The music of bagpipe, fife and drum
brought them all out of Haddo’s Hole into High
Street. It was the hour of the morning drill,
and the soldiers were marching out of the Castle.
From the front of St. Giles, that jutted into the
steep thoroughfare, they could look up to where the
street widened to the esplanade on Castle Hill.
Rank after rank of scarlet coats, swinging kilts and
sporrans, and plumed bonnets appeared. The sun
flashed back from rifle barrels and bayonets and from
countless bright buttons.
A number of the older laddies ran
up the climbing street. Mr. Traill called Bobby
back and, with a last grip of Glenormiston’s
hand, set off across the bridge. To the landlord
the world seemed a brave place to be living in, the
fabric of earth and sky and human society to be woven
of kindness. Having urgent business of buying
supplies in the markets at Broughton and Lauriston,
Mr. Traill put Bobby inside the kirkyard gate and
hurried away to get into his everyday clothing.
After dinner, or tea, he promised himself the pleasure
of an hour at the lodge, to tell Mr. Brown the wonderful
news, and to show him Bobby’s braw collar.
When, finally, he was left alone,
Bobby trotted around the kirk, to assure himself that
Auld Jock’s grave was unmolested. There
he turned on his back, squirmed and rocked on the
crocuses, and tugged at the unaccustomed collar.
His inverted struggles, low growlings and furry contortions
set the wrens to scolding and the redbreasts to making
nervous inquiries. Much nestbuilding, tuneful
courtship, and masculine blustering was going on,
and there was little police duty for Bobby. After
a time he sat up on the table-tomb, pensively.
With Mr. Brown confined, to the lodge, and Mistress
Jeanie in close attendance upon him there, the kirkyard
was a lonely place for a sociable little dog; and
a soft, spring day given over to brooding beside a
beloved grave, was quite too heart-breaking a thing
to contemplate. Just for cheerful occupation
Bobby had another tussle with the collar. He pulled
it so far under his thatch that no one could have
guessed that he had a collar on at all, when he suddenly
righted himself and scampered away to the gate.
The music grew louder and came nearer.
The first of the route-marching that the Castle garrison
practiced on occasional, bright spring mornings was
always a delightful surprise to the small boys and
dogs of Edinburgh. Usually the soldiers went
down High Street and out to Portobello on the sea.
But a regiment of tough and wiry Highlanders often
took, by preference, the mounting road to the Pentlands
to get a whiff of heather in their nostrils.
On they came, band playing, colors
flying, feet moving in unison with a march, across
the viaduct bridge into Greyfriars Place. Bobby
was up on the wicket, his small, energetic body quivering
with excitement from his muzzle to his tail.
If Mr. Traill had been there he would surely have
caught the infection, thrown care to this sweet April
breeze for once, and taken the wee terrier for a run
on the Pentland braes. The temptation was going
by when a preoccupied lady, with a sheaf of Easter
lilies on her sable arm, opened the wicket. Her
ample Victorian skirts swept right over the little
dog, and when he emerged there was the gate slightly
ajar. Widening the aperture with nose and paws,
Bobby was off, skirmishing at large on the rear and
flanks of the troops, down the Burghmuir.
It may never have happened, in the
years since Auld Jock died and the farmer of Cauldbrae
gave up trying to keep him on the hills, that Bobby,
had gone so far back on this once familiar road; and
he may not have recognized it at first, for the highways
around Edinburgh were everywhere much alike.
This one alone began to climb again. Up, up it
toiled, for two weary miles, to the hilltop toll-bar
of Fairmilehead, and there the sounds and smells that
made it different from other roads began.
Five miles out of the city the halt
was called, and the soldiers flung themselves on the
slope. Many experiences of route-marching had
taught Bobby that there was an interval of rest before
the return, so, with his nose to the ground, he started
up the brae on a pilgrimage to old shrines, just as
in his puppyhood days, at Auld Jock’s heels,
there was much shouting of men, barking of collies,
and bleating of sheep all the way up. Once he
had to leave the road until a driven flock had passed.
Behind the sheep walked an old laborer in hodden-gray,
woolen bonnet, and shepherd’s two-fold plaid,
with a lamb in the pouch of it. Bobby trembled
at the apparition, sniffed at the hob-nailed boots,
and then, with drooped head and tail, trotted on up
the slope.
Men and dogs were all out on the billowy
pastures, and the farm-house of Cauldbrae lay on the
level terrace, seemingly deserted and steeped in memories.
A few moments before, a tall lassie had come out to
listen to the military music. A couple of hundred
feet below, the coats of the soldiers looked to her
like poppies scattered on the heather. At the
top of the brae the wind was blowing a cold gale, so
the maidie went up again, and around to a bit of tangled
garden on the sheltered side of the house. The
“wee lassie Elsie” was still a bairn in
short skirts and braids, who lavished her soft heart,
as yet, on briar bushes and daisies.
Bobby made a tour of the sheepfold,
the cowyard and byre, and he lingered behind the byre,
where Auld Jock had played with him on Sabbath afternoons.
He inspected the dairy, and the poultry-house where
hens were sitting on their nests. By and by he
trotted around the house and came upon the lassie,
busily clearing winter rubbish from her posie bed.
A dog changes very little in appearance, but in eight
and a half years a child grows into a different person
altogether. Bobby barked politely to let this
strange lassie know that he was there. In the
next instant he knew her, for she whirled about and,
in a kind of glad wonder, cried out:
“Oh, Bobby! hae ye come hame?
Mither, here’s ma ain wee Bobby!” For she
had never given up the hope that this adored little
pet would some day return to her.
“Havers, lassie, ye’re
aye seein’ Bobby i’ ilka Hielan’
terrier, an’ there’s mony o’ them
aboot.”
The gude-wife looked from an attic
window in the steep gable, and then hurried down.
“Weel, noo, ye’re richt, Elsie. He
wad be comin’ wi’ the regiment frae the
Castle. Bittie doggies an’ laddies are fair
daft aboot the soldiers. Ay, he’s bonny,
an’ weel cared for, by the ordinär’.
I wonder gin he’s still leevin’ i’
the grand auld kirkyaird.”
Wary of her remembered endearments,
Bobby kept a safe distance from the maidie, but he
sat up and lolled his tongue, quite willing to pay
her a friendly visit. From that she came to a
wrong conclusion: “Sin’ he cam’
o’ his ain accord he’s like to bide.”
Her eyes were blue stars.
“I wadna be coontin’ on
that, lassie. An’ I wadna speck a door on
’im anither time. Grin he wanted to get
oot he’d dig aneath a floor o’ stane.
Leuk at that, noo! The bonny wee is greetin’
for Auld Jock.”
It was true, for, on entering the
kitchen, Bobby went straight to the bench in the corner
and lay down flat under it. Elsie sat beside him,
just as she had done of old. Her eyes overflowed
so in sympathy that the mother was quite distracted.
This would not do at all.
“Lassie, are ye no’ rememberin’
Bobby was fair fond o’ moor-hens’ eggs
fried wi’ bits o’ cheese? He wullna
be gettin’ thae things; an’ it wad be
maist michty, noo, gin ye couldna win the bittie dog
awa’ frae the reekie auld toon. Gang oot
wi’ ‘im an’ rin on the brae an’
bid ’im find the nests aneath the whins.”
In a moment they were out on the heather,
and it seemed, indeed, as if Bobby might be won.
He frisked and barked at Elsie’s heels, chased
rabbits and flushed the grouse; and when he ran into
a peat-darkened tarp, rimmed with moss, he had such
a cold and splashy swim as quite to give a little
dog a distaste for warm, soapy water in a claes tub.
He shook and ran himself dry, and he raced the laughing
child until they both dropped panting on the wind-rippled
heath. Then he hunted on the ground under the
gorse for those nests that had a dozen or more eggs
in them. He took just one from each in his mouth,
as Auld Jock had taught him to do. On the kitchen
hearth he ate the savory meal with much satisfaction
and polite waggings. But when the bugle sounded
from below to form ranks, he pricked his drop ears
and started for the door.
Before he knew what had happened he
was inside the poultry-house. In another instant
he was digging frantically in the soft earth under
the door. When the lassie lay down across the
crack he stopped digging, in consternation. His
sense of smell told him what it was that shut out the
strip of light; and a bairn’s soft body is not
a proper object of attack for a little dog, no matter
how desperate the emergency. There was no time
to be lost, for the drums began to beat the march.
Having to get out very quickly, Bobby did a forbidden
thing: swiftly and noisily he dashed around the
dark place, and there arose such wild squawkings and
rushings of wings as to bring the gude-wife out of
the house in alarm.
“Lassie, I canna hae the bittie
dog in wi the broodin’ chuckies!”
She flung the door wide. Bobby
shot through, and into Elsie’s outstretched
arms. She held to him desperately, while he twisted
and struggled and strained away; and presently something
shining worked into view, through the disordered thatch
about his neck. The mother had come to the help
of the child, and it was she who read the inscription
on the brazen plate aloud.
“Preserve us a’!
Lassie, he’s been tak’n by the Laird Provost
an’ gien the name o’ the auld kirkyaird.
He’s an ower grand doggie. Ma puir bairnie,
dinna greet so sair!” For the little girl suddenly
released the wee Highlander and sobbed on her mother’s
shoulder.
“He isna ma ain Bobby ony mair!”
She “couldna thole” to watch him as he
tumbled down the brae.
On the outward march, among the many
dogs and laddies that had followed the soldiers, Bobby
escaped notice. But most of these had gone adventuring
in Swanston Dell, to return to the city by the gorge
of Leith Water. Now, traveling three miles to
the soldiers’ one, scampering in wide circles
over the fields, swimming burns, scrambling under
hedges, chasing whaups into piping cries, barking and
louping in pure exuberance of spirits, many eyes looked
upon him admiringly, and discontented mouths turned
upward at the corners. It is not the least of
a little dog’s missions in life to communicate
his own irresponsible gaiety to men.
If the return had been over George
IV Bridge Bobby would, no doubt, have dropped behind
at Mr. Traill’s or at the kirkyard. But
on the Burghmuir the troops swung eastward until they
rounded Arthur’s Seat and met the cavalry drilling
before the barracks at Piershill. Such pretty
maneuvering of horse and foot took place below Holyrood
Palace as quite to enrapture a terrier. When
the infantry marched up the Canongate and High Street,
the mounted men following and the bands playing at
full blast, the ancient thoroughfare was quickly lined
with cheering crowds, and faces looked down from ten
tiers of windows on a beautiful spectacle. Bobby
did not know when the bridge-approach was passed; and
then, on Castle Hill, he was in an unknown region.
There the street widened to the great square of the
esplanade. The cavalry wheeled and dashed down
High Street, but the infantry marched on and up, over
the sounding drawbridge that spanned a dry moat of
the Middle Ages, and through a deep-arched gateway
of masonry.
The outer gate to the Castle was wider
than the opening into many an Edinburgh wynd; but
Bobby stopped, uncertain as to where this narrow roadway,
that curved upward to the right, might lead. It
was not a dark fissure in a cliff of houses, but was
bounded on the outer side by a loopholed wall, and
on the inner by a rocky ledge of ascending levels.
Wherever the shelf was of sufficient breadth a battery
of cannon was mounted, and such a flood of light fell
from above and flashed on polished steel and brass
as to make the little dog blink in bewilderment.
And he whirled like a rotary sweeper in the dusty road
and yelped when the time-gun, in the half-moon battery
at the left of the gate and behind him, crashed and
shook the massive rock.
He barked and barked, and dashed toward
the insulting clamor. The dauntless little dog
and his spirited protest were so out of proportion
to the huge offense that the guard laughed, and other
soldiers ran out of the guard houses that flanked
the gate. They would have put the noisy terrier
out at once, but Bobby was off, up the curving roadway
into the Castle. The music had ceased, and the
soldiers had disappeared over the rise. Through
other dark arches of masonry he ran. On the crest
were two ways to choose the roadway on
around and past the barracks, and a flight of steps
cut steeply in the living rock of the ledge, and leading
up to the King’s Bastion. Bobby took the
stairs at a few bounds.
On the summit there was nothing at
all beside a tiny, ancient stone chapel with a Norman
arched and sculptured doorway, and guarding it an
enormous burst cannon. But these ruins were the
crown jewels of the fortifications their
origins lost in legends and so they were
cared for with peculiar reverence. Sergeant Scott
of the Royal Engineers himself, in fatigue-dress,
was down on his knees before St. Margaret’s
oratory, pulling from a crevice in the foundations
a knot of grass that was at its insidious work of
time and change. As Bobby dashed up to the citadel,
still barking, the man jumped to his feet. Then
he slapped his thigh and laughed. Catching the
animated little bundle of protest the sergeant set
him up for inspection on the shattered breeching of
Mons Meg.
“Losh! The sma’ dog
cam’ by ‘is ainsel’! He could
no’ resist the braw soldier laddies. ‘He’s
a dog o’ discreemination,’ eh? Gin
he bides a wee, noo, it wull tak’ the conceit
oot o’ the innkeeper.” He turned to
gather up his tools, for the first dinner bugle was
blowing. Bobby knew by the gun that it was the
dinner-hour, but he had been fed at the farm and was
not hungry. He might as well see a bit more of
life. He sat upon the cannon, not in the least
impressed by the honor, and lolled his tongue.
In Edinburgh Castle there was nothing
to alarm a little dog. A dozen or more large
buildings, in three or four groups, and representing
many periods of architecture, lay to the south and
west on the lowest terraces, and about them were generous
parked spaces. Into the largest of the buildings,
a long, four-storied barracks, the soldiers had vanished.
And now, at the blowing of a second bugle, half a hundred
orderlies hurried down from a modern cook-house, near
the summit, with cans of soup and meat and potatoes.
The sergeant followed one of these into a room on
the front of the barracks. In their serge fatigue-tunics
the sixteen men about the long table looked as different
from the gay soldiers of the march as though so many
scarlet and gold and bonneted butterflies had turned
back into sad-colored grubs.
“Private McLean,” he called
to his batman who, for one-and-six a week, cared for
his belongings, “tak’ chairge o’
the dog, wull ye, an’ fetch ‘im to the
non-com mess when ye come to put ma kit i’ gude
order.”
Before he could answer the bombardment
of questions about Bobby the door was opened again.
The men dropped their knives and forks and stood at
attention. The officer of the day was making the
rounds of the forty or fifty such rooms in the barracks
to inquire of the soldiers if their dinner was satisfactory.
He recognized at once the attractive little Skye that
had taken the eyes of the men on the march, and asked
about him. Sergeant Scott explained that Bobby
had no owner. He was living, by permission, in
Greyfriars kirkyard, guarding the grave of a long-dead,
humble master, and was fed by the landlord of the dining-rooms
near the gate. If the little dog took a fancy
to garrison life, and the regiment to him, he thought
Mr. Traill, who had the best claim upon him, might
consent to his transfer to the Castle. After orders,
at sunset, he would take Bobby down to the restaurant
himself.
“I wish you good luck, Sergeant.”
The officer whistled, and Bobby leaped upon him and
off again, and indulged in many inconsequent friskings.
“Before you take him home fetch him over to the
officers’ mess at dinner. It is guest night,
and he is sure to interest the gentlemen. A loyal
little creature who has guarded his dead master’s
grave for more than eight years deserves to have a
toast drunk to him by the officers of the Queen.
But it’s an extraordinary story, and it doesn’t
sound altogether probable. Jolly little beggar!”
He patted Bobby cordially on the side, and went out.
The news of his advent and fragments
of his story spread so quickly through the barracks
that mess after mess swarmed down from the upper moors
and out into the roadway to see Bobby. Private
McLean stood in the door, smoking a cutty pipe, and
grinning with pride in the merry little ruffian of
a terrier, who met the friendly advances of the soldiers
more than half-way. Bobby’s guardian would
have liked very well to have sat before the canteen
in the sun and gossiped about his small charge.
However, in the sergeant’s sleeping-quarters
above the mess-room, he had the little dog all to
himself, and Bobby had the liveliest interest in the
boxes and pots, brushes and sponges, and in the processes
of polishing, burnishing, and pipe-claying a soldier’s
boots and buttons and belts. As he worked at
his valeting, the man kept time with his foot to rude
ballads that he sang in such a hissing Celtic that
Bobby barked, scandalized by a dialect that had been
music in the ears of his ancestors. At that Private
McLean danced a Highland fling for him, and wee Bobby
came near bursting with excitement. When the sergeant
came up to make a magnificent toilet for tea and for
the evening in town, the soldier expressed himself
with enthusiasm.
“He iss a deffle of a dog, sir!”
He was thought to be a “deffle
of a dog” in the mess, where the non-com officers
had tea at small writing and card tables. They
talked and laughed very fast and loud, tried Bobby
out on all the pretty tricks he knew, and taught him
to speak and to jump for a lump of sugar balanced
on his nose. They did not fondle him, and this
rough, masculine style of pampering and petting was
very much to his liking. It was a proud thing,
too, for a little dog, to walk out with the sergeant’s
shining boots and twirled walkingstick, and be introduced
into one strange place after another all around the
Castle.
From tea to tattoo was playtime for
the garrison. Many smartly dressed soldiers,
with passes earned by good behavior, went out to find
amusement in the city. Visitors, some of them
tourists from America, made the rounds under the guidance
of old soldiers. The sergeant followed such a
group of sight-seers through a postern behind the armory
and out onto the cliff. There he lounged under
a fir-tree above St. Margaret’s Well and smoked
a dandified cigar, while Bobby explored the promenade
and scraped acquaintance with the strangers.
On the northern and southern sides
the Castle wall rose from the very edge of sheer precipices.
Except for loopholes there were no openings.
But on the west there was a grassy terrace without
the wall, and below that the cliff fell away a little
less steeply. The declivity was clothed sparsely
with hazel shrubs, thorns, whins and thistles; and
now and then a stunted fir or rowan tree or a group
of white-stemmed birks was stoutly rooted on a shelving
ledge. Had any one, the visitors asked, ever
escaped down this wild crag?
Yes, Queen Margaret’s children,
the guide answered. Their father dead, in battle,
their saintly mother dead in the sanctuary of her tiny
chapel, the enemy battering at the gate, soldiers had
lowered the royal lady’s body in a basket, and
got the orphaned children down, in safety and away,
in a fog, over Queen’s Ferry to Dunfirmline in
the Kingdom of Fife. It was true that a false
step or a slip of the foot would have dashed them
to pieces on the rocks below. A gentleman of the
party scouted the legend. Only a fox or an Alpine
chamois could make that perilous descent.
With his head cocked alertly, Bobby
had stood listening. Hearing this vague talk
of going down, he may have thought these people meant
to go, for he quietly dropped over the edge and went,
head over heels, ten feet down, and landed in a clump
of hazel. A lady screamed. Bobby righted
himself and barked cheerful reassurance. The sergeant
sprang to his feet and ordered him to come back.
Now, the sergeant was pleasant company,
to be sure; but he was not a person who had to be
obeyed, so Bobby barked again, wagged his crested
tail, and dropped lower. The people who shuddered
on the brink could see that the little dog was going
cautiously enough; and presently he looked doubtfully
over a sheer fall of twenty feet, turned and scrambled
back to the promenade. He was cried and exclaimed
over by the hysterical ladies, and scolded for a bittie
fule by the sergeant. To this Bobby returned
ostentatious yawns of boredom and nonchalant lollings,
for it seemed a small matter to be so fashed about.
At that a gentleman remarked, testily, to hide his
own agitation, that dogs really had very little sense.
The sergeant ordered Bobby to precede him through the
postern, and the little dog complied amiably.
All the afternoon bugles had been
blowing. For each signal there was a different
note, and at each uniformed men appeared and hurried
to new points. Now, near sunset, there was the
fanfare for officers’ orders for the next day.
The sergeant put Bobby into Queen Margaret’s
Chapel, bade him remain there, and went down to the
Palace Yard. The chapel on the summit was a convenient
place for picking the little dog up on his way to
the officers’ mess. Then he meant to have
his own supper cozily at Mr. Traill’s and to
negotiate for Bobby.
A dozen people would have crowded
this ancient oratory, but, small as it was, it was
fitted with a chancel rail and a font for baptizing
the babies born in the Castle. Through the window
above the altar, where the sainted Queen was pictured
in stained glass, the sunlight streamed and laid another
jeweled image on the stone floor. Then the colors
faded, until the holy place became an austere cell.
The sun had dropped behind the western Highlands.
Bobby thought it quite time to go
home. By day he often went far afield, seeking
distraction, but at sunset he yearned for the grave
in Greyfriars. The steps up which he had come
lay in plain view from the doorway of the chapel.
Bobby dropped down the stairs, and turned into the
main roadway of the Castle. At the first arch
that spanned it a red-coated guard paced on the other
side of a closed gate. It would not be locked
until tattoo, at nine thirty, but, without a pass,
no one could go in or out. Bobby sprang on the
bars and barked, as much as to say: “Come
awa’, man, I hae to get oot.”
The guard stopped, presented arms
to this small, peremptory terrier, and inquired facetiously
if he had a pass. Bobby bristled and yelped indignantly.
The soldier grinned with amusement. Sentinel duty
was lonesome business, and any diversion a relief.
In a guardhouse asleep when Bobby came into the Castle,
he had not seen the little dog before and knew nothing
about him. He might be the property of one of
the regiment ladies. Without orders he dared
not let Bobby out. A furious and futile onslaught
on the gate he met with a jocose feint of his bayonet.
Tiring of the play, presently, the soldier turned his
back and paced to the end of his beat.
Bobby stopped barking in sheer astonishment.
He gazed after the stiff, retreating back, in frightened
disbelief that he was not to be let out. He attacked
the stone under the barrier, but quickly discovered
its unyielding nature. Then he howled until the
sentinel came back, but when the man went by without
looking at him he uttered a whimpering cry and fled
upward. The roadway was dark and the dusk was
gathering on the citadel when Bobby dashed across
the summit and down into the brightly lighted square
of the Palace Yard.
The gas-lamps were being lighted on
the bridge, and Mr. Traill was getting into his streetcoat
for his call on Mr. Brown when Tammy put his head
in at the door of the restaurant. The crippled
laddie had a warm, uplifted look, for Love had touched
the sordid things of life, and a miracle had bloomed
for the tenement dwellers around Greyfriars.
“Maister Traill, Mrs. Brown
says wull ye please send Bobby hame. Her gude-mon’s
frettin’ for ‘im; an’ syne, a’
the folk aroond the kirkyaird hae come to the gate
to see the bittie dog’s braw collar. They
wullna believe the Laird Provost gied it to ’im
for a chairm gin they dinna see it wi’ their
gin een.”
“Why, mannie, Bobby’s
no’ here. He must be in the kirkyard.”
“Nae, he isna. I ca’ed,
an’ Ailie keeked in ilka place amang the stanes.”
They stared at each other, the landlord
serious, the laddie’s lip trembling. Mr.
Traill had not returned from his numerous errands about
the city until the middle of the afternoon. He
thought, of course, that Bobby had been in for his
dinner, as usual, and had returned to the kirkyard.
It appeared, now, that no one about the diningrooms
had seen the little dog. Everybody had thought
that Mr. Traill had taken Bobby with him. He
hurried down to the gate to find Mistress Jeanie at
the wicket, and a crowd of tenement women and children
in the alcove and massed down Candlemakers Row.
Alarm spread like a contagion. In eight years
and more Bobby had not been outside the kirkyard gate
after the sunset bugle. Mrs. Brown turned pale.
“Dinna say the bittie dog’s
lost, Maister Traill. It wad gang to the heart
o’ ma gudemon.”
“Havers, woman, he’s no’
lost.” Mr. Traill spoke stoutly enough.
“Just go up to the lodge and tell Mr. Brown
I’m weel, I’ll just attend to
that sma’ matter my ainsel’.”
With that he took a gay face and a set-up air into
the lodge to meet Mr. Brown’s glowering eye.
“Whaur’s the dog, man?
I’ve been deaved aboot ‘im a’ the
day, but I haena seen the sonsie rascal nor the braw
collar the Laird Provost gied ‘im. An’
syne, wi’ the folk comin’ to spier for
‘im an’ swarmin’ ower the kirkyaird,
ye’d think a warlock was aboot. Bobby isna
your dog ”
“Haud yoursel’, man.
Bobby’s a famous dog, with the freedom of Edinburgh
given to him, and naething will do but Glenormiston
must show him to a company o’ grand folk at
his bit country place. He’s sending in a
cart by a groom, and I’m to tak’ Bobby
out and fetch him hame after a braw dinner on gowd
plate. The bairns meant weel, but they could no’
give Bobby a washing fit for a veesit with the nobeelity.
I had to tak’ him to a barber for a shampoo.”
Mr. Brown roared with laughter.
“Man, ye hae mair fule notions i’ yer
heid. Ye’ll hae to pay a shullin’
or twa to a barber, an’ Bobby’ll be sae
set up there’ll be nae leevin’ wi’
‘im. Sit ye doon an’ tell me aboot
the collar, man.”
“I can no’ stop now to
wag my tongue. Here’s the gude-wife.
I’ll just help her get you awa’ to your
bed.”
It was dark when he returned to the
gate, and the Castle wore its luminous crown.
The lights from the street lamps flickered on the
up-turned, anxious faces. Some of the children
had begun to weep. Women offered loud suggestions.
There were surmises that Bobby had been run over by
a cart in the street, and angry conjectures that he
had been stolen. Then Ailie wailed:
“Oh, Maister Traill, the bittie dog’s
deid!”
“Havers, lassie! I’m
ashamed o’ ye for a fulish bairn. Bobby’s
no’ deid. Nae doot he’s amang the
stanes i’ the kirkyaird. He’s aye
scramblin’ aboot for vermin an’ pussies,
an’ may hae hurt himsel’, an’ ye
a’ ken the bonny wee wadna cry oot i’
the kirkyaird. Noo, get to wark, an’ dinna
stand there greetin’ an’ waggin’
yer tongues. The mithers an’ bairns maun
juist gang hame an’ stap their havers, an’
licht a’ the candles an’ cruisey lamps
i’ their hames, an’ set them i’ the
windows aboon the kirkyaird. Greyfriars is murky
by the ordinär’, an’ ye couldna find
a coo there wi’oot the lichts.”
The crowd suddenly melted away, so
eager were they all to have a hand in helping to find
the community pet. Then Mr. Traill turned to the
boys.
“Hoo mony o’ ye laddies hae the bull’s-eye
lanterns?”
Ah! not many in the old buildings
around the kirkyard. These japanned tin aids
to dark adventures on the golf links on autumn nights
cost a sixpence and consumed candles. Geordie
Ross and Sandy McGregor, coming up arm in arm, knew
of other students and clerks who still had these cherished
toys of boyhood. With these heroes in the lead
a score or more of laddies swarmed into the kirkyard.
The tenements were lighted up as they
had not been since nobles held routs and balls there.
Enough candles and oil were going up in smoke to pay
for wee Bobby’s license all over again, and enough
love shone in pallid little faces that peered into
the dusk to light the darkest corner in the heart
of the world. Rays from the bull’s-eyes
were thrown into every nook and cranny. Very
small laddies insinuated themselves into the narrowest
places. They climbed upon high vaults and let
themselves down in last year’s burdocks and tangled
vines. It was all done in silence, only Mr. Traill
speaking at all. He went everywhere with the
searchers, and called:
“Whaur are ye, Bobby? Come awa’ oot,
laddie!”
But no gleaming ghost of a tousled
dog was conjured by the voice of affection. The
tiniest scratching or lowest moaning could have been
heard, for the warm spring evening was very still,
and there were, as yet, few leaves to rustle.
Sleepy birds complained at being disturbed on their
perches, and rodents could be heard scampering along
their runways. The entire kirkyard was explored,
then the interior of the two kirks. Mr. Traill
went up to the lodge for the keys, saying, optimistically,
that a sexton might unwittingly have locked Bobby in.
Young men with lanterns went through the courts of
the tenements, around the Grassmarket, and under the
arches of the bridge. Laddies dropped from the
wall and hunted over Heriot’s Hospital grounds
to Lauriston market. Tammy, poignantly conscious
of being of no practical use, sat on Auld Jock’s
grave, firm in the conviction that Bobby would return
to that spot his ainsel’ And Ailie, being only
a maid, whose portion it was to wait and weep, lay
across the window-sill, on the pediment of the tomb,
a limp little figure of woe.
Mr. Traill’s heart was full
of misgiving. Nothing but death or stone walls
could keep that little creature from this beloved grave.
But, in thinking of stone walls, he never once thought
of the Castle. Away over to the east, in Broughton
market, when the garrison marched away and at Lauriston
when they returned, Mr. Traill did not know that the
soldiers had been out of the city. Busy in the
lodge Mistress Jeanie had not seen them go by the
kirkyard, and no one else, except Mr. Brown, knew the
fascination that military uniforms, marching and music
had for wee Bobby. A fog began to drift in from
the sea. Suddenly the grass was sheeted and the
tombs blurred. A curtain of gauze seemed to be
hung before the lighted tenements. The Castle
head vanished, and the sounds of the drum and bugle
of the tattoo came down muffled, as if through layers
of wool. The lights of the bull’s-eyes were
ruddy discs that cast no rays. Then these were
smeared out to phosphorescent glows, like the “spunkies”
that everybody in Scotland knew came out to dance in
old kirkyards.
It was no’ canny. In the
smother of the fog some of the little boys were lost,
and cried out. Mr. Traill got them up to the gate
and sent them home in bands, under the escort of the
students. Mistress Jeanie was out by the wicket.
Mr. Brown was asleep, and she “couldna thole
it to sit there snug.” When a fog-horn
moaned from the Firth she broke into sobbing.
Mr. Traill comforted her as best he could by telling
her a dozen plans for the morning. By feeling
along the wall he got her to the lodge, and himself
up to his cozy dining-rooms.
For the first time since Queen Mary
the gate of the historic garden of the Greyfriars
was left on the latch. And it was so that a little
dog, coming home in the night might not be shut out.