In my opinion there’s hardly
an acre of Dartmoor as wouldn’t set forth a
good tale, if us could only go back along into time
and get hold of it. Anyway, there’s a ’mazing
fine thing to be told about Vitifer Farm; and
you don’t want to go back far, neither, for it
all happened but ten year ago.
Vitifer is one of the “tenement”
farms and don’t belong to the Duchy; and Furze
Hill farm, which adjoins Vitifer, be likewise
land handed down from father to son from generations
forgot. The “tenements” are scattered
over Dartmoor, mostly in the valleys of East and West
Dart; but Vitifer and Furze Hill stood together
half a mile distant from the famous Vitifer tin
mine that lies in the wild ground west of Hameldon.
And Joe Gregory farmed Vitifer when this fearful
thing fell out, and his brother Amos Gregory was master
at Furze Hill.
The Duchy had long desired the land,
for ’tis Duchy’s rule to snap up the tenement
farms as they fall in the market, and indeed few will
soon remain in private possession; but for the minute
the two brothers middle-aged bachelors
both held on where their forefathers had
worked before them time out of mind, and it looked
almost as though they was going to be the last of
the ancient name to resist the over-lord of Dartmoor;
for men come and men go; but Duchy lasts for ever
and, no doubt, will have all it wants to the last
rood afore many years be past.
One of the next generation, however,
still stood for the Gregory race, and he was a nephew
to Joe and Amos. A third brother they had, but
him and his wife were dead, and their only son lived
with Joe and was thought to be his heir. Ernest
Gregory he was called, and few thought he’d make
old bones, for the young man was pigeon-breasted and
high-coloured and coughed a good bit when first he
came up from the “in country” to the Moor.
Along with his uncle, however, he
put on flesh and promised better. Fair and gentle
he was a quiet, timid sort of chap, who
kept pretty much to himself and didn’t neighbour
with the young men and maidens. He was said to
be vain behind his silence and to reckon himself a
good deal cleverer than us Merripit people; but I
never found him anything but well behaved and civil
spoken to his elders, and I went so far sometimes as
to ask his Uncle Amos why for he didn’t like
the man. Because the master of Furze Hill never
did care about Ernest, though Joe Gregory, with whom
the young fellow lived at Vitifer, thought very
highly of him indeed.
And Amos confessed he hadn’t
got no deep cause to dislike his nephew.
“To be plain, ’tis a woman’s
reason and no more,” admitted Amos. “Ernest
have got a glide in his eye, poor chap, and God knows
that’s not a fault, and yet I never can abide
that affliction and it would put me off an angel from
heaven if the holy creature squinted.”
It was a silly prejudice of the man,
and in time I think he got it under and granted that
you did ought to judge a person by their acts and not
by their eyes; but human nature has its ingrained
likes and dislikes, and I for one couldn’t question
Amos, because I hate a hunchback, and I wouldn’t
trust one of they humped people man or woman with
anything that belonged to me. The broadest-minded
of us have got a weak spot like that somewhere and
hate some harmless thing if ’tis only a spider.
But, after he’d been along at
Vitifer five years, I don’t think a living
soul felt anything but kindly to Ernest, and when it
was rumoured that he’d got brave enough to go
courting Sarah White from Postbridge, everybody wished
him luck, including his uncles especially
Amos himself; for Joe’s younger brother was
very friendly to the Postbridge Whites, and them who
thought they knew, always said how he’d offered
for Jenny White twenty-five years before and might
very like have won her if she hadn’t loved the
water-keeper on East Dart better and married him instead.
Then happened the wondrous mystery
of Joe Gregory. ’Twas just before Christmas rough
stormy weather and not much doing on the high ground when
Joe set out early one morning for Exeter to see his
lawyers. He’d done very well that year better
than Amos and he was taking a matter of
one hundred and fifty pounds in cash to Exeter for
his man of business to invest for him. And Ernest
drove him in to Ashburton, at cocklight of a stormy
day, and was going in again that evening to meet his
uncle and fetch him home.
All went well, and at the appointed
time Joe’s nephew set out once more with a light
trap and a clever horse, after dark, to meet the evening
train. And no more was heard till somewhere about
ten o’clock of that night. Then Amos Gregory,
just finishing his nightcap and knocking out his pipe
to go to bed, much to his astonishment heard somebody
banging on the front door of Furze Hill. Guessing
it was some night-foundered tramp, he cussed the wanderer
to hell; but cussing was only an ornament in his speech,
for a tenderer creature really never lived, and
he wouldn’t have turned a stray cat from his
door that fierce night, let alone a human.
It weren’t no tramp, however;
it proved to be his nephew Ernest, and the young man
was clad in his oilskins and dripping with the storm
rain and so frightened as a rabbit.
In a word, he’d been to Ashburton
and waited for the appointed train, only to find his
uncle hadn’t come back by it. And so he
bided, till the last train of all, and still Joe hadn’t
turned up. So Ernest drove home, hoping to find
a telegram had come meanwhile and been brought up from
Merripit post office. But there weren’t
no telegram; and now he was properly feared and had
come over to Amos to know what did ought to be done.
First thing to do, in the opinion
of Amos, was to pour a good dollop of gin down Ernest’s
neck; then, when the shaking chap had got a bit of
fight in him, he explained that till the morn they
were powerless to take action.
“I know his lawyer, because
Cousins and Slark be my lawyers also,” said
Amos; “and they always was the family men of
business, so if us hear nought when the post office
opens to-morrow, we’ll send off a telegram to
them; and if they’ve got nothing to say, then
we must tell the police.”
Ernest was a good bit down-daunted
and said he felt cruel sure evil had over-got his
uncle, and Amos didn’t like it neither, for a
more orderly man than Joe Gregory and one more steadfast
in doing what he promised couldn’t easily be
found. However, they had to suffer till morning,
and Ernest went back to Vitifer, which stood
not quarter of a mile away.
Morning brought no letter nor yet
telegram, so Amos went down to Merripit post office
and sent a wire off to the Exeter lawyers axing for
news of his brother; and he waited till an answer
came down. It ran like this:
Mr. Gregory spent an hour with
us yesterday and left at four o’clock to catch
down train.
Cousins
and Slark.
Well, that showed there was something
wrong, and Amos felt he was up against it. He
never let the grass grow under his feet, and in twenty
minutes he was riding to Ashburton, to catch a train
for Exeter. And afore he went, he directed Ernest
to tell the police that his uncle was missing.
So hue and cry began from that morning, and the centre
of search was Exeter, because from there came the
last sure news of the man. The lawyers made it
clear that Joe was all right when he left them.
He’d handed over his money to be invested, and
he’d put a codicil to his will, which, of course,
the lawyers didn’t divulge to Amos. Then
he’d gone off very cheerful and hearty to buy
a few things afore he catched his train. But
from that moment not a whisper of Joe Gregory could
be heard. He wasn’t a noticeable sort of
chap, being small with an everyday old face and everyday
grey whiskers; and nobody to the railway stations at
Exeter or Totnes, where he would change for the Ashburton
line, had seen him to their knowledge. Yet in
the course of the next few days, when his disappearance
had got in the papers, three separate people testified
as they’d met Joe that evening, and Ernest Gregory
was able to prove they must have seen right.
The first was a tobacconist’s assistant at Exeter,
who came forward and said a little, countrified man
had bought two wooden pipes from him and a two-ounce
packet of shag tobacco; and he said the little man
wore a billycock hat with a jay’s blue wing feather
in it. And a barmaid at Newton Abbot testified
that she’d served just such a man at the station
after the train from Exeter had come in, about five-thirty,
and afore it went out. She minded the jay’s
feather in his hat, because she’d asked the
customer what it was, and he’d told her.
And lastly a porter up at Moretonhampstead said that
a small chap answering to the description had got
out of the Newton train to Moreton, which arrived at
Moreton at fifteen minutes after six. But he’d
marked no jay’s feather in the man’s hat
and only just noticed him, being a stranger, as went
out of the station with half a dozen other travellers
and gave up his ticket with the rest. The tickets
was checked, and sure enough, there were two from
Exeter to Moreton; but while Ernest could prove the
jay’s feather to be in his uncle’s hat,
neither he nor anybody else could give any reason why
Joe should have gone to Moreton instead of coming
home. He might have left the train for a drink
at Newton, where there was time for him to do so; but
he would have gone back to it no doubt in the ordinary
course. Asked if he came in alone for his drink,
the barmaid said he did so and was prepared to swear
that nobody spoke to him in the bar but herself.
And he’d gone again afore the down train left.
But at Totnes, where Joe was known by sight and where
he ought to have changed for Ashburton, none had seen
him.
The police followed the Moreton clue,
but nobody there reported sight of Joe on the night
he disappeared. He’d got a friend or two
at Moreton; but not one had fallen in with him since
the autumn ram fair, when he was over there with his
nephew for the day.
The law done all in its power; the
down lines were searched from Newton, and Amos Gregory
offered a reward of fifty pounds for any news of his
lost brother; but not a speck, or sign, of Joe came
to light. A month passed and the nine days’
wonder began to die down a bit.
I met Amos about then, and we was
both on horseback riding to Ashburton, and he told
me that he was bound for the lawyers, to make inquiry
of how the law stood in the matter and what he ought
to do about Vitifer Farm.
“My nephew Ernest, is carrying
on there,” he told me, “and he’s
a good farmer enough and can be trusted to do all
that’s right; but there’s no money to
be touched and I must find out if they’ll tell
me what have got to be done and how the law stands.”
He was a lot cut up, for him and his
brother had always been very good friends; and he
was troubled for his nephew also, because Ernest had
lost his nerve a good deal over the tragedy.
“He’s taking on very bad
and can’t get over it,” said Amos to me.
“The natural weakness of his character have
come out under this shock, and the poor chap be like
a fowl running about with its head off. He never
had more wits than please God he should have, and
this great disaster finds him unmanned. He will
have it his uncle’s alive. He’s heard
of men losing their memory and getting into wrong
trains and so on. But I tell him that with all
the noise that’s been made over the country,
if Joe was living, though he might be as mad as a
hatter, ’tis certain by now we should have wind
of him.”
“Certain sure,” I said.
“He’s a goner without a doubt, and ’twill
take a miracle ever to get to the bottom of this.”
I was reminded of them words a fortnight
later, for it did take a miracle to find the shocking
truth. In fact you may say it took two. And
one without the other might just as well not have
happened. And ’tis no good saying the days
of miracles be passed, because they ban’t.
I heard later that the lawyers let
Amos read his brother’s will and got a power
of attorney for him to act and carry on. And the
will left Vitifer Farm to Amos, on the condition
that he would keep on his nephew Ernest. It was
four year old; and the codicil, that Joe wrote the
day he disappeared, ordained that when Amos died,
Vitifer shouldn’t be sold to Duchy, but
handed down to the next generation of the Gregorys
in the shape of Ernest.
Well, Amos had no quarrel with that,
and when he went home, he asked his nephew if he’d
known about the codicil, and he said he had not.
And when he learned of his uncle’s kind thought
for him, he broke down and wept like a child, till
Amos had to speak rough and tell him to keep a stiff
upper lip and bear himself more manly.
“If you be going to behave like
a girl over this fearful loss, I shan’t have
no use for you at Vitifer,” Amos warned
the young chap. “You must face this very
sad and terrible come-along-of-it same as I be doing.
And you must show me what you’re good for, else
I may do something you won’t like. This
tragedy reminds me, Ernest,” he said, “that
I haven’t made my own will yet, and as you be
my next-of-kin, if your poor uncle have gone home,
that means you’ll inherit Furze Hill also in
course of time and be able to run a ring fence round
both places. But that remains to be seen; and
if you are going to show that you haven’t got
manhood enough to face the ups and downs of life,
then I shall turn elsewhere for one to follow me and
young Adam White, my godson, may hap to be the man.”
He gave his nephew a bit more advice
and told him he’d best to go on courting the
maiden, Sarah White, to distract his mind.
“For you’re the sort,”
said Amos, “that be better with a strong-willed
woman at your elbow in my opinion, and if Sally takes
you, I shall be glad of it.”
So Ernest bucked up a bit from that
day forth, and no doubt the fact that he was to have
Vitifer in the course of nature, decided Sarah,
for she agreed to wed the young man ten days afterwards,
and Amos was pleased, and decided that the wedding
should fall out next Easter.
Ernest Gregory, as we all marked,
was a changed man from that hour; for though he was
built to feel trouble very keen, he hadn’t the
intellects to feel it very deep, and in the glory
of winning Sarah, he beamed forth again like the sun
from a cloud. And nobody blamed him, because,
whether your heart be large or small, a dead uncle,
however good he was, can’t be expected to come
between a man and the joy of a live sweetheart, who
has said “Yes” to him.
II
Then came a night of stars, and once
again Amos Gregory was shook up to his heels by somebody
running in hot haste with news just as the farmer
was about to go to bed. And once more it was his
nephew, Ernest, who brought the tale.
“I’ve found a wondrous
pit in the rough ground beyond Four Acre Field,”
he said. “I came upon it this afternoon,
rabbiting, and but for the blessing of God, should
have falled in, for the top’s worn away and some
big stones have fallen in. ’Tis just off
the path in that clitter of stone beside the stile.”
The young man was panting and so excited
that his words tripped each other; but his uncle didn’t
see for the minute why he should be, and spoke according.
“My father always thought there
was a shaft hole there,” answered Amos, “and
very likely there may be, and time have worn it to
the light, for Vitifer Mine used to run out into
a lot of passages that be deserted now, and there’s
the famous adit in Smallcumbe Goyle, half a mile away,
to the west, long deserted now; and when I was a child,
me and my brothers often played in the mouth of it.
The place was blocked years ago by a fall from the
roof. But why for you want to run to me with this
story at such an hour, Ernest, I can’t well
say. Us ought to be abed, and Sarah will soon
larn you to keep better hours, I reckon. You’re
a lot too excitable and I could wish it altered.”
But the man’s nephew explained.
“That ain’t all, Uncle Amos,” he
went on, “for I found Uncle Joe’s hat
alongside the place! There it lies still and
little the worse blue jay feather and all.
But I dursn’t touch it for fear of the law,
and seeing it just after I’d found the hole,
filled me with fear and terror. Because it looks
cruel as if Uncle had pretty near got home that fatal
night, and coming across by the field path in the
dark, got in the rough and went down the pit.”
Well, Amos had reached for his boots
you may be sure before Ernest was to the end of his
tale, and in five minutes he’d put on his coat
and gone out with Ernest to see the spot.
Their eyes soon got used to the starlight,
and by the time they reached the field called Four
Acre, Amos was seeing pretty clear. In one corner
where a field path ran from a stile down the side,
was a stony hillock dotted with blackthorns and briars
and all overgrown with nettles, and in the midst of
it, sure enough, time and weather had broke open a
hole as went down into the bowels of the earth beneath.
And beside this hole, little the worse for five weeks
in the open, lay Joe Gregory’s billycock hat.
Amos fetched a box of matches out
of his pocket, struck one and looked at the hat.
Then he peered down into the black pit alongside, and,
as he did so, he felt a heavy push from behind, and
he was gone falling down into darkness
and death afore he knew what had happened. And
in that awful moment, such a terrible strange thing
be man’s mind, it weren’t fear of death
and judgment, nor yet horror of the smash that must
happen when he got to the bottom, that gripped Gregory’s
brain: it was just a feeling of wild anger against
himself, that he’d ever been such a fool as to
trust a man with a glide in his eye!
In the fraction of time as passed,
while he was falling, his wits moved like lightning,
and he saw, not only what had happened, but why it
had happened. He saw that Ernest Gregory knew
all about Joe and had probably done him in five weeks
ago; and he saw likewise that now it was his turn
to be murdered. Then Vitifer and Furze Hill
would both belong to the young man. All this
Amos saw; and he felt also a dreadful, conquering desire
to tell the people what had happened and be revenged;
and he told himself that his ghost should come to
Merripit if he had to break out of hell to come, and
give his friends no rest till they was laid upon the
track of his nephew.
All that worked through his brain
in an instant moment, like things happen in a dream,
and then he was brought up sudden and fell so light
that he knew he weren’t dead yet, but heard
something crack at the same moment. And then
Amos discovered he was on a rotten landing-stage of
old timber, with the shaft hole above him and a head,
outlined against the stars, looking down, and another
hole extending below. He was, in fact, catched
half-way to his doom and hung there with the devil
above and the unknown deep below and hung up on the
mouldering wood. He heard Ernest laugh then,
and the sound was such as none had ever heard from
him before more like a beast’s noise
than a man’s. Then his head disappeared
and Amos was just wondering what next, when his nephew
came to the hole again and dropped a great stone.
It shot past the wretched chap where he hung, just
touching his elbow, and then Amos, seeing he was to
be stoned to make sure, called upon God to save him
alive. He pressed back against the pit side, while
the crumbling timber gave under him and threatened
to let him down any moment, but the action saved his
life, for the time being, for as he moved, down came
another stone and then another. Where the joists
of the stage went in, however, was a bit of cover
for the unfortunate chap just enough to
keep him clear of the danger from above, and there
he stuck, pressed to the rock like a lichen, with
great stones going by so close that they curled his
hair. All was black as pitch and the young devil
up over had no thought that his poor uncle was still
alive. Amos uttered no sound, and presently,
his work done as he thought, Ernest began the next
job and Gregory heard him making all snug overhead.
Soon the ray of starlight was blotted out and the
pit mouth blocked up with timber first and stones
afterwards; and Amos doubted not that his young relation
had made the spot look as usual and blocked it so
as nothing less than the trump of Doom would ever
unseal it again.
And even if that weren’t so,
he knew he could never climb up the five and twenty
feet or more he’d fallen. Indeed, at that
moment the poor chap heartily wished he was at the
bottom so dead as a hammer and battered to pulp and
out of his misery. For what remained? Nought
but a hideous end long drawn out. In fact he
felt exceeding sorry for himself, as well he might;
but then his nature came to the rescue, and he told
himself that where there was life there was hope;
and he turned over the situation with his usual pluck
and judgment and axed himself if there was anything
left that he might do, to put up a fight against such
cruel odds.
And he found there was but one thing
alone. He couldn’t go up and he felt only
too sure the only part of him as would ever get out
of that living grave was his immortal soul, when the
end came; but he reckoned it might be possible to
get down. The only other course was to bide where
he was, wait till morning, and then lift his voice
and bawl in hope some fellow creature might hear and
succour. But as the only fellow being like to
hear him was his nephew, there didn’t seem much
promise to that. He waited another half hour
till he knew his murderer was certainly gone home;
then he lighted matches and with the aid of the last
two left in his box scanned the sides of the pit under
him. They were rough hewn, and given light he
reckoned he could go down by ’em with a bit of
luck and the Lord to guide his feet. Then he
considered how far it might be to the bottom, and
dropped a piece of stone or two, and was a good bit
heartened to find the distance weren’t so very
tremendous. In fact he judged himself to be about
half-way down and reckoned that another thirty feet
or thereabout would get him to the end. He took
off his coat then and flung it down; and next he started,
with his heart in his mouth, to do or die.
Amos Gregory promised himself that
nought but death waited for him down beneath, and
he was right enough for that matter. How he got
down without breaking his neck he never could tell,
but the pit sloped outward from below and he managed
to find foothold and fingerhold as he sank gingerly
lower and lower. A thousand times he thought he
was gone. Then he did fall in good truth, for
a wedge of granite came out in his hand; but to his
great thankfulness, he hadn’t got to slither
and struggle for more than a matter of another dozen
feet, and then he came down on his own coat what he’d
dropped before him. So there he was, only scratched
and torn a bit, and like a toad in a hole, he sat
for a bit on his coat and panted and breathed foul
air. ’Twas dark as a wolf’s mouth,
of course, and he didn’t know from Adam what
dangers lay around him; but he couldn’t bide
still long and so rose up and began to grope with
feet and hands. He kicked a few of the big stones
that Ernest Gregory had thrown down, as he thought
atop of him; and then he found the bottom of the hole
was bigger than he guessed. And then he kicked
a soft object and a great wonder happened. Kneeling
to see what it might be, he put forth his hand, touched
a clay-cold, sodden lump of something, and found a
sudden, steady blaze of light flash out of it.
He drew back and the light went out. Then he
touched again and the light answered.
By this time Amos had catched another
light in his brain-pan and knowed too bitter well
what he’d found. He groped into the garments
of that poor clay and found the light that he’d
set going was hid in a dead man’s breast pocket.
Then he got hold of it, drew out an electric torch
and turned it on the withered corpse of his elder
brother. There lay Joe and the small dried-up
carcase of him weren’t much the worse seemingly
in that cold, dry place; but Amos shivered and went
goose-flesh down his spine, for half the poor little
man’s face was eat away by some unknown beast.
Joe’s brother sat down then
with his brains swimming in his skull, and for a bit
he was too horrified to do ought but shiver and sweat;
and then his wits steadied down and he saw that what
was so awful in itself yet carried in its horror just
that ray of hope he wanted now to push him on.
His instinct was always terrible strong
for self-preservation, and his thoughts leapt forward;
and he saw that if a fox had bit poor dead Joe, the
creature must have come from somewheres. Of course
a fox can go where a man cannot, yet that foxes homed
here meant hope for Amos; and there also was the blessed
torch he’d took from his dead brother’s
breast.
He nerved himself and felt all over
the poor corpse and found Joe’s purse and his
tobacco pouch and the two pipes he was reported to
have bought at Exeter; and doubtless he’d bought
the electric torch also, for Amos knew that his brother
possessed no such thing afore. But there it was:
he’d been tempted to buy the toy, and though
it couldn’t bring him back to life, there was
just a dog’s chance it might save his brother’s.
Amos knew the thing wouldn’t last very long
alight, so he husbanded it careful and only turned
it on when his hands couldn’t tell him what he
wanted to know.
At first it seemed as though there
weren’t no way out; but with the help of the
light, he found at last a little, low tunnel that opened
out of the hole; and then he found another opposite
to it. And the one he reckoned must run up under
Vitifer into the thickness of the hill; while
t’other pointed south. Then, thinking upon
the lay of the land, Amos reckoned the second might
be most like to lead to the air. And yet his heart
sank a minute later, for he guessed rightly
as it proved that the south tunnel was
that which opened into a cave at Smallcumbe Goyle,
near half a mile down under. A place it was where
he’d often played his games as a child; but
that ancient mine adit was well known to be choked
by a heavy fall of rock fifty yards from the mouth,
so it didn’t look very hopeful he’d win
through. However his instinct told him the sole
chance lay there; for t’other channel, if pursued,
could only lead to the heart of the hill. He
set out according and after travelling twenty yards
with bent head found the roof of the tunnel lift and
went on pretty steady without adventures for a few
hundred yards. ’Twas very evil air and he
doubted if he’d keep his head much longer; but
with the torch light to guide his feet, he staggered
forward conscious only of one thing, and that was a
great and growing pain in his elbow. That’s
where the first stone had grazed him that his nephew
had thrown down the pit, and he stopped and found he
was cut to the bone and bleeding a lot. The loss
vexed him worse than the pain, for he knew very well
you can’t lose blood without losing strength,
and he couldn’t tell yet whether it might not
be within his strength to save him at the other end.
So he slit a piece off the tail of his shirt and tied
it above his elbow so tight as he was able. Then
he held on, but knew too well he was getting spent.
For a man well over fifty year can’t spend a
night of that sort and find himself none the worse
for it.
A bit farther forward there was a
little more to breathe, and as the tunnel dropped,
he felt the air sweeter. And that put a pinch
more hope into him again. It was up and down
with him and his mind in a torment, but at last he
tried not to think at all, and just let his instinct
to fight for life hold him and concentrated all his
mind and muscle upon it. Yet one thought persisted
in his worst moments: and that was, that if he
didn’t come through, his nephew wouldn’t
be hanged, but enjoy the two farms for his natural
life; and the picture of that vexed Amos so terrible
that without doubt ’twas as useful to help him
as a bottle of strong waters would have been.
On he went, and then he had a shock,
for the torch was very near spent and began to grow
dimmer; so he put it out to save the dying rays against
when he might need them. And he slowed down and
rested for half an hour, then refreshed, he pushed
slowly on again.
And things happened just as he expected
they would do; for after another spell, he was brought
up short and he found the way blocked and knew that
he stood a hundred feet and no more from the mouth
of the tunnel in a grass-grown valley bottom among
the rocks outside. But he might as well have
been ten miles away, and too well he knew it.
The air was sweet here, for where foxes can run, air
can also go; but outlet there was none for him, though
somewhere in the mass of stone he doubted not there
was a fox-way. He turned on the torch then and
shifted a good few big stones and moved more; but
he saw in half an hour the job was beyond his powers
and that if he’d been Goliath of Gath he couldn’t
have broke down that curtain of granite single-handed.
He’d found a pool of water and
got a drink and he’d satisfied his mind that
his elbow bled no more, and that was all the cheer
he had, for now his torch went out for good and with
its last gleam he’d looked at his watch and
seen that it was half after two in the morning.
Night or day, however, promised to be all the same
for Amos now, and he couldn’t tell whether daylight
would penetrate the fall of stone when it came, or
if the rock was too heavy to allow of it. And
in any case a gleam of morning wouldn’t help
him, for the Goyle was two good miles from Merripit
village, and a month might well pass before any man
went that way. Nor would Amos be the wiser if
a regiment of soldiers was marching outside. So
it looked as if chance had only put off the evil hour,
and he sat down on a stone and chewed a bit of tobacco
and felt he was up against his end at last. Weariness
and chill as he grew cold acted upon the man, and afore
he knew it he drew up his feet, rested his head on
his sound arm, and fell into heavy sleep. For
hours he slumbered and woke so stiff as a log.
But the sleep had served him well and he found his
mind active and his limbs rested and his belly crying
for food.
He poked about and at last saw something
dim that thrust out of the dark on the ground, and
then it got brighter, and he marked low down, no higher
than his knee, a blue ghost of light shooting through
some cleft among the stones. It waxed until he
could put down his watch and read the hands by it.
And he found it was past six o’clock.
He set to work at the rocks again
presently, but surrounded by darkness he didn’t
know where to begin and knew that a hungry man, with
nought but his two hands, could make no great impression
on all that stone; but he turned where the ray came
through and putting his head to the earth, found there
was a narrow channel out to the daylight, and wished
he could take shape of a badger and so get through.
Time dragged and hope waned.
But the water proved a source of strength, and Amos
knew a man can hold out a long time if water ban’t
denied. His life passed through his mind with
all its ups and downs, and he found time to be thankful
even in all his trouble that he was a bachelor without
wife or child to mourn him. And then his thoughts
ran on to the great mystery there would be and the
hunt after him; and he saw very clear indeed that
all would go just as it done before, and the police
would never find a trace, and Ernest Gregory would
weep his eyes out of his head very near and offer
a reward so large that everybody would say he was an
angel barring the wings.
Amos was dwelling on what his nephew
would get in the next world, to make up for his fun
in this one, and marvelling in his simple mind that
the wicked could flourish like the green bay tree
and nothing be done against ’em by Providence,
when that happened to fill his mind very full of his
own affairs again.
He was sitting with his eyes on the
shaft of daylight under the stones, when suddenly
it went out and for a moment disappeared. But
then, like a cork out of a bottle, something emerged,
and Amos saw a long red thing sneak through and drop,
panting, on its side not three yards from him.
And well he knew what it was, even if the reek hadn’t
told him. ’Twas a hunted fox that had saved
its brush not for the first time belike in
the old tin mine working, and that meant more to the
man than a sack of diamonds just then. He moved
and the fox, little thinking to find an enemy on that
side of the barrier, jumped to his feet and galloped
up the passage so hard as he could pelt; while Amos
strained his ears to the hole and prepared to lift
his voice and have the yell of his life for salvation
when the moment arrived.
How long the fox had stood afore hounds
he couldn’t tell; but long or short, they’d
run him to the rocks for certain, and then the prisoned
man would hear ’em and try to make the hunters
hear him if he could. Hounds met at Dart Meet
that day, and Gregory doubted not they’d found
a fox as was had took ’em up East Dart and then
away to the Vitifer mine district, where he knew
he was safe.
And in ten minutes he heard hounds
and in five minutes more they was got within a few
yards of him, yelping and nosing t’other side
of the granite. He guessed the huntsman would
soon be with ’em at the cave mouth and presently
gave tongue down the road the fox had come, and after
shouting thrice with all his breath, waited, and sure
enough heard an answering shout.
Yes, he’d been heard screaming
for his life, and presently the men outside drew off
the hounds and was able to get into conversation with
Amos and larn the rights of his fearful story.
It was only a question of time after
that and the field gave up hunting a fox to save a
man. Labourers were sent for, and the rocks attacked
in good earnest; and the huntsman did a very clever
thing, for he sent his fox terrier through the hole
to Amos with a packet of sandwiches tied on his back.
Presently the little dog went in again with a bottle
of cordial as one of the hunters gladly gave for the
purpose, for Amos Gregory was well known for a good
sport, and the field felt terrible glad as they’d
been called to save him.
As soon as he was in communication
with the outer world, Amos had ordered one thing to
be done before all else, and it was done. So long
before he’d got free, for it took five hours
of desperate hard work to get to him, the police had
done their bit elsewhere and arrested Ernest Gregory
for the murder of his Uncle Joe. He was spreading
muck on Four Acres Field at the time and called on
God to strike the constables dead for doing such a
shameful deed as to suspect him.
’Twas all in the newspapers
next day, of course, and all men agreed that never
was such an escape from death afore. In fact,
my friend Amos was one of the wonders of the Dartmoor
world for a long time afterwards. He never got
back the full use of his elbow, but weren’t a
penny the worse any other way in a month and quite
well enough to testify afore the law about all his
adventures had showed him.
And Ernest turned out one of the vain
murderers who be quite content to go down to history
on the debit side so long as he’s famous, if
only for sin. He explained that Joe Gregory had
always intended to come home from Exeter by way of
Moreton, and that he had done so, and that Ernest had
met him there and reckoned that particular wild, black
night very well suited for putting the old man away.
He knew all about the codicil to Joe’s will,
and having found the mine shaft months afore, used
it as we know how. He’d took Joe to see
it on getting home, and knocked him in, just as he’d
treated Amos after. And ’twas all done for
the land, which had become his god; and when Amos
told his nephew he’d made no will, he was so
good as signing his own death warrant.
They tried to fetch him in insane;
but it didn’t work with the jury nor yet the
judge, and Ernest Gregory was hanged for his sins to
Exeter gaol; and Sarah White, who had meant to wed
him, felt terrible glad it happened before and not
after the wedding.
As for Vitifer and Furze Hill,
now both the property of Amos Gregory, no doubt Duchy
will get ’em after all some day. In fact,
Duchy always wins in the long run, as them mostly
do who can afford to wait.
Our old parson preached a fine sermon
on the affair after Ernest Gregory had gone to his
reward; for he showed how by the wonderful invention
of his Maker, Joe Gregory, though dead, yet was allowed
to save his brother’s life and so proclaim the
wonder of God to sinful man. And no doubt all
right-thinking people believed him.
Anyway, Amos set great store upon
the electric torch ever after and it hangs above his
mantelshelf to this day. And henceforth he always
took off his hat to a fox whenever he seed one; for
he was a very grateful sort of man and never forgot
a kindness.