Foes by Mary Johnston
page 12 of 352 (03%)
page 12 of 352 (03%)
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great of height and girth, was plainly dressed; the last, seeming
slighter by contrast than he actually was, wore fine cloth, silken hose, gold buckles to his shoes, and a full wig. The first had a massive, somewhat saturnine countenance, the last a shrewd, narrow one. The first had a long stride and a wide reach from thumb to little finger, the last a short step and a cupped hand. William Jardine, laird of Glenfernie, led the way to the fire. "The ford was swollen. Mr. Touris got a little wet and chilled." "Ah, the fire is good!" said Mr. Touris. "They do not burn wood like this in London!" "You will burn it at Black Hill. I hope that you like it better and better?" "It has possibilities, ma'am. Undoubtedly," said Mr. Touris, the Scots adventurer for fortune, set up as merchant-trader in London, making his fortune by "interloping" voyages to India, but now shareholder and part and lot of the East India Company--"undoubtedly the place has possibilities." He warmed his hands. "Well, it would taste good to come back to Scotland--!" His words might have been finished out, "and laird it, rich and influential, where once I went forth, cadet of a good family, but poorer than a church mouse!" Mrs. Jardine made a murmur of hope that he _would_ come back to Scotland. But the laird looked with a kind of large gloom at the reflection of fire and candle in battered breastplate and morion and crossed pikes. |
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