<h2>CHAPTER XXVI<br/> <span class="f8">A WHOLE WEDDING DAY</span></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">Fortune</span> favoured us admirably in our plans.
Mrs. Jack, taking only her dressing bag and a
few odd parcels, went by the afternoon train
from Ellon to Aberdeen. In hearing of the household
she regretted that she had to go alone, as Miss Marjory
was unable to leave her room. About five o’clock I was
in the wood as appointed; and in about half an hour
Marjory joined me in her footman’s livery. I had a
flannel coat in my bag which we exchanged for that
which she wore and which we hid in the wood. We
were thus less noticeable. We reached Whinnyfold a
little after six, and Marjory went into the house and
changed her dress which was left ready. She was not
long; and we were soon flying on our road to Aberdeen.
We arrived a little before eight and caught the mail; arriving
at Carlisle at ten minutes to two o’clock. In
the hotel we found Mrs. Jack anxiously awaiting us.</p>
<p>In the early morning we were ready; and at eight
o’clock we all went together to St. Hilda’s Church, where
the clergyman was waiting as had been arranged. All
formalities were gone through and Marjory and I were
made one. She looked oh! so sweet in her plain white
frock; and her manner was gentle and solemn. It all
seemed to me like a dream of infinite happiness; from
which every instant I feared I should wake, and find
in its stead some grim reality of pain, or terror, or unutterable
commonplace.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>When we went back to breakfast at the hotel, we did
not even go through the form of regarding it as in any
way a wedding feast. Marjory and I had each our part
to play, and we determined—I certainly did—to play it
well. Mrs. Jack had been carefully coached by Marjory
as to how she should behave; and though now and again
she looked from one to the other of us wistfully, she did
not make any remark.</p>
<p>After a little shopping we got the 12:53 train,
arriving at Aberdeen at 6:20. Mrs. Jack was to go
on by the 7 train to Ellon where the carriage was to
meet her. My wife and I got our bicycles and rode
to Whinnyfold by Newburgh and Kirkton so as to avoid
observation. When she had changed her clothes in our
own house, we started for Crom. In the wood she
changed her coat and left her bicycle.</p>
<p>Before we parted she gave me a kiss and a hug that
made my blood tingle.</p>
<p>“You have been good” she said “and that is for my
husband!” Once again she held up that warning finger
which I had come to know so well, and slipped away.
She then went on alone to the Castle, whilst I waited in
nervous expectancy of hearing the whistle which she
was to blow in case of emergency. Then I rode home
like a man in a dream.</p>
<p>I left my bicycle at the hotel, and after some supper
walked by the sands to Whinnyfold, stopping to linger
at each spot which was associated with my wife. My
wife! it was almost too much to think of; I could hardly
realise as yet that it was all real. As I sat on the Sand
Craigs I almost fancied I could see Marjory’s figure once
again on the lonely rock. It seemed so long ago, for
so much had happened since then.</p>
<p>And yet it was but a few days, all told, since we had
first met. Things had gone in a whirl indeed. There<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</SPAN></span>
seemed to have been no pause; no room for a pause. And
now I was married. Marjory was my wife; mine for
good or ill, till death did us part. Circumstances seemed
to have driven us so close together that we seemed not
new lovers, not bride and groom, but companions of a
lifetime.</p>
<p>And yet.... There was Marjory in Crom, compassed
round by unknown dangers, whilst I, her husband
of a few hours, was away in another place, unable even
to gaze on her beauty or to hear her voice. Why, it was
not like a wedding day or a honeymoon at all. Other
husbands instead of parting with their wives were able
to remain with them, free to come and go as they
pleased, and to love each other unfettered as they would.
Why....</p>
<p>I brought myself up sharp. This was grumbling already,
and establishing a grievance. I, who had myself
proposed the state of things to Marjory, to my wife.
She was my wife; mine against all the rest of the world.
My love was with her, and my duty was to her. My
heart and soul were in her keeping, and I trusted her to
the full. This was not my wedding day in the ordinary
sense of the word at all. This was <em>not</em> my honeymoon.
Those things would come later, when our joy would be
unfettered by circumstances. Surely I had reason to
rejoice. Already Marjory had called me her husband,
she had kissed me as such; the sweetness of her kiss was
still tingling on my lips. If anything but love and trust
could come to me from sitting still and sentimentalising
and brooding, then the sooner I started in to do some
active work the better!...</p>
<p>I rose straightway and went across the headland to
my house, unpacked the box of tools which had come
from Aberdeen, and set about my task of trying to make
an opening into the cave.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>I chose for various reasons the cellar as the spot at
which to make the first attempt. In the first place it was
already dug down to a certain depth, so that the labour
would be less; and in the second, my working could be
kept more secret. In clearing the foundations of the
house the workmen had gone down to the rock nearly all
round. Just at the end of Witsennan point there seemed
to be a sort of bowl-like hollow, where the thin skin of
earth lay deeper than elsewhere. It was here that the
cellar was dug out, and the labour of cutting or blasting
the rock saved. With a pick-axe I broke and stripped away
a large patch of the concrete in the centre of the cellar,
and in a short time had dug and shovelled away the
earth and sand which lay between the floor level and the
bed rock. I cleared away till the rock was bare some
four or five feet square, before I commenced to work on
it. I laboured furiously. What I wanted was work,
active work which would tire my muscles and keep my
thoughts from working into channels of gloom and disintegration.</p>
<p>It took me some time to get into the way of using the
tools. It is all very well in theory for a prisoner to get
out of a jail or a fortress by the aid of a bit of scrap
iron. Let any one try it in real life; under the most
favourable conditions, and with the best tools available,
he will come to the conclusion that romancing is easy
work. I had the very latest American devices, including
a bit-and-brace which one could lean on and work without
stooping, and diamond patent drills which could,
compared with ordinary tools of the old pattern, eat their
way into rock at an incredible rate. My ground was on
the gneiss side of the geological division. Had it been
on the granite side of the line my labour and its rapidity
might have been different.</p>
<p>I worked away hour after hour, and fatigue seemed to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</SPAN></span>
come and go. I was not sleepy, and there was a feverish
eagerness on me which would not let me rest. When
I paused to ease my muscles cramped with work, thought
came back to me of how different this night might have
been.... And then I set furiously to work again.
At last I took no heed of the flying hours; and was only
recalled to time by the flickering of my lamp, which was
beginning to go out. When I stood up from my task,
I was annoyed to see how little I had done. A layer
of rock of a few inches deep had been removed; and that
was all.</p>
<p>When I went up the steps after locking the cellar
door behind me and taking away the key, I saw the
grey light of dawn stealing in through the windows.
Somewhere in the village a cock crew. As I stepped out
of the door to return home, the east began to quicken
with coming day. My wedding night had passed.</p>
<p>As I went back to Cruden across the sands my heart
went out in love without alloy to my absent wife; and
the first red bolt of dawn over the sea saw only hope
upon my face.</p>
<p>When I got to my room I tumbled into bed, tired
beyond measure. In an instant I was asleep, dreaming
of my wife and all that had been, and all that was to be.</p>
<p>Marjory had arranged that she and Mrs. Jack were
for the coming week at least, to come over to Cruden every
day, and lunch at the hotel; for my wife had set her
heart on learning to swim. I was to be her teacher,
and I was enthusiastic about the scheme. She was an
apt pupil; and she was strong and graceful, and already
skilled in several other physical accomplishments,
we both found it easy work. The training which she
had already had, made a new accomplishment easy. Before
the week was over she was able to get along so
well, that only practice was needed to make her a good<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</SPAN></span>
swimmer. All this time we met in public as friends,
but no more; we were scrupulously careful that no one
should notice even an intimacy between us. When we
were alone, which was seldom and never for long, we
were good comrades as before; and I did not venture
to make love in any way. At first it was hard to refrain,
for I was wildly in love with my wife; but I
controlled myself in accordance with my promise. I
soon began to have a dawning feeling that this very
obedience was my best means to the end I wished
for. Marjory grew to have such confidence in me
that she could be more demonstrative than before,
and I got a larger share of affection than I expected.
Besides I could see with a joy unspeakable
that her love for me was growing day by day; the tentative
comradeship—without prejudice—was wearing thin!</p>
<p>All this week, whilst Marjory was not near, I worked in
the cellar at Whinnyfold. As I became more expert with
the tools, I made greater progress, and the hole in the
rock was becoming of some importance. One day on
coming out after a spell of afternoon work, I found Gormala
seated on a stone against the corner of the house.
She looked at me fixedly and said:</p>
<p>“Be yon a grave that ye thole?” The question staggered
me. I did not know that any one suspected that
I was working in the house, or even that I visited it so
often as I did. Besides, it did not suit my purpose that
any one should be aware, under any circumstances, that
I was digging a hole. I thought for a moment before
answering her:</p>
<p>“What do you mean?”</p>
<p>“Eh! but I’m thinkin’ ye ken weel eneuch. I’m no
to be deceived i’ the soond. I’ve heard ower mony a time
the chip o’ the pick, not to ken it though there be walls
atween. I wondered why ye came by yer lanes to this<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</SPAN></span>
dreary hoose when ye sent yon bonnie lassie back to her
hame. Aye she is bonnie though her pride be cruel to the
aud. Ah, weel! The Fates are workin’ to their end,
whatsoe’er it may be. I maun watch, so that I may be
nigh when the end cometh!”</p>
<p>There was no use arguing with her; and besides anything
that I could say would only increase her suspicion.
Suspicion abroad about my present task was the last
thing I wished for.</p>
<p>She was round about the headland the next morning,
and the next, and the next. During the day I never
saw her; but at night she was generally to be found
on the cliff above the Reivie o’Pircappies. I was glad of
one thing; she did not seem to suspect that I was working
all the time. Once I asked her what she was waiting
for; she answered without looking at me:</p>
<p>“In the dark will be a struggle in the tide-race, and
a shrood floatin’ in the air! When next death an’ the
moon an’ the tide be in ane, the seein’ o’ the Mystery o’
the Sea may be mine!”</p>
<p>It made me cold to hear her. This is what she foretold
of Marjory; and she was waiting to see her prophecy
come to pass.</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</SPAN></span></p>
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