Randal remembered his father’s
going to fight the English, and how he came back again.
It was a windy August evening when he went away:
the rain had fallen since morning. Randal had
watched the white mists driven by the gale down through
the black pine-wood that covers the hill opposite
Fairnilee. The mist looked like armies of ghosts,
he thought, marching, marching through the pines,
with their white flags flying and streaming.
Then the sun came out red at evening, and Randal’s
father rode away with all his men. He had a helmet
on his head, and a great axe hanging from his neck
by a chain, and a spear in his hand. He was riding
his big horse, Sir Hugh, and he caught Randal
up to the saddle and kissed him many times before
he clattered out of the courtyard. All the tenants
and men about the farm rode with him, all with spears
and a flag embroidered with a crest in gold.
His mother watched them from the tower till they were
out of sight. And Randal saw them ride away, not
on hard, smooth roads like ours, but along a green
grassy track, the water splashing up to their stirrups
where they crossed the marshes.
Then the sky turned as red as blood,
in the sunset, and next it grew brown, like the rust
on a sword; and the Tweed below, when they rode the
ford, was all red and gold and brown.
Then time went on; that seemed a long
time to Randal. Only the women were left in the
house, and Randal played with the shepherd’s
children. They sailed boats in the mill-pond,
and they went down to the boat-pool and watched to
see the big copper-coloured salmon splashing in the
still water. One evening Randal looked up suddenly
from his play. It was growing dark. He had
been building a house with the round stones and wet
sand by the river. He looked up, and there was
his own father! He was riding all alone, and
his horse, Sir Hugh, was very lean and lame,
and scarred with the spurs. The spear in his
father’s hand was broken, and he had no sword;
and he looked neither to right nor to left. His
eyes were wide open, but he seemed to see nothing.
Randal cried out to him, “Father!
Father!” but he never glanced at Randal.
He did not look as if he heard him, or knew he was
there, and suddenly he seemed to go away, Randal did
not know how or where.
Randal was frightened.
He ran into the house, and went to his mother.
“Oh, mother,” he said,
“I have seen father! He was riding all alone,
and he would not look at me. Sir Hugh was lame!”
“Where has he gone?” said Lady Ker, in
a strange voice.
“He went away out of sight,”
said Randal. “I could not see where he
went.”
Then his mother told him it could
not be, that his father would not have come back alone.
He would not leave his men behind him in the war.
But Randal was so sure, that she did
not scold him. She knew he believed what he said.
He saw that she was not happy.
All that night, which was the Fourth
of September, in the year 1513, the day of Flodden
fight, Randal’s mother did not go to bed.
She kept moving about the house. Now she would
look from the tower window up Tweed; and now she would
go along the gallery and look down Tweed from the other
tower. She had lights burning in all the windows.
All next day she was never still. She climbed,
with two of her maids, to the top of the hill above
Yair, on the other side of the river, and she watched
the roads down Ettrick and Yarrow. Next night
she slept little, and rose early. About noon,
Randal saw three or four men riding wearily, with tired
horses. They could scarcely cross the ford of
Tweed, the horses were so tired. The men were
Simon Grieve the butler, and some of the tenants.
They looked very pale; some of them had their heads
tied up, and there was blood on their faces.
Lady Ker and Randal ran to meet them.
Simon Grieve lighted from his horse,
and whispered to Randal’s mother.
Randal did not hear what he said,
but his mother cried, “I knew it! I knew
it!” and turned quite white.
“Where is he?” she said.
Simon pointed across the hill.
“They are bringing the corp,” he said.
Randal knew the “corp” meant the dead body.
He began to cry. “Where
is my father?” he said, “where is my father?”
His mother led him into the house.
She gave him to the old nurse, who cried over him,
and kissed him, and offered him cakes, and made him
a whistle with a branch of plane tree, So in a short
while Randal only felt puzzled. Then he forgot,
and began to play. He was a very little boy.
Lady Ker shut herself up in her own
room - her “bower,” the servants
called it.
Soon Randal heard heavy steps on the
stairs, and whispering. He wanted to run out,
and his nurse caught hold of him, and would not have
let him go, but he slipped out of her hand, and looked
over the staircase.
They were bringing up the body of
a man stretched on a shield.
It was Randal’s father.
He had been slain at Flodden, fighting
for the king. An arrow had gone through his brain,
and he had fallen beside James IV., with many another
brave knight, all the best of Scotland, the Flowers
of the Forest.
What was it Randal saw, when he thought
he met his father in the twilight, three days before?
He never knew. His mother said
he must have dreamed it all.
The old nurse used to gossip about
it to the maids. “He’s an unco’
bairn, oor Randal; I wush he may na be fey.”
She meant that Randal was a strange
child, and that strange things would happen to him.