The Great Shadow and Other Napoleonic Tales9. The Doings at West InchI can remember that moment so well. I have heard from others that a great, sudden blow has dulled their senses. It was not so with me. On the contrary, I saw and heard and thought more clearly than I had ever done before. I can remember that my eyes caught a little knob of marble as broad as my palm, which was imbedded in one of the grey stones of the rockery, and I found time to admire its delicate mottling. And yet the look upon my face must have been strange, for Cousin Edie screamed, and leaving me she ran off to the house. I followed her and tapped at the window of her room, for I could see that she was there. "Go away, Jock, go away!" she cried. "You are going to scold me! I won't be scolded! I won't open the window! Go away!" But I continued to tap. "I must have a word with you!" "What is it, then?" she cried, raising the sash about three inches. "The moment you begin to scold I shall close it." "Are you really married, Edie?" "Yes, I am married." "Who married you?" "Father Brennan, at the Roman Catholic Chapel at Berwick." "And you a Presbyterian?" "He wished it to be in a Catholic Church." "When was it?" "On Wednesday week." |