Fifteen minutes after the report of
the time-gun on Monday, when the bells were playing
their merriest and the dining-rooms were busiest,
Mr. Traill felt such a tiny tug at his trouser-leg
that it was repeated before he gave it attention.
In the press of hungry guests Bobby had little more
than room to rise in his pretty, begging attitude.
The landlord was so relieved to see him again, after
five conscience stricken days, that he stooped to
clap the little dog on the side and to greet him with
jocose approval.
“Gude dog to fetch Auld Jock ”
With a faint and piteous cry that
was heard by no one but Mr. Traill, Bobby toppled
over on the floor. It was a limp little bundle
that the landlord picked up from under foot and held
on his arm a moment, while he looked around for the
dog’s master. Shocked at not seeing Auld
Jock, by a kind of inspiration he carried the little
dog to the inglenook and laid him down under the familiar
settle. Bobby was little more than breathing,
but he opened his silkily veiled brown eyes and licked
the friendly hand that had done this refinement of
kindness. It took Mr. Traill more than a moment
to realize the nature of the trouble. A dog with
so thick a fleece of wool, under so crisply waving
an outer coat as Bobby’s, may perish for lack
of food and show no outward sign of emaciation.
“The sonsie, wee why, he’s
all but starved!”
Pale with pity, Mr. Traill snatched
a plate of broth from the hands of a gaping waiter
laddie, set it under Bobby’s nose, and watched
him begin to lap the warm liquid eagerly. In
the busy place the incident passed unnoticed.
With his usual, brisk decision Mr. Traill turned the
backs of a couple of chairs over against the nearest
table, to signify that the corner was reserved, and
he went about his duties with unwonted silence.
As the crowd thinned he returned to the inglenook to
find Bobby asleep, not curled up in a tousled ball,
as such a little dog should be, but stretched on his
side and breathing irregularly.
If Bobby was in such straits, how
must it be with Auld Jock? This was the fifth
day since the sick old man had fled into the storm.
With new disquiet Mr. Traill remembered a matter that
had annoyed him in the morning, and that he had been
inclined to charge to mischievous Heriot boys.
Low down on the outside of his freshly varnished entrance
door were many scratches that Bobby could have made.
He may have come for food on the Sabbath day when
the place was closed.
After an hour Bobby woke long enough
to eat a generous plate of that delectable and highly
nourishing Scotch dish known as haggis. He fell
asleep again in an easier attitude that relieved the
tension on the landlord’s feelings. Confident
that the devoted little dog would lead him straight
to his master, Mr. Traill closed the door securely,
that he might not escape unnoticed, and arranged his
own worldly affairs so he could leave them to hirelings
on the instant. In the idle time between dinner
and supper he sat down by the fire, lighted his pipe,
repented his unruly tongue, and waited. As the
short day darkened to its close the sunset bugle was
blown in the Castle. At the first note, Bobby
crept from under the settle, a little unsteady on
his legs as yet, wagged his tail for thanks, and trotted
to the door.
Mr. Traill had no trouble at all in
keeping the little dog in sight to the kirkyard gate,
for in the dusk his coat shone silvery white.
Indeed, by a backward look now and then, Bobby seemed
to invite the man to follow, and waited at the gate,
with some impatience, for him to come up. Help
was needed there. By rising and tugging at Mr.
Traill’s clothing and then jumping on the wicket
Bobby plainly begged to have it opened. He made
no noise, neither barking nor whimpering, and that
was very strange for a dog of the terrier breed; but
each instant of delay he became more insistent, and
even frantic, to have the gate unlatched. Mr.
Traill refused to believe what Bobby’s behavior
indicated, and reproved him in the broad Scotch to
which the country dog was used.
“Nae, Bobby; be a gude dog.
Gang doon to the Coogate noo, an’ find Auld
Jock.”
Uttering no cry at all, Bobby gave
the man such a woebegone look and dropped to the pavement,
with his long muzzle as far under the wicket as he
could thrust it, that the truth shot home to Mr. Traill’s
understanding. He opened the gate. Bobby
slipped through and stood just inside a moment, and
looking back as if he expected his human friend to
follow. Then, very suddenly, as the door of the
lodge opened and the caretaker came out, Bobby disappeared
in the shadow of the church.
A big-boned, slow-moving man of the
best country house-gardener type, serviceably dressed
in corduroy, wool bonnet, and ribbed stockings, James
Brown collided with the small and wiry landlord, to
his own very great embarrassment.
“Eh, Maister Traill, ye gied
me a turn. It’s no’ canny to be proolin’
aboot the kirkyaird i’ the gloamin’.”
“Whaur did the bit dog go, man?”
demanded the peremptory landlord.
“Dog? There’s no’
ony dog i’ the kirkyaird. It isna permeetted.
Gin it’s a pussy ye’re needin’,
noo ”
But Mr. Traill brushed this irrelevant pleasantry
aside.
“Ay, there’s a dog. I let him in
my ainsel’.”
The caretaker exploded with wrath:
“Syne I’ll hae the law on ye. Can
ye no’ read, man?”
“Tut, tut, Jeemes Brown.
Don’t stand there arguing. It’s a
gude and necessary regulation, but it’s no’
the law o’ the land. I turned the dog in
to settle a matter with my ain conscience, and John
Knox would have done the same thing in the bonny face
o’ Queen Mary. What it is, is nae beesiness
of yours. The dog was a sma’ young terrier
of the Highland breed, but with a drop to his ears
and a crinkle in his frosty coat no’
just an ordinär’ dog. I know him weel.
He came to my place to be fed, near dead of hunger,
then led me here. If his master lies in this
kirkyard, I’ll tak’ the bit dog awa’
with me.”
Mr. Traill’s astonishing fluency
always carried all walls of resistance before it with
men of slower wit and speech. Only a superior
man could brush time-honored rules aside so curtly
and stand on his human rights so surely. James
Brown pulled his bonnet off deferentially, scratched
his shock head and shifted his pipe. Finally he
admitted:
“Weel, there was a bit tyke
i’ the kirkyaird twa days syne. I put ’im
oot, an’ haena seen ’im aboot ony main”
He offered, however, to show the new-made mound on
which he had found the dog. Leading the way past
the church, he went on down the terraced slope, prolonging
the walk with conversation, for the guardianship of
an old churchyard offers very little such lively company
as John Traill’s.
“I mind, noo, it was some puir
body frae the Coogate, wi’ no’ ony mourners
but the sma’ terrier aneath the coffin.
I let ‘im pass, no’ to mak’ a disturbance
at a buryin’. The deal box was fetched up
by the police, an’ carried by sic a crew o’
gaol-birds as wad mak’ ye turn ower in yer ain
God’s hole. But he paid for his buryin’
wi’ his ain siller, an’ noo lies as canny
as the nobeelity. Nae boot here’s the place,
Maister Traill; an’ ye can see for yer ainsel’
there’s no’ any dog.”
“Ay, that would be Auld Jock
and Bobby would no’ be leaving him,” insisted
the landlord, stubbornly. He stood looking down
at the rough mound of frozen clods heaped in a little
space of trampled snow.
“Jeemes Brown,” Mr. Trail
said, at last, “the man wha lies here was a
decent, pious auld country body, and I drove him to
his meeserable death in the Cowgate.”
“Man, ye dinna ken what ye’re
sayin’!” was the shocked response.
“Do I no’? I’m
canny, by the ordinär’, but my fule tongue
will get me into trouble with the magistrates one
of these days. It aye wags at both ends, and
is no’ tied in the middle.”
Then, stanch Calvinist that he was,
and never dreaming that he was indulging in the sinful
pleasure of confession, Mr. Traill poured out the
story of Auld Jock’s plight and of his own shortcomings.
It was a bitter, upbraiding thing that he, an uncommonly
capable man, had meant so well by a humble old body,
and done so ill. And he had failed again when
he tried to undo the mischief. The very next morning
he had gone down into the perilous Cowgate, and inquired
in every place where it might be possible for such
a timid old shepherd to be known. But there!
As well look for a burr thistle in a bin of oats, as
look for a human atom in the Cowgate and the wynds
“juist aff.”
“Weel, noo, ye couldna hae dune
aething wi’ the auld body, ava, gin
he wouldna gang to the infairmary.” The
caretaker was trying to console the self-accusing
man.
“Could I no’? Ye
dinna ken me as weel as ye micht.” The disgusted
landlord tumbled into broad Scotch. “Gie
me to do it ance mair, an’ I’d chairge
Auld Jock wi’ thievin’ ma siller, wi’
a wink o’ the ee at the police to mak’
them ken I was leein’; an’ syne they’d
hae hustled ’im aff, willy-nilly, to a snug
bed.”
The energetic little man looked so
entirely capable of any daring deed that he fired
the caretaker into enthusiastic search for Bobby.
It was not entirely dark, for the sky was studded
with stars, snow lay in broad patches on the slope,
and all about the lower end of the kirkyard supper
candles burned at every rear window of the tall tenements.
The two men searched among the near-by
slabs and table-tombs and scattered thorn bushes.
They circled the monument to all the martyrs who had
died heroically, in the Grassmarket and elsewhere,
for their faith. They hunted in the deep shadows
of the buttresses along the side of the auld kirk
and among the pillars of the octagonal portico to the
new. At the rear of the long, low building, that
was clumsily partitioned across for two pulpits, stood
the ornate tomb of “Bluidy” McKenzie.
But Bobby had not committed himself to the mercy of
the hanging judge, nor yet to the care of the doughty
minister, who, from the pulpit of Greyfriars auld
kirk, had flung the blood and tear stained Covenant
in the teeth of persecution.
The search was continued past the
modest Scott family burial plot and on to the west
wall. There was a broad outlook over Heriot’s
Hospital grounds, a smooth and shining expanse of
unsullied snow about the early Elizabethan pile of
buildings. Returning, they skirted the lowest
wall below the tenements, for in the circling line
of courtyarded vaults, where the “nobeelity”
of Scotland lay haughtily apart under timestained
marbles, were many shadowy nooks in which so small
a dog could stow himself away. Skulking cats
were flushed there, and sent flying over aristocratic
bones, but there was no trace of Bobby.
The second tier of windows of the
tenements was level with the kirkyard wall, and several
times Mr. Traill called up to a lighted casement where
a family sat at a scant supper.
“Have you seen a bit dog, man?”
There was much cordial interest in
his quest, windows opening and faces staring into
the dusk; but not until near the top of the Row was
a clue gained. Then, at the query, an unkempt,
illclad lassie slipped from her stool and leaned out
over the pediment of a tomb. She had seen a “wee,
wee doggie jinkin’ amang the stanes.”
It was on the Sabbath evening, when the well-dressed
folk had gone home from the afternoon services.
She was eating her porridge at the window, “by
her lane,” when he “keeked up at her so
knowing, and begged so bonny,” that she balanced
her bit bowl on a lath, and pushed it over on the kirkyard
wall. As she finished the story the big, blue
eyes of the little maid, who doubtless had herself
known what it was to be hungry, filled with tears.
“The wee tyke couldna loup up
to it, an’ a deil o’ a pussy got it a’.
He was so bonny, like a leddy’s pet, an’
syne he fell ower on the snaw an’ creepit awa’.
He didna cry oot, but he was a’ but deid wi’
hunger.” At the memory of it soft-hearted
Ailie Lindsey sobbed on her mother’s shoulder.
The tale was retold from one excited
window to another, all the way around and all the
way up to the gables, so quickly could some incident
of human interest make a social gathering in the populous
tenements. Most of all, the children seized upon
the touching story. Eager and pinched little
faces peered wistfully into the melancholy kirkyard.
“Is he yer ain dog?” crippled
Tammy Barr piped out, in his thin treble. “Gin
I had a bonny wee dog I’d gie ‘im ma ain
brose, an’ cuddle ‘im, an’ he couldna
gang awa’.”
“Nae, laddie, he’s no’
my dog. His master lies buried here, and the leal
Highlander mourns for him.” With keener
appreciation of its pathos, Mr. Traill recalled that
this was what Auld Jock had said: “Bobby
isna ma ain dog.” And he was conscious
of wishing that Bobby was his own, with his unpurchasable
love and a loyalty to face starvation. As he mounted
the turfed terraces he thought to call back:
“If you see him again, lassie,
call him ‘Bobby,’ and fetch him up to
Greyfriars Dining-Rooms. I have a bright siller
shulling, with the Queen’s bonny face on it,
to give the bairn that finds Bobby.”
There was excited comment on this.
He must, indeed, be an attractive dog to be worth
a shilling. The children generously shared plans
for capturing Bobby. But presently the windows
were closed, and supper was resumed. The caretaker
was irritable.
“Noo, ye’ll hae them a’
oot swarmin’ ower the kirkyaird. There’s
nae coontin’ the bairns o’ the neeborhood,
an’ nane o’ them are so weel broucht up
as they micht be.”
Mr. Traill commented upon this philosophically:
“A bairn is like a dog in mony ways. Tak’
a stick to one or the other and he’ll misbehave.
The children here are poor and neglected, but they’re
no’ vicious like the awfu’ imps of the
Cowgate, wha’d steal from their blind grandmithers.
Get on the gude side of the bairns, man, and you’ll
live easier and die happier.”
It seemed useless to search the much
longer arm of the kirkyard that ran southward behind
the shops of Greyfriars Place and Forest Road.
If Bobby was in the enclosure at all he would not
be far from Auld Jock’s grave. Nearest
the new-made mound were two very old and dark table-tombs.
The farther one lay horizontally, on its upright “through
stanes,” some distance above the earth.
The supports of the other had fallen, and the table
lay on their thickness within six inches of the ground.
Mr. Traill and the caretaker sat upon this slab, which
testified to the piety and worth of one Mistress Jean
Grant, who had died “lang syne.”
Encroached upon, as it was, by unlovely
life, Greyfriars kirkyard was yet a place of solitude
and peace. The building had the dignity that
only old age can give. It had lost its tower by
an explosion of gunpowder stored there in war time,
and its walls and many of the ancient tombs bore the
marks of fire and shot. Within the last decade
some of the Gothic openings had been filled with beautiful
memorial windows. Despite the horrors and absurdities
and mutilation of much of the funeral sculpturing,
the kirkyard had a sad distinction, such as became
its fame as Scotland’s Westminster. And,
there was one heavenward outlook and heavenly view.
Over the tallest decaying tenement one could look
up to the Castle of dreams on the crag, and drop the
glance all the way down the pinnacled crest of High
Street, to the dark and deserted Palace of Holyrood.
After nightfall the turreted heights wore a luminous
crown, and the steep ridge up to it twinkled with myriad
lights. After a time the caretaker offered a
well-considered opinion.
“The dog maun hae left the kirkyaird.
Thae terriers are aye barkin’. It’d
be maist michty noo, gin he’d be so lang
i’ the kirkyaird, an’ no’ mak’
a blatterin’.”
As a man of superior knowledge Mr.
Traill found pleasure in upsetting this theory.
“The Highland breed are no’ like ordinär’
terriers. Noisy enough to deave one, by nature,
give a bit Skye a reason and he’ll lie a’
the day under a whin bush on the brae, as canny as
a fox. You gave Bobby a reason for hiding here
by turning him out. And Auld Jock was a vera
releegious man. It would no’ be surprising
if he taught Bobby to hold his tongue in a kirkyard.”
“Man, he did that vera
thing.” James Brown brought his fist down
on his knee; for suddenly he identified Bobby as the
snappy little ruffian that had chased the cat and
bitten his shins, and Auld Jock as the scandalized
shepherd who had rebuked the dog so bitterly.
He related the incident with gusto.
“The auld man cried oot on the
misbehavin’ tyke to haud ’is gab.
Syne, ye ne’er saw the bit dog’s like
for a bairn that’d haen a lickin’.
He’d ‘a’ gaen into a pit, gin there’d
been ane, an’ pu’d it in ahind ’im.
I turned ’em baith oot, an’ told ’em
no’ to come back. Eh, man, it’s fearsome
hoo ilka body comes to a kirkyaird, toes afore ’im,
in a long box.”
Mr. Brown was sobered by this grim
thought and then, in his turn, he confessed a slip
to this tolerant man of the world. “The
wee deil o’ a sperity dog nipped me so I let
oot an aith.”
“Ay, that’s Bobby.
He would no’ be afraid of onything with hide
or hair on it. Man, the Skye terriers go into
dens of foxes and wildcats, and worry bulls till they
tak’ to their heels. And Bobby’s sagacious
by the ordinär’.” He thought
intently for a moment, and then spoke naturally, and
much as Auld Jock himself might have spoken to the
dog.
“Whaur are ye, Bobby? Come awa’ oot,
laddie!”
Instantly the little dog stood before
him like some conjured ghost. He had slipped
from under the slab on which they were sitting.
It lay so near the ground, and in such a mat of dead
grass, that it had not occurred to them to look for
him there. He came up to Mr. Traill confidently,
submitted to having his head patted, and looked pleadingly
at the caretaker. Then, thinking he had permission
to do so, he lay down on the mound. James Brown
dropped his pipe.
“It’s maist michty!” he said.
Mr. Traill got to his feet briskly.
“I’ll just tak’ the dog with me,
Mr. Brown. On marketday I’ll find the farmer
that owns him and send him hame. As you say,
a kirkyard’s nae place for a dog to be living
neglected. Come awa’, Bobby.”
Bobby looked up, but, as he made no
motion to obey, Mr. Traill stooped and lifted him.
From sheer surprise at this unexpected
move the little dog lay still a moment on the man’s
arm. Then, with a lithe twist of his muscular
body and a spring, he was on the ground, trembling,
reproachful for the breach of faith, but braced for
resistance.
“Eh, you’re no’
going?” Mr. Traill put his hands in his pockets,
looked down at Bobby admiringly, and sighed.
“There’s a dog after my ain heart, and
he’ll have naething to do with me. He has
a mind of his ain. I’ll just have to be
leaving him here the two days, Mr. Brown.”
“Ye wullna leave ‘im!
Ye’ll tak’ ‘im wi’ ye, or I’ll
hae to put ’im oot. Man, I couldna haud
the place gin I brak the rules.”
“You will no’ put the wee dog out!”
Mr. Traill shook a playful, emphatic finger under
the big man’s nose.
“Why wull I no’?”
“Because, man, you have a vera
soft heart, and you canna deny it.” It
was with a genial, confident smile that Mr. Traill
made this terrible accusation.
“Ma heart’s no’
so saft as to permit a bit dog to scandalize the deid.”
“He’s been here two days,
you no’ knowing it, and he has scandalized neither
the dead nor the living. He’s as leal as
ony Covenanter here, and better conducted than mony
a laird. He’s no the quarrelsome kind,
but, man, for a principle he’d fight like auld
Clootie.” Here the landlord’s heat
gave way to pure enjoyment of the situation. “Eh,
I’d like to see you put him out. It would
be another Flodden Field.”
The angry caretaker shrugged his broad shoulders.
“Ye can see it, gin ye stand
by, in juist one meenit. Fecht as he may, it
wull soon be ower.”
Mr. Traill laughed easily, and ventured
the opinion that Mr. Brown’s bark was worse
than his bite. As he went through the gateway
he could not resist calling back a challenge:
“I daur you to do it.”
Mr. Brown locked the gate, went sulkily
into the lodge, lighted his cutty pipe, and smoked
it furiously. He read a Psalm with deliberation,
poked up an already bright fire, and glowered at his
placid gude wife. It was not to be borne to
be defied by a ten-inch-high terrier, and dared, by
a man a third under his own weight, to do his duty.
After an hour or so he worked himself up to the point
of going out and slamming the door.
At eight o’clock Mr. Traill
found Bobby on the pavement outside the locked gate.
He was not sorry that the fortunes of unequal battle
had thrown the faithful little dog on his hospitality.
Bobby begged piteously to be put inside, but he seemed
to understand at last that the gate was too high for
Mr. Traill to drop him over. He followed the
landlord up to the restaurant willingly. He may
have thought this champion had another solution of
the difficulty, for when he saw the man settle comfortably
in a chair he refused to lie on the hearth. He
ran to the door and back, and begged and whined to
be let out. For a long time he stood dejectedly.
He was not sullen, for he ate a light supper and thanked
his host with much polite wagging, and he even allowed
himself to be petted. Suddenly he thought of
something, trotted briskly off to a corner and crouched
there.
Mr. Traill watched the attractive
little creature with interest and growing affection.
Very likely he indulged in a day-dream that, perhaps,
the tenant of Cauldbrae farm could be induced to part
with Bobby for a consideration, and that he himself
could win the dog to transfer his love from a cold
grave to a warm hearth.
With a spring the rat was captured.
A jerk of the long head and there was proof of Bobby’s
prowess to lay at his good friend’s feet.
Made much of, and in a position to ask fresh favors,
the little dog was off to the door with cheerful,
staccato barks. His reasoning was as plain as
print: “I hae done ye a service, noo tak’
me back to the kirkyaird.”
Mr. Traill talked to him as he might
have reasoned with a bright bairn. Bobby listened
patiently, but remained of the same mind. At last
he moved away, disappointed in this human person, discouraged,
but undefeated in his purpose. He lay down by
the door. Mr. Traill watched him, for if any
chance late comer opened the door the masterless little
dog would be out into the perils of the street.
Bobby knew what doors were for and, very likely, expected
some such release. He waited a long time patiently.
Then he began to run back and forth. He put his
paws upon Mr. Traill and whimpered and cried.
Finally he howled.
It was a dreadful, dismal, heartbroken
howl that echoed back from the walls. He howled
continuously, until the landlord, quite distracted,
and concerned about the peace of his neighbors, thrust
Bobby into the dark scullery at the rear, and bade
him stop his noise. For fully ten minutes the
dog was quiet. He was probably engaged in exploring
his new quarters to find an outlet. Then he began
to howl again. It was truly astonishing that
so small a dog could make so large a noise.
A battle was on between the endurance
of the man and the persistence of the terrier.
Mr. Traill was speculating on which was likely to be
victor in the contest, when the front door was opened
and the proprietor of the Book Hunter’s Stall
put in a bare, bald head and the abstracted face of
the book-worm that is mildly amused.
“Have you tak’n to a dog
at your time o’ life, Mr. Traill?”
“Ay, man, and it would be all
right if the bit dog would just tak’ to me.”
This pleasantry annoyed a good man
who had small sense of humor, and he remarked testily
“The barkin’ disturbs my customers so they
canna read.” The place was a resort for
student laddies who had to be saving of candles.
“That’s no’ right,”
the landlord admitted, sympathetically. “’Reading
mak’th a full man.’ Eh, what a deeference
to the warld if Robbie Burns had aye preferred a book
to a bottle.” The bookseller refused to
be beguiled from his just cause of complaint into
the flowery meads of literary reminiscences and speculations.
“You’ll stop that dog’s
cleaving noise, Mr. Traill, or I’ll appeal to
the Burgh police.”
The landlord returned a bland and
child-like smile. “You’d be weel
within your legal rights to do it, neebor.”
The door was shut with such a business-like
click that the situation suddenly became serious.
Bobby’s vocal powers, however, gave no signs
of diminishing. Mr. Traill quieted the dog for
a few moments by letting him into the outer room,
but the swiftness and energy with which he renewed
his attacks on the door and on the man’s will
showed plainly that the truce was only temporary.
He did not know what he meant to do except that he
certainly had no intention of abandoning the little
dog. To gain time he put on his hat and coat,
picked Bobby up, and opened the door. The thought
occurred to him to try the gate at the upper end of
the kirkyard or, that failing, to get into Heriot’s
Hospital grounds and put Bobby over the wall.
As he opened the door, however, he heard Geordie Ross’s
whistle around the bend in Forest Road.
“Hey, laddie!” he called.
“Come awa’ in a meenit.” When
the sturdy boy was inside and the door safely shut,
he began in his most guileless and persuasive tone:
“Would you like to earn a shulling, Geordie?”
“Ay, I would. Gie it to
me i’ pennies an’ ha’pennies, Maister
Traill. It seems mair, an’ mak’s
a braw jinglin’ in a pocket.”
The price was paid and the tale told.
The quick championship of the boy was engaged for
the gallant dog, and Geordie’s eyes sparkled
at the prospect of dark adventure. Bobby was
on the floor listening, ears and eyes, brambly muzzle
and feathered tail alert. He listened with his
whole, small, excited body, and hung on the answer
to the momentous question.
“Is there no’ a way to
smuggle the bit dog into the kirkyard?”
It appeared that nothing was easier,
“aince ye ken hoo.” Did Mr. Traill
know of the internal highway through the old Cunzie
Neuk at the bottom of the Row? One went up the
stairs on the front to the low, timbered gallery,
then through a passage as black as “Bluidy”
McKenzie’s heart. At the end of that, one
came to a peep-hole of a window, set out on wooden
brackets, that hung right over the kirkyard wall.
From that window Bobby could be dropped on a certain
noble vault, from which he could jump to the ground.
“Twa meenits’ wark, stout
hearts, sleekit footstaps, an’ the fearsome
deed is done,” declared twelve-year-old Geordie,
whose sense of the dramatic matched his daring.
But when the deed was done, and the
two stood innocently on the brightly lighted approach
to the bridge, Mr. Traill had his misgivings.
A well-respected business man and church-member, he
felt uneasy to be at the mercy of a laddie who might
be boastful.
“Geordie, if you tell onybody
about this I’ll have to give you a licking.”
“I wullna tell,” Geordie
reassured him. “It’s no’ so
respectable, an’ syne ma mither’d gie
me anither lickin’, an’ they’d gie
me twa more awfu’ aces, an’ black marks
for a month, at Heriot’s.”