Wee Macgreegor Enlists eBook

John Joy Bell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 121 pages of information about Wee Macgreegor Enlists.

Wee Macgreegor Enlists eBook

John Joy Bell
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 121 pages of information about Wee Macgreegor Enlists.

A smartly dressed young man was lounging at the counter, apparently basking in Christina’s smiles.  As a matter of fact, the young man was merely choosing a notebook, and until the moment of Macgregor’s entrance had been treated with the slightly haughty politeness which Christina made a point of administering to males under fifty.  But with amazing abruptness she became so charming that the young man, a sensitive, susceptible creature, decided that an ordinary penny note-book would not do.

‘Well,’ said Christina sweetly, ’here are some at twopence, threepence and sixpence.  The sixpenny ones are extremely reliable.’

After some desultory conversation in low tones, during which Macgregor writhed with frequently averted gaze, the young man chose a sixpenny one and put down a florin, regretfully remarking that he had to catch a confounded train.

With a delicious smile Christina handed him his change, and with a graceful salute he fled without counting it.  Immediately the door had closed Christina realized that she had given him one and ninepence.  A small matter at such a time, yet it may have been the last straw.  She had no word for Macgregor as he came to the counter, his uncertainty increased by that delicious smile given to another.

‘Weel, ye’ve got back,’ was all he could utter, and her attitude stopped him in the first movement of offering his hand.

‘Yesterday afternoon,’ she returned coldly.

‘Ay, I ken.  I wish ye had sent me word,’ he managed to say after a slight pause.

‘It did not seem necessary.  I suppose your mother told you.’

’I heard it first frae Aunt Purdie.  I missed ye by less nor an ‘oor.  It was gey hard lines.’

Christina stared.

‘I got leave yesterday mornin’ an’ catched the first train to Aberdeen——­’

‘Oh! . . .  What on earth took you to Aberdeen?’

‘Christina,’ he exclaimed, ’dinna speak like that!  I gaed to Aberdeen because I couldna thole it ony mair.’

‘Thole what?’

’Oh, ye ken! . . .  Maybe I had nae business to be vexed at ye for gaun wi’ Aunt Purdie, but oh, Christina dear, I wisht ye hadna gaed.’

He dropped his gaze and continued:  ‘I’m tellin’ ye I gaed to Aberdeen because something seemed to ha’e come betwixt us, because I——­’ He stuck.  Confession in the face of stem virtue is not so easy, after all.

‘Pity you had the long journey,’ she said airily, ’but you ought to have stopped for a day or two when you were there.  Aberdeen is a delightful city.’  She turned and surveyed the shelves above her.

His look then would have melted the heart of any girl, except this one who loved him.

‘Christina,’ he said piteously, ‘it wasna a’ ma fau’t.’

Leisurely she faced him.

‘May I ask what you are referring to?’

’Ye never said ye was sorry to leave me; yer letters wasna like ye, an’ I didna ken what to think.  An’ then the cocoa-nut fairly put the lid on.  I tell ye, a chap has to dae something when a girl treats him like that.’

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Project Gutenberg
Wee Macgreegor Enlists from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.