RANDAL and Jean went to the old woman
and comforted her, though they could not understand
what she meant. She cried and sobbed, and threw
her arms about; but, by degrees, they found out all
the story. When Randal had told her how all he
saw in Fairyland was changed after he had touched
his eyes with the water from the bottle, the old woman
remembered many tales that she had heard about some
charm known to the fairies, which helped them to find
things hidden, and to see through walls and stones.
Then she had got the bottle from Randal, and had stolen
out, meaning to touch her eyes with the water, and
try whether that was the charm and whether
she could find the treasure spoken of in the old rhymes.
She went
“Between the Camp
o’ Rink
And Tweed water clear,”
and to the place which lay
“Between the wet
land and the dry,”
that is, between the marsh and the Catrail.
Here she had noticed the three great
Stones; which made a kind of chamber on the hill-side,
and here she had anointed her eyes with the salt water
of the bottle of tears.
Then she had seen through the grass,
she declared, and through the upper soil, and she
had beheld great quantities of gold. And she was
running with the bottle to tell Randal, and to touch
his eyes with the water that he might see it also.
But, out of Fairyland, the strange water only had
its magical power while it was still wet on the eyelashes.
This the old nurse soon found; for she went back to
the three standing stones, and looked and saw nothing,
only grass and daisies. And the fairy bottle
was broken, and all the water spilt.
This was her story, and Randal did
not know what to believe. But so many strange
things had happened to him, that one more did not seem
impossible. So he and Jean took the old nurse
home, and made her comfortable in her room, and Jean
put her to bed, and got her a little wine and an oat-cake.
Then Randal very quietly locked the
door outside, and put the key in his pocket.
It would have been of no use to tell the old nurse
to be quiet about what she thought she had seen.
By this time it was late and growing
dark. But that night there would be a moon.
After supper, of which there was very
little, Lady Ker went to bed. But Randal and
Jean slipped out into the moonlight. They took
a sack with them, and Randal carried a pickaxe and
a spade. They walked quickly to the three great
stones, and waited for a while to hear if all was quiet.
Then Jean threw a white cloak round her, and stole
about the edges of the camp and the wood. She
knew that if any wandering man came by, he would not
stay long where such a figure was walking. The
night was cool, the dew lay on the deep fern; there
was a sweet smell from the grass and from the pine
wood.
In the meantime, Randal was digging
a long trench with his pickaxe, above the place where
the old woman had knelt, as far as he could remember
it.
He worked very hard, and when he was
in the trench up to his knees, his pickaxe struck
against a stone. He dug round it with the spade,
and came to a layer of black burnt ashes of bones.
Beneath these, which he scraped away, was the large
flat stone on which his pick had struck. It was
a wide slab of red sandstone, and Randal soon saw that
it was the lid of a great stone coffin, such as the
ploughshare sometimes strikes against when men are
ploughing the fields in the Border country.
Randal had seen these before, when
he was a boy, and he knew that there was never much
in them, except ashes and one or two rough pots of
burnt clay.
He was much disappointed.
It had seemed as if he was really
coming to something, and, behold, it was only an old
stone coffin!
However, he worked on till he had
cleared the whole of the stone coffin-lid. It
was a very large stone chest, and must have been made,
Randal thought, for the body of a very big man.
With the point of his pickaxe he raised the lid.
In the moonlight he saw something of a strange shape.
He put down his hand, and pulled it out.
It was an image, in metal, about a
foot high, and represented a beautiful woman, with
wings on her shoulders, sitting on a wheel.
Randal had never seen an image like
this; but in an old book, which belonged to the Monks
of Melrose, he had seen, when he was a boy, a picture
of such a woman.
The Monks had told him that she was
Fortune, with her swift wings that carry her from
one person to another, as luck changes, and with her
wheel that she turns with the turning of chance in
the world.
The image was very heavy. Randal
rubbed some of the dirt and red clay off, and found
that the metal was yellow. He cut it with his
knife; it was soft. He cleaned a piece, which
shone bright and unrusted in the moonlight, and touched
it with his tongue. Then he had no doubt any
more. The image was gold!
Randal knew now that the old nurse
had not been mistaken. With the help of the fairy
water she had seen The Gold of Fairnilee.
He called very softly to Jeanie, who came glimmering
in her white robes through the wood, looking herself
like a fairy. He put the image in her hand, and
set his finger on his lips to show that she must not
speak.
Then he went back to the great stone
coffin, and began to grope in it with his hands.
There was much earth in it that had slowly sifted
through during the many years that it, had been buried.
But there was also a great round bowl of metal and
a square box.
Randal got out the bowl first.
It was covered with a green rust, and had a lid; in
short, it was a large ancient kettle, such as soldiers
use in camp. Randal got the lid off, and, behold,
it was all full of very ancient gold coins, not Greek
nor Roman, but like such in use in Briton before Julius
Cæsar came.
The box was of iron. On the lid,
in the moonshine, Jeanie could read the letters S.
P. Q. R., but she did not know what they meant.
The box had been locked, and chained, and clamped
with iron bars. But all was so rusty that the
bars were easily broken, and the lid torn off.
Then the moon shone on bars of gold,
and on great plates and dishes of gold and silver,
marked with letters, and with what Randal thought
were crests. Many of the cups were studded with
red and green and blue stones. And there were
beautiful plates and dishes, purple, gold, and green;
and one of these fell, and broke into a thousand pieces,
for it was of some strange kind of glass. There
were three gold sword-hilts, carved wonderfully into
the figures of strange beasts with wings, and heads
like lions.
Randal and Jean looked at it and marvelled,
and Jean sang in a low, sweet voice:
“Between the Camp
o’ Rink
And Tweed water clear,
Lie nine kings’
ransoms
For nine hundred year."
Nobody ever saw so much treasure in all broad Scotland.
Jean and Randal passed the rest of
the night in hiding what they had found. Part
they hid in the secret chamber of Fairnilee, of which
only Jean and Lady Ker and Randal knew the secret.
The rest they stowed away in various places.
Then Randal filled the earth into the trench, and
cast wood on the place, and set fire to the wood, so
that next day there was nothing there but ashes and
charred earth.
You will not need to be told what
Randal did, now that he had treasure in plenty.
Some he sold in France, to the king, Henry II., and
some in Rome, to the Pope; and with the money which
they gave him he bought corn and cattle in England,
enough to feed all his neighbours, and stock the farms,
and sow the fields for next year. And Fairnilee
became a very rich and fortunate house, for Randal
married Jean, and soon their children were playing
on the banks of the Tweed, and rolling down the grassy
slope to the river, to bathe on hot days. And
the old nurse lived long and happy among her new bairns,
and often she told them how it was she who
really found the Gold of Fairnilee.
You may wonder what the gold was,
and how it came there? Probably Father Francis,
the good Melrose Monk, was right. He said that
the iron box and the gold image of Fortune, and the
kettle full of coins, had belonged to some regiment
of the Roman army: the kettle and the coins, they
must have taken from the Britons; the box and all
the plate were their own, and brought from Italy.
Then they, in their turn, must have been defeated
by some of the fierce tribes beyond the Roman wall,
and must have lost all their treasure. That must
have been buried by the victorious enemy; and they,
again, must have been driven from their strong camp
at Rink, either by some foes from the north, or by
a new Roman army from the south. So all the gold
lay at Fairnilee for many hundred years, never quite
forgotten, as the old rhyme showed, but never found
till it was discovered, in their sore need, by the
old nurse and Randal and Jean.
As for Randal and Jean, they lived
to be old, and died on one day, and they are buried
at Dryburgh in one tomb, and a green tree grows over
them; and the Tweed goes murmuring past their grave,
and past the grave of Sir Walter Scott.