seem to feel the heat as much as he did. 'I had thought this heat would break the record, Betty,' he said on the fourth day, 'but I suppose we've got to accept the verdict of Science.' 'Hear, hear!' I said. 'And cheer up, Mr Blue! It'll maybe burst the record yet.' 'I hope so,' he said; considering that I paid two-and-nine for the instrument.' Of course Tullypawkie took an interest in the thermometer, and Mr Blue sat up late reading a book so as to be able to answer questions. And our young Dougies made wee bets on how high the quicksilver would go each day. . . . . . It was Saturday afternoon, and the young Dougies was purchasing their week-end cigarettes. Quite a crowd was in the shop, and I was busy serving- them when Roddy Martin called out, 'Quick, Mr Blue! Come and see your thermometer. Either it's gone mad, or else—' 'Let me get at it!' cried Mr Blue, pushing his way among the boys. 'Holy Moses! this beats all records. Ninety-seven in the shade!' 'Hurray!' cried everybody. 'Lads,' said Mr Blue, wiping his brow, 'this must be reported. Can I count on you all as witnesses?! 'Righto!' cried everybody. With trembling fingers Mr Blue wrote the following letter to the Daily Observer: SIR,—On Saturday, at 3.5 P.M. in Tullypawkie P.O., the thermometer registered 97° in the shade. J. BLUE, Postmaster. He then set out to walk the five miles to the town. On his return the quicksilver had fell a lot, but he explained that he had caught the heat-wave at its highest height. The letter appeared on the Monday. On the Tuesday there was several letters saying the thing was preposterious. One of them advised Mr Blue, when reading his thermometer, to keep his nose off the mercury. Mr Blue coldly replied, giving a list of witnesses. On the Thursday afternoon, which was cold and wet, two gentlemen arrived in a car and asked for Mr Blue. One of them was a Beaver and the other an Egg. They was horrified to learn that Mr Blue was away for the day. 'Is it the thermometer?' I inquired, for they looked that sort. 'There it is!' They fairly jumped at it. After a lot of whispering they asked for a bowl of hot water and a jug of cold. Then they brought out thermometers of their own and put them in the water along with Mr Blue's, and waited, almost dancing with excitement. At last the Beaver cried, 'Extraordinary!' and the Egg exclaimed, 'Quite accurate!' They left, looking very solemn, watched by the whole of Tullypawkie. When Mr Blue came home and heard my news he was highly gratified. Tullypawkie,' he said, is now famous for ever in the annuals o' Science—and I done it!' 'Splendid!' I said, with a wee lump in my throat. For how could I tell the man that that monkey, Roddy Martin, had held the hot end of his cigarette close to the quicksilver? 16. FED UP. THERE is times when the best of us gets fed up; when the most optimistical feels that hope is defunk, and life, apart from meals, not worth living. I am not referring particularly to the heat-wave, about which I wrote in the previous chapter of this biography, but I mention it because the troubles started just as it was drawing to a close. On the morning of its second last day I was extra busy, for Mr Blue had kindly said I could take the day off to meet some friends in the town. I was greatly hampered by the attentions of a bum-bee, which kept playing about the counter where I was writing. I couldna kill a bumbee in cold blood, and in desperation I took Mr Blue's old straw hat, which was lying handy, and put it over the beast. For a while it buzzed, then was quiet, and I forgot all about it. The next thing I knew was Mr Blue saying, 'I'll run down to the station and see if there's any word o' that parcel of cigarettes. That'11 save a few minutes of your time.' 'Best thanks, Mr Blue,' I said, writing away. Then he put on his hat . . . I canna mind what I said, and I canna repeat what he said. For a while he was not far from being non corpus mentis. I did what I could to give first aid, but he soon had a knob on his head the size of a tangerine, and I could see that he wouldna be fit for anything that day. In fact, he had to go upstairs and lie down, leaving me to my remorse and disappointment. I pity the next bumbee that annoys me! However, he was all right the following morning, and merely expressed the hope that I wasna seriously thinking of leaving the P.O. for the honey business. It happened to be the half holiday, and some of our young Dougies had got up a picnic for some of us girls, at a favourite spot beside a river and an old ruined castle. We started off at 3 P.M., and my spirits began to revive, for I had on all my new pretties, and suspected I was not looking exactly repulsive. It was really a jolly party, though semi-boiled, that reached the romantic spot. And then the two boys who was carrying the hamper slipped off the stepping-stones into the river, and one of them fell on the hamper, sinking it to the bottom. What pen could describe the state of the sandwiches, cream-cookies, jam-sponges, meringues, etc.? The heat was so awful that we laid them out to dry, but in a minute they were covered with flies and earwigs, etc., etc. The two wretched swains was sent back for fresh provisions, but they had no sooner returned than a thunderstorm started. It would have made an angel burst into tears to behold us poor girls in our white frocks and things, all like drowned white mice. And oh, the mud going home ! Jessie Harvie was the only one who enjoyed it. She pretended to be frightened at the lightning, and got engaged to Tommy Knox—her third engagement since she put up her hair. She came in the evening to tell me about it, and it was the last straw—at least, I thought it was. 'Jessie,' I said sternly, have you forgotten that we are going on our holidays, together, on Saturday week?' 'Of course I have not, Betty.' 'Have you forgotten that you promised me not to get engaged to anyone before we started.' I had had a horror of Jessie being love-sick when we should be enjoying life by the sea. 'Don't you worry,' she said. 'It was a side-slip this afternoon. There's nothing to prevent me getting engaged at the seaside if I fancy the chap.' 'You should think shame of yourself,' I said. 'Did you let Tommy kiss you to-day?' 'Only once, or thereabouts.' 'I believe you'll live to regret it,' I said, little thinking my words was prophetical. On the Friday week Mr Blue came in, saying, 'Tullypawkie's fairly getting it in the neck! Measles in the autumn, whooping-cough in the winter, 'flu in the spring, and now mumps.' 'Mumps!' I ejaculated. 'That 's the way to pronounce it!' he said. 'I met the doctor just now, and he's got several cases, including that young scamp, Tommy Knox.' At these sinister words my heart fell into my shoes. 'Mr Blue,' I said, could you spare me for five minutes?' 'Make it four, Betty!' Mr Blue always brightens up when an epidemic's about. I rushed over to the bakery where Jessie has her job. She wasna there! 'She went home, unwell, yesterday,' said the baker. I flew to the cottage where she lives with her folk. Before I reached the door the window above was opened, and there was Jessie with a pink fascinator round her head. Her face is naturally round, but now . . . oh dear! 'Oh, Jessie,' I cried, have you got it?' 'Them, you mean!' she said bitterly in a hoarse voice. 'Oh, Betty, I canna gang with you to-morrow.' 'I canna gang by myself—I wouldna gang,' I said, for I was sorry for her. The sight would have grieved a goat. 'Oh, Betty,' she wailed, 'it's a judgment on me. Never again will I get engaged!' 'Come, come, Jessie,' I said, 'there's no need to be dramatic.' 'I've sent him a p.p.c.,' she said, 'breaking it off, and saying I wished I could return his chased salutes with measles on them.' 'You're a cruel thing!' I exclaimed. 'Do you expect a man to present you with chased salutes which has been fumigated?' 'Go away!' she cried. 'It hurts me to speak!' 'It hurts me to listen!' She banged down the window and I walked away. 'What 's the matter, Betty?' asked Mr Blue, when I got back to the P.O. 'Fed up.' 'What's the diet?' 'Holiday's off. Jessie's got the mumps.' 'That's hard cheese!' he said. 'But the mumps isna permanent. Ye'll get them later.' Of course he meant the holidays; but . . . And the aggravating thing is that the mumps may be obtained without any previous engagement. 17. THE TONIC. FOR some time Mr Blue had seemed more disinclined than usual for his work, and his face had assumed a peely-wally aspect. 'I confess I'm feeling low, Betty,' he said in reply to my respectful inquiry. 'But I dare say I'll feel better when the summer is by.' 'That's a long time to wait,' I said. 'Would you not get the doctor to give you a tonic?' 'Na, na! It's not as bad as that,' he said hurriedly. 'Delays is dangerous,' I remarked. One of the saddest things in life is the tonic that is got too late. If I was a celebrated artist I would paint a picture showing the druggist's boy arriving with the tonic just as the funeral procession is starting.' 'You've got a great imagination!' he said, with a laugh which didna ring true, and I observed him glancing in the mirror which advertises the 'Captain Cigarettes.' And next day he confessed that, meeting the doctor on the road, he had ordered a tonic at 2s. 8d. net. 'I grudge the cash, Betty,' he said, 'for I've no faith in medicines. In fact, I asked the doctor if it wouldna be as beneficial for me to finish up a partly consumed bottle that I got in the year '97, and has been standing in the scullery ever since.' 'And what did the doctor say?' 'He refused to guarantee the results of drinking such an ancient vintage—or words to that effect.' 'It has probably turned into something else by this time,' I said, 'and might make you come out in pea-green spots, or worse. Never monkey with drugs, Mr Blue.' 'Your advice seems sound,' he replied; and just then our interesting converse was interrupted by a rotten customer. A few days later I inquired how he was getting on with the tonic. 'So-so,' was his answer. 'The difficulty is to remember to take it after every meal.' 'That'll never do, Mr Blue!' said I. 'It's no good unless you take it regularly. Where do you keep the bottle?' 'In front of the clock on the mantel-piece. It's a curious fact that, whereas I used to look at the clock often, nowadays I seldom want to ken the time.' I shook my head. 'Mr Blue, are you sure you're not just shirking the tonic?' 'Certainly not, Betty! It's pure forgetfulness. I frequently remember it between 3 and 4 A.M.; but that's not much use, is it?' 'Not much—unless you could arrange to have your breakfast at three.' 'But the breakfast would probably make me forget. However,' he said, lighting his twenty-third cigarette for the day, 'I intend to make a strong effort to be regular in future.' I couldna feel very optimistic, but I let the matter rest for another week. Then I asked him if he had finished the tonic. 'Not quite, Betty ; not quite.' 'I forgot to inquire if it had a nice taste,' I said. 'Nice! It's atrocious!' 'Well, how much is left in the bottle, Mr Blue?' He did his best to put me off, but at last I got him to confess that the bottle was still 'fully three-quarters full.' 'Are you not ashamed of yourself?' I demanded. 'To a certain extent I am, he replied; 'though I suppose ninety per cent. of the tonics in this country are at the same level in their bottles as mine. Did ever you hear of a human being completely finishing a tonic?' 'I'm going to hear of one very shortly,' I returned. 'Kindly fetch the bottle down to the shop the next time you descend. I'll take charge of it and see that you get your doses regularly.' It took a lot of nagging before he would bring down the bottle, but at last it was in my possession, and I hid it in the back room. I gave him a stiff one for a start, and he made such faces that I couldna doubt the stuff was good for him. 'Persevere, Mr Blue,' I said, 'and you'll be a gladiator yet!' He said the cure was worse than the disease, and implored me to let him off the next dose, but I was adamantine. It was Saturday evening, and I heard him thanking Providence for the Sabbath. 'You'll get double doses on Monday,' I promised him. With such regularity the tonic soon got low in the bottle, but, to nay great disappointment, Mr Blue didna appear to be much more robust. 'I suppose you'll be having another bottle to complete the cure,' I said carelessly. 'Not for a pension!' he replied, and I could see he meant it. Well, it seemed worth the money—especially as he had just raised my wages—so in the evening I slipped along to the doctor's and got another bottle, the doctor observing that Mr Blue was a sensible man to give the tonic a proper chance. About a week later, Mr Blue asked if the bottle wasna near empty, and I told him that it was getting on that way. 'It's like the widow's cruse,' he said, and groaned. 'I'll have something to say to the doctor the next time I meet him,' he added bitterly. That put the wind up for me, so I went to the doctor and confessed what I had done. To my surprise he was pleased, and promised secrecy; and to my horror he gave me another bottle, free, and told me to carry on the good work. He said I could increase the dose, which was some help. 'This tonic's getting terrible strong,' said Mr Blue next morning after his breakfast. 'It's getting down to the dregs,' I said to encourage him. 'Praise Heaven for that!' said he; and went out to buy a pound of peppermints. On the eighth day he cried, 'Is it never going to be finished?' 'Only two days more, Mr Blue. Surely you're feeling better now?' 'I'll be feeling better in two days.' And in two days he really did look better. I was feeling quite gratified, when, all at once. he asked for the empty bottle. 'I couldna have dreamed,' he said, 'that that bottle could have contained so many doses. Get me the spoon and a jug of water.' I felt like swooning. 'Mr Blue,' I said, 'for the love of Mike, dinna measure it!' He looked at me, wagged his head, and chucked the bottle into the coal-box. 'Betty,' he said in a kind voice, 'you're the limit!' 18. SLANG. ABOUT a fortnight ago, in the schoolhouse, a lady friend of the minister's— strictly platonic, of course, him being already a benedictine, and her very plain—gave a lecture to us young folk on 'Our Beautiful English Language.' There was a good attendance, the weather being rotten. The lecture consisted of original remarks of the lady's own, and selections from the works of great writers, some of which was pretty slow, though she recited them with the greatest gusto, and we applauded with the same, always thinking each piece would be the last, till the dust got so thick that the minister, after drinking all the lady's water, asked us to give the beetles a chance, or words to that effect—which is the longest sentence I have ever wrote in this biography. The lecture concluded with a wee sermon about Slang. The lady said she was shocked and grieved to hear the conversation of young people — especially girls — nowadays. They did not seem to be able to speak a sentence in good English. She asked us if we did not think it was silly, when we had so many right words to choose from, to keep on using such words as 'awful,' 'rotten,' and even 'putrid,' nearly every time we opened our mouths. And was it not idiotic to say we was 'fed up,' when we had not had a meal? Afterwards, on the road home, Jessie Harvie suddenly said, 'The old thing wasna so dotty after all. It is rotten how we use slang. What do you say, Betty, to start a reform stunt in Tullypawkie?' I must say I was astonished at this coming from Jessie, till I remembered she was pursuing a young man which was spending the summer in Tullypawkie, after getting his M.A. degree at the university. 'It'll be awful difficult to keep it up,' I said; 'but I'm on, if you are.' 'Righto!' said Jessie. 'Well, how are we going to kick off? Of course, you and me must watch our steps when we're gassing to each other, and we must take a vow to use only the selectest language to our bosses and the blighters that come into our shops.' 'I expect some of them'll think we're off our chumps,' I said. 'Still, it'll be fun— 'No, no!' cried Jessie. 'We've got to keep solemn mugs. If we let our faces slip, it 's all up a gum-tree. Now let's have a little practice.' We was both speechless for ages. 'Get a move on!' said Jessie at last. 'I was waiting for you,' I replied. 'What'll I say?' 'Say something about the weather.' I cleared my throat and said, 'The weather has been rot—extremely disagreeable of late.' 'It has indeed been most unpleasing recently,' she returned in a hollow, eggy voice that didna belong to her. 'The mud on this road is very plentiful.' 'Too copious for words.' And then we got stuck. 'My mind's a blank,' I said. 'Same here,' said Jessie. 'But I dare say it'll be easier with the customers.' She thought for a minute. 'Betty, what would you say to a chap that was pestering you to walk out with him?' 'It depends on the chap.' 'But suppose you wasn't having any? I've been in the habit of telling them to run away and eat grass; but, now that we've reformed, it seems hardly the cheese.' After considerable consideration I replied, 'You could tell him to disperse himself rapidly to yonder field and imitate the cows.' 'That's splendid,' she said; 'but I doubt he might drop dead on the spot. Besides, it's a lot for me to remember.' 'Well, you could simply say "Go!"—along with a spurning gesture.' 'How do you do a spurning gesture?' 'Stand firm on your left foot and on the toe of your right—' 'What? Stand on your own toe!' 'Dinna be a chump!' I said, and showed her. 'That gives you a feeling of dignity.' 'So it does,' she declared, trying. 'Makes you feel as if you was surrounded by butlers and feetmen waiting for orders.' 'That's right, Jessie,' I said. 'Then just as you say "Go!" you wave your arm—so!—as if you was throwing away a handful of rubbish, such as potato peelings. And then— to put the lid on—you stamp your foot.' 'Which foot?' 'The right, of course! You couldna stand on your toe and stamp with the other.' 'Neither I could,' she admitted. 'But that's a top-hole stunt, Betty, and I'll certainly try it.' . . . . . Next morning, having sat up reading a dictionary, I was a bit late in arriving at the P.O. However, Mr Blue nodded in his usual way, and I remarked, 'Looks like being a delightfully warm day, Mr Blue. The unaccustomed sunshine is quite enjoyable.' 'I gather that you was at the lecture last night,' he said, with a satirical smile. 'But, as you suggest, the day does look like being a corker for heat. How would you translate the word "corker" into "beautiful English" — eh, Betty?' 'You might say "Exceptionally fine," Mr Blue.' 'H'm! That strikes me as feeble without being beautiful. What about "peach"?' ' "Peach" is slang.' 'Is it? I once heard a young man refer to yourself as "a peach." ' 'Who was it?' I cried without thinking. 'Ha, ha!' said Mr Blue, 'that would be telling! But ye dinna object to slang when it's a compliment!' I tossed my head, which, I have been informed, is rather becoming to me, and said stiffly, 'I would object greatly to be called a peach by anybody.' 'Maybe you would prefer to be called an apricock—eh?' I was rather relieved when Mr Boggie, the farmer, came in to see the postmaster. As they went into the back room Mr Boggie turned and said he hoped I had enjoyed the lecture, though some folk had expected it would be funnier. 'It was a delightful lecture, Mr Boggie,' I replied, 'and extremely stimulating to the mind.' 'Gosh!' said Mr Boggie, looking at me. Then I heard him ask Mr Blue if Betty had been getting singing lessons, because she had got a sort of queer warble in her voice. I suppose I was a bit nervous, but I was determined to carry on, and when old Mrs M'Phun came in for a luggage label I inquired whether she wanted the attachable or the adhesive variety. 'I'll adhesive ye!' she exclaimed. 'Give me a stick-on! That's the worst of the school-board.' And she left in a temper. However, I persevered till dinner-time — some customers seemed annoyed, and others went into fits—and at dinner-time I met Jessie. I could see at once that all was not well. Jessie had put on white stockings that morning—in honour of the sunshine, I suppose —and they was all splashed with mud. 'Listen!' she said. 'To begin with, that dashed old beaver, the boss, told me to take the egg from my mouth before I spoke to folk; and to end with, Willie Brown whistled me out of the shop, to ask me to walk out with him on Sunday. I thought this was a fine chance for the spurning gesture, but I was too excited to notice things, and stamped my foot in a puddle— 'Did he go?' I eagerly inquired. 'He did—after asking me when I had got the bats in my belfry. That's all! So long! I'm fed up with "beautiful English"!' I admit that I, too, was completely satisfied. 19. WANGLING IT. HAVING got rid of the mumps and the young man she had accepted during a thunderstorm, Jessie Harvie declared herself ready for our holiday. 'We'll be off on Saturday,' she said. 'Righto!' I replied, but with some dubiosity. 'This is Thursday, and you got back to work the day before yesterday, after four weeks off.' 'Well, what about it?' 'I'm wondering if you've spoke to your boss.' 'Going to do it now,' she said, as we stopped outside the bakery. 'Come in and watch me.' 'You're twenty minutes late this morning,' I observed. 'I'll leave early to make up for it.' Jessie is the limit for cheek, and she had certainly found it pay in the past; but now I had my forebodings. Mr Macbeth was behind the counter, pulling at his long gray beard and looking pretty cross. 'You're late again,' he said with a snap. Jessie gave him a richly pathetic look. I'm afraid I'm still a convalescent,' she said. 'I felt that languid this morning.' 'Well, you can get busy now, and let me gang for my breakfast.' 'Oh, certainly, Mr Macbeth. You can depend on me to work till I drop. But I'm hoping to feel much more energetic after my holiday, now so rapidly approaching.' 'Your what?' 'My holiday which commences on Saturday.' 'Great Jonah!' he cried. 'You've been off duty for weeks, and now you—' 'Come, come, Mr Macbeth, you surely dinna suppose I took the mumps for fun!' 'I wouldna wonder if you did. And this is the busiest month of the year. Holidays! What next?' Jessie burst into pre-war tears. I must say she is very good at it, but I'm afraid Mr Macbeth had seen the stunt before. Anyway, he wasna visibly affected. 'If you gang on Saturday, you take the sack with you,' he said, and went to his breakfast. 'The atrocious old beaver!' said Jessie in a rage. 'I would have flung his sack in his teeth—but I canna afford it. What's to be done?' She picked up a hot macaroon and began to eat it. 'Nothing! It's just what I expected,' I said bitterly. 'Well, I must get along to the P.O.' 'Hold on, Betty! Suppose you was to appeal to his better feelings—if he's got any. Drop in when I'm away at my dinner, and see what you can do.' Well, I didna promise then, but as the day rolled on I decided to try. To have our holiday postponed a second time would be too fiascoish. So, at a quarter to two, I stepped into the baker's shop feeling far from hopeful. Mr Macbeth was behind the counter, meditating on a wasp stuck in a jam tart. 'Mr Macbeth,' I said, 'I dinna want to seem interfering, but I've come about this holiday of Jessie's and mine.' 'You needna have troubled,' he replied. 'I've no quarrel with you, Betty, but it's high time Jessie had a lesson.' 'Don't you think she's had it now? She was crying when I left this morning.' 'Alligator's tears! I'm not so easy cajoled. She sticks to her job, or she gets the sack.' I heaved a heavy sigh. 'I'm afraid we'll have to pay for the rooms this time,' I said, whether we use them or not.' 'I sympathise with you, but she had no business to make plans without consulting me. Her impudence is the limit. In my young days even girls had to put duty before pleasure— I produced a sad, sweet smile. 'Oh, Mr Macbeth,' I said softly, you needna speak of your young days as if they had been in the year One!' He tried not to look pleased, saying, 'I'm auld enough to seem auld-fashioned in my notions. I pay Jessie a good wage, and the pastry she devours is worse than any bonus could be— 'She'll pay for the pastry yet, Mr Macbeth. Already she's losing her figure. She'll pay to Nemesis!' 'I'm not acquaint with that disease,' he said, 'but I trust it's painful. If she canna put my interests before her own, she can gang.' 'Still,' I said, after a breather, you wouldna deny that she's an attraction to the shop.' 'An attraction?' 'She can sell the fancy stuff—especially to cycle parties, not to mention our local young men—' He thumped the counter. 'Are you suggesting that my success in the pastry line depends on that young hussy's flirtations?' 'Mr Macbeth,' I said solemnly, 'your pastry is universally celebrated for its own merits. Still, there's bakers in the town that would jump at Jessie for their counters.' He stared. 'You see, it's this way, Mr Macbeth. There's a physicological reason,' I went on. 'The average young man, when he sees Jessie in her white bib and apron, wishes he could eat her, which, being impossible, he eats the next nicest thing.' 'You're talking nonsense!' 'It's human nature, Mr Macbeth. Only a few short years ago,' I said, with a sort of admiring look, 'you would have wanted to eat her yourself—impudence and all.' 'That's enough!' he said. I felt that it was, one way or another, so I sighed resignedly, looked at him reproachfully, and retired. Glancing back, I observed him stretching out his moustaches rather complacently. I was on tender-hooks all day till Jessie burst into the P.O., yelling, 'It's all right. How did you wangle it, Betty?' 'I appealed to his imagination.' I couldna think of another word for it. 20. GOING ON HOLIDAY. YOU'RE quite right, Betty,' said Mr Blue, lighting his twenty-fourth cigarette, business being over for the day; 'a holiday should mean a complete change of scenery and occupation, including faces and feeding. That's why I take my holiday in November and spend it in Glasgow.' 'It sounds awful,' I remarked. 'It is awful!' he replied. 'But it makes me contented with Tullypawkie for the other fifty weeks of the year.' 'What on earth do you do in Glasgow in November?' I inquired. 'The first week I wander about in the mud and rain—or it might be the fog; the second, I sit in my lodgings and watch the fire smoking, whilst I endeavour to get quit of a cold in the head, plus dyspeepsia, prior to returning to my duty here.' 'You really are the limit, Mr Blue,' I said respectfully. 'I canna think what my biography would be without you.' 'I hope I'm not such a curio as all that,' he said, 'though I'll allow that the bulk of folk of my age waits till they get home before admitting themselves the worse of their holidays.' 'I wonder at you taking a holiday at all,' I observed. 'Ah, but you see, if I didna take it they would wonder at headquarters. Ay, I can see them reporting the phenomenon to the P.M.G., and I can hear the P.M.G. saying, "Bless us! Here's a postmaster that works for the pleasure of the thing! We'll add to his enjoyment by reducing his salary!" Na, na, Betty! In the P.O. service ye must never do anything original. They canna comprehend it. . . . However,' he went on, 'this is very unappropriate conversation, considering that you're for off in the morning, and must he wanting to get home now to attend to your packing, complexion, etcetera. So I wish you a fine holiday—and here's your salary.' 'Thank you, Mr Blue,' I returned. 'I hope you'll not be overwrought in my absence.' 'You'll probably find me performing a nervous breakdown on your return—but we needna anticipate.' I fancied he was a bit nervous already, and it was unusual for him to see me off the premises. At the door he said, 'So long, Betty. See and get your meals regular. And I'm instructed by the P.M.G. to hand you this for sundry holiday expenses.' He shoved an envelope into my hand, pushed me out, shut the door, and bolted it. In the envelope was two pound notes. It is necessary to put some dots here. ..... The morning train started at 7-30; but it would have been less of a rush if Jessie hadna insisted on tearing back home for her lipstick, and then running into the bakery to say good-bye to her boss. Old Moses happened to be away from the counter, so, to let him ken she had called, she helped herself to six cream-cookies, and wrote on an empty bag: 'Best thanks and fondest regards from Jessie.' Several young Dougies was at the station to see us off, and we did not spurn their offerings of chocs., marzipan bonbons, and bananas. It was the first time my parents had let me go away on my own, so I was rather excited, but not so crazy as Jessie, though she is two years older. In our honour the station-master had kindly put three fog-signals on the rail, and when the train started and they went off, Jessie pretended she was shot, and with a screech fell down on the seat—also on the bag of cream-cookies. 'Alas, my poor breakfast!' she remarked on examining the result, and threw the bag out of the window. It burst on a cow standing by the fence. 'Mrs Moo getting some of her own back,' she said, and went into fits. 'Jessie,' I said, when I had stopped laughing myself, 'dinna tell me you was going to breakfast on cream-cookies!' 'I had no time for breakfast this morning,' she replied; and now I suppose I'll have to fill up on bananas and marzipan.' And she got busy on both. 'For any sake,' I cried, remember we've got an hour on the steamboat after the train. Have you never heard of Nemesis?' 'I think I once heard of the blighter at school—a king of Egypt, I believe.' There was an old gentleman in the opposite corner, and after a wee while he leaned forward and said, 'You were thinking of Rameses, missie.' 'Not at all,' said Jessie, bolting about an ounce of marzipan. 'His name's Jamie, if you want to ken. Try one of his bonbons.' The old gentleman wagged his head and said to me, 'I think you and I would prefer Rameses to Nemesis, missie.' Wanting to be polite I replied, 'Oh, certainly.' 'None for me, thank you,' said Jessie, engulping another lump. 'I prefer somebody alive.' The old gentleman went into fits; so did we all. In fact the rest of that part of the journey was what the poet might call a fitful fever. At the end of it the old gentleman wished us a safe voyage, and also wished he might meet such merry girls every time he travelled. 'Thanks for the comp.,' Jessie replied. 'And if all the aged ones was like you it would be a better world.' In the train from Glasgow to the coast she became more subdued, and when the sea hove in sight she said, 'Oh, I hope it's not going to be lumpy.' To my horror I could see 'white horses,' but I replied as calmly as I could, 'The voyage takes but an hour, Jessie.' 'A lot can happen on the sea in an hour,' she replied. 'I think I'll leave the rest of the bonbons for the dickybirds.' There was but two small ones left out of the pound. Well, we got on board the steamboat, which was already heaving slightly. 'Would you like to go down?' I said. 'Do I look like climbing the funnel?' she retorted, and groaned. So I took her down to the saloon, and we got seats in a corner. She brought out her puff and lipstick, but seemed to forget about them. 'Would you not like to lie right down?' I inquired, both angry and sorry. 'No; I'll remain bent as long as I can,' she said. 'It's more dignified.' The steamboat left the pier and began to roll. 'Dinna desert me, Betty,' she sighed. 'Never!' I replied. I wouldna have moved then for five pounds. She closed her eyes, and I heard her whisper, 'This must be Rameses!' 21. ON HOLIDAY. OUR first evening at Rothesay was wet. Our landlady called it showery weather, but it came out that the shower had been going on for about three months. 'Never mind,' said Jessie, who was very optimistic after her sea-sickness, 'it's bound to clear up soon.' Our landlady was a sort of relation of Jessie's mother, and Jessie's mother had wrote to her asking her to keep an eye on us girls. Fortunately the good soul, as Jessie remarked, had a top-hole squint. 'Now,' said Jessie, when we was going to bed, we'll rise at six and have a plunge in the sea and a smart walk before breakfast.' And then she started to tell me about her previous conquests at Rothesay—this was her third visit—and we didna sleep till near three. The last words I heard was: 'I hope none of the poor wretches are here this summer. It would be highly painful for me.' I dreamt of handsome young men hanging themselves on lamp-posts and jumping off the pier with anchors round their necks, and woke to hear a clock striking. 'Jessie,' I cried, 'it's nine o'clock, and the sun's shining.' 'Nonsense!' she mumbled; 'that's the moon, and you're hearing double.' However, just then our landlady banged on the door—for the fourth or fifth time, as she declared. 'I suppose it's the sea air,' said Jessie, and I dare say it's better to take the plunge gradually. Do you smell the ozone, Betty?' 'I smell kippers, anyway,' I replied, and I want to get at them.' With these words I sprang slowly from my cosy lair. 'Oh dear! I feel that languid this morning!' said Jessie, yawning and stretching herself. I feel like a picture I once seen in a Christmas number—"The Awakening of Phisky"!' 'It's pronounced "Pysicky,"' I told her, with the accent on the "sick."' 'Oh well, I dinna feel like her after all. But I wonder what Cupid has in store for me to-day.' 'Never mind Cupid,' I said. 'Get a move on, you big, fat, lazy thing!' 'I'm thankful I'm fat,' she said, shutting her eyes and smiling dreamily. 'You surely dinna expect me to believe that, Jessie,' I said, looking out at the blue water and trying not to sneeze with the fresh air. 'It's the truth, Betty,' she returned. 'It's fashionable to be skinny, but it's fashionable only because the great majority canna be fat. All those fashion plates and mannikins is made skinny-like merely to flatter and delude the miserable creatures that are the same. We all ken in our heart of hearts that the men prefer us fat. You should be thankful that you're inclined that way yourself.' 'That's enough boudoir conversation,' I said. 'If you dinna jump, I'll throw this sponge at you.' 'Betty,' she said, 'did you ever imagine, just before getting up on a cold frosty morning, that your maid had brought you your chocolate, your billet-douxes, your invitations to balls, dinners, garden-parties, your boxes of flowers, etcetera—and you had nothing to do but wait till your hot bath was seasoned with costly perfumery? 'Never!' Maybe it wasna exactly true, but I couldna encourage her luxurious nonsense. I advanced with the sponge. . . . . . Owing to the way she lingered over her toilet it was eleven o'clock before we was ready for the promenade. Almost the first person we saw on the esplanade was Tommy Knox, from Tullypawkie, the boy she had got engaged to in a thunderstorm and then jilted, because she thought she had got the mumps from him. He was leaning against the rail, gazing at the water. When I pointed him out Jessie gave a start, and said, 'This is too terrible! I hope he hasna come here to persecute me.' 'Not at all,' I assured her. 'He left Tullypawkie three days before us. It's merely a coincidence.' 'I wish I could believe that,' she said with a groan. 'He looks awful sad. I earnestly trust he's not contemplating suicide.' 'I think he's contemplating yon red-faced girl, with the mustard jumper, in the blue boat,' I said, thinking to check her conceit. She shook her head. 'Such a living skeleton would never attract him,' she said. 'I suppose we'd better walk the other way,' I remarked. 'He's bound to see us sooner or later,' said Jessie, without stopping. Just then two young Dougies, smoking cigarettes as if they was paid for doing it, went past. They stared, then smiled and touched their hats. In a hoarse whisper Jessie said to me, 'I was semi-engaged to the tall one last summer.' 'Semi would be plenty, I should think,' I said. 'Who was the other girl?' 'It was another boy,' she said without a blush. 'But doesna poor Tommy look as if he had lost everything? How terrible it would be if he was to commit felo se do, or whatever they call it, while we was at Rothesay! I suppose I would have to identify the remains. And how awful it would be if he had that last fatal p.p.c. of mine next his heart.' 'Was that the one you wrote when you had the mumps?' 'It was. Whiles I wish I had softened the blow, but I was ratty at the time.' 'What exactly did you say?' 'After telling him that no true gentleman, with the mumps on him, would dream of embracing a lady, even if she had sort of swooned against him in a thunderstorm, I told him that all was over between us, and wished him the measles and many of them. Was I too harsh, Betty?' 'Well, it would surely settle him,' I said. As my mother says, it's really more satisfactory to break a dish than just to crack it.' 'Hush!' she cried. 'Let us gang past him in perfect silence.' And she commenced to walk on her heels and talk loudly about the beauties of Rothesay. But he didna seem to hear. He was busy waving and making signs to the red-faced girl, and she was coyly bringing her boat nearer to him. 'His mind seems to have completely went with grief,' said Jessie, after a look back. 'He's actually going for a sail with that Face! I hope Heaven'll forgive me for blasting his young life.' 'It seems too much to expect,' I said, feeling rather fed up; 'but if I was you, Jessie, I wouldna start to dwell on your sins at the very beginning of your holiday. Come on and have a slider.' 'Righto,' she replied. I'll try to conceal my remorse for your sake, Betty. But I'm afraid a slider will do little to help.' 'We'll have a couple, then.' I was really afraid she had still a leaning to the Tullypawkie boy. However, after the third slider, she cheered up and got busy with her puff and lipstick. 'I expect he was only temporally mad, Betty,' she was saying, when in he walked with the red-faced girl. They was that taken up with each other that they never noticed us. They sat down with their backs to us. And then we heard him call her 'Duckie.' 'I think it would be a good idea, Jessie,' I said. 'What?' 'To go and have that plunge.' 22. NICE BOYS. THERE is times when I dinna ken whether to be amused or annoyed at Jessie. Personally, I have no objections to boys—if they are the nice sort, which seems, so far, to be scarce in Rothesay—but I never yet observed a specimen that I would dream of chasing; whereas Jessie would pursue a dead sheep in plus-fours. In the silent watches of the other night, when not a sound was heard but the numerous cats, I remonstrated with her. 'Jessie,' I said, 'have you no discriminations? Are you not afraid you'll grow into a vamp?' 'Dinna be so prehistoric,' she replied. 'When you're as old as me'—she is twenty and I am near eighteen—'you'll realise the awful competition us girls has to face. And when you see your youth slipping away, like an overlooked slider in a heat-wave—' She hove a heavy sigh. 'It's the first time I've heard you poetical,' I remarked, and I sincerely hope it'll be the last. As for the competition, I'm sure it's not near so awful as some of the prizes we see floating around.' 'A man's a man for a' that,' said Jessie. 'That's not what Burns meant when he wrote it.' 'Times have changed since his day. Some of your ideas, Betty, would have been up to date in the Ark; others would have been considered old-fashioned.' 'It's not my ideas we're talking about,' I retorted; it's your behaviour. We've been here for a week now, and you've done nothing but chase young men.' 'What a thing to say! How could I have chased them when I've always been in front of them?' 'Some of us looks best from behind, and kens it,' I coldly replied. 'It's man-chasing all the same.' 'Upon my word!' she exclaimed in well-stimulated indignation. 'To hear you, a body would think we had come to Rothesay to admire the scenery.' 'Well, it's worth admiring.' 'Tell me that when you're forty! What hypocrisy!' She sat up and started to devour chocs. 'Scenery!' she went on; I tell you honestly, Betty, Mount Vesuvius doing its best wouldna interest me if there was a young man at the foot of it! I get plenty of scenery in Tullypawkie eleven and a half months of the year—same old scenery and the same old faces! Have a choc. and try to talk sense.' I declined the choc., being completely fed up in that respect, and said, I would prefer Vesuvius to a lot of the faces here, which so frequently resembles hot-cross buns and haddocks— 'We canna have everything,' she interrupted; 'and we shouldna judge by appearance— especially in the case of men. You may live to learn that a face like a plate of soup conceals a true heart and a noble mind. What are you laughing at?' 'Go on, Jessie,' I said; 'you're splendid!' She began to laugh herself. 'I'm not extra fond of soup, I admit,' she said, 'but when a body's hungry—' 'That's what I'm complaining about!' I told her. 'You'll take just anything, Jessie! You should try to control your appetite. For instance, those two chaps that spoke to us at the "Pierrots" to-night—' 'Oh, I must have met them last year.' 'You must have met a thousand last year; but we'll let that pass,' I said. 'Well, those two was the limit, and I tell you straight, Jessie, I'd rather stay in the house than be seen with them again.' 'Do you mean that, Betty?' 'Certainly I do! Yon two was soup all through.' 'Very well,' she sighed, 'they'll get the frozen face to-morrow. As a matter of fact. I didna notice till they tried to be funny that they had only half a set between them.' 'That was the least of their defects,' I said. 'I dinna object to ugliness, if there's niceness along with it.' 'But how can you tell whether there 's niceness?' 'Oh, go to sleep!' I cried, and drew the clothes over my ear, for I had said my say, and could only hope that it would bear some rare, refreshing fruit, as one of our poets has sung. The cats' cantata was now very adagio and fortissimo — I can play a little on the piano— but now and then, between the demi-semi-quavers and the molto arpeggios, I heard Jessie give a groan. I hoped it was remorse, but it might have been the chocs. . . . . . It poured all next day—even the scenery was invisible—but cleared up in the evening. We had not gone far along the esplanade when Jessie kept her promise and gave the two poor wretches—I couldna help being sorry for them then—the F.F., which left them paralysed. A duchess couldna have done it better. It would have pierced a pomegranate. A little later, while we was listening to the band, which was playing a dreamy foxtrot, Jessie gave me a nudge that near sent me into the lap of an aged beaver. Following the squint of her eyes, I observed two young Dougies, with beautiful Fair Isle jerseys and beautiful hair-ile heads, and their faces was far from ill-favoured. 'Would you say there was niceness yonder?' said Jessie in a hoarse whisper. 'I can feel it from here,' I replied. 'It's a pity you didna meet them last year.' 'It 's never too late to mend, except when it's a "ladder,"' said Jessie. 'Come on!' Not wishing to create a scene, I went with her. Looking the picture of modesty, she walked past the two young Dougies, giving them, at the last moment, one of her celebrated round-the-corner glances—I must say Jessie has lovely lashes—but I couldna be sure then if they caught it. However, we walked on up the esplanade, and after a while she squeezed my arm and said they was following us. Well, we walked on and on, and the folk about us got fewer and fewer, and it began to get dark. 'I doubt they're bashful,' said Jessie, and gave a fetching look over her shoulder. 'I like them all the better for it, but the night's no longer young, and we promised, worse luck, to be in at ten.' With these words she took her purse from her bag and emptied it of everything except two pennies and a card with her name and address. 'Jessie,' I cried, what's that for?' 'Wait and see,' she replied, and dropped the purse. A hanky's the usual thing, but I feel that I might need mine in this chilly weather.' I was stupefied with horror, and for the next three minutes expected to hear hurrying footsteps behind. But never a footstep! And then Jessie took a look back. 'Gosh!' she exclaimed. 'They've disappeared!' So had the purse—for Jessie knew exactly where she had dropped it. It began to rain. 'Where's your "niceness" now?' she cried bitterly. We got home soaked, our white shoes ruined, and passed a miserable, speechless night. Even the cats was dumb. In the morning a policeman called with the purse, which had been handed into the office the previous night. The cash was intact. Jessie threw the pennies out of the window, and then went down to look for them. Still, I believe they were nice boys. 23. STILL ON HOLIDAY. I COULDNA help feeling sorry for Jessie after the purse fiasco, and I am sure all my feminine readers will sympathise with her. O, ladies, just imagine yourselves dropping your purse for a young man to pick up and return to you, thus producing a semi-introduction, and the young man taking it to the police-office, and an aged policeman delivering it to you next morning, just before breakfast! What a sardonic irony! What a cruel jest of Fate! As recorded in the previous chapter of this biography, Jessie threw the contents of the purse—two pennies—out of the window, and then went down to look for them. After a long search in the long grass she returned with one penny and two wet feet. I advised her to change her shoes and stockings, but she bitterly exclaimed, 'Never!' and sank upon a chair at the table. I asked a few questions, but, receiving no answer, decided not to intrude on her grief. After a melancholy hut hearty repast she said suddenly, 'Betty, I'm done with men!' I was that astonished, I could only gaze at her. 'I'm finished with them for ever!' 'But,' I said at last, 'we've still a week of holidays. How are you going to pass the time ?' 'I'll look at the scenery and send p.p.c.'s to my old aunts.' 'I dare say the scenery can stand it, but your aunts'll probably die of surprise,' I said. 'It was certainly very provoking about the purse, but while there's life there's fish, and as good ones in the sea as ever came out.' 'If you're trying to be funny—' she began huffily. 'Not at all. I'm trying to cheer you up. Come out and have a slider.' 'I'm done with sliders.' 'Well, a plunge. The sea looks a bit cosier to-day.' 'I'm finished with the sea. I dinna intend to leave this house till it's time to catch the boat for home.' 'Would you not bide in your bed when you're at it?' I asked, sarcastic-like. 'In all my career I have never heard such nonsense.' 'If you're going to be cruel,' she said, 'I'll burst in tears. How can I show my face in public after being scurned and sporned—I mean, scorned and scurned?' 'I ken what you mean,' I said kindly. 'But all that's a delusion, Jessie. How were those two nice boys to guess that you dropped the purse intentional-like?' 'I might have hoped that,' she sighed, 'if I hadna given them the glad eye.' 'But it was getting dark at the time. They might have missed the G.E.' She shook her head. 'Two pennies only in the purse must have looked awful bad. I wish I had risked a ten-shilling note. Two pennies beside the card with my name and address—no, no, Betty; nothing could make the loss look genuine. And now those two boys'll be laughing their heads off. I'm completely affronted.' 'You're a silly goose,' I told her. 'Come away out and forget about it. See how the sun's shining—the finest morning yet!' 'Ay, even Nature's laughing at me,' she wailed. 'Away out yourself, Betty. Enjoy yourself whilst you're young.' 'I must post my letter to mother, or she'll think I've croaked; but I'll be back in five minutes,' I said, fancying she might be better left to her own company for a while. I had never before seen Jessie like this. 'Dinna hurry back for me. I'll just sit here and read the Free Church Monthly for last November,' she said. 'But you might get me a dozen p.p.c.'s—the cheapest possible —and half a pound of chocs.—soft centres— the rich sort.' 'Righto!' I replied. 'Do you want comics or views for your aunts?' 'Oh, views—in wet weather, if possible. Comics would be quite inappropriate under the circumstances.' I went into the town, wondering what I could do to stir her up. I sort of half hoped I might meet the two young Dougies with the Fair Isle jerseys. I felt I could tell from their faces if they thought Jessie guilty. At the same time, I felt I would blush furiously if they looked at me; and suddenly observing two figures resembling them, I rushed into the door of a shop, thinking it was an ice-cream saloon, and ordered a raspberry slider, only to find it was a barber's—and, after all, the two figures turned out to be false alarms. I was that shook up that I posted mother's letter without a stamp. I also forgot about the p.p.c.'s, but that turned out to be providential. When I returned to the house the landlady was at the door with her dog, and she told me that Jessie was in the back garden. So I went round, expecting to find her devouring the Free Church Monthly in the shade of the ash-pit. I could hardly believe my ears when I heard her talking and laughing. And when I got round the corner I could hardly believe my eyes. There she was, all smiles, hobnobbing with the two young Dougies with the Fair Isle jerseys. I never seen such a mercurious creature. In my stupefication I dropped the chocs., and the landlady's dog was off with them like a shot. 'Never mind, Betty,' cried Jessie. 'Dinna grudge the poor beast its well-earned breakfast.' Then she introduced the two young Dougies as if she had kent them all her life. I confess I blushed, but so did they, especially the younger one. Then she explained that the young Dougies, fearing the police might have been tempted, had called to inquire if the purse had been safely received, and, casting down her eyelashes, she declared that she valued the purse itself more than anything on earth, having got it from a dear defunk friend. (She really got it in a raffle, the monkey!) After a little more conversation the two young Dougies—they was just shy enough to be nice—explained that they had a wee motor-boat, and wanted us to go for a trip. Jessie, looking as coy as a canary being admired by a cat, asked me what I thought. It would have served her right if I had said, 'Certainly not!' . . . . . These dots represents a week. I canna deny it has been a happy one—splendid weather, etc. Alas, it is all over. The boys left to-night, and we are going back to Tullypawkie in the morning. We have all promised to meet again next summer, if then alive, which does not seem likely. I have sort of promised to write to Willie. Jessie considers herself semi-engaged to Robert. It is now 1 A.M. and she is in a very low state. She has not touched her packing yet. She is lying on the bed with her cheek against a box of chocs. she got from Robert. The box is empty. Such is life! 24. A LOVE-LETTER. THOUGH I was sorry the holiday was over, I canna say that my grief was unbearable, and the journey home might have been quite enjoyable, but for Jessie's dismal company. She spent most of the time in wishing she was dead, and counting the remains of her cash— 7½d. The future, she declared, was like the skin of a banana, which she held up; she didna ken how she was going to face it for eleven and a half months. I told her she would soon get used to facing it, if she hung it up in her bedroom above her looking-glass; but that only annoyed her, and she said I was too young to understand the tragedy of a woman's soul. However, as I have already observed, Jessie is a most mercurious creature. When the train arrived at Tullypawkie, there was several of the local young Dougies waiting to welcome us and carry our luggage; and, having hastily powdered her nose, Jessie burst into loud smiles and commenced making eyes. She said it had been the most glorious holiday ever, and hinted that she had left numerous damaged hearts in Rothesay. Oh no! she wasna sorry to be home. Dear old Tullypawkie! Old friends was best after all! And so forth. I really think Jessie would shine in high society. My parents appeared glad to see me, this having been my first holiday away from them. I assured them that they didna look a day older, and gave them an account of my doings, dwelling mostly on the scenery and weather. Parents is apt to forget they was once young themselves. My father declares that in his day a slider was a curiosity, and that boys, supposing they had the money, would never dream of taking girls into tea-rooms. What a life! After tea I strolled into the village, just to see if the P.O. was still there. Somehow I felt that great changes might have taken place in my absence, but everything was just the same. It seemed terrible quiet. Not even a poor blind man playing a penny whistle. So you've got back, Betty,' said the neighbours, and that was all. Slipping into the P.O., I discovered Mr Blue yawning copiously and opening his second twenty of cigarettes for the day. 'Gosh!' he cried, starting dramatically, 'is it really you, Betty?' 'Do I look like a ghost?' I asked him. 'Not at all,' said he, shaking my hand. I should say you've put on a couple of stones.' 'Oh, horrors!' I exclaimed. 'Never mind,' he returned kindly, 'Tullypawkie canna have too much of you.' I inquired if he had been missing me in the P.O. 'I've been missing you that badly,' he said, that I very near invested in a cat for company!' 'Am I intended to take that as a compliment?' I asked with pretended hauteur. 'Certainly,' he replied. 'I did think of a monkey, but—' He smiled, though not the least sardonically. 'I'm really glad to see you back, Betty. By-the-bye,' he said suddenly, 'there's a letter for you—came this morning.' 'A letter!' I ejaculated. He pointed to the pigeon-holes. It was addressed care of the P.O., otherwise it would have been delivered in the usual way.' With these words he turned and walked into the back room. Feeling the colour of magenta, for I realised that it could only be from Willie, the young Dougie which had paid me attentions at Rothesay, I took out and opened the letter with trembling fingers. There was six large pages, wrote in pencil on both sides, and some poetry. I could see at once that it was a love-letter, for it began: 'My darling Betty,— It is three years since we parted, and it seems like three hours.' That was enough to show that he had wrote in great emotion, and I forgave him for his awful writing and bad spelling, including 'O, for the touch of a varnished hand!' I was just beginning to get the hang of it all when Jessie rushed in. She had found a letter at home from Robert, Willie's friend, and wanted to tell me all about it, though, of course, it was strictly sacred. I went to the back room and told Mr Blue I would be on duty in the morning. 'Righto, Betty,' he replied. 'See and keep that nice colour.' I confess that I exited in some confusion. 'I promised Bobby Niven to take a walk, but, of course, that's off now,' said Jessie. 'Where can we get peace to read our letters? Mine's a mile long, and, judging from the first page, awful passionate.' 'Be quiet! I'm not going to read you my letter, Jessie.' 'Of course not. We'll just exchange titbits.' 'I couldna do that.' 'I suppose you're shy,' she said, 'it being your first. Anyway, let's find a private place. It wasna so easy. Everywhere we turned young Dougies was standing smoking cigarettes. Two of them started to pursue us. We dashed into a wood and rushed through it till we came to a burn. 'Skip across, and we'll dodge round the old castle,' said Jessie. There was a good deal of water in the burn, but the stepping-stones was mostly dry on the top. I went first, so it wasna my fault when Jessie slipped and grabbed at me, and we both went into two feet of water. When we got out our light frocks was like pulp, and so was the letters. We was both a bit out of temper, but there was no use in raging. 'I believe my folks'll all be out now. Come home with me,' said Jessie, 'and we'll get the letters dried—and ourselves too. I can lend you things.' We took a roundabout way to avoid being seen, and found the house empty. In no time Jessie had the kitchen fire roaring, our wet things hung in front of it, and the letters spread carefully in the fender. 'That thin paper'll soon dry,' she said. 'Come up to my window, and we can watch, in case any of my folks come home.' So we went up, and Jessie got awful sentimental, telling about her past romances. There seemed to be something fatal about her, she declared, for it had never really been her intention to blight the lives of the numerous young men. I canna say I believed it all; still, it was interesting—and the next we knew was a frightful smell of burning. Down we rushed, but, alas! too late. A coal had fell — the letters was gone — we hadna got the addresses either — and our things was singeing. What a tragedy! I expected Jessie to break down. I confess I felt that way myself. But Jessie looked at the clock, and said, I suppose I'll have to apologise to Bobby Niven for keeping him waiting. What are you for doing, Betty?' 'I think,' I said as gaily as I could, 'I'll gang home and darn my father's socks.' 25. A BIRTHDAY. IHAD scarcely settled down after my holiday, and had just completed Vol. I. of this biography, when I got the surprise of my life. For some days I had noticed that Mr Blue wasna like himself. He was less short with customers, less sarcastic with folk in general; he went about like a hen in felt slippers, and started violently for no oblivious reason; he would often have two cigarettes burning at once; twice he swallowed a stamp, fortunately a halfpenny one on both occasions; and he seemed to avoid meeting my eye. All sorts of horrible suspicions floated about my mind, the worst being that, in my absence, the unfortunate quadragenarian had succumbered to one of our Tullypawkie spinsters, and was now shuddering on the brink of a breach of promise suite. But how easy it is to misjudge folk! When Mr Blue approached me on the Monday afternoon, looking like a dying geranium, I felt I was about to hear a painful revelation. 'Betty,' he said, taking out his hanky and wiping away some perspiration and half a cigarette, 'I suppose you're aware that tomorrow is Tuesday?' 'This being Monday, Mr Blue,' I replied, 'I am.' 'And the half-holiday, Betty.' His voice was sort of hoarse. I inclined my head, wondering what was coming. 'And—and your birthday, Betty—your eighteenth birthday.' 'So it is—but how did you ken?' He waved his hand and smiled feebly. After a few moments he said, 'Betty, are ye engaged?' If I wasna a robust girl I would have swooned then. 'For to-morrow, I mean,' he said hurriedly. 'For your birthday celebrations.' At that I couldna help smiling. 'I'm afraid, Mr Blue, we dinna celebrate birthdays in our family. I dare say my sisters'll remember me, as they expect me to remember them, but— He appeared to pull himself together, saying, 'This birthday has got to be celebrated, and I'm relieved to hear you've got no engagement. As a matter of fact, I've ordered a charabanc for two o'clock to-morrow, and invited a number of young folk to join us. I propose that we gang to the town, visit the picture-house, and then have tea. After that—' 'Mr Blue !' I exclaimed. 'Dinna be angry,' he said. 'Read this, if you please!' and he handed me a letter, and stood there, wiping his face. I wiped part of mine, feeling quite overcome, and opened the letter, taking out a card, on which was very neatly wrote the following words: THE YOUNG MEN OF TULLYPAWKIE requests the Pleasure of Miss BETTY CAIRNIE'S Company at a DANCE in the School, at 8 P.M. on Tuesday, to Celebrate her Eighteenth Birthday. 'Mr Blue,' I cried, 'this is too much!' 'Not at all,' said he. 'Your eighteenth birthday happens but once. Your twenty-eighth may happen oftener, but we needna anticipate. In the meantime, let us hope it'll be a fine day—and—not a word, Betty!—here comes Peter with the mail.' . . . . . My father looked cross, and privately slipped me the price of a pair of stockings; my mother said she had never heard tell of such nonsense, and was up till 2 A.M. doing up my frock. Jessie, of course, had been invited, but I think she was a wee bit jealous. You would almost need to accept him now,' she said. 'I will—if he asks me,' I answered. 'A difference of thirty years or so is neither here nor there nowadays.' 'A mere trifle.' She gave it up and tried another way. 'It'll take you all your time to get ready your speech, Betty.' 'What speech?' 'Well, Mr Blue is pretty sure to propose your health at the dance, and, of course, you would need to reply.' She had me this time. 'Oh, horrors!' I exclaimed; and I suppose I looked so terrified that she was sorry she had been nasty. I'll help you,' she said. 'I once got highly commended for an essay on "Insects I Have Met." Come round to our house tonight, and we'll get busy.' I went round, and took a pound of mixed toffees with me, because Jessie canna think hard with her mouth empty. We wrote pages and pages before her mother interfered at midnight; but, when I read them over at home, they didna seem likely to be a great help. Jessie's mind was always going back to the insects. How true it is that a little knowledge is a dangerous thing! I tried to compose a few original remarks, but composed myself to sleep instead. . . . . . It would take several chapters to describe that gorgeous day. Everything was a treat, including the weather. Everybody was that nice to me that whiles I wondered if I hadna come into a million pounds without being aware of it. But, of course, I kept Mr Blue and his kindness was at the bottom of it all. The only fly with any ointment on it was the thought of the speech, but I didna let it get the better of me. The dance was splendid. At least five young Dougies informed me that I looked 'a peach,' and, seeing it was their funeral, I couldna very well tell them not to be silly goats. In fact, under the whole circumstances, I felt it would be ill-mannered to discourage anybody, which, I regret to say, has led to several awkward entanglements. But, as Jessie declared, it was no time for the frozen face. She certainly misbehaved herself properly. At 1 A.M. Mr Blue got up beside the piano and read a telegram which, he pretended, had come from the P.M.G. The P.M.G. sent his loving congratulations to Miss Betty Cairnie, and hoped he might live to see the P.O. worthy of her services. (Laughter and cheers.) Mr Blue then proposed my health, explaining first, that, owing to an unforeseen scarcity of lemonade, the gentlemen had kindly agreed to drink it in cream-cookies and meringues. Several young Dougies drank it so heartily that they had to retire, foaming at the mouth. But I guessed the fun was invented to keep me from being too highly embarrassed. Still, I felt pretty queer when I got up beside the piano, and the applause made me worse. I think I said something like this: 'Mr Blue, and kind friends, thanks awfully much. It has been the best ever. It will never be forgot—not even when I am eighty, and no longer young. Everything will remind me of it—postage-stamps, charabancs, movies, foxtrots, cream-cookies, Jessie Harvie, earwigs, bumbees, etcetera. I hope Mr Blue and his old chum, the P.M.G., and everybody here will live for many, many happy generations in the most enjoyable prosperity. Girls, three cheers for Mr Blue and the young men of Tullypawkie.' You should have heard the screech that rose to heaven! When it had subsidised, Mr Blue, now very nervous, replied for himself and the boys; and then we sang 'Auld Lang Syne.' I discovered that I had promised to let nine young Dougies escort me home. We walked slow, and they got one minute each. Each's conversation was rather scrappy, the other eight being busy listening. Maybe it was just as well. I loved them all that night. 26. THE DRAMATIC SOCIETY. THE Tullypawkie Young People's Mutual Improvement Association was in a bad way. At the annual business meeting, on 1st September, only seven souls was present, and their united ages amounted to three hundred and twelve. The secretary, Mr Moodie, the sheep-dip agent, reported that he had received but two literary contributions for the new session's syllabus, both of which was rotten; and Miss Munn, the treasurer, declared she was 3s. 4½d. out of pocket. The chairman, the Rev. Mr M'Rorie, said it was a deplorable state of affairs, considering that the T.Y.P.M.I.A. had been in existence for seventy years, and he earnestly trusted a new wave of enthusiasm would sweep through Tullypawkie. Miss Munn was heard to remark that she earnestly trusted the new wave would wash back her 3s. 4½d., and then the meeting adjourned into the wet night. When I discussed it with Mr Blue, in the P.O., he said, 'The only wave at all likely to sweep through Tullypawkie in this weather is an overflow from the river. I'm afraid the Mutual is doomed. Its very name is fatal in these modern times. Young people nowadays dinna believe they can be improved—mutually or otherwise. I would suggest sending round the hat for the 3s. 4½d., then wind up the concern and bury it.' 'Some of the aged members might object to that,' I said. 'Then their only hope is to change the name of the association.' 'To what, Mr Blue?' 'Well, what about "The Tullypawkie Dancing and Dramatic Society"?—But dinna tell anybody I mentioned it.' 'It sounds great,' I told him. 'Of course, we can manage to dance without a society, but it's certainly high time Tullypawkie had a dramatic society. Only I'm afraid the aged ones—' 'Let the aged ones keep on mutually improving themselves and getting into debt, and let the young folks start a dramatic society of their own,' he said. 'Would you join, Mr Blue?' 'Certainly not! I'm not a young folk. But I'll take tickets for the performances.' I tried to persuade him to be treasurer, but the honour didna seem to attract him. The same evening I spoke to some friends, and all was enthusiastic. Jessie Harvie wanted us to decide on the spot to perform a play she had seen in the town called Only a Chorus Girl. She was sure she could do the heroine splendidly. Another girl, who had also seen it, said such a play was far too up-to-date for Tullypawkie, and, besides, Jessie was far too fat for the part, which required a nymph-like creature that didna thump with her feet. Jessie, highly offended, said she would tender her resignation, but I advised her to wait till there was something to resign from. We formed a committee, and I was appointed secretary. No one seemed keen to be treasurer, and, as there was nothing so far to treasure, we left the matter in abeisance. The first thing to be done was, we agreed, to have a public meeting to raise public interest and funds. We was shy about asking for the big room in the school-house, and Bob Dixon offered the use of his father's storehouse, hoping us girls would not mind the mice, which was numerous and rather forward. Us girls looked dubious till Tommy Smith promised to have at least six cats present at the meeting, and then we passed him and Bob a vote of cordial thanks. I was really astounded at the crowd that turned up. The storehouse was packed, and it would have been suffocating but for the draughts, which near blew out the candles. Still, the perfumes of cheese, glue, and paraffin, etc., was well to the fore. Near every boy had brought a cat or two—there was twenty-two all told--and fights was frequent, while the fuffing was incessant. After all, Mr Blue had kindly consented to be our president, and had generously coughed up a donation of ten shillings for a start. Seven persons offered to accept the duties of treasurer. It was necessary to expel five of the cats before Mr Blue could get a hearing. He then explained the object of the meeting, and pointed out what a great benefit it would be to Tullypawkie to have a dramatic society of its own. Mr M'Caskie, the unsuccessful tailor, kept saying he couldna see any benefit, till he was expelled by three young Dougies. Unfortunately he was carrying a parcel containing a finnan haddie for his supper, and all the pussies flew out after him, and soon the girls began to whisper to Mr Blue, asking him to cut it as short as he could, please. 'I have now to announce,' said Mr Blue, 'that members may now be enrolled forthwith. The annual subscription for performing members is 2s. 6d. per annum; for nonperforming, or laying, members, 5s. per ditto. Subscriptions is now due.' There was a most gratifying rush to enrol. Of the total of thirty-three, however, all was performing members except one, and she changed her mind—unfortunately, before she had parted with her cash. We had now thirteen applicants for the treasurership, so Mr Blue took it himself. But the astonishing thing was the number of aged ones that joined. 'I'm sort o' worried about it,' said Mr Blue, next morning in the P.O. 'Do you think they'll want nothing but plays with antique parts?' I asked him. 'On the contrary,' he replied. 'The difficulty will be to get plays with sufficient juvenile parts. But that's not the worry. Most of these aged ones is, or was, leading lights in the old Mutual, and I dinna like the responsibility of finally bursting the ancient concern' 'It was as good as burst already, Mr Blue,' I assured him. 'Wait till you see the attendance next Friday. Miss Munn is reading an essay on Wordsworth's poems.' 'In that case,' he said, looking relieved, 'we can surely call it suicide. And now, Betty, have you any ideas about plays?' 'Some of the members thinks we should kick off with Shakespeare,' I said. 'Bobby Dixon says he would guarantee to give Tullypawkie fits with his Macbeth, and Jessie is awful keen on doing Fair Rosalind. Personally, I'm afraid Bobby would give the wrong sort of fits, and I doubt Jessie is just a wee bit too— 'She is!' said Mr Blue firmly. 'But Shakespeare is out of the question. If they canna make it pay in London, even with refreshment bars handy and beauteous females selling sweeties all the time, how could we hope for a profit in Tullypawkie?' 'That's true,' I said 'Well, other members is for East Lynne. Miss M'Bean suggested it because she inherited a pair of blue specs and a respirator from her deceased uncle, and she says she's got a wee nephew with a lovely hacking cough that would simply bring the house down.' 'No, no, Betty,' he replied ; we canna undertake a play merely because one member possesses some useful stage properties, as they call them; and, anyway, Miss M'Bean, apart from resembling nothing but an onion, is hen-toed, and hasna the vocal chords of a chicken. I was afraid we would have trouble with the aged ones. In the meantime I'll write for a selection of plays.' I am sorry to find that my account of the Dramatic Society's progress will require another chapter of this biography. But, before closing, I must record that at the Mutual Improvement meeting only two souls appeared to hear Miss Munn's paper, and both resigned before she could read it. Miss Munn is now the sole member, but she declares she will never resign without getting back her 3s. 4½d. 27. A COMMITTEE MEETING. MR BLUE had an acquaintance in Glasgow closely connected with the stage—bill-sticking, I think—which told Mr Blue where to get a loan of plays for the committee to read. So Mr Blue obtained about a dozen, and at the end of a fortnight a meeting was held to decide which of the plays the Tullypawkie Dramatic Society should perform at Christmas. Mr Blue was in the chair, and didna look extra comfy. Though he never reproached me, I whiles fancied he wished he hadna let me persuade him to be president of the society. Being secretary, I sat at the table beside him and, when necessary, told him what to do. It was usually necessary. 'Declare the meeting open,' I whispered. 'What? In this pandemonium!' 'Use your hammer, and call for order.' He had a wee mallet, and he hit the table such a crack that the head flew off. (Cheers.) 'Put those dogs outside!' he cried. Shut the door, and pay attention!' The five dogs being expelled, and the door shut, he said, 'Is all the committee present?' After each of us had carefully counted the others, someone replied, 'Miss Duff is unavoidably non-present with a super-gumboil.' 'Heaven be praised!' said Mr Blue under his breath. 'I propose a vote of cordial thanks —I mean sympathy—to Miss Duff.' (Hear, hear!) 'Put that in the minutes, Betty.' 'Righto!' I returned, drawing a swelled face with a long nose to remind me. 'The first business is to choose a play by vote.' He repeated my words and continued, 'I presume you have all read all the plays, and considered them carefully. I have read them myself, and, leaving out a couple which I couldna make head or tail of, I would classify them as follows: Plays we couldna do spectacular justice to, such as the one that winds up with an earthquake; plays containing divorces, illicit carry-ons, etcetera, which Tullypawkie prefers to read about privately in the Sunday papers—' A voice: 'Could we not leave out the bits about the divorce?' Another voice: 'Shurrup, you idiot! Would you offer the public a skin wanting the banana?' (Laughter.) 'Order!' said Mr Blue. 'Finally, there's what I would call two possible plays—highly respectable, yet not unromantic, requiring nothing special in scenery and female finery' (a groan from Jessie Harvie), 'and very little in the way of noble or gallant efforts from the men.' 'You needna insult us, Mr Blue,' cried Tommy Dixon, which had wanted to be 'Macbeth.' 'No offence intended,' Mr Blue replied. 'In any case, the plays is out of the question.' 'Why ?' screeched Miss M'Phun, one of the aged members, which used to warble feebly but perseveringly at all the Mutual Improvement meetings. 'Because,' said Mr Blue, 'the authors of the plays has to get from three to five guineas for every performance, and that would simply sink the Tullypawkie Dramatic Society before it had got its sea-legs, as it were.' A hairpin from Miss M'Phun's bun was distinctly heard to drop. The local agent for M'Cracken's far-famed sheep-dip rose to his feet. 'Mr Blue,' he said, 'this is a scandalous state of affairs. By what right does the authors demand such preposterious sums?' 'I suppose they think they deserve something for having wrote the plays,' Mr Blue returned. 'Anyway, we darena perform the plays without paying the cash.' 'It's rank profiteering!' said the sheep-dip agent. 'But I believe, if we was offering to perform one of the plays, we could beat the author down to, say, a pound. Authors is notoriously greedy for fame.' Tommy Dixon got up. 'Mr President,' he said, we're getting off the scent. The first business of this meeting was to choose a play by vote.' 'You're right, Tommy. I will now read over the list of plays eleven in number—and the meeting will vote by holding up its hands —one hand for each person, mind! Betty— I mean the Honorary Secretary—will record the votes.' The recording was very easily done. Including Mr Blue and myself there was eleven souls present, and each soul voted for a different play. 'This,' said Mr Blue, is what the French calls a fiasco, or cal de suc.—What do we do now, Betty?' he asked in a hoarse whisper. 'Dear knows,' I replied. 'Perhaps somebody would vote for a different play.' He put it to the meeting, but nobody would, and neither would he nor me. 'Then,' said Mr Blue, 'I hereby declare this meeting null and void.' (Cheers and groans.) 'You should have gone in for Macbeth,' cried Tommy Dixon. 'No author to pay.' 'Hold your tongue, Tommy! The meeting has been declared null and void.' 'But you canna do that,' yelled the sheep-dip agent. I demand a poll!' Mr Blue looked at me, and I whispered, 'Tell him he canna get it.' 'You canna get a poll—and I'm astonished at you asking for such a thing,' said Mr Blue. 'Has any of you ladies any observations to observe?' Jessie Harvie got up, giggling. 'I thought all the plays was rotten,' she said. I think we should perform a pantomime. I wouldna mind being the principal boy, if Betty was the principal girl.' I felt myself blushing for her, and her that stout; but some of the young Dougies shouted for a pantomime, till Miss M'Phun got up, waving her umbrella. She said she was perfectly affronted at the suggestion from Miss Harvie, and trusted the higher-minded members of the committee would instantly tabloo it. Sooner than appear in a pantomime she would resign from the society, forfeiting her 2S. 6d. Then that impudent thing Jessie cried, 'Come, come, Miss M'Phun! Never say die! You would bring down the house as an ugly sister.' At that there was a lovely row. Somebody said Jessie should withdraw the unseasonable remark; Tommy Dixon shouted that this would never have happened if we had chose Macbeth; the sheep-dip agent kept on demanding a poll; the five dogs was scraping and barking at the door; and Mr Blue thumped the table and yelled for order till he poured with perpiration. I regret to say that the rest of the meeting, including myself, was in fits. At last there was a sort of silence, and Mr Blue had started again to declare the meeting null and void, when Andrew Latto asked to be allowed to say a few words. Andrew is rather a quiet chap as a rule, and Mr Blue said, 'Certainly, Andrew; proceed.' Andrew said he thought that, anyway, a play of three or four acts was too much for a first attempt. It would be safer to start our career in the dramatic world with three short, simple plays. He knew where two could be got— they had been successful in many places—and they would cost us only ten shillings each. (Cheers.) As for the third, he thought it ought to be home-made by local talent, which would add great interest to the entertainment; and he begged to propose that Miss Betty Cairnie should write it. (Loud cheers, except from Miss M'Phun and me.) Imagine my feelings! I was that embarrassed I didna ken what I had said in reply till the meeting was over, and Jessie came imploring me to write her the part of a beauteous Spanish dancing-girl crossed in love, which, after performing the caoutchouc before her false lover and his wealthy fiancée, stabbed herself with a giletto, and expired in gorgeous agony. 28. AS PLAYWRIGHT. IDARE SAY it would be quite easy to write a one-act play if you could use any number of scenes, and if you was allowed, for instance, to hang out a board, saying, 'ten years has now rolled past,' 'this character is not so rotten as he seems,' etc., and if you wasna continually pestered by the folk that hoped they was going to get parts. As Mr Blue observed, my first attempt would have been splendid if I could have shown the murder in the lonely wood, the abduction on the steam yacht, the fearful fight on the seashore in the thunderstorm, and the escape of the heroine and hero from the gorilla in the aeroplane, instead of merely making the characters talk about them in a bed-sitting-room. And if I could have been allowed five hours for the performance, the play, Mr Blue declared, would have been a perfect corker. As it turned out, I had to go back to Jessie's idea of the Spanish dancer. As for the aspirants for dramatic notorosity, as he called them, Mr Blue said I should simply pay no attention to their pesterings. 'That's all very well, Mr Blue,' I replied, but as I have no immediate prospects of leaving Tullypawkie for a superior world, I canna afford to offend half the families in the place. Besides, it might injure the trade of the P.O.' 'True,' he admitted. 'The gross turnover in halfpenny stamps has appreciatively increased since you entered the service.' 'Are you including the two stamps you swallowed recently?' I respectfully inquired. 'Certainly,' he replied; 'you, Betty, being the primeval cause thereof.' There is times when I wonder whether Mr Blue is as serious as he looks. 'Still,' he went on, 'in my opinion, it's not the thing for the authoress of the play to accept sauce from the would-be performers. Just you be dignified, Betty, and tell the young folks they can take what they get, or leave it.' 'The aged ones is as bad as the young,' I told him. 'It's a pity they ever got on the committee. Miss M'Phun, for instance, is continually squabbling with Jessie Harvie about being the heroine. At first she was down on anything with dancing in it, but now she says she understands that a Spanish dancer depends more on grace than agility, and wants the part herself. Fancy a Spanish dancinggirl wearing specs! Besides, her ankles is unutterably hopeless.' 'I'll take your word for that, Betty,' he returned hurriedly. 'Have you settled on Jessie for the part?' 'She's my greatest friend, so what else can I do? But though Jessie's ankles is faultless, I canna help feeling that the rest of her is too much inclined to what the French calls—I canna mind the word— 'Contretemps, maybe,' suggested Mr Blue modestly. 'Something to that effect. The French is so much more delicate in expressing plain truths,' I said. 'Well, anyway, that's what I feel about Jessie.' 'And, of course, you wouldna like to hurt her feelings,' he said. 'Still, you must remember that your dramatic reputation is at stake, Betty. What's the private opinion in the committee?' 'Oh, if it was coming to a vote, Jessie would have a majority. The young men is in her favour. Besides, Mr Blue, we've near three months before us, and Jessie, being already semi-conscious of her weight on her feet, hopes to get quit of a stone or two by Christmas.' 'It's a misfortune that her day's work happens to be in a bakery,' he remarked. 'It is, indeed. Still, she has made a vow never to touch pastry before twelve, noon; so we must hope for the best.' 'Then,' said Mr Blue, 'seeing you have settled on Jessie, the sooner we get it confirmed by the committee, the better. Call a meeting for Friday night.' Well, the meeting confirmed it. Miss M'Phun, though sulky, got the part of the high-born wealthy Peruvian lady—I made her Peruvian to suit Miss M'Phun's sallow colour and save make-up—for whom the false lover deserts the faithful dancing-girl, thus leading to the tragedy. There was trouble when Andrew Latto, who was to produce the play, said he must have Miss M'Phun's word that she wouldna wear her specs—especially in the love scenes. 'Very well,' bitterly said Miss M'Phun, who without them can see nothing distinct at close quarters, 'dinna blame me if Mr Dixon (the false lover) gets his nose bit instead of a chaste salute.' 'I'll take care of that, Miss M'Phun,' cried Tommy Dixon; 'I'm not asking for hydrophobia.' Which, as it seemed to me, boded ill for the love scenes being purely and tenderly realistic. However there was a worse trouble to come. The aged ones, led by Miss Duff, unhappily recovered from her super-gumboil, objected to the dancer killing herself with a dagger, which —like a true Spanish girl—Jessie was to snatch from her garter. Miss Duff thought poison would be just as good, besides being more respectable, and the bottle could easy be snatched from a hand-bag. (A voice: I'll lend Jessie my suit-case.') Jessie, in a rage, said it was evident that Miss Duff kent more about bottles than Spanish dancers, and flatly refused to carry a bag and take poison, which could never be half as thrilling as the dagger. Mr Blue asked the meeting to vote, and as the votes was equally divided—six each way—it looked as if Jessie wouldna be able to kill herself at all. Suggestions of a pistol and a hatchet got no support, and at last Mr Blue whispered to me to try to arrange something, called for order, and said, 'The authoress will now address the meeting, and if the meeting has the courtesy of a bullock, it will agree to what she proposes.' I told the meeting I was quite willing to make it poison, and before Jessie and her supporters could screech at me, I pointed out that I would make it a slow poison, which would give Jessie a far better opportunity than the dagger for a display of her defunking agony. The notion seemed to appeal to Jessie, and she agreed, but on condition that the curtain wasna let down till she was quite finished. She said she would take the poison from a wee green bottle, once containing wart solvent, which she would suddenly pluck from her madly heaving bosom. This being all the business, the meeting broke up and passed out into the mud. 'So all you've got to do now, Betty,' said Mr Blue, is to get your play wrote down.' 'That's all,' I sighed. I was in the pink of depression. 29. THE PLAY. THE LAST DANCE. (A Tragedy in One Act.) SCENE.—A Market place in Sunny Spain. Men and women in fancy costumes is strolling about with baskets of oranges and onions. Whiles they exchange remarks on the rottenness of trade, and take drams from their bottles of sherry wine. Whiles, being of a mercurious temperature, they burst into song-, singing 'Fa, la, la,' and dance the fandagio. Suddenly the sound of music is heard, and JESSA, the dancer, enters, followed by her musician, BILLIO, playing a stirring march on the ocarino. Fruit Vendors. [Corking their bottles.] Ha, ha! Here comes our Jessa to cheer us by dancing the gay Polony! Jessa. [Tries to smile. She is feeling low because she doubts her lover, SENIOR ROMOLIO.] Strike up, Billio! See and mind the sharps and flats this time! Billio. [In poor health owing to his hopeless passion for JESSA.] Ah, Jessa, what's a sharp or flat when the heart is broke ? But here goes! [HE blows a soul-piercing blast, and JESSA commences to whirl about in the voluptuous mazes of the Polony, whilst the Fruit Vendors beat time with their sandals and refresh themselves with sherry wine.] Jessa. Faster, fathead! Put more beefo and less wheezo into it! Billio. I canna help the wheezo. I doubt I've catched the influenzo. Jessa. You must save up for a melodion. Get bizzio! [BILLIO, after some hacking coughs, gets busy, and so does JESSA. After ten minutes she sinks gracefully on the ground in a squatting position. BILLIO retires behind a pile of empty orange-boxes and wheezes.] Orange Vendor. Not up to her usual. Onion Vendor. Not what she was in 1901. [Several of the VENDORS selects gratuities of damaged oranges and defective onions, and throws them to JESSA. Then, after a final refreshment, they exit, singing solemnly, 'Fa, la, la!' BILLIO, blowing his nose with a patchwork hanky, comes forward and collects the fruits for JESSA.] Jessa. [Spurning them.] Away! I'm fed up with fruit. I'm fed up with everything. Billio. Oh, dinna say that, Jessa! Ham and eggs is, unfortunately, out of the question, but even a defective onion is better than nothing Jessa. Away, away ! Billio. But you must eat to live. Jessa. I dinna want to live. Only the defunk is happy in this world. [Bursts into tears.] Billio. [Visibly affected.] Can it be that you have had no breakfastio? Jessa. These lips has not tasted food since luncho yesterday. [Averting her gaze.] The Senior Romolio was to have fetched fish and chips last night, but—' Billio. The foul blighter! Jessa. Hush! I still try to hope he may have been detained by some accidento. Billie. Fatal for choice! But no such luck. Jessa. Billio! What meanest thee? Hast seen the Senior? Billio. [Averting his gaze.] I—I hast not. Jessa. The truth, the truth! Billio. [Averting his gaze still more.] At 9 P.M. I seen him under the window of the wealthy Seniorina Bella von Jelosio, with his gramophono on an obsolete pram. Jessa. Serenading her? Billio. Ay! 'Last Night on the Backo Porcho Jessa. [With a scream.] All is over! I am underdone! Nothing left but this! [Fetches out from her jumper a wee green bottle.] Billio. What's that ? Sherry wine? Jessa. Poison! Extra slow! Billio. Gosh! Give me it, and I'll see that he gets it. Jessa. Alas! I love him still. Billio. Well, you're the limit! Are you for taking it yourself? [SHE nods.] Would you not take me instead? Jessa. [Visibly affected.] Ah, my poor faithful friend, I prefer the poison. [SHE waits till the audience has got over its emotion, then shakes the bottle, uncorks it, and raises it to her lips.] Billio. Hold on! Somebody's coming! [Footprints is heard, and, corking the bottle, she puts it in her jumper.] My goodness! If it isna that putrid Senior! Jessa. [Hoarsely.] Retire, Billio! [SHE rises, whilst BILLIO, with tears gushing down his face, retires behind the orange-boxes, not forgetting the fruit.] Romolio. [Enters, smoking a cigario.] Ha! Jessa. [Haughtily.] Is that all you have to say to me? Where was you last night? Romolio. At—at the dentisto, my darling. I meant to send you a p.p.c., but [comes forward to embrace her] Jessa. Begone! Romolio. Tut, tut! Is my little dancing-girl cross with her boy-boy? I'm sorry the fish and chips was overlooked, but the gas I got at the dentisto's— Jessa. Dry up! I know all! Romolio. Ha! Jessa. [Listening] See you later. [Scoots behind orange-boxes.] [SENIORINA BELLA VON JELOSIO enters. She is dressed in the height of fashion, and covered with jewellery.] Romolio. Ha! Bella. [Falling on his neck.] Romolio, say you are mine alone. Romolio. Certainly! [Patting her on the jewellery.] And you, darling, are all mine. Bella. [Drawing back.] Swear that the gossip is false; that you are not completely betrothed to a common dancing-girl. Romolio. Certainly! A loud wheeze from behind the orange-boxes. Bella. Hark! What was that? Romolio. 'Twas but the wind, beloved. Come, let us canoodle. Bella. I am quite agreeable. [In the midst of their canoodling BILLIO appears, playing the ocarino, followed by JESSA performing the Polony. Poor JESSA thinks she can maybe fascinate ROMOLIO once more, and SHE carries on till BILLIO simply canna play for wheezing.] Bella. [Suddenly suspicious.] Is—is she the dancing-girl? Romolio. Dancing-girl! Ha, ha! She canna dance for nuts! Come on, Bella, let's get a move on. Here, missie! [HE throws JESSA 2d.] So-long! [JESSA stops dancing. BILLIO picks up the 2d. and looks like flinging them at ROMOLIO, but retires behind orange-boxes, where his wheezes get fainter and fainter.] Jessa. Stay, Senior! The performance isna quite finished. Behold! [Fetches out green bottle, shakes and uncorks it.] May my ghost haunt you! [Drinks. After a few refined gargles SHE sinks down and commences to soliloquise.] Ah, me! Oh, my! Etc., etc. [The guilty pair looks on in holy horror, which is increased when JESSA, in one of her numerous convulsions, brings down the pile of orange-boxes, and BILLIO is seen to have wheezed his last. N.B.—The CURTAIN must not be let down till JESSA gives the wink.] 30. SCANDAL. You might think that a place like Tullypawkie wouldna ken the meaning of the word Scandal. One day last summer, in the P.O., an English tourist rolled up his eyes and remarked, 'Tullypawkie! The very name suggests honest hearts and innocent minds!'— and having got nine 1½d. stamps for nine-pence, he went off in his car and was never seen again. Mr Blue wasna himself for weeks after. He had taken the man for a poet. But it's wonderful what can be done by a population of four hundred and one, and Tullypawkie manages to have a scandal every other week. As a rule, thanks to my literary interests, I pay small attention to the local gossip; but I could hardly remain unmoved when it became common talk that Mr Boggie, the farmer, and my spinster aunt Bethia had been observed canoodling in the Lady's Wood—so called because in the good old days a gentleman suspended his wife on a certain tree there. The tree is still flourishing, and a short cut to the railway station runs past it. Now, if you saw Mr Boggie you would say at once that he was no gay flirt, him being a semi-aged beaver of great corpulosity; and as for my Aunt Bethia—the sudden sight of a gent's sock has been known to perturbate her severely. (See Chapter 11 of this biography for account of my aunt winning a pair of plus-fours in a ballot.) When two weeks had rolled away without any news of an engagement, Tullypawkie was annoyed—the farmer's marriage would have meant a big feast—and so was my parents, which had been paying the rent of my aunt's cottage for years. And when my mother stopped talking about a new carpet for her parlour and a new dress for herself I was annoyed, too. In the P.O. I remarked with well-assumed nonchalance, 'I suppose, Mr Blue, you have heard the scandal about your friend, Mr Boggie?' 'Not being stone-deaf,' he replied, 'I have! But I can assure you, Betty, there's nothing in it.' 'Are you saying that because you're a man?' I respectfully inquired. 'I'm saying it because I'm not a woman. The simple facts is these: In the dusk Mr Boggie and your aunt was proceeding through the wood in opposite directions. Your aunt— unintentionally, I trust—tripped on a tree root, and but for Mr Boggie would have bit the mud. That's all. I repeat, Betty, there's nothing in it.' 'Not even a parlour carpet?' I said before I knew. Then, of course, I had to explain. Mr Blue lit a fresh cigarette, blew out the match, and scratched his head with it. 'I canna but admire your regard for your mother,' he said at last: but, merely because she wants a parlour carpet, would you desire lifelong misery for two decent objects like Mr Boggie and your aunt?' 'They're both getting up in years; they canna live that long,' I replied. 'And it needna be pure misery. Mr Boggie is frequently sober; my aunt is a splendid cook, and never answers back.' 'The attributes of the perfect woman!' he exclaimed. 'But I may tell you in confidence, Betty, that Mr Boggie is coy, and that he's not at all certain your aunt didna try to trip over the tree root.' 'She would never be so coquettish,' I assured him. 'Mr Blue, I wish you would rub it into Mr Boggie that he has compromised himself with the best cook in the world, and I'll do what I can with my aunt.' He laughed, but in the end I got him to promise to speak to Mr Boggie that very night, while I performed on Aunt Bethia. It happened that Mr Brown, the grocer, was having a sale of damaged dates, so I took Aunt Bethia a box, her being a devotee of the oriental delicacy. Requesting her to shut her eyes and open her mouth, I inserted three rare tough ones, thus rendering her as good as speechless. 'Aunt Bethia,' I said, 'I wonder if you are aware that Tullypawkie is coupling your name with that of Cupid.' 'Oopit?' she said, staring. 'Cupid, the wee god of love,' I explained. 'It is rumoured that you was lately observed enjoying his whispers—or was it his whiskers?' Next moment I had to thump her on the back. 'Dinna try to swallow them,' I said. 'Apart from its being a waste of the mercies, it might prove fatal; and it's more becoming to blush than get black in the face.' 'Mum-mum-mum!' she remarked. 'That's the word, though Tullypawkie doesna act up to it. I regret to say your little affair in the wood gets more topical every day.' Jum-jum!' she observed. 'True,' I returned soothingly, 'but it wouldna satisfy the romantic mind of the public. Personally, I'm ready to believe that the amorous woodland stunt was not entirely premeditated on your part.' 'Yum-yum! she cried, waving her arms. 'Well, if that's how you feel about it,' I said, 'there's hope for Cupid.' 'Bo-bo-bo!' she ejaculated, dancing on her chair. 'That's right! You'll soon be able to say his entire name,' I said pleasantly. 'I suspect he's been mashed on you for generations, and if you refuse him now, I fear he'll do something desperate. In fact, it's rumoured that he was seen practising to put his head in the machine for mincing turnips— 'Wa-a-a!' she yelled. 'So dinna spurn him, Aunt Bethia,' I went on. 'There's no reason why you and Mr Boggie shouldna live, for ten years or so, in comparative happiness. Neither of you has yet reached the state of seline decay.' At this point she appeared to swallow a couple of dates inclusive. 'Betty,' she mumbled, 'I wish you would hold your tongue. Him and me got engaged this afternoon.' 31. OPPOSITION. I SUPPOSE it wasna to be expected that our dramatic society would meet with the universal approval of Tullypawkie. As Mr Blue observed, one of the three great drawbacks to being alive is envy, the other two being indigestion and the rotten weather. Apart from the old-fashioned folk who would as soon have plunged into a cold bath as enter a theatre, the opposition soon began to raise what Mr Blue called its hydrant head. To begin with, there was Miss Munn, the treasurer and sole remaining member of the Mutual Improvement Association, which was owing her 3s. 4½d. She blamed the Dramatic for bursting the Mutual, though it had simply died of natural decay. There was Miss Troley of the big house, a wealthy lady resembling a horse no longer young, and she was offended because we hadna asked her to be our patroness. And, of course, there was a lot of our own members which was profoundly peeved at not getting parts in the plays. No use telling them our wee stage would accommodate them only if they was lying dead, three deep; they demanded their subscriptions back, and Mr Blue had to tell them firmly that there was nothing doing. A week later it came out that Miss Munn had got a hold of the peeved ones, and they had formed the Tullypawkie Co-operative Vocal and Instrumental Association, with which was incorporated the Tullypawkie Young People's Mutual Improvement Association. 'Smart work for Miss Munn,' Mr Blue remarked. 'She'll now be getting back her 3s. 4½d.' Before deciding on the amount of the membership subscription they called on Miss Troley and asked her to be sole patroness. Miss Troley said she would be delighted, and promised five pounds, which made a membership subscription entirely unnecessary; and the popularity of the association became something immense. Then they nailed Mr Logie, the schoolmaster, to be their conductor, etc., and altogether it looked as if our dramatic society would have no show at all. However, it leaked out that Miss Troley had made a condition for her five pounds, viz., that the association would perform nothing but classic songs and music, which, Mr Blue said, was like cutting off the roots of a tree before planting it, especially as the schoolmaster kent as much about classic music as a hen. Still, I must say this for Miss Troley; though she had bats in her belfry, she wasna mean. To show what she meant by classic music, she got some friends to give a concert in her big drawing-room, and invited the whole association, and any others interested. Mr Blue said I ought to attend for the sake of my biography, and Jessie Harvie tried to persuade me to gang for the fun of the thing; but it didna seem to be playing the game, especially as there was to be refreshments gratis. 'Well,' said Jessie, 'my conscience never troubles me till the day after, so I intend to be present. If you'll put it in your biography, Betty, I'll write a report of the jamboree.' So this is Jessie's report, with a few improvements made in the language by me. 'We was inducted by the butler to a gorgeous room containing rows of chairs and a pianoforte which three could have slept in, Miss Troley welcomed us, and made a speech against foxtrots, etc., saying that really musical folk considered them poor tripe, or words to that effect. She said that if we could stick classic music long enough we would get to like it fine. She then sat down at the piano and gave it three solemn bashes, and a lady, with round specs and the longest nose I ever seen off an elephant, commenced to screech in some foreign tongue. Miss Troley's other friends sat with their heads to one side, looking as if their lunches had disagreed with them. As for us ones in the audience, we wouldna have dared to catch each other's eyes. Of course we applauded voraciously when it was over, and I expect the marks made by Adam Robb, the gamekeeper, on the paroquet floor will remain there for ever. 'Next there was a fiddle stunt by a bald beaver, which wouldna have been so bad if he hadna kept such silly time. Him and Miss Troley would play away like mad, and then, just when a body was feeling like dancing, they would slow down as if their works had got out of order. Then two ladies and two gents got up and performed a vocal part song called 'Snow,' and if I hadna kept thinking of mud four inches thick I would have gone into hysterics. Still, it was nothing to the flute solo of a wee man with a nose like a cherry, and eyes like beads. I'm not saying he wasna handy at his job; the notes came out as if they had been oiled; hut he ought to have done it behind a curtain. The gamekeeper, which was just behind me, kept quaking like an aspen jelly and whispering, 'Oh dear, oh dear! He'll be the death of me! 'Personally, I bit a hole in my best hanky. 'Well, it went on for a couple of hours, and never a catchy tune in the whole jingbang. Then we went into another room, and the refreshments was that good and plentiful I couldna help wishing I could have thought more of the classic music. Afterwards the schoolmaster proposed a vote of thanks to Miss Troley, and we gave her three hearty cheers and passed out.' Such was Jessie's report. Next day I met Miss Munn, and pleasantly remarked, 'I suppose you'll be getting up a splendid classic concert for Christmas, Miss Munn.' She walked on without answering. And, a few days later, Mr Blue came into the P.O. with the news that the opposition had completely burst. 'The T.C.V.I.A. is no more,' he said. 'The schoolmaster has resigned. He declared he couldna hope to produce one classic screech from the material at his disposal, and the material, being insulted, resigned likewise. At least, that was their excuse. I fancy Miss Troley's concert fed them up with the classic idea.' 'And what about Miss Munn?' I inquired. 'I canna help being sorry for Miss Munn,' he replied. 'She really deserved to get her 3s. 4½d. I understand she's in a very low state mentally as well as financially.' 'Serves her right!' 'So it does. Still, we can afford to be generous. In fact, Betty, I propose that the Dramatic Society elects her an honorary member and gives her the treasurership.' 'Is this one of your sardonic jests, Mr Blue?' I exclaimed. 'Not at all. It strikes me as good business for the Dramatic Society. Think it over.' After a while I saw his point. He was right! Tullypawkie declared it was a highly noble deed. There was a new rush to join the Dramatic Society, with which was now incorporated the T.C.V.I.A. and the T.Y.I.M.I.A., and a shower of donations from well-wishers. Miss Munn is happy with her 3s. 4½d., and every seat for our performances at Christmas is already sold. I'm beginning to wonder if Mr Blue isna wasted on the P.O. 32. VANITY. WHEN I informed Mr Blue that my Aunt Bethia and Mr Boggie had decided to get married on the 22nd, he merely remarked, I suppose they're too old to know better.' 'You'll be getting an invitation, Mr Blue, so I hope you won't shed a gloom on the performance by making such cynical observations as that one.' 'It's only the young that is wise nowadays —the young men, I mean,' he said, lighting his twenty-seventh cigarette for the day. 'You canna be ignorant of the fact, Betty, that whereas in the last twelve months Tullypawkie has witnessed the nuptials of three couples whose united ages canna be less than 350, there hasna been what you might call a juvenile wedding for three years.' 'That's due to bad trade, Mr Blue,' I said. 'You might as well blame it on the rotten weather,' he replied. 'Na na! It's due to the wisdom of the young men. They ken what they canna afford. They dinna mind being chased, but they're not going to be catched.' 'Really, Mr Blue!' I exclaimed, with a toss of my head. I suppose bobbed hair does toss more gracefully than the put-up sort. 'Present company excepted,' he said. 'You're young enough to join the chase, as it were. But, chasing apart, the girls has only themselves to blame for the young men's wisdom.' 'What's wrong with the girls, Mr Blue?' 'Sh!' he whispered, for someone was coming into the post-office. It was Rosie M'Culloch, got up to kill at a thousand yards. Rosie fancies herself as the double of Bébé Daniels, the movie star; and if a banana resembles a butterfly, then Rosie is certainly the living image of Bébé. She usually looks as if she was thinking of her high heels, and she's a bit to the ripe side generally. Her and Jessie Harvie is always rivals in dress at the dances, but Jessie, though stout, is fresh enough to look nice in rags. I let Mr Blue attend to her, just to pay him back for his unseemly remarks. She wanted a stamp for a letter, which she took care to let me see was addressed to somebody 'esquire.' I dare say it contained the instalment due on the costume she was wearing. Whilst she slowly licked the stamp she made eyes at Mr Blue. He got pink, and so did the stamp. Then, after a few choice remarks on the atrocious weather, she pit-patted out. Mr Blue's cigarette had fell into the drawer and burned a hole in a ninepenny stamp. To distract him from his mourning I repeated my question, What's wrong with the girls?' 'Did you not get an answer to that a minute ago?' he demanded. 'That hussy with half-an-ounce of powder on her face—' 'Oh, not quite so much as that, Mr Blue!' 'And paint on her lips, and beads on her bare neck, and—' 'Her neck is Rosie's strong point—her hors d'œuvre, as the French calls it—' 'And patent shoes which must be pure agony, and pink silk stockings—' 'White, Mr Blue. Her ankles is given to blushing.' 'And well they might!' he cried. Yon sight was enough to make a young man a heap wiser than Solomon. In the name of Adam and Eve, Betty, what young man with the brains of a puddock would face it financially? The ordinary expenses of matrimony is terrifying enough, but with these extras—na, na! The annual cost of the powder alone—' 'Come, come, Mr Blue, dinna exaggerate,' I said. 'A little powder goes a long way, and there's nothing depresses a girl like a shiny nose. Personally, if mine was shiny, I wouldna spare the puff. And you may be sure that any nice young man would sooner see powder than his own reflection on his fiancée's nose.' 'Well, well, we'll let the powder pass. After all, it's only a drop in the bucket of the modern female's vanity. But it's the vanity in general that keeps down the number of weddings in Tullypawkie. In the decent old days, before girls dressed as if life was a pantomime—' We was again interrupted by a customer; us P.O. officials gets little peace; and when the customer had passed out with his halfpenny stamp, Mr Blue seemed to have forgot about the girls, for he commenced to talk about the Dramatic Society and the ill-temper shown at the rehearsals. But I wasna inclined to let the subject drop. 'Mr Blue,' I said, 'it may be true that there has been no youthful weddings for some time, but I could tell you of several which is brewing.' 'I didna say that all the young men of Tullypawkie was sane,' was his reply. 'And as for vanity,' I went on, as if he hadna spoke; 'would you like to see girls dress as if life was a funeral?' 'Personally, I'm not interested,' he said a bit shortly; 'and it's time you was balancing the cash.' Well, I hope I ken when to be dumb; but in the evening I discussed it with Jessie Harvie. She was highly amused. 'Forty-three is an awkward age for a man,' she said. 'He realises that he's got no more sense than he had at twenty, so he tries to talk like a prophet of the Auld Testament. You can take it from me, Betty, that your Mr Blue would be sick of life if us girls went back to the fashions of his young- days.' 'Are you saying he's not sincere?' I cried indignantly. 'He thinks he is, but we can easy prove he isna,' she replied. 'Keep your hair on, and I'll explain.' Next morning I found Mr Blue still depressed about the burned ninepenny stamp, which was too much damaged to sell to the public; and he could hardly report to headquarters that he had done it with a cigarette. 'A dead loss, Betty,' he groaned. 'Never say die, Mr Blue! Keep it till next summer, on the chance of an intoxicated tourist.' I then laid before him the letter Jessie and me had composed the previous night, and retired to the back room. The letter was as follows : MISSES BETTY CAIRNIE and JESSIE HARVIE requests the pleasure of MR BLUE'S company on Tuesday afternoon (half-holiday) to view the pictures in town and a cup of tea. After a minute had rolled away I heard him say, 'Betty, what fun is this?' From behind the door I answered, 'Mr Blue, you have several times been very entertaining to Jessie and me, and if you dinna accept, we'll be badly hurt.' Suffice it to say that I had never seen him look so pleased. . . . . . Tullypawkie now supported a charabanc for the half-holiday, and about fifteen minutes before it was due to start, Jessie and me arrived at the P.O. and knocked at the door. Though, for a wonder, it was a lovely day, we was both wearing long raincoats and prehistoric tammies. 'We're a bit early, Mr Blue,' said Jessie when he opened the door. 'Come in and sit down,' said Mr Blue, all smiles and blushes. 'It's really too kind of you both.' 'Not at all,' said Jessie, me being incapable of speech. 'I dinna think we'll require our raincoats after all, Betty.' She slipped hers off, and I did the same. Then there was a dead silence. Mr Blue's face fell; you could almost have heard it. Jessie and me had on ancient blouses—hers dark green, mine dark brown—up to our chins, long dark skirts down to our heels, giving just an uncoquettish glimpse of black wool stockings and old blue sand-shoes. You never saw such frights. Mr Blue went over to the window, and, looking out, said hoarsely, 'Looks like rain. I'm afraid you'll want your raincoats.' 'What a pity!' said Jessie. 'Betty, I think we should let down our skirts an inch or so to keep our feet dry.—Mr Blue, can we use your back room for a minute?' 'Certainly,' he replied, and it was like a voice from a tomb. In the back room we put our hankies in our mouths—and in three minutes our sad rags was in a bundle, and there we was in our pretty frocks, like ordinary human girls. You should have seen Mr Blue's face when we appeared. Our own faces wasna exactly ghastly. 'We was afraid our good things might get spoiled,' said Jessie, and then we all went into fits. 'I confess,' said Mr Blue, 'that I prefer your—your working clothes.' It was a jolly afternoon. 33. THE PERFECT PRESENT. I COULD guess that Mr Blue was bothered by more than the official form he was trying to fill up, and I wasna exactly surprised when he threw down his pen, saying, 'Betty, I'm in a quandary.' 'Cough it up,' was my respectful response. 'But I could almost prophecy it's something to do with the wedding.' 'Your prognostication is correct.' The more Mr Blue is worried, the bigger his words. 'What a conglomeration of tribulations would have been saved if your aunt and Mr Boggie had gone and got married surreptitiously.' 'So it would,' I agreed; but it would have done me out of a new frock, Mr Blue.' My sister Kate and me was to be Aunt Bethia's bridesmaids, and Mr Blue had promised, in what he called a fit of temporal insanity, to be Mr Boggie's best man. 'I dinna grudge you your new frock, Betty,' he replied; 'I suppose it's natural for ladies to delight in weddings, but I canna believe that any sober man enjoys the performance, especially if he happens to be a performer.' 'What's bothering you?' I asked him. 'Your wardrobe, or the speech you've got to make?' 'Neither. The funeral outfit I got in 1904 shows but a fraction of the ravages of the moths; and in a wee book I've discovered a speech that'll do fine, if I can only remember to leave out the words "young couple" and "long life." But the days is flying past, and I simply canna find a suitable wedding present. I tell you, I've been losing sleep over it.' 'Yes; you have indeed been wearing a bleary aspect of late,' I remarked with sincere sympathy. 'Still, it shouldna be so terribly difficult. The great matter is to think of something that will be useful to both—and, of course, not too costly.' 'I've thought of a hundred things that might be useful to him, and another hundred that might be useful to her ; but I'm blessed if I can think of one that would be entirely suitable for both, and, as you say, not too costly.' Being ignorant of the sum he was prepared to burst, I didna like to offer suggestions in case they would be beyond his financial reach. 'For instance,' he went on, 'I understand that a sofa would be an acceptable, as well as a suitable gift for them both; but I could as soon put up a steam yacht. I did think of a nice roomy easy-chair, but— 'The very thing, Mr Blue!' He shook his head. 'Na, na—not at their time of life.' 'But they could use it turn about.' 'They would probably quarrel as to whose turn it was, and I didna want my present to be a rotten apple of discord.' He sighed and continued: 'Then I thought of a gramophone ; but he would be sure to want peace when she wanted music, and vice versa. I also thought of an encyclopedia; but the objections is too obvious.' 'I canna say they hit me in the eye, Mr Blue,' I remarked. 'What are the objections?' 'Have you never heard what the wise man said about ignorance being bliss?' 'Now you're joking!' 'Far from it. I recollect the sad case of a middle-aged couple that got a fine encyclopedia, second-hand, but up to date to 1850, for their silver-wedding present. All would have been well if they had left it on the shelf; but before long each began to discover how stupid the other was, and it became a sort of disease with them to spend the long winter evenings in jeering at each other's lack of education, confounding each other with questions, losing their tempers, and, to put it metaphysically, biting off each other's noses. Within a twelve-month they was driving home their remarks with the parlour-fire shovel and poker; and now they're separated, with five volumes apiece. So much for an encyclopedia as a wedding present!' 'If everybody thought it out like you, Mr Blue,' I said, compressing a smile, 'there would be fewer wedding presents going.' 'And fewer unhappy marriages.' 'But so far as my Aunt Bethia is concerned,' I went on, 'I'm sure she would never use the volumes, except, maybe, for pressing Mr Boggie's Sunday— 'Ay,' he said quickly; 'and she would probably have the volumes so occupied in that way just when Mr Boggie urgently desired to look up something—such as the inventor of porridge, or the moral effect of a glass of whisky on a sitting hen. And then there would be another comparatively happy home gone to pot!' 'It does seem hopeless,' I said, wondering what he would say next. 'It is hopeless,' he replied. 'Whiles I feel that I'll gang completely off my chump, searching for the perfect present.' 'Have you never tried to get ideas from catalogues?' I asked after a pause. 'Catalogues! I've got a bunch upstairs, and I dinna doubt I'll be able to recite pages when they take me to the asylum. I've got, for example, a catalogue of musical instruments; and, music being the food of love, ye might think I would get help there. But, Betty— barring a pianoforte, which is, of course, out of the question—is there any musical instrument that two persons can perform on jointly and simultaneously? Can two persons perform on a fiddle, a flute, a piccaninny, or a hobo?' 'What about a big drum?' 'That, as Mr Algebra might say, is absurd,' he said shortly. 'Then there's a catalogue of games; but I canna imagine our friends playing anything more athletic than Tiddleywinks, and I happen to ken that Mr Boggie canna control his language when he misses. Oh, you may be quite sure that I've studied the catalogues. I hate being beat, but I see but one way out of the quandary, and it's a back-door way.' 'Dinna tell me,' I cried, that you're going to backslide from being best man!' 'I havena the moral courage for that,' he replied. 'My idea is merely to give two small presents—one masculine, one feminine.' 'But will that really be any easier for you?' 'Well, I would certainly be most grateful to you for any hints about the one for your aunt,' he said; 'but my mind is firmly made up respecting the one for Mr Boggie. It's something that'll be highly useful to him as a farmer, as well as—' 'Not a cow!' 'Oh, I couldna financially face a cow, Betty —certainly not one in full working order. My modest idea is to present Mr Boggie with a nice ten-gallon drum of the finest weed-killer. What think you of that?' He seemed astonished that there was no applause. 'Do you not think it's a very suitable present?' he asked, taking out a cigarette. 'Well,' I answered, 'it all depends on how you look at it. There's folk in Tullypawkie that might fancy you was putting temptation in Mr Boggie's way; and my Aunt Bethia is a nervous body.' He stared, then threw up his hands. That's the finish! I give it up!' he wailed, and stottered into the back room. I followed him, and though he waved me away, I said, 'Mr Blue, what's wrong with a wireless set, with ear-'phones for two?' You should have seen it dawn! 'Betty,' he cried, what would the P.O. do without you?' And, with a happy smile, he tossed the fresh cigarette into the fire and put the match in his mouth. 34. DISCUSSION ON ROMANCE. IT was the afternoon of the day following the night of my Aunt Bethia's wedding to Mr Boggie, the farmer, and business in the P.O. was far from brisk; in fact, there was very little doing. The sole official transaction between the hours of two and four consisted in informing a wee boy that we couldna oblige him with change for a penny. The weather was wet, but that didna account for the deceased appearance of Tullypawkie generally. That appearance was due to the gorgeous supper given by Mr Boggie in his barn the previous night to celebrate his nuptial day, which had happened on his sixtieth birthday. Better late than early, as Mr Blue remarked in his speech at the supper. The supper had been attended by all the grown-ups who could use their legs and a knife and fork, and those grown-ups, having got through the morning's work somehow, was now, more or less, in the arms of Morpheus. Mr Blue was an exception. He was busily engaged in sitting at the counter, apparently thinking hard, for his eyes was half-shut, and whiles he groaned. Two hours had passed without him opening his mouth, even for a cigarette; and at last, wishing to stir him up, I asked the first question that came into my head, 'Mr Blue, do you believe in romance?' 'No,' he said; 'and I shouldna have taken that steak pie last night.' 'Dinna brood on it,' I respectfully advised him. 'I'm not. It's brooding on me.' It wasna a very polite or courteous remark, but I let it pass. 'Mr Blue, why dinna you believe in romance?' 'Because there's no such thing.' 'Come, come; you needna speak as if you had been born in the year One! You must have had some acquaintance with romance when you was slightly younger than you are now.' 'Never!' 'Well, you can imagine romance!' 'Na!' I was getting quite interested in the subject, and I said, 'Suppose you heard screams outside the P.O., and, on going to the door, you saw a fair young flapper about to be devoured by a fiery dragon—wouldna that be romance?' 'It would be a delusion.' 'Well, perhaps a fiery dragon in Tullypawkie is a bit too much. But suppose it was a giant that challenged you to fight for the F.Y.F.—what would you call that?' 'A nightmare.' 'But, seriously, Mr Blue, would you not try to save her?' 'What would I do with a fair young flapper?' 'She might be dark,' I said, just to see what would happen—me being dark. Nothing happened. He didna even glance at me. 'I thought you was a brave man, though a postmaster,' I observed at last. 'Not me,' he replied, not the least offended. I began to feel slightly alarmed for him. 'Mr Blue,' I said suddenly, 'how many helpings of pie did you have last night?' 'Seven, maybe eight.' 'What! Is that a fact, or a poetical licence?' 'It's what I feel.' 'Then it's poetical.' 'It's possible that I've come to that,' he groaned. 'My head would fit the most dis-sipated poet that ever lived. On a total abstainer like me such a head is an irony. Judging from my head I ought to have been the merriest of the merry last night. Was I?' 'Far from it,' I replied. 'Would a good smart walk not help your head?' I inquired. I dare say I could manage to hold back the rush for an hour.' He shook his head as if it was fragile, and groaned again. With a smile that made me think of a cooking plum, he said, 'Fancy talking to me of romance!' 'I still believe you're romantic internally, Mr Blue,' I said, hoping to divert his mind from his unfortunate nut; and I wouldna wonder if you could be brave at a pinch. Listen! Suppose an enormous lion, without warning, bounced into the P.O. What would you do?' 'I would say, "Welcome!"' 'But what about me?' 'You're old enough to speak for yourself.' 'Well, I never!' I exclaimed. 'Do you imagine the lion would eat you first?' 'Assuming that it was partial to pie, it would. That would give you time to escape, I suppose.' 'Then, after all,' I cried, clasping my hands and rolling up my eyes, 'I would owe my life to you!' 'No; merely to the pie.' 'I'm afraid you 're hopeless, Mr Blue,' I sighed. 'That's me,' he said, taking out a cigarette and putting it back in the packet. I was beginning to think I might as well clear the box for the afternoon dispatch when a motor-car came rushing into the village and stopped with a jerk at the door. A man in a lovely coat and gloves burst into the shop. He was young and very good looking. 'Quick, please—a telegraph form!' he said. I gave him one and a pencil. As he wrote I noticed his hand was shaking. 'You'll send it at once?' he said when he had finished. 'This instant,' I replied, taking the money —a half-crown and two pennies. 'It's most urgent,' he said, and bolted. In no time the car was racing away. It was urgent, right enough ! 'Holy Moses!' I ejaculated, and handed the form to Mr Blue. Of course, I canna divulge the names and address; but this was the message: Dearest, he is adamant. Trust me, and let us take the only way left us. Make ready and meet me Perth Station, London train, to-night. Mr Blue, as he read it, seemed to waken up. Then he jumped over to the telegraph board, saying, 'Not a word till I get this on the wire.' When he had tapped it off he came back to the counter. He took out a cigarette. 'By jingo, Betty,' he said, 'that's the most romantic thing that has ever happened in my postal career! An elopement! I feel like preserving that young chap's half-crown as a souvenir. Where is it?' I gave it him from the drawer. It chanced to be the only half-crown among the silver. 'This half-crown,' he said, and suddenly glowered at it, then rang it on the counter. Alas, it was a bad one! 35• SANTA. IT was 6 P.M. on the Eve of Christmas. At last we had got the evening delivery sent out, and nothing remained on the sorting-table but a parcel that had lost its label, a string that had lost its parcel, and a comic p.p.c. addressed to a party which had ascended the pole some years ago, and was now confined somewhere for his Majesty's pleasure. Mr Blue declares that the Christmas postal rush is caused mostly by bad consciences, and professes to hate the whole thing; he forbade me to wish him a merry one when it came, But I'm beginning to think he isna quite the cynic he was when I first became his assistant. So when he sat down and lit a cigarette— the first since five o'clock—I casually remarked, 'I suppose you'll be hanging it up to-night, Mr Blue?' 'Certainly,' he replied; I'm not in the habit of leaving it on the floor.' 'I'm referring to your stocking, or sock,' I explained. 'Oh, I thought you meant my hat, and had forgot that I, though I'm supping at Mr Boggie's tonight, am a total abstainer,' he replied. 'What for would I hang up my stocking, or sock?' 'For Santa Claus.' 'Is it animal, vegetable, or mineral?' 'Dinna be silly!' I respectfully remarked. You ken fine that Santa Claus puts things in stockings, or socks!' 'Dear me! So that's where the mysterious holes comes from! Many a morning I've wondered.' 'Mr Blue, dinna pretend ye dinna ken that, on Christmas Eve, Santa Claus comes down the chimney and puts presents in stockings, or socks.' 'All right, Betty! I'll take your word for it,' he said, as if he was speaking to a child. 'And where should the sock be hung up?' 'On one of the knobs at the foot of the bed, of course!' 'Quite so! On one of the knobs at the foot of—' 'Mr Blue, dinna tell me you never hung up your stocking when you was a wee boy!' 'It's so long ago, and my memory's failing,' he said, with a heavy sigh. 'Still, if it'll amuse you, Betty, I'll hang up a sock tonight—a new one—and if there's any holes in the morning, I'll expect you to darn them. How's that?' I'm afraid my smile was not quite natural. I hadna meant to egg him on so far; for who on earth would dream of putting anything in the poor soul's sock? And it would be such a melancholy sight for him on Christmas morning. What a subject for a great artist— 'The Bachelor Awakes, or, The Empty Sock'! Fortunately, just then a customer came in, and, whilst Mr Blue was attending, I got a brain-wave. I slipped into the back room and undid the catch on the window. When the customer had passed out, Mr Blue said, 'I understand you have a dance on to-night, Betty, so you can run away home now and take time to apply your cosmetics, etcetera. Art, they say, should never be hurried.' I thanked him warmly, and at the door I said carelessly 'I suppose you was joking about hanging up your sock, Mr Blue?' 'What I have said, I have said,' was his stern reply. 'But you'll never remember about it after the big supper at the Boggies'.' 'I'll suspend it before I gang there,' he retorted. Which was just what I wanted. Wishing him a happy evening at the festive board, ærated waters and all, I rushed over to the bakery and found Jessie Harvie hurrying up to get away early. 'Jessie,' I said, I suppose you're hanging it up to-night?' 'Never again!' she answered. 'Last year I got nothing except from my brothers, and the young blighters filled it with tempting parcels of cinders and corks, and a dainty packet which I was sure was gloves, till I found it was banana skins. No more Santa for me, thank you kindly!' 'Still, Jessie,' I said, that should make you all the more sympathetic for them that gets nothing at all.' 'Yes, I don't think,' she returned. 'But you may as well cough up your narrative.' After swearing her to secrecy, I told her my plan, and, after telling me I was cracked, she said, 'Righto, Betty! I'll assist you; and, what's more, I'll pinch a dozen of old Moses's richest pastries for Santa to insert.' Could friendship extend farther? . . . . . Shortly after 10 P.M. Jessie and I slipped away from the dance. Fortunately, it was frosty and moonlight, and we hadna far to walk; still more fortunately, the wall of Mr Blue's back garden was comparatively low; but it wasna easy to get over without spoiling our pretty frocks. I was terribly nervous, but Jessie giggled all the time. Fancy breaking into the house of a single gentleman!' she said. 'Imagine if he hasna gone to the Boggie's after all! What a compromise, as the French might say.' 'Oh, be quiet!' I whispered. 'It's perfectly all right when I've got you to chaperon me.' 'Chaperon yourself!'' she cried; 'and me subscribing a bag of the richest pastries!' 'Well, dinna tell the whole of Tullypawkie about it,' I retorted. 'If you've no regard for our reputations, think of his.' 'I'm not fashing. It's your funeral,' was her reply. The window opened easily enough, and I was thankful to get inside. Jessie overbalanced and fell in with a wild screech. 'Dinna fash,' she said; I'm totally uninjured. The pastries broke my fall.' I thought it more likely that her fall had broke the pastries, but I didna want to start another argument. All was still as we crept through the P.O. and up the narrow stair, where the dark was something awful. 'I hope there's not a ghost,' said Jessie, clutching my arm. 'Better a ghost than a mouse,' I returned, with a shudder. 'It does seem a bit unconventional,' I admitted, 'to be sneaking through a man's house like this. If it wasna for a good object—' 'The mice is the only objects I'm thinking of. I'm sure the perfume of the pastries will attract them. If the worst comes to the worst, Betty, would you mind if I sacrificed the pastries to the brutes, same as foreigners in sledges throws their babies to the wolves?' 'Not a bit,' I courteously replied. These pastries can no longer be very attractive to a human being.' 'I like your cheek!' she exclaimed. 'They're merely slightly bashed. I didna land on them with my complete weight.' 'It might have been better if you had, for then they would have entirely disappeared.' After we had made it up we looked into the kitchen. The fire was near out, so I put coals on. 'He'll never believe that Santa did that!' said Jessie. He'll wonder!' 'Men never wonder when things is quite comfortable for them,' I replied, thinking of my father. We looked into the parlour, and then went along the passage. I trust that you will believe that I recoiled from the bedroom door, which was half-open; but Jessie called out, 'Ahoy, Mr Blue, if you're there! It's only two ladies.' And she walked boldly in. 'For a bachelor,' she said, gazing around in the moonlight, 'he keeps his place quite nice. I've heard tell of bachelors that couldna have coaxed a pig to share their boudoirs.' 'Is the sock there?' I whispered, entering gingerly. 'You're getting hoarse with emotion,' she said. 'Ay, the sock's here, and, the bed being wooden, the extravagant monkey has nailed it on!' I felt deeply touched at this token of faith in Santa Claus. 'It's a rare big sock,' she remarked, but it'll never take in the pastries.' 'Hang the bag on the nail,' I told her, and proceeded to insert the gifts of Santa. There was really nothing to boast about—only a packet of cigarettes, a box of matches, a silver safety-pin once got from an unwelcome suitior, a wee pot of mother's red-currant jelly, a tangerine, a fig, and a halfpenny for luck.' 'A body would think you was sweet on the man,' said Jessie, and I could have cuffed her. 'The gifts is entirely platonic,' I said. 'The fig's platonic enough, but I'm not so sure of the other things,' she said, and started to giggle. To put an end to the painful scene I suddenly exclaimed, 'Oh, there's a mouse!' and she took to her heels, with a great display of white ankles. Unfortunately, there really was a mouse in the passage, and we near fell down the stair in our hurry to escape from its clutches. In the P.O. we embraced and congratulated each other on the successful dénouement, and was good friends once more. Then we raced back to the dance, where we found our partners being devoured with anxiety. . . . . . When I entered the P.O. next morning— Christmas isna a postal holiday in Tullypawkie —I got a scare. Mr Blue was the colour of a ninepenny stamp. Before I could cry out, he said, 'Betty, I've got to apologise to your friend, Mr Santa Claus. On returning home at midnight from a banquet consisting of steak pudding, jam roley-poley, and welsh rabbit, I found not only a sock full of welcome gifts, and a cosy fire, but also a parcel of what I might call plutocratic pastries—' 'Dinna tell me you ate them after a heavy supper!' I exclaimed. 'Every crumb, Betty!' he declared, with a proud but ghastly smile. ' I couldna think to hurt the feelings of Mr S. Claus.' 'But the pastries was from Jessie,' I said before I knew. He staggered back. 'Great goodness, if I had only kent that!' he wailed. 'I appreciate the compliment,' I said, 'but I'm sorry it has cost you so dear.' 'Never mind, Betty. I dare say I'll get over it in a week or so—in a month, at the outside. And, in any case, the misery may be said to be localised—it isna mental, ye understand?' And he put out his hand. 'Then, Mr Blue,' I said, grasping it, 'I can at least venture to wish you a semi-merry Christmas.' 36. DRESS REHEARSAL. SOME of my readers may have been kindly wondering about our Dramatic Society, and the grand public performance which was to be given in December. Well, I may say that the performance was a great success financially, and that the performers will probably do better next year. There is times, as Mr Blue says, when it is best to be honest, and I am not going to pretend now that the performers was anything but hopeless, especially in my own little play which, as you may remember, was called The Last Dance: A Tragedy. Fortunately, our programmes was typewritten, and at the eleventh hour I changed it to The Final Kick: A Comico-Tragedy. As Mr Blue observed, Shakespeare would very likely have done the same in similar circs. Modesty had kept me away from the rehearsals, but on the afternoon before the great day Andrew Latto, who was producing my play, came into the P.O. and said, 'Betty, I'm in despair. Will you come to the dress rehearsal to-night? I dinna want you to get a shock to-morrow, and I want you to believe that I've done my best.' 'I'm sure you have, Andrew,' I said kindly, yet cannily, for I was beginning to suspect that his feelings for me was more than merely social. After I saw what he had gone through for my play I was sure of it. 'Very well, I'll come,' I told him; 'but I'll be speechless.' 'I expect it'll make you that,' he said. He was right! The performers had got their lines by heart, but their acting was awful! The play was not a bit like what I thought it would be. To begin with, the orange and onion vendors in the market-place was like nothing on earth. 'Stop!' Andrew would cry. 'Start again! Once more, try to remember that you are Spaniards of a mercurious temperature, as the author explains it. One minute, you should be smiling and singing "Fa, la, la!" —the next, you should be gloomily discussing the badness of the fruit trade. And, for the love of Mike, dinna grin at the audience when you raise to your lips your bottles of sherry wine. I've told you fifty times that drinking sherry wine is as familiar a pastime to Spaniards as supping porridge is to Tullypawkyites. Now, do it all again, without grins!' They did it again—several times; but the only one that didna grin was William Watt, and he had dropped his bottle on his toes. Then Maggie Murray, an onion vendor, started to complain — 'Could we not have wee-er bottles? I near broke a tooth that time.' 'Certainly not!' Andrew replied. 'These is the only proper species of bottles. Dinna forget to let the audience see the labels, which gives a touch of local colour.' (The labels, I may say, bore the inscription, 'Fine Old Sherry.') I was sadly disillusionised, too, with Jessie Harvie as the heroine, Jessa. Though I believe she had kept her promise of two months previously, to abstain from pastry before twelve noon, she looked such a dumpling in her Spanish dancer's dress that her neat ankles didna seem worth while. Her unfortunate admirer and musician, Billio, who was intended to be dying of wheezo-influenzo, plus love, couldna get his wheezes to carry past the third row of reserved seats (1s. 6d., including tax), and had to cough instead, which wasna near so artistic. Moreover, he had been unable to learn the ocarino, and his penny whistle was most un-Spanish-like. Still, he was so keen to do his bit that his false cough had become a real one, with a whoop in it you could have heard a mile away. Tommy Dixon, the villain, would have been not so bad if he hadna been really mashed on Jessie, which he was supposed to jilt, and irritated by Miss M'Phun, the wealthy seniorina, which he was supposed to adore for her gold. In vain Andrew had told him not to make faces when Miss M'Phun threw herself on his chest, but to roll up his eyes in voluptuous rapture; and now Andrew had to insist on him turning his back to the audience in the passionate love scenes. Then Miss M'Phun, who is a bit aged, gave poor Andrew more trouble. 'Miss M'Phun,' said Andrew, kindly endeavour to swallow your smiles when you are being embraced. Dinna look too happy. You are supposed to suspect him of mashing the dancing-girl in secret. And I would be highly obliged if you wouldna wear your specs, especially when you trip lightly on to the stage and fall on his neck.' 'I canna see without them,' Miss M'Phun replied; and I've no ambition to trip and fall on my own neck, thank you!' However, after a lot of persuading, she took them off, and came on to the stage as if she was a hundred and five. (I should explain that we was saving our lamps for the following night, and the light was pretty poor—only a few candles.) And as she approached Tommy, the wicked monkey turned round, and, with a loud screech of 'Oh, my love!' she threw herself on his back. I'm afraid I laughed with the others, but it was too cruel, and I havena forgiven Tommy yet. In the end, Miss M'Phun refused to act without her specs. And I've a good mind,' she cried, 'to get the use of Miss M'Bean's blue ones, and likewise the respirator she got from her deceased uncle!' But worse was to come. When Jessie came on to dance the gay Polony for the last time, previous to taking the poison, she carried a big fat cushion. 'Come now,' said poor Andrew, 'you ought to have learned to collapse painlessly by this time. Throw away that cushion!' Jessie laid it down beside her. 'Learning to collapse painlessly isna the soft job you seem to think,' she said; 'I dinna mind breaking a leg or two when the public's paying to see me, but I'm not going to risk it now. Betty,' she cried, 'what would happen to your tragedy to-morrow if I couldna dance, let alone stand?' I had to admit she was talking sense, but pointed out that she might have practised in the last two months. 'So I did,' she replied, and went through my bed first shot. My parents said that that was enough damage, and wouldna let me spoil the floor.' 'Well, well,' sighed Andrew; 'it's your funeral, Jessie. Now let's get busy. Strike up, Billio!' The ill-starred musician commenced to apologise. He explained that he couldna get a demi-semi-quaver out of his whistle, which would be useless until it had been boiled. It appeared that he had been eating voice-jujubes for his cough, and a portion of one had got into the instrument. 'I'll try to whistle the tune with my face,' he said, 'though it should make me cough for a fortnight.' 'Then whistle—and may you cough for a century!' said Andrew, at the limit. 'How can I dance the gay Polony to a funereal birge? ' said Jessie a minute later. 'Cork it, and let me commit my suicide in peace! Oh, where's my wee green bottle? Dash! I must have left it on the mantelpiece. But never mind; we'll imagine it! Here goes!' She pretended to drink, then staggered about, pointing her finger at Tommy. 'May my ghost haunt ye!' she yelled, and, after a few gargling sounds, sat carefully down on the cushion, rolled carefully off it, and started her defunking agony, which, I must say, was topping—and, of course, the hole in one of her stockings didna matter at a rehearsal. 'Curtain!' cried Andrew, wiping his brow, and down it came half-way—and stuck. 'If this happens to-morrow night, there'll be trouble for somebody,' said Jessie. 'What a way to treat a prima donna! Besides, I wasna near finished.' Well, it did happen next night, and Jessie had to lie there till Billio, forgetting he had just expired behind the orange-boxes, came forward and carried her off, kicking with rage. The audience just screamed. Oh, I was thankful I had named it a comico-tragedy on the programme. And now I am getting used to being called Tullypawkie's humorous young writer. 37• STAMPS. 'THAT young man seems to have a very copious correspondence,' Mr Blue remarked to me as soon as Andrew Latto had left the P.O. 'He bought but the one stamp,' I returned, starting to dust the cigarette shelf. 'It's his third to-day,' said Mr Blue; 'and you've dusted that shelf already.' I tossed my head and threw the duster under the counter. 'This is Friday,' said Mr Blue, lighting a cigarette, 'and he must have purchased a score of stamps since Monday.' I picked up the duster, folded it, and put it in its drawer. 'I trust,' said Mr Blue, 'that he's not seeking to get rich quick by betting on horses.' 'He's not such a fool,' I said, taking out the duster and starting to polish the brass scales. 'I'm relieved to learn that it's not likely to be the turf,' said Mr Blue. 'Still, that only deepens the mystery. And if I was you, Betty, I wouldna make myself feverish over these scales.' 'I like a job that warms me up this cold weather,' I said, rubbing harder than ever. 'In that case, fire away,' he replied. 'As for that young man, it's possible, of course, that he's got himself entangled in some love affair. What do you think?' 'You surely dinna imagine that he would write to her three or four times a day,' I said, trying not to pant. 'It would seem excessive,' said Mr Blue. 'Maybe he encloses a stamp for reply, eh?' 'Very likely!' I said sardonically, beginning to perspire. 'But what puzzles me,' said Mr Blue, 'is the way he keeps on purchasing one stamp at a time, and him at work fully ten minutes' walk from the P.O. Eighty minutes spent in pedestrian exercise, and forty in selecting four stamps—grand total, two hours per diem —twelve hours per week—six hundred and twenty-four hours, or fifty-two working days per annum—well, really, a body would fancy that he was fond of the girl—wouldna you, Betty?' I was about to knock over the scales—I didna care if they was smashed to bits—when Mr Boggie, the farmer, came in, and to my relief he wanted a chat with Mr Blue, and they both went into the back room. While I couldna but admire Mr Blue's delicacy, I was feeling highly embarrassed, and while Andrew's attentions during the last few weeks hadna been entirely unwelcome, I felt that it was time they stopped—so far as the P.O. was concerned. So that evening, after explaining to my parents that I was going to borrow a book from Jessie Harvie, I went out, and, by a strange coincidence, met Andrew. I say 'a strange coincidence' because the same thing had happened five nights running. 'It's a fine evening for a walk, Betty,' said Andrew, and except that there was a thick, damp fog, bitter cold, it was quite a perfect night. But, seeing that my father had remarked, 'Dinna forget to bring home the book this time,' I felt it would be dishonourable not to do so. However, as Andrew pointed out, we could go to Jessie's by a long cut. Andrew isna a very talkative person, and, maybe owing to the damp fog, I wasna as vivacious as usual, and we had gone about a mile before conversation began to flow. 'Betty,' said he. 'What?' said I. 'Do you think it's as dark as it was last night?' 'Just about the same, I think.' 'I believe you're right,' he said. 'Do you think it's as cold?' 'A fraction colder, maybe.' 'I wouldna wonder if it was.' He coughed several times. Betty!' 'What?' 'I intended to call at the post-office at six, but I simply had to finish a job.' This gave me the chance I was wanting. 'Talking of the P.O.,' I lightly remarked; 'how many stamps have you got now, Andrew?' 'Enough to do me for several years,' he replied. 'Why was you asking?' 'Then you'll not be buying any more?' 'Of course I will! I couldna very well come into the post-office just to see you— could I?' 'Certainly not!' 'But I must see you, Betty, and it's well worth the 1½d.' 'Thanks!' I said, with well-feigned sangfroid. 'But I dinna happen to be an inferior waxwork.' 'Oh, Betty!' he cried, 'dinna be offended.' 'I'm not,' I said; 'but I refuse to serve you with any more stamps. I canna encourage you to waste your substance even on non-riotous pursuits.' 'But it's good for the post-office. You canna refuse to sell me a stamp.' 'I can let Mr Blue serve you.' 'Betty!' he exclaimed. 'What have I done? Am I not to get seeing you for a whole clay at a time?' 'I would call it a week,' I said. 'I certainly canna go on borrowing books in this fashion.' 'You could borrow a book one night and return it the next—eh? Silence is best when you've nothing to say. I was silent. 'This is rotten!' he said at last. I remained silent. 'Betty, say it's rotten,' he cried. 'That's fishing for a compliment,' I replied. 'Personally,' I went on, not wishing to hurt him, 'I have no special objection to you coming into the P.O., but I must tell you that Mr Blue is wondering.' 'Wondering if we're en—' 'Wondering why you dinna buy your stamps in bulk.' 'Oh, is that all?' He seemed disappointed. A year, as it were, rolled by before he spoke again. 'Betty, why will you not be engaged?' 'I've told you before—we're far too young.' 'That's nonsense,' he said. 'I feel like a hundred, and you talk whiles as if you was a thousand.' 'I canna help being wise for my years,' I replied. Another long period elapsed, during which he frequently sighed. If you've finished with my hand,' I said at last, 'I would like to make use of it.' 'What do you want it for?' 'To scratch my nose.' 'Let me scratch it for you,' he said tenderly. I'm afraid I laughed. Even in the dark I could see he was hurt — and I never was one to enjoy hurting folk. It is necessary to put a few dots here. . . . . . It was a bit late when we got home. 'Mercy!' I ejaculated at the gate, 'I've forgot to call at Jessie's!' At that moment my father came out. He gave Andrew a sort of nod, and looked at me. 'Well, my lass,' he said, 'have you brought the book this time?' 'No, father'—to this day I canna think how I said it—'I've brought Andrew instead.' He gave a sort of laugh. 'How does Andrew like being borrowed?' he inquired. I was speechless, but Andrew, after several coughs, said, 'Excuse me, Mr Cairnie, but I believe she's got me for keeps.' 38. THE RING. I SUPPOSE there is girls in the world that I can prance around the morning after, crying, Look at me! I'm engaged!' But in all my life I had never felt so bashful as I did that Saturday morning on my way to the P.O. Andrew was off in the dark, on his bike, to the town, to buy a ring as soon as the shop was open. 'We'll not say a word to a soul, Betty,' he had said, 'till you've got it on your finger; and then we'll let them guess.' I could see he was thinking of my delicate feelings, and though I merely warned him against gross extravagance, I felt really grateful. I hope he'll be as thoughtful when I'm ninety; if so, he'll be a unique husband. I was particularly anxious that Mr Blue, after all his kindness to me, should be the first to see the ring. However, it was fated that he wasna to be the first to learn the news. I was a bit late that morning, and as I was hurrying past the bakery, Jessie Harvie ran out. 'Hullo, Betty,' she cried, 'you look as if something had happened!' 'I slept in, and I'm frightfully late,' I replied. 'I expect I'll get the sack.' 'That's nothing to look happy about,' she said, staring at me. 'What have you been doing to your complexion? You've got an awful high colour!' 'It's the sharp wind, I suppose,' I said. 'I'll see you later, Jessie.' She grabbed my arm. 'There isna a breath of wind this morning—and now you're scarlet!' she said. 'Come on, cough it up, Betty.' There was no help for it, her being my oldest friend, and I told her. She wasna as surprised as I expected, but she seemed pleased, and squeezed my hand several times. 'This is great news, Betty,' she said. 'Though far from handsome, Andrew's all right, and I congratulate you warmly on your first engagement.' 'My first!' 'Do you intend it to be permanent?' she inquired. 'What else? A girl doesna get engaged for the fun of the thing.' 'I do! Gosh! I've been betrothed seven times—the perfect number—though I'm not fed up yet!' I laughed. 'You've never been properly engaged, Jessie—only semi, as you call it.' 'Semi's good enough for me. It's like eating your cake and still having it. But I'm using the word "temporally" now; it's more dignified than "semi." ' 'I doubt you're a cynic,' I said. 'Not me! I'm what they call an optimist. "The best is yet to come" is my motto.' 'I hope you'll ken him when he arrives,' I remarked. 'I will, even supposing his number is 119.' Next moment she hove a sigh. 'I hope he'll ken me,' she said, and put her arm round my neck. 'Happy days, wee Betty — and break it gently to Mr Blue.' Then she ran into the shop. Fortunately, it being close on the New Year, there was a heavy mail that morning, and immediately after it was sorted and sent out, Mr Blue had to gang to the station to see about some business. I was wondering how I would ever manage to tell him, when Andrew burst in, breathing heavily, grabbed my hand across the counter, and put on my finger the loveliest wee ring of pearls and diamonds. I was that overcome I could say nothing but 'Oh, you extravagant monkey!' Still, he didna seem offended. 'I had to waken up the jeweller and get him to open the shop in his pyjamas and ulster,' he told me. 'I just couldna wait.' 'I doubt he would charge you extra for that,' I said, though it wasna exactly what I was wanting to say. 'I'm not caring,' said Andrew, 'so long as you like it. Do you, Betty?' . . . . . These dots represents the time wasted over a rotten customer. . . . . . And these ones is for a little conversation Andrew and me had before he had to scoot away to his work. Then Mr Blue came in. I felt quite different now that I was wearing the ring. All I had to do was to wait till he observed it. But he seemed to be blind that morning. After a while I began to give him opportunities of observing it, such as touching up my hair, scratching my nose, etc., but he took no notice. Even when I passed him a packet of cigarettes that he had asked for he didna see it. And then the sun came out, and I thought the sparkles would have dazzled him when I started pointing out some figures on an official form right under his nose; but never a single interjection came from him. 'Mr Blue,' I said at last, 'are you feeling quite fit this morning?' 'Never felt better, Betty. Thanks for kind inquiry,' he replied. After a while, with my hand to my brow, and standing in a sunbeam, I said, 'I seem to have got a bit of a headache, Mr Blue.' 'I'm vexed to hear that,' he said kindly. 'If you would like to gang home, I can manage.' 'Oh, I dare say it'll pass off,' I said, letting fall my hand and gazing at the ring. 'I could let you have a Queen Anne powder,' he said, still more kindly, 'if you can stick the atrocious taste.' With thanks I told him I preferred the headache. I was beginning to feel pretty desperate. Time was passing, and in a wee while the P.O. would be getting busy, and some customer would be sure to spot my ring and make a noise about it. Feeling the colour of a penny stamp, I suddenly said, 'Mr Blue, I've got something to show you. Look!' 'Well, well,' he said quite calmly, 'is that what you've been squandering your salary on?' 'Mr Blue! I got it from Andrew Latto.' 'Oh, I see! That's why Andrew has been buying a 1½d. stamp three or four times a day for weeks! The instalment system, of course!' I felt like screeching, but I managed to say with considerable dignity, 'Mr Blue, Andrew and me are engaged.' At that he looked quite different. Thank you, Betty,' he said. 'Of course I saw your pretty ring all the time, but I wanted you to tell me. Well, I congratulate you both.' I didna seem to have anything to say. 'It's a bad job for the P.O.,' he went on. 'I had hoped to live to see you Postmistress-General.' Deeply touched by this tribute, I assured him that I wouldna be leaving the service for ages. 'I'm thankful for small mercies,' he said, opening the safe and taking out a wee package. He put it in my hand, saying, 'Now, Betty, there's to be no speech-making. It's merely a small instrument for assisting a young lady to keep her appointments with her young man. Not a word, if you please.' I opened the paper, and then a case, and lo and behold! there was the dearest wee wrist-watch! 'Mr Blue!' was all I could say just then. 'As a matter of fact,' he said, 'I had a bet with myself that you and Andrew would settle it before the year was out, and, as you see, I've — won!' He smiled. THE END. Edinburgh: Printed by W. & R. Chambers, Limited.