The Laird's Luck and Other Fireside Tales by Sir Arthur Thomas Quiller-Couch
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page 16 of 295 (05%)
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He opened his eyes wide. I saw the sudden idea take hold of him, and
again I liked what I saw. "If I thought--" He broke off. "You don't mean--" he began, and broke off again. "I mean the Morays," I said. "There may be difficulties; but at this moment I cannot see any real ones." By this time he was gripping the arms of his chair. "If I thought--" he harked back, and for the third time broke off. "What a fool I am! It's the last thing they ever put in a boy's head at that infernal school. If you will believe it, they wanted to make a priest of me!" He sprang up, pushing back his chair. We carried our wine into the great hall, and sat there talking the question over before the fire. Before we parted for the night I had engaged to use all my interest to get him a commission in the Morays; and I left him pacing the hall, his mind in a whirl, but his heart (as was plain to see) exulting in his new prospects. And certainly, when I came to inspect the castle by the next morning's light, I could understand his longing to leave it. A gloomier, more pretentious, or worse-devised structure I never set eyes on. The Mackenzie who erected it may well have been (as the saying is) his own architect, and had either come to the end of his purse or left his heirs to decide against planting gardens, laying out approaches or even maintaining the pile in decent repair. In place of a drive a grassy cart-track, scored deep with old ruts, led through a gateless entrance into a courtyard where the slates had dropped from the roof |
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