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the mourners.

Her "fits" grew more and more masterly, until the neighbors argued boastfully:

"I'm tellin' ye, when my man died, she had the worst fit she ever had." And the answer, as positive, would be: "Mistress Macpherson, hae I no' got the use o' my sight, praise be to God? Did I no' see her eyes roll up to heaven and her legs stiffen when my Jeannie was carried oot?"

Certainly, Mistress MacNab would never think of burying her man without Kirsty's being there, butter prize or no butter prize. Thus reassured, Kirsty had resolved to outdo all her past efforts at the funeral of Sandy MacNab. Always in the back of her head she had had a notion that by biting the sides of her cheeks till they bled, and frothing the blood upon her lips, she could give a more convincing and gruesome fit than any she had ever given. She had saved this for some great day. And this was the day. The world would see that Kirsty Fraser scorned to bear a grudge in the face of death. She would treat Mistress MacNab better than if she had been a friend.

On Monday morning she felt so kindly toward Mistress MacNab that she was minded to step over and say a word of comfort to her. She even thought of offering to do the "biddin'," although she knew full well that her legs would never stand it.

But Mistress MacKenty came in to say that Maggie Tate was to do the "biddin'," and that the funeral was on Wednesday, adding meaningly, "But there's no need to tell ye that; ye 'll be the first to be bidden, nae doot.❞

Her tone made Kirsty uneasy.
At sundown, when Tammas, her son,

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came wearily in, she watched him wash his face in the tin basin, and as he spluttered and blew the water,-he never thought he was clean unless he made a noise about it, she started to ask if he had heard anything, but stopped, mistrusting her voice. It would no' do to let Tammas know that she was anxious. And should it be that some were already bidden, Tammas would know that she had been slighted, being left to the last.

On Tuesday the coffin was brought home. Jimmy Tocher tripped on the step as they carried it in, and it banged against the door. Kirsty could hear Mistress MacNab raking them up hill and down dale for their fecklessness, and she wanted to join them and see for herself if they had dented the mountings, but she could n't make the first advance.

At dusk she saw Maggie Tate on her rounds doing the bidding. She cried in at Jessie MacLean's and then went on to Mistress MacKenty's. "She'll be here inside ten minutes," Kirsty reflected, and rose to put the kettle on, so that she could make her a cup of tea. "It's unco thirsty work, biddin' to funerals."

It was getting too dark to see. The kettle boiled dry, and she pulled it forward on the crane. "Mistress MacKenty is talking her stone-blind. She'll never get here to-night," she decided, but she could n't give up watching.

Tammas came home. He had heard something, and was uneasy in his mind. Kirsty could tell, because he was whistling "The Lass o' Ballochmyle" between his teeth, which was a sign. And forby that, he said the long grace before supper, and he said it slowly, as she always had begged him to. He

was trying to be kind to her; he even blew the smoke from his pipe up the chimney instead of out across the room. It was unnatural-like, and Kirsty knew that his behavior meant that he was sure that she would not be bidden to see the corpse. She resented his giving up hope before she did. He had never valued her fits. On occasions he had even advised her to bide away if funerals made her take on so. He was like his father, that he was. He was reliable-like, but he was dull. All the Frasers were dull. Why could he no' speak up and say, "Ye'll no' be bidden to see the corp', and I'm glad o' 't," if that was what he was thinking? She'd give him just a minute more; then she 'd ask him outright.

And now this was the day of the funeral. Through the small space between the jamb and the door Kirsty could see Mistress MacPherson knocking for admission to the house of sor

row.

She had a small parcel in her hand, which she held gingerly upright. "A jar o' calf's-foot jelly, nae doot," Kirsty informed Tammas as she called his attention to it. "That's the tenth parcel since ten o'clock. Mistress MacNab will no' need ti buy a bite o' food for a fortnight." She said this exultantly. Funerals were Kirsty's art, and she liked them to be successful. "Tammas, keep out from between me an' the door. I can no' see through ye."

Tammas had made another attempt to shut the door in a yearning desire to spare her. Manlike, he could not understand why she tortured herself by looking on. He had seen her put on her black mutch in readiness, and his heart was sick for her. He wondered why she could not give up hope.

"Mither." She looked at him as he spoke. To avoid her eyes, he bent down, and used the heel of his boot to press the tobacco into the bowl of his pipe. "Weel?" she prompted, and there He paced the floor silently, stopping was an edge on her voice.

"I'm thinkin' o' drivin' up to Skilly's the morn ti borrow their rake. Would ye like to go wi' me?"

So he believed she would n't be bidden, and he was trying to save her face.

He little knew. He had never set store by her fits, but others had. Mistress MacNab might wait till the last to bid her, as was natural; she'd do the same herself, but bid her she would, as Kirsty knew well. So she answered tartly:

"I'm thinkin' yer losing the wee bit o' sense ye were born wi', Tammas. The morn 's Sandy MacNab's funeral."

Tammas reddened guiltily.

every now and then to do some kindly, useless thing for her; and she, knowing what prompted him, would snap at him furiously.

The minister came. Kirsty sat rigidly forward in her chair as he was admitted and the door closed after him. Tammas stopped pacing. He did n't know what to do with his hands. He tried them in his pockets, and then took them out again, hanging them limply by his sides.

From over the street came the singing. Kirsty picked nervously at the crochet edging on her knitted wristlets. She half turned to look at Tammas, and her voice quavered:

"They 're no' to bid me, Tammas."

"Oh, aye," he murmured. "I had But as Mistress MacNab's door opened forgotten, Mither."

and Skilly's lad came running out,

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She sat up at the thought, grasping her face, puir body! I could feel it in my heart ti pity her, Tammas."

at it eagerly.

"Aye, will it no', Tammas? Will it no'?" she cried gratefully.

Then, turning it over in her mind, she found it sweet with comfort, and she chuckled while the tears were still wet upon her face.

Fully recovered in spirit, she got up lightsomely, and began to unfasten the strings of her black mutch.

"We'll shut the door on the rest o' 't, Tammas," she said, and was moving toward it when Mistress MacKenty

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came breathlessly in. She was burning with news to tell, and greedy to see its effect.

"Mistress MacNab is havin' a fit, an' Skilly's laddie has gone for the doctor," she cried.

"A fit!" Kirsty screamed the words in a hysteria of unbelief. "What would she be knowing of a fit, she that has never had one?"

Gloating with the joy of telling it, for she had always envied Kirsty her fits, Mistress MacKenty's voice swelled with gratification as she answered:

"Such a fit as I have never seen. Her eyes are rollin' to heaven, and the blood is frothin' on her lips."

At that Kirsty's knees began to tremble beneath her. She put out a wavering hand and gripped Tammas by the sleeve, striving to keep upright and face Mistress MacKenty, who continued maliciously:

"Drumorty will never forget this fit. I'll mind on 't mysel' if I ever hae a corp'."

And Kirsty Fraser knew that her glory was gone. Another had stolen the chief jewel of her crown. There would be none in all Drumorty who would do her homage again.

But not before Mistress MacKenty would she bow her head. She took her hand from Tammas' sleeve and stood alone, and nothing in her voice as she spoke told Mistress MacKenty that her pride lay stricken.

"Gie her the ammonia bottle to take over, Tammas. I hae had slight fits mysel', an' weel I ken ammonia 's good."

And Mistress MacKenty wondered at this heroic thing that made Kirsty Fraser disclaim the glory of her fits and hand her laurels to another. She stood shamed before it, and she hung her head and crept away, unable longer to look Kirsty Fraser in the face.

Kirsty stood till she had gone; then her hand went feeling blindly for her chair. She cupped one hand helplessly in the other as she sat. The string of her black mutch hung down like a weary pendulum that had wagged its hour. As Tammas knelt by her, dumbly anxious to comfort, she whispered:

"Think ye she knows I care, Tammas?"

"Niver, Mither. I would no' have known it mysel'."

Assured of that, she let the tears steal down her wrinkled cheeks. Her hands trembled together helplessly in her lap. Tammas reached out and held them firmly in his, and they sat there silently together.

Her thoughts went seeking comfort everywhere, but found none. With every funeral her pride would die a little more; with every funeral Mistress MacNab would reap a greater triumph. None would think of Kirsty's fits except to say how poor they were, and how great were the fits of Mistress MacNab. And so until the end.

"O Tammas," she cried, "when I am dead and lying helpless, ye 'll no' let that Mistress MacNab have fits at my funeral! Promise me that, Tammas!"

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