JEAN was found, but where was Randal?
She told the men who had come out to look for her,
that Randal had gone on to look for the Wishing Well.
So they rolled her up in a big shepherd’s plaid,
and two of them carried Jean home in the plaid, while
all the rest, with lighted torches in their hands,
went to look for Randal through the wood.
Jean was so tired that she fell asleep
again in her plaid before they reached Fairnilee.
She was wakened by the men shouting as they drew near
the house, to show that they were coming home.
Lady Ker was waiting at the gate, and the old nurse
ran down the grassy path to meet them.
“Where’s my bairn?”
she cried as soon as she was within call.
The men said, “Here ’s
Mistress Jean, and Randal will be here soon; they
have gone to look for him.”
“Where are they looking?” cried nurse.
“Just about the Wishing Well.”
The nurse gave a scream, and hobbled back to Lady
Ker.
“Ma bairn’s tint!" she
cried, “ma bairn’s tint! They ’ll
find him never. The good folk have stolen him
away from that weary Wishing Well!”
Tint, lost.
“Hush, nurse,” said Lady Ker, “do
not frighten Jean.”
She spoke to the men, who had no doubt
that Randal would soon be found and brought home.
So Jean was put to bed, where she
forgot all her troubles; and Lady Ker waited, waited,
all night, till the grey light began to come in, about
two in the morning.
Lady Ker kept very still and quiet,
telling her beads, and praying. But the old nurse
would never be still, but was always wandering out,
down to the river’s edge, listening for the
shouts of the shepherds coming home. Then she
would come back again, and moan and wring her hands,
crying for “her bairn.”
About six o’clock, when it was
broad daylight and all the birds were singing, the
men returned from the hill.
But Randal did not come with them.
Then the old nurse set up a great
cry, as the country people do over the bed of someone
who has just died.
Lady Ker sent her away, and called
Simon Grieve to her own room.
“You have not found the boy
yet?” she said, very stately and pale.
“He must have wandered over into Yarrow; perhaps
he has gone as far as Newark, and passed the night
at the castle, or with the shepherd at Foulshiels.”
“No, my Lady,” said Simon
Grieve, “some o’ the men went over to Newark,
and some to Foulshiels, and other some down to Sir
John Murray’s at Philiphaugh; but there’s
never a word o’ Randal in a’ the country-side.”
“Did you find no trace of him?”
said Lady Ker, sitting down suddenly in the great
armchair.
“We went first through the wood,
my Lady, by the path to the Wishing Well. And
he had been there, for the whip he carried in his hand
was lying on the grass. And we found this.”
He put his hand in his pouch, and
brought out a little silver crucifix, that Randal
used always to wear round his neck on a chain.
“This was lying on the grass
beside the Wishing Well, my Lady - ”
Then he stopped, for Lady Ker had
swooned away. She was worn out with watching
and with anxiety about Randal.
Simon went and called the maids, and
they brought water and wine, and soon Lady Ker came
back to herself, with the little silver crucifix in
her hand.
The old nurse was crying, and making a great noise.
“The good folk have taken ma
bairn,” she said, “this nicht o’
a’ the nichts in the year, when the fairy
folk - preserve us frae them! –have
power. But they could nae take the blessed rood
o’ grace; it was beyond their strength.
If gipsies, or robber folk frae the Debatable Land,
had carried away the bairn, they would hae taken him,
cross and a’. But the guid folk have gotten
him, and Randal Ker will never, never mair come hame
to bonny Fairnilee.”
What the old nurse said was what everybody
thought. Even Simon Grieve shook his head, and
did not like it.
But Lady Ker did not give up hope.
She sent horsemen through all the country-side:
up Tweed to the Crook, and to Talla; up Yarrow,
past Catslack Tower, and on to the Loch of Saint Mary;
up Ettrick to Thirlestane and Buccleugh, and over
to Gala, and to Branxholme in Teviotdale; and even
to Hermitage Castle, far away by Liddel water.
They rode far and rode fast, and at
every cottage and every tower they asked “had
anyone seen a boy in green?” But nobody had seen
Randal through all the country-side. Only a shepherd
lad, on Foulshiels hill, had heard bells ringing in
the night, and a sound of laughter go past him, like
a breeze of wind over the heather.
Days went by, and all the country,
was out to look for Randal. Down in Yetholme
they sought him, among the gipsies; and across the
Eden in merry Carlisle; and through the Land Debatable,
where the robber Armstrongs and Grahames lived;
and far down Tweed, past Melrose, and up Jed water,
far into the Cheviot hills.
But there never came any word of Randal.
He had vanished as if the earth had opened and swallowed
him. Father Francis came from Melrose Abbey,
and prayed with Lady Ker, and gave her all the comfort
he could. He shook his head when he heard of
the Wishing Well, but he said that no spirit of earth
or air could have power for ever over a Christian soul.
But, even when he spoke, he remembered that, once in
seven years, the fairy folk have to pay a dreadful
tax, one of themselves, to the King of a terrible
country of Darkness; and what if they had stolen Randal,
to pay the tax with him!
This was what troubled good Father
Francis, though, like a wise man, he said nothing
about it, and even put the thought away out of his
own mind.
But you may be sure that the old nurse
had thought of this tax on the fairies too, and that
she did not hold her peace about it, but spoke
to everyone that would listen to her, and would have
spoken to the mistress if she had been allowed.
But when she tried to begin, Lady Ker told her that
she had put her own trust in Heaven, and in the Saints.
And she gave the nurse such a look when she said that,
“if ever Jean heard of this, she would send
nurse away from Fairnilee, out of the country,”
that the old woman was afraid, and was quiet.
As for poor Jean, she was perhaps
the most unhappy of them all. She thought to
herself, if she had refused to go with Randal to the
Wishing Well, and had run in and told Lady Ker, then
Randal would never have started to find the Wishing
Well. And she put herself in great danger, as
she fancied, to find him. She wandered alone on
the hills, seeking all the places that were believed
to be haunted by fairies.
At every Fairy Knowe, as the country
people called the little round green knolls in the
midst of the heather, Jean would stoop her ear to
the ground, trying to hear the voices of the fairies
within. For it was believed that you might hear
the sound of their speech, and the trampling of their
horses, and the shouts of the fairy children.
But no sound came, except the song of the burn flowing
by, and the hum of gnats in the air, and the gock,
gock, the cry of the grouse, when you frighten
him in the heather.
Then Jeanie would try another way
of meeting the fairies, and finding Randal. She
would walk nine times round a Fairy Knowe, beginning
from the left side, because then it was fancied that
the hill-side would open, like a door, and show a
path into Fairyland. But the hill-side never
opened, and she never saw a single fairy; not even
old Whuppity Stoorie sit with her spinning-wheel in
a green glen, spinning grass into gold, and singing
her fairy song: -
“I once was young
and fair,
My eyes were bright
and blue,
As if the sun shone
through,
And golden was my hair.
“Down to my feet
it rolled
Ruddy and ripe like
corn,
Upon an autumn morn,
In heavy waves of gold.
“Now am I grey
and old,
And so I sit and spin,
With trembling hand
and thin,
This metal bright and
cold.
“I would give
all the gain,
These heaps of wealth
untold
Of hard and glittering
gold,
Could I be young again!”