In making this statement I have purposely
couched it in bald and simple language, for fear I
should be accused of colouring my narrative for the
sake of effect. If, however, I have told my story
with any approach to realism, the reader will understand
me when I say that by this time the succession of
dramatic incidents which had occurred had arrested
my attention and excited my imagination to the exclusion
of all minor topics.
How could I plod through the dull
routine of an agent’s work, or interest myself
in the thatch of this tenant’s bothy or the sails
of that one’s boat, when my mind was taken up
by the chain of events which I have described, and
was still busy seeking an explanation for them.
Go where I would over the countryside,
I could see the square, white tower shooting out from
among the trees, and beneath that tower this ill-fated
family were watching and waiting, waiting and watching and
for what? That was still the question which stood
like an impassable barrier at the end of every train
of thought.
Regarded merely as an abstract problem,
this mystery of the Heatherstone family had a lurid
fascination about it, but when the woman whom I loved
a thousandfold better than I did myself proved to be
so deeply interested in the solution, I felt that
it was impossible to turn my thoughts to anything
else until it had been finally cleared up.
My good father had received a letter
from the laird, dated from Naples, which told us that
he had derived much benefit from the change, and that
he had no intention of returning to Scotland for some
time. This was satisfactory to all of us, for
my father had found Branksome such an excellent place
for study that it would have been a sore trial to him
to return to the noise and tumult of a city. As
to my dear sister and myself, there were, as I have
shown, stronger reasons still to make us love the
Wigtownshire moors.
In spite of my interview with the
general or perhaps I might say on account
of it I took occasion at least twice a day
to walk towards Cloomber and satisfy myself that all
was well there. He had begun by resenting my
intrusion, but he had ended by taking me into a sort
of half-confidence, and even by asking my assistance,
so I felt that I stood upon a different footing with
him than I had done formerly, and that he was less
likely to be annoyed by my presence. Indeed, I
met him pacing round the inclosure a few days afterwards,
and his manner towards me was civil, though he made
no allusion to our former conversation.
He appeared to be still in an extreme
state of nervousness, starting from time to time,
and gazing furtively about him, with little frightened,
darting glances to the right and the left. I hoped
that his daughter was right in naming the fifth of
October as the turning point of his complaint, for
it was evident to me as I looked at his gleaming eyes
and quivering hands, that a man could not live long
in such a state of nervous tension.
I found on examination that he had
had the loose rails securely fastened so as to block
up our former trysting-place, and though I prowled
round the whole long line of fencing, I was unable
to find any other place where an entrance could be
effected.
Here and there between the few chinks
left in the barrier I could catch glimpses of the
Hall, and once I saw a rough-looking, middle-aged man
standing at a window on the lower floor, whom I supposed
to be Israel Stakes, the coachman. There was
no sign, however, of Gabriel or of Mordaunt, and their
absence alarmed me. I was convinced that, unless
they were under some restraint, they would have managed
to communicate with my sister or myself. My fears
became more and more acute as day followed day without
our seeing or hearing anything of them.
One morning it was the
second day of October I was walking towards
the Hall, hoping that I might be fortunate enough
to learn some news of my darling, when I observed
a man perched upon a stone at the side of the road.
As I came nearer to him I could see
that he was a stranger, and from his dusty clothes
and dilapidated appearance he seemed to have come from
a distance. He had a great hunch of bread on
his knee and a clasp-knife in his hand, but he had
apparently just finished his breakfast, for he brushed
the crumbs off his lap and rose to his feet when he
perceived me.
Noticing the great height of the fellow
and that he still held his weapon, I kept well to
the other side of the road, for I knew that destitution
makes men desperate and that the chain that glittered
on my waistcoat might be too great a temptation to
him upon this lonely highway. I was confirmed
in my fears when I saw him step out into the centre
of the road and bar my progress.
“Well, my lad,” I said,
affecting an ease which I by no means felt, “what
can I do for you this morning?”
The fellow’s face was the colour
of mahogany with exposure to the weather, and he had
a deep scar from the corner of his mouth to his ear,
which by no means improved his appearance. His
hair was grizzled, but his figure was stalwart, and
his fur cap was cocked on one side so as to give him
a rakish, semi-military appearance. Altogether
he gave me the impression of being one of the most
dangerous types of tramp that I had ever fallen in
with.
Instead of replying to my question,
he eyed me for some time in silence with sullen, yellow-shot
eyes, and then closed his knife with a loud snick.
“You’re not a beak,”
he said, “too young for that, I guess. They
had me in chokey at Paisley and they had me in chokey
at Wigtown, but by the living thunder if another of
them lays a hand on me I’ll make him remember
Corporal Rufus Smith! It’s a darned fine
country this, where they won’t give a man work,
and then lay him by the heels for having no visible
means of subsistence.”
“I am sorry to see an old soldier
so reduced,” said I. “What corps did
you serve in?”
“H Battery, Royal Horse Artillery.
Bad cess to the Service and every one in it!
Here I am nigh sixty years of age, with a beggarly
pension of thirty-eight pound ten not enough
to keep me in beer and baccy.”
“I should have thought thirty-eight
pound ten a year would have been a nice help to you
in your old age,” I remarked.
“Would you, though?” he
answered with a sneer, pushing his weather-beaten
face forward until it was within a foot of my own.
“How much d’ye think that
slash with a tulwar is worth? And my foot with
all the bones rattling about like a bagful of dice
where the trail of the gun went across it. What’s
that worth, eh? And a liver like a sponge, and
ague whenever the wind comes round to the east what’s
the market value of that? Would you take the
lot for a dirty forty pound a year would
you now?”
“We are poor folk in this part
of the country,” I answered. “You
would pass for a rich man down here.”
“They are fool folk and they
have fool tastes,” said he, drawing a black
pipe from his pocket and stuffing it with tobacco.
“I know what good living is, and, by cripes!
while I have a shilling in my pocket I like to spend
it as a shilling should be spent. I’ve fought
for my country and my country has done darned little
for me. I’ll go to the Rooshians, so help
me! I could show them how to cross the Himalayas
so that it would puzzle either Afghans or British
to stop ’em. What’s that secret worth
in St. Petersburg, eh, mister?”
“I am ashamed to hear an old
soldier speak so, even in jest,” said I sternly.
“Jest, indeed!” He cried,
with a great, roaring oath. “I’d have
done it years ago if the Rooshians had been game to
take it up. Skobeloff was the best of the bunch,
but he’s been snuffed out. However, that’s
neither here nor there. What I want to ask you
is whether you’ve ever heard anything in this
quarter of a man called Heatherstone, the same who
used to be colonel of the 41st Bengalis?
They told me at Wigtown that he lived somewhere down
this way.”
“He lives in that large house
over yonder,” said I, pointing to Cloomber Tower.
“You’ll find the avenue gate a little way
down the road, but the general isn’t over fond
of visitors.”
The last part of my speech was lost
upon Corporal Rufus Smith; for the instant that I
pointed out the gate he set off hopping down the road.
His mode of progression was the most
singular I have ever seen, for He would only put his
right foot to the ground once in every half-dozen
strides, while he worked so hard and attained such
a momentum with the other limb that he got over the
ground at an astonishing speed.
I was so surprised that I stood in
the roadway gazing after this hulking figure until
the thought suddenly struck me that some serious result
might come from a meeting between a man of such blunt
speech and the choleric, hot-headed general.
I therefore followed him as he hopped along like some
great, clumsy bird, and overtook him at the avenue
gate, where he stood grasping the ironwork and peering
through at the dark carriage-drive beyond.
“He’s a sly old jackal,”
he said, looking round at me and nodding his head
in the direction of the Hall. “He’s
a deep old dog. And that’s his bungalow,
is it, among the trees?”
“That is his house,” I
answered; “but I should advise you to keep a
more civil tongue in your head if you intend to speak
with the general. He is not a man to stand any
nonsense.”
“Right you are. He was
always a hard nut to crack. But isn’t this
him coming down the avenue?”
I looked through the gate and saw
that it was indeed the general, who, having either
seen us or been attracted by our voices, was hurrying
down towards us. As he advanced he would stop
from time to time and peer at us through the dark
shadow thrown by the trees, as if he were irresolute
whether to come on or no.
“He’s reconnoitering!”
whispered my companion with a hoarse chuckle.
“He’s afraid and I know what
he’s afraid of. He won’t be caught
in a trap if he can help it, the old ’un.
He’s about as fly as they make ’em, you
bet!”
Then suddenly standing on his tip-toes
and waving his hand through the bars of the gate,
he shouted at the top of his voice:
“Come on, my gallant commandant!
Come on! The coast’s clear, and no enemy
in sight.”
This familiar address had the effect
of reassuring the general, for he came right for us,
though I could tell by his heightened colour that his
temper was at boiling point.
“What, you here, Mr. West?”
he said, as his eye fell upon me. “What
is it you want, and why have you brought this fellow
with you?”
“I have not brought him with
me, sir,” I answered, feeling rather disgusted
at being made responsible for the presence of the
disreputable-looking vagabond beside me. “I
found him on the road here, and he desired to be directed
to you, so I showed him the way. I know nothing
of him myself.”
“What do you want with me, then?”
the general asked sternly, turning to my companion.
“If you please, sir,”
said the ex-corporal, speaking in a whining voice,
and touching his moleskin cap with a humility which
contrasted strangely with the previous rough independence
of his bearing, “I’m an old gunner in
the Queen’s service, sir, and knowing your name
by hearing it in India I thought that maybe you would
take me as your groom or gardener, or give me any
other place as happened to be vacant.”
“I am sorry that I cannot do
anything for you, my man,” the old soldier answered
impressively.
“Then you’ll give me a
little just to help me on my way, sir,” said
he cringing mendicant. “You won’t
see an old comrade go to the bad for the sake of a
few rupees? I was with Sale’s brigade in
the Passes, sir, and I was at the second taking of
Cabul.”
General Heatherstone looked keenly
at the supplicant, but was silent to his appeal.
“I was in Ghuznee with you when
the walls were all shook down by an earthquake, and
when we found forty thousand Afghans within gunshot
of us. You ask me about it, and you’ll
see whether I’m lying or not. We went through
all this when we were young, and now that we are old
you are to live in a fine bungalow, and I am to starve
by the roadside. It don’t seem to me to
be fair.”
“You are an impertinent scoundrel,”
said the general. “If you had been a good
soldier you would never need to ask for help.
I shall not give you a farthing.”
“One word more, sir,”
cried the tramp, for the other was turning away, “I’ve
been in the Tarada Pass.”
The old soldier sprang round as if
the words had been a pistol-shot.
“What what d’ye
mean?” he stammered. “I’ve been
in the Tarada Pass, sir, and I knew a man there called
Ghoolab Shah.”
These last were hissed out in an undertone,
and a malicious grin overspread the face of the speaker.
Their effect upon the general was
extraordinary. He fairly staggered back from
the gateway, and his yellow countenance blanched to
a livid, mottled grey. For a moment he was too
overcome to speak. At last he gasped out:
“Ghoolab Shah’ Who are you who know Ghoolab
Shah?”
“Take another look,” said
the tramp, “your sight is not as keen as it
was forty years ago.”
The general took a long, earnest look
at the unkempt wanderer in front of him, and as he
gazed I saw the light of recognition spring up in his
eyes.
“God bless my soul!” he
cried. “Why, it’s Corporal Rufus Smith.”
“You’ve come on it at
last,” said the other, chuckling to himself.
“I was wondering how long it would be before
you knew me. And, first of all, just unlock this
gate, will you? It’s hard to talk through
a grating. It’s too much like ten minutes
with a visitor in the cells.”
The general, whose face still bore
evidences of his agitation, undid the bolts with nervous,
trembling fingers. The recognition of Corporal
Rufus Smith had, I fancied, been a relief to him,
and yet he plainly showed by his manner that he regarded
his presence as by no means an unmixed blessing.
“Why, Corporal,” he said,
as the gate swung open, “I have often wondered
whether you were dead or alive, but I never expected
to see you again. How have you been all these
long years?”
“How have I been?” the
corporal answered gruffly. “Why, I have
been drunk for the most part. When I draw my
money I lay it out in liquor, and as long as that
lasts I get some peace in life. When I’m
cleaned out I go upon tramp, partly in the hope of
picking up the price of a dram, and partly in order
to look for you.”
“You’ll excuse us talking
about these private matters, West,” the general
said, looking round at me, for I was beginning to move
away. “Don’t leave us. You know
something of this matter already, and may find yourself
entirely in the swim with us some of these days.”
Corporal Rufus Smith looked round
at me in blank astonishment.
“In the swim with us?”
he said. “However did he get there?”
“Voluntarily, voluntarily,”
the general explained, hurriedly sinking his voice.
“He is a neighbour of mine, and he has volunteered
his help in case I should ever need it.”
This explanation seemed, if anything,
to increase the big stranger’s surprise.
“Well, if that don’t lick
cock-fighting!” he exclaimed, contemplating me
with admiration. “I never heard tell of
such a thing.”
“And now you have found me,
Corporal Smith,” said the tenant of Cloomber,
“what is it that you want of me?”
“Why, everything. I want
a roof to cover me, and clothes to wear, and food
to eat, and, above all, brandy to drink.”
“Well, I’ll take you in
and do what I can for you,” said the general
slowly. “But look here, Smith, we must have
discipline. I’m the general and you are
the corporal; I am the master and you are the man.
Now, don’t let me have to remind you of that
again.”
The tramp drew himself up to his full
height and raised his right hand with the palm forward
in a military salute.
“I can take you on as gardener
and get rid of the fellow I have got. As to brandy,
you shall have an allowance and no more. We are
not deep drinkers at the Hall.”
“Don’t you take opium,
or brandy, or nothing yourself, sir?” asked
Corporal Rufus Smith.
“Nothing,” the general said firmly.
“Well, all I can say is, that
you’ve got more nerve and pluck than I shall
ever have. I don’t wonder now at your winning
that Cross in the Mutiny. If I was to go on listening
night after night to them things without ever taking
a drop of something to cheer my heart why,
it would drive me silly.”
General Heatherstone put his hand
up, as though afraid that his companion might say
too much.
“I must thank you, Mr. West,”
he said, “for having shown this man my door.
I would not willingly allow an old comrade, however
humble, to go to the bad, and if I did not acknowledge
his claim more readily it was simply because I had
my doubts as to whether he was really what he represented
himself to be. Just walk up to the Hall, Corporal,
and I shall follow you in a minute.”
“Poor fellow!” he continued,
as he watched the newcomer hobbling up the avenue
in the ungainly manner which I have described.
“He got a gun over his foot, and it crushed
the bones, but the obstinate fool would not let the
doctors take it off. I remember him now as a smart
young soldier in Afghanistan. He and I were associated
in some queer adventures, which I may tell you of
some day, and I naturally feel sympathy towards him,
and would befriend him. Did he tell you anything
about me before I came?”
“Not a word,” I replied.
“Oh,” said the general
carelessly, but with an evident expression of relief,
“I thought perhaps he might have said something
of old times. Well, I must go and look after
him, or the servants will be frightened, for he isn’t
a beauty to look at. Good-bye!”
With a wave of the hand the old man
turned away from me and hurried up the drive after
this unexpected addition to his household, while I
strolled on round the high, black paling, peering through
every chink between the planks, but without seeing
a trace either of Mordaunt or of his sister.
I have now brought this statement
down to the coming of Corporal Rufus Smith, which
will prove to be the beginning of the end.
I have set down soberly and in order
the events which brought us to Wigtownshire, the arrival
of the Heatherstones at Cloomber, the many strange
incidents which excited first our curiosity and finally
our intense interest in that family, and I have briefly
touched upon the circumstances which brought my sister
and myself into a closer and more personal relationship
with them. I think that there cannot be a better
moment than this to hand the narrative over to those
who had means of knowing something of what was going
on inside Cloomber during the months that I was observing
it from without.
Israel Stakes, the coachman, proved
to be unable to read or write, but Mr. Mathew Clark,
the Presbyterian Minister of Stoneykirk, has copied
down his deposition, duly attested by the cross set
opposite to his name. The good clergyman has,
I fancy, put some slight polish upon the narrator’s
story, which I rather regret, as it might have been
more interesting, if less intelligible, when reported
verbatim. It still preserves, however, considerable
traces of Israel’s individuality, and may be
regarded as an exact record of what he saw and did
while in General Heatherstone’s service.