I
There’s no doubt that a man’s
opinions change with his business, because the point
of view’s just everything. What be good
to you is what you want to happen and think ought
to happen; and if it don’t happen, then you’m
a bit fretful about it, and reckon there’s a
screw loose somewhere in the order of things.
For instance, I be a gamekeeper to-day, and I take
a view of fish and birds according; but once on a
time I was a fly-by-night young rip of a poacher,
and had a very different idea about feathers and fins.
“A fish be no more the bank-owner’s
fish than the water in the river be his water!”
That’s what I used to say. Because a salmon he’s
a sea-fish, and free as air and his own master.
Same with a bird. How do I know whether ’twas
Squire Tom, or Squire Dick, or Squire Harry as reared
a pheasant I happen to knock over on a moony night?
Birds will fly, as Nature meant ’em; and, again,
it may be just a wild bird, as never came out of no
boughten egg at all, but belonged to the country, like
his father and his grandfather afore him. And
so ’tis common property, same as the land did
ought to be, and if I be clever enough to catch ’un
and kill ’un why, so much the better
for me! All for free trade you see I was.
And in a poacher that must be the point of view.
But time and chance play all manner of funny pranks
with a man; and time and chance it were that turned
me from this dangerous walk of life into what I be
now. The way of it was simple enough, in a manner
of speaking, yet I’m sure no such thing happened
afore, or be like to hap again.
Woodcotes was a very great estate
on the brink o’ Dartmoor. In fact, the
covers crept up the hills as far as the fierce winds
would let ’em; and they was cold woods up over cold
and rocky and better liked by the foxes than the pheasants.
But the birds done very well half a mile lower down,
and the river that run through Woodcotes carried a
lot of salmon at the proper time. A ten-pound
fish was no wonder, and more’n one twenty-pounder
have left it in my memory.
I was twenty-five on the night this
tale begins twenty-five year old, and a
proper night-hawk of a chap, as loved the hours of
darkness and gloried in the shedding of blood.
Sport was in my veins, so to say, handed down from
father to son, for my grandfather had been a gamekeeper,
and my father a water-bailiff, and my uncle my
father’s brother a huntsman.
That was the line of life I’d thirsted for, or
even to go for a jockey. But Nature weren’t
of the same mind. I growed six foot tall afore
I was seventeen my mother’s family
was all whackers and so riding was out of
the question, and I went on the land and worked behind
the horses instead of on ’em.
Well, the river ran very suent through
the water-meadows below my village, and there was
wonnerful fine stickles and reaches for trout, and
proper deep pools for salmon. And on a fine night
in June, with the moonlight bright as day, I was down
beside it a bit after one o’clock, busy about
a little matter of night-lines. I meant to make
an experiment, too, because I’d read in a book
how the salmon will come up to stare if you hold a
bright light over ’em. They’ll goggle
up at you and get dazed by the light, and then you
can spear ’em as easy as picking blackberries.
’Twas news to me, but a thing very well to know
if true, and I got a bull’s-eye lantern to prove
it.
Through a hayfield half
cut, ’twas I went, where the moon
throwed a shadow beside each uplifted pook, and the
air was heavy with the scent, and a corncrake somewhere
was making a noise like sharpening a scythe. A
few trout were rising at the night moths, but nothing
moved of any account in the open, and I pushed forward
where the hayfield ended at the edge of the woods.
There, just fifty yards inside the trees, was one of
the properest pools on the river; and, having set
my night-lines for a trout or two higher up, I came
down to the salmon pool, spear in hand, and lit my
lantern and got on a rock in the mid-channel, where
’twas clear and still, with nought but the oily
twist and twirl of the currents running deep beneath
me.
I felt so bold as a lion that night,
for Squire Champernowne, of Woodcotes, had died at
dawn, and the countryside was all in a commotion,
and I knowed, what with talking and drinking in the
pubs and running about all day, that not a keeper
would be to work after dark. A very good man
had been the Squire, though peppery and uncertain in
his temper, and quick to take offence, but honest
and well-liked by all who worked for him. ’Twas
one of they tragical moments, long expected but none
the less exciting, when death came, and I felt certain
sure that I should have the river to myself till morning.
But I was wrong. Looking upstream
by good chance afore I got to work, I saw a man in
the meadow moonlight. There he was, making for
the woods. He was following the path I followed,
and in five minutes I saw that he’d be on the
river-bank within ten yards of me. Of course,
I thought the chap was after me and had tracked me
down. It astonished me a good bit to mark him,
and I saw he was a tall, slim man, much lighter than
me, though very near the same height. He didn’t
tally with my knowledge of any of the Woodcotes keepers,
so I felt better and hoped as it might be a stranger,
or a lunatic, or somebody as wouldn’t be feeling
any interest in me. But I had to shift, of course,
so I nipped off my rock and went under the bank where
the ivy fell over at the tail of the salmon pool.
’Twas a deep, sandy-bottomed reach, with the
bank dipping in steeply o’ one side and a shelving,
pebbly ridge the other. The river narrowed at
the bottom of the pool and fell over a fall.
So there I went, and looked through the ivy unseen
and watched my gentleman along the river-path.
He came, and the light of the moon
shone on him between two trees, so that I could mark
who ’twas; and then I seed the man of all others
in the world I’d least have counted to see.
For there, if you please, went young Mister Cranston
Champernowne, the nephew of the dead man, and thought
to be heir to Woodcotes! For Squire never married,
but he had a good few nephews, and two was his special
favourites: this one and his brother, young Lawrence
Champernowne. They were the sons of General Sir
Arthur Champernowne, a famous fighter who’d
got the Victoria Cross in India, and carried half the
alphabet after his name.
Well, there stood the young youth,
and even in the owl-light I could see he was a bit
troubled of spirit. He looked about him, moved
nervously, and then fetched something out of his pocket.
’Twas black and shining, and I felt pretty sure
’twas a bottle; but I only had time to catch
one glimpse of it, for he lifted his arm and flung
it in the pool. It flashed and was gone, and
then, before the moony circles on the water had got
to the bank, the man was off. He walked crooked
and shaky, and something told me as the young fellow
had done terrible wrong and felt it.
Whatever ’twas he’d hid,
it lay now in the deepest part of the river, and that,
no doubt, he knew. But I knowed more. The
bottom where his bottle was lying happened to be fine
sand with a clear lift to the little beach; and so,
given a proper tool, ’twas easy enough to rake
over the river-bed and fetch up anything of any size
on that smooth surface.
Of course, my first thought was to
fetch that bottle out of the water; but then a cold
shiver went through me, and I told myself to mind my
own business and leave Cranston Champernowne to mind
his. Yet somehow I couldn’t do that.
There was a sporting side to it, and a man like me
wasn’t the sort to sit down tamely afore such
a great adventure. So I said to myself:
“I’ll have that bottle!”
My wits ran quick in them days, as
was natural to a night-hawk, and I only waited till
the young chap was off through the woods, and then
nipped back into the grass field, fetched a haymaker’s
rake, made fast a brave stone to ’un, got my
night-lines up, and soon lowered down the rake over
the spot where the bottle went in. At the second
drag I got him, and there, sure enough, was the thing
that Mister Champernowne had throwed in the pool.
But it weren’t a bottle by no means. Instead,
I found a black, tin, waterproof canister a foot long;
and, working at it, the lid soon came off. Inside
was one piece of paper and no more. That was all
the canister hid; and the next thing I done was to
light up my lantern and see what wonderful matter
it could be as the young man was at such pains to do
away with so careful. For Woodcotes House was
two mile from the river, and Cranston Champernowne
had been at all this trouble, you see, on the very
day of his uncle’s death.
Well, I soon found out all about it,
for the thing was simple enough. The paper was
a will, or, as I heard long after, a thing called a
codicil a contrivance what you add to a
will. And it revoked and denied everything as
the dead man had wrote before. In a few words
the paper swept away Squire Champernowne’s former
wills and testaments, and left Woodcotes to Lawrence
Champernowne, the son of General Sir Arthur and the
brother of the chap as had just flung the paper in
the river.
So there ’twas, and even a slower-witted
man than me might have read the riddle in a moment.
No doubt young Mister Cranston thought himself the
heir, and reckoned ’twas all cut and dried.
Then, rummaging here and there after his uncle was
gone, he’d come upon this facer and found himself
left in the cold. The paper was dated two year
back, and signed by two names of women-servants at
Woodcotes.
Well, I soon came to myself afore
this great discovery, and though, no doubt, the right
and natural thing for me to have done, as a sporting
sort of blade always open to the main chance, would
have been to go to Lawrence Champernowne or his father,
yet I hesitated; because, though I held a poacher’s
ideas about game and such like, I wasn’t different
from other folk in other matters. I’d got
religion from my mother, for she taught me the love
of God, and father, the water-bailiff, he taught me
the fear of God likewise; and if you’ve got
them two things properly balanced in your intellects,
you can’t go far wrong. And at that moment
the feeling in my mind was not to be on the make.
No, I swear to you I only felt sorry for the young
chap as had done this terrible deed. I was troubled
for him, and considered very like the temptation was
too great, that he’d just fallen into it in
a natural fit of rage at his disappointment, and that
presently, when he came to his senses, he’d bitterly
mourn such a hookem-snivey deed. For, of course,
Champernownes were great folk, high above any small
or mean actions, and with the fame of the family always
set up afore them. Yes, I thought it all out,
and saw his mind working, and felt so sure as death
that a time would come when he would regret the act
and feel he’d ruined his life. “He’ll
return here some day afore ’tis too late, and
seek to fetch up the paper,” I thought.
And with that I was just going to fling the canister
back in the pool when a better idea took hold on me.
I’d make it easier and quicker for the man, and
even now, while he was smarting and doubtless battling
with his better nature, I’d help him in secret
to do the right thing. He’d think it was
a miracle, too, for, of course, I wasn’t going
to give myself away over the business. And no
doubt, if the young fellow saw a miracle worked on
his behalf, he’d turn from his wickedness and
repent.
In a word, my purpose was to put the
paper back in his path again, afore he got home; and
not only that, but I meant to speak a word or two just
a voice he should hear out of the night. I might
save his soul, and, whether or no, ’twas a sporting
idea to try to do so. So I set to work, and even
in them exciting moments I thought what strange messengers
the Lord do choose to run His Almighty errands.
I knowed the way the young chap had
to go, and how long ’twould take. Two miles
from the river lay Woodcotes, and, by following over
a hill and dropping down t’other side, I could
get in his track again and be at the edge of the home
gardens where he’d come out. I saved half
a mile going that way, and would be able to get there
long afore him.
Of course, all this went through my
head a lot quicker than I set it down. Like a
flash came my determination, and I acted on it, and
ran through the night and headed him off, and hid
in a rhododendron bush just by the main drive, where
he’d leave the woods on his way home. And
right in his path, where his feet must go, I’d
put the tin canister. ’Twas dry again, and
flashed in the moonlight so bright that he couldn’t
miss it nohow.
Still as a mouse I waited for him,
and just over my head hooted an owl. “Hoo-hoo-hoo!
Hoo-hoo-hoo-hoo!” he shouted out; and another,
long ways off, answered to him.
What should I say? was the question
in my mind while I waited for Mr. Champernowne.
And first I thought I’d say nothing at all; but
then I reckoned ’twould be more solemn and like
a miracle if I did. I minded a thing my father
used to speak when I was a li’l one. He’d
tell it out very serious, and being poetry made it
still more so. “Don’t you do it, else
you’ll rue it!” That’s what my father
used to tell me a score of times a day, when I was
a boy, and the words somehow came in my mind that night.
Therefore I resolved to speak ’em and make ’em
sound so mysterious as I could, just when the young
fellow found the canister.
It all went very well in
fact, a lot better than I’d hoped for, chance
favoured me in a very peculiar way, and the Dowl hisself
couldn’t have planned a greater or more startling
surprise for Cranston Champernowne. Along he
came presently, with his head down and his shoulders
up. Like a haunted creature he crept from the
woods; his face was white, and misery stared out of
it. Presently he looked upward at the moon, while
he walked along like an old, tired man. And when
I see his face, I was terrible glad I’d took
such a lot of trouble for him, because ’twas
properly ravaged with suffering. He came to the
canister, and the owl was hollering for all he was
worth, and the matter fell out like this. First
Mister Champernowne catched sight of the canister
and stood still, as if the sight had froze him; then
the bird shouted, and I had to wait for him to shut
up afore I had my say.
“Hoo-hoo-hoo! Hoo-hoo-hoo-hoo!”
went the owl. Then, the moment he stopped, I
spoke, very loud and slow.
“Don’t you do it, or else you’ll
rue it!” I said.
And the young man gazed up into the
air and very near fell down in a fit, I believe, for
he ’peared to think he’d heard but one
voice, and that the owl was telling to him! I’m
sure it must have been like that with him, for he
cried aloud and he lifted up his hands, and he shook
like a reed in the river.
“Good God in Heaven, what’s
this? Am I mad?” he says. Then the
owl was frightened, and slipped away silent on open
wing, and the young man stood still staring and panting.
He put his hands over his face to wipe away the canister,
for ’twas clear that he didn’t believe
the thing was real; but when he looked again, there
it lay, glittering like a star the very
item he’d thrown in the deepest part of the
river not an hour afore! Then he crept towards
it very slow, as if ’twas a snake; and he bent
and touched it and found it to be a real thing and
not a dream. With that he picked it up and strained
his ears to listen; and I could see the sweat shining
on the face of ’un and the breath of the man
puffing in a mist on the night air. He stood
all doubtful for a little, while I bided so still that
not a leaf moved; then he went on his way, like a
creature sick or drunk, and he passed into the gardens
and disappeared from sight.
I waited till he was properly gone,
and after that I got back in the woods and returned
to the river. Always a neat and tidy man as
poachers mostly are I took the hayrake
back to the field and wound up my lines. Then
I went home, for ’twas peep of day by now, and
I felt I’d done a very proper night’s
work, and wondered if there’d ever be anything
to show for it.
Well, there wasn’t in
fact, it looked much as if I’d done a miracle
for nothing. Days passed by. Squire Champernowne
got buried with a proper flare-up, and we heard that
Mr. Cranston Champernowne was heir to Woodcotes and
the farms and all. And next time I was out and
about on the river according to my custom, I heard
the owl hollering, and I said to the owl: “You
and me had our trouble for nought, my old dear, for
’tis very clear he wouldn’t listen to
us. He was a hard case and a bad lot, and ’tis
no good honest folk like you and me putting a man into
the straight road if he won’t bide in it.”
And the owl he goes “Hoo-hoo-hoo!” laughing
like.
II
Two full years passed afore the end
of my tale. The new Squire did very wisely, and
was highly thought upon. He ruled well, for he
had an old head on young shoulders, and he was a good
landlord and a patient, sensible, and kind-hearted
chap. He got engaged to be married also, and seemed
so bright and cheerful as need be, and good friends
with his brother Lawrence, and popular with high and
low. Yet right well I knowed there was a cruel
canker at his heart, for no well-born man could do
the thing he’d done and not smart to his dying
day and feel all his prosperity was poison. Not
to mention the terrible shock as he had got from me
on the night after his uncle’s death.
I felt sure, somehow, as the truth
would come out, and that I should hear more about
that coorious evening. And so I did, but ’twas
in a manner very different from what I guessed or
expected. In a word, to be quite honest about
it, I got into smart trouble myself one night in
October ’twas, and a brave year for pheasants.
The chaps at Woodcotes outwitted me for the fust time
in their lives, and cut short my little games.
They set a trap for me, and I got catched. There’s
no need to dwell upon the details, but I found myself
surrounded by six of ’em, and knowing very well
that, if I showed fight, ’twould only be a long
sight worse for me in the end, I threw up the sponge,
gived ’em my air-gun a wonderful weapon
I’d got from a gipsy and let ’em
take me. I was red-handed by ill-fortune, which,
indeed, they had meant me to be. In fact, they
waited just where they knowed I was going to be busy,
having fust throwed me off the scent very clever by
letting one of their number tell a pack o’ lies
to a woman friend of mine in a public-house the night
afore. She told me what a keeper had told her,
and I believed it, and this was the result.
There weren’t no lock-up within
five miles, and so the men took me to Woodcotes till
morning; and very pleased they was, and very proud
of themselves, for I’d been a thorn in their
hands for a good bit. And I said nought, understanding
such matters, and knowing that every word you speak
at such a time will be used against you.
And then we got to Woodcotes, and
I had to speak, for though ’twas three in the
morning or a bit later, young Squire, knowing about
the thing, hadn’t gone to bed. He commanded
’em to bring me afore him, and I came in, handcuffed,
to his libery, and there he sat with a good fire and
a book. And a very beautiful satin smoking-jacket
he wore, and the room smelled of rich cigars.
I blinked, coming in out of the dark, and he told the
keepers to go till he’d had a talk along with
me. And then he dressed me down properly, but
not till his men was t’other side of the door.
He knowed all about my family and
its success in the world, and its fame in all to do
with sport, and he said that ’twas a crying sin
and shame that such as me should break away and be
a black sheep and get into trouble like this.
“’Tis a common theft,
and nothing more nor less,” he said. “You’ve
been warned more than once, and you knew right well
that, if you persisted, this would be the end of it.”
Well, I made ready for a dig back,
of course, and was going to surprise the man; but
somehow he spoke so kind and generous and ’peared
to be so properly sorry for me, that I struck another
note. I thought I saw a chance of getting on
his blind side and being let off, so I kept away from
such a ticklish subject as the canister. Instead,
I spoke very earnest of my hopes for the future, and
promised faithful as I’d try to see the matter
of pheasants and such like from his point of view.
And I told him that I was tokened to a good girl same
as he was and that ’twould break
her very heart if I got a month, and very likely make
her throw me over and wreck my life, and so on.
I worked myself up into a proper heat, and pleaded
all I knew with the man. I implored him to put
mercy before justice for once, and assured him that
’twould pay him a thousandfold to let me off.
I was contrite, and allowed that no doubt my views
on the subject of game might be altogether mistaken.
I took his word for it that he was right and I was
wrong. In fact, I never talked so clever in all
my life afore; but at the end it was that the really
thrilling thing fell out. For then, just to make
a good wind-up like, I called home my father’s
oft-spoken words, and said to the man the very same
speech that I’d said to him more’n two
years afore, when I was hid in the rhododendron bush.
“Don’t you do it, or else
you’ll rue it!” I said. And then I
stopped, and my heart stopped too, I’ll swear,
for in an instant moment I saw that Squire remembered
when and where he’d heard that warning afore.
He turned a awful sort o’ green colour, and
started from his chair. Then he fell back in
it again and stared upon me as if I was a spectrum
rose out of a grave. He couldn’t speak
for a bit, but presently he linked up my voice with
the past, and squared it out and came to his senses.
But he didn’t twist, nor turn, nor quail afore
me. In fact, when he recovered a bit, he was
a good deal more interested than frightened.
“Those words!” he said.
“Could it be is it possible that you ”
“God’s my judge, Squire
Champernowne, that I didn’t mean to touch on
that,” I answered. “’Twas dead and
buried in my heart, and the kind words you have said
to me would have made me keep it there for evermore.
I ban’t your judge, though you be going to be
mine, and I didn’t speak them words in no sense
to threaten, and I didn’t speak ’em to
remind you as you’d ever heard ’em before.
’Twas just because the words be solemn poetry,”
I said. “’Twas just because of that I
used ’em, and for no other reason.”
He nodded and considered.
“Tell me,” he answered
in a simple, quiet way “tell me everything
you know about that night from the beginning.”
And so I did. I hid nought and
explained all, even down to my feelings in the matter,
and my wish, man to man, to give him another chance
for to do right. And I never see a male creature
so much moved as Squire was when I telled the tale.
“I thought it was a miracle,”
he said very quietly, after I’d finished.
Then, after a pause: “Yes, and so it was
a miracle, and this is a miracle, too!”
Then he had his say.
“I would sooner have had this
happen than anything in the world,” he declared.
“First, the mystery has been cleared up for me,
and, secondly, the mystery can be cleared up for you.
You did me the best turn that living man could have
done for me you put me right with myself.
You’ll stare at that, but it’s true.
I had done a crooked thing that night; but I did a
straight one the next morning, for I was strong again
by that time. The lawyer came then, and I showed
him the codicil, which had come into my hands quite
by chance the day before when I was searching for another
paper. But he only laughed at it. My late
uncle was a man of strong temper, a gusty, fiery man
of moods and whims. His passions were like storms he
would forget them when they had swept over him.
More than once in his life had he committed the gravest
actions in a rage and entirely forgotten them afterwards,
until he was reminded, by unpleasant results, of the
things that he had done. ‘Your uncle,’
said the lawyer to me, ’well understood his
own peculiarities, and was aware, long before his end
came, that there existed evidences of his past ungovernable
temper in the shape of unjust additions to his will
and hasty alterations now regretted. Six months
ago, when you were abroad, I visited him and made a
will for him that revoked and annulled all that preceded
it. You are the heir and the only heir.’
So it appeared. And now I must ask you to see
the proofs of what I tell you, for I shall not be
at peace until you have done so. They are with
my lawyers, and if you come to see me a week hence,
they shall be here for you to read.”
The young man was fussy, you see,
and very tender about his honour, and didn’t
think I’d believe him. But, of course, I
did.
“A week hence I shall be in
klink, Squire,” I said, and moved my handcuffs,
just to remind him of the state of things. And
then he had the head-keeper in and set me free.
’Twas a case of one good turn deserving another,
no doubt; and though the young man never forgave himself
for his one slip, he forgave me for my many, and a
month from that day I went as third keeper to Woodcotes.
And I never regretted it, I do assure you, nor more
didn’t he. I’m head-keeper now, and
growing terrible old, and he’s been dead these
many years, but I’m hopeful and wishful to meet
him again afore long, for he was a sportsman and more
than a good master to me.