’About the middle of
the night
The cocks began
to craw:
And at the dead hour o’
the night
The corpse began
to thraw.’
Ballad of Young Benjie.
We that is, the four members
of our Oxford reading party were bathing
in a deep pool in many-terraced Tees, and I was seated
on a rock’s edge, drying in the September sunshine,
and quoting from Clough’s ’Bothie of Tober-na-Vuolich’:
’How to the element
offering their bodies, down shooting the fall,
They mingled themselves with
the flood and the force of imperious
water,’
when from the central black cauldron
immediately below me appeared the face of Sandie our
best diver with a most curiously perturbed
expression on his countenance. I had been watching
a little circlet of foam that eddied round on the
outskirts of the current, and seemed to wink at me
with a hint of hidden and evasive mystery.
Then it vanished, for Sandie’s head had shattered
it.
‘Hello, Sandie!’ I cried to him, ‘what’s
up? It’s not cramp, is it?’
He climbed out and up to where I sat
on the rock above, and shook the water from his hair.
‘Ugh!’ he said in disgust.
’I’ve just been to the bottom, and there
I swear I came across a drowned body; I felt a corpse
and touched long hair. I believe it was a woman’s.’
He looked at his hands in disgust, and perceptibly
shivered.
‘Nonsense!’ said I.
’It must have been a drowned cow or sheep, or
possibly a pony.’
‘Go down and look, or rather
feel for yourself,’ he retorted.
‘How deep down was it?’ I inquired.
‘Twenty feet, perhaps,’
he said, ’for it’s a deep pool, and I believe
the poor thing’s tethered sunk with
a stone tied to her feet.’
‘Surely not,’ I exclaimed,
’for if it was a case of murder it would be
known.’
‘Go down and see for yourself,’
cried Sandie testily. ’I’ve had enough
of it.’ Calling our other two companions
I told them of Sandie’s discovery, and we came
to the conclusion that it was our duty to try to verify
or disprove Sandie’s assertion.
These two dived, but did not get down
far enough in the water; it seemed to me as I watched
their attempts that the stream carried them too swiftly
forward, so when my turn came I dived in somewhat higher
up, and got as far down as I could in my dive, and
kept on striking downwards till I calculated I was
close to the spot Sandie had indicated. Treading
the water I felt about in the amber swirl for Sandie’s
gruesome find, but the circling eddy swept me onward.
Knowing my breath was all but exhausted
I made a final effort, sank a little deeper, striving
against the current, and spread my hands abroad.
I touched something surely it was hair!
Kicking against the stream I felt again.
Yes, it was hair floating in the current the
hair of a woman. I touched with a shrinking hand
a human head, then almost suffocated, I rose to the
surface and slowly regained the shore.
‘Well?’ interrogated Sandie, watching
my face closely.
‘I believe you’re right,’
I said faintly, still short of breath. ’Yes,
I believe it’s some poor woman, for I could
just touch the skull, and the hair was long and floating
in the current.’
‘Good Lord!’ exclaimed
the two others. ’Can she have got wedged
in between two rocks?’
‘I think she’s been thrown
in,’ said Sandie gloomily. ’I felt
her body swaying to the stream. Some ruffian’s
knocked her on the head, tied a stone to her feet,
and flung her in.’
‘No more bathing for me,’
I said, shivering. ’We’ll just have
to dress and go back and report to “the Dean."’
When we had returned to the inn where
we were lodging we reported our discovery to our tutor,
‘the Dean,’ and asked his advice.
’Granted that you have “viewed the corpse,”
as coroners insist, I suppose you should report it
to the Inspector of Police,’ said he thoughtfully,
’but perhaps I might find out first from our
landlord if there has been any story about of a woman
being missed. Possibly a “village tragedy”
may come to light. When we’ve had tea I
will have a pipe and a “crack,” as they
call it here, with our landlord. Perhaps at supper
I may have something to report.’
We were well content to leave it in
‘the Dean’s’ hands, for he was most
astute in management of men, and loved to fathom a
mystery.
At supper, which was an informal meal,
whereat we waited on ourselves, he told us that he
had found out nothing in course of his ‘crack’
with the landlord, for the simple reason that he had
only been a month in possession, and nothing eventful
had occurred in that time.
‘I think,’ suggested ‘the
Dean,’ ’that you two divers should run
down on your bikes to-morrow to the Inspector of Police
at Middleton, and tell him privately of your discovery.’
This Sandie and I willingly agreed
to, and started off after breakfast down the valley.
We found on arrival that the Inspector was away at
the county town attending the Assizes, and was not
expected back till the end of the week.
We got back just in time to escape
a drenching, for a ‘thunder plump’ broke
in the heaven above the moors as we ascended the last
rise to the inn, which effectually prevented all thought
of further investigation of the Black Lynn pool.
The next morning was brilliant after
the storm, and naturally suggested an expedition.
‘Let’s go for a walk right
across the moors,’ said Sandie to me; ’the
other two want to work, but I’ve turned restless.’
I agreed at once, for I was restless
also in disappointment of our errand. We ordered
sandwiches, obtained leave from ‘the Dean,’
and prepared to start off at once.
‘Don’t fret if we don’t
get back to-night,’ cried Sandie, the ‘second-sighted,’
to our tutor as we departed; ’we may get lost,
Ted may break down under his weight of learning, or
one of Saint Cuthbert’s Cross Fell fiends may
“lift” him.’
We wanted to get as far as Brough
under Stanemoor, and back by the great ‘Nick,’
and then athwart Cross Fell’s desolate moor,
but we had not taken the weather into our consideration,
nor thought of possible sopping peat-hags on our return
journey.
Thus when we had toiled up ‘the
Nick’ by a narrow path from Brough to the wild
moorland we found our track across the waste very difficult
to follow. By six o’clock the clouds had
gathered black above us, and another thunderstorm
grew imminent.
Suddenly the lightning flared through
the serrated gloom, and thunder reverberated over
the heather.
The rain descended javelin-like upon
us as we struggled through the heavy peat-hags; we
lost our bearings and determined to make for any light
that we might descry in lonely farm or shepherd’s
sheil on this forsaken waste. We had almost given
up hope when we saw a faint glimmer through the increasing
gloom three-quarters of a mile away, perhaps, on our
left hand.
We made for our beacon as straightly
as we could; then in a dip we lost sight of it, but
eventually succeeded in discovering it again, and
judged the light to proceed from the window of a small
farm, as indeed proved to be the case when we had
traversed another mile of broken moorland.
After knocking on the door repeatedly,
we heard some one moving within. We went up to
the window, and asked for shelter from the storm, as
we were strangers who had lost our way.
The door slowly opened, and a man
bearing a tallow dip in a battered sconce showed himself
in the entry.
‘We’ve little accommodation
here the night,’ he said, as he looked at us
somewhat suspiciously; ’the goodman has died
and lies steekit in his coffin, but ye can come in
for shelter if ye have a mind.’
This did not sound very inviting,
but any shelter was preferable to a night in a peat-hag;
so we accepted his offer, and followed the man within.
It was a strange scene that met our
eyes in the little kitchen. On trestles in the
middle of the room stood the coffin; in a box-bed to
one side of the hearth an old woman in a white mutch
or cap sat up against pillows; on the farther side
of the hearth sat an untidy, foolish-faced girl who
peeled potatoes with an uncanny disconcern.
The old woman, on the contrary, had
exceedingly bright eyes, and seemed to note everything
with extraordinary interest. ‘Wha’s
there?’ she asked, as we bowed in a hesitating
manner to our hostess.
Sandie explained who we were and how
we had chanced to intrude upon her in such an untimely
hour.
‘Ay,’ she replied, ’the
goodman’s dead, and is to be lifted the morn,
but ye can bide the night; and if ye dinna mind such
company,’ she pointed contemptuously at the
man who had let us in, ‘ye can sleep wi’
him i’ the room above.’
‘Whisht, mother, whisht wi’
yer talk afore strange gentlemen,’ said he,
and he seemed to be very uneasy beneath her scorn.
‘Why should I whisht?’
she said angrily. ’Why hae na ye brocht
my daughter Jean to her father’s burying?’
The man turned to us eagerly, evidently
anxious to divert our attention.
‘Be seated, gentlemen,’
he said, drawing up two chairs to the fire; ’ye’ll
be ready for something to eat belike. Mary can
give ye some bacon and eggs and potatoes for supper
whilst ye dry your coats.’
‘Ay,’ interrupted the
old lady, ’ye shall have meat and drink.
Nane shall come to a burying at my hoose and no have
meat and drink before they gang awa. Set oot
the bannocks and honey and milk, Mary, for the lads,
then mak ready the bacon and eggs.’
Mary with a strange disordered giggle
that brought a chill to my bones, looked up at this
and half spoke, half sang, aloud to herself by way
of reply. ’Meat and drink for Dad’s
burying. But wherefore not for Jean’s?
Puir lassie, she was aye kind to me, was Jeannie.’
‘Don’t heed her, gentlemen,’
said the man in a husky voice, ’she’s a
bit daft, poor girl,’ and as he spoke he trod
noisily on the stone floor, evidently trying to drown
her voice, and forthwith dragged a table that stood
in the window somewhat nearer the hearth.
Mary had now finished with her potatoes,
and was cutting rashers of bacon which were soon sizzling
delightfully in the pan. Meantime Sandie was
talking to our bedridden hostess, whom he had discovered
to be of Scottish extraction, and I was conversing
with the son-in-law about the danger of being lost
on Cross Fell.
There was a lull in the storm at this
time, but one could hear the long lances of rain striking
on the stone tiles above; it was good to be within
doors, and to dry one’s coat by the peat embers.
We insisted on our hostess partaking of supper, which
we served up to her in bed; then Sandie and I, the
girl and the man, set ourselves down by the table and
stretched forth our hands, in the Homeric phrase, ’to
the good things set before us.’
Sandie and I had our backs to the
coffin, and had forgotten all about it and the ‘goodman,’
its occupant; Mary and her brother-in-law sat at the
corners of the table, and their features were lit up
by the flickering peats. The man had shifty,
furtive eyes, set rather deep beneath an overhanging
forehead, lined cheeks, and a clean-shaven heavy jaw;
Mary, with sallow face, light eyes, and disordered
hair sat opposite him, evidently apprehensive.
A strange party amid strange surroundings,
thought I, for a moment, as I framed an etching of
the black coffin, the bright-eyed old woman in the
night mutch abed, the daft girl and dour man and two
Oxford undergraduates eating heartily amid the flickering
light of the dip and the peat flames.
But what a splendid moorland supper
it was! Bacon and eggs and fried potatoes, bannocks
with butter, heather honey and milk.
‘What luck!’ I murmured
in Sandie’s ear, ’to be hopelessly lost,
and to find this!’ and I stretched forth my
legs at glorious ease. ’Shifty eyes’
now produced a ‘cutty’ and suggested a
smoke, which Sandie and I were thinking was the one
thing left to complete our satisfaction. Suddenly
and without warning I heard a creak behind my chair,
but I took no heed. Then a further creaking and
a grinding noise and I looked round. I
saw the coffin-lid lift upward and a white shroud show
below. Slowly the shrouded corpse rose with creaking
bones before my staring eyes rose to a
sitting posture, and sat still. The coffin-lid
clanged to the ground; then all was still, an awful
silence filled the room. A moment more, and a
cry of terror rose to the roof, for the man beside
me was down on his knees before the corpse in an ecstasy
of terror. ’Never accuse me, Ephraim!
Dinnot terrify us that gate, feyther!’ he cried
in anguish. ’Poor Jean just happened an
accident fell and was drowned in the river.’
The man’s face held me rigid. Never had
I seen mortal fear like this. Suddenly I heard
a louder voice beside me, for Sandie moved
by an uncontrollable impulse shot forth
an accusing arm, and cried accusingly, ’She
lies in the Black Linn pool her head knocked
in a stone fast to her feet.’
The man’s face turned to ashes. Awfully
he twisted his head about to the voice. He could
not remove his eyes from Sandie’s accusing countenance,
spittle dropped from his bloodless lips, his eyes
were like to pillars. Then he began to shuffle
off still upon his knees away
from Sandie and towards the door with his
face twisted over his shoulder as if it were made
of stone.
He shuffled a little faster still
upon his knees his head still twisted over
his shoulder ‘thrawn’ in terror of Sandie
and the accusing corpse. He reached the door,
groped for the handle, opened it, then shambled to
his feet, passed through the outer door, and so into
the black night.
I saw the lightning swoop down upon
the moorland. I caught a glimpse of a man running
as one blinded his hands above his head
to protect himself vaguely through the
inky peat-hags. Then I turned to look on Sandie
who was also gazing into the darkness his
face like the archangel Michael’s. I had
not yet found my voice, and could not speak for tension,
when I heard a foolish titter from the girl beside
me who was suddenly overcome with laughter.
‘Tee hee,’ she
went, ’tee hee! What a funny face Tom
had on him. Tee hee!’
Then I heard a voice from the bed
speaking composedly. ’Ay, I aye kenned
he’d murdered puir Jeannie. Whaur wast ye
fund my puir lassie?’ she asked Sandie.
As Sandie replied to her I looked
at the fearful figure of the shrouded corpse that
sat upright facing the doorway, whence his son-in-law
had fled, and wondered if there could be any spark
of life left within. As I looked the composed
voice spoke again, ’Dinna be fieyed! Puir
Ephraim’s been ill-steekit. It’s
twa-three days since the doctor certifiedst him; noo
his muscles hae stiffened and raxed him up. Ye
mun lay him doon again, Maisters, for I’ll no
can sleep wi’ him glowering that gate.’
The speaker in the night mutch was
the only one of us who seemed unaffected by the extraordinary
events we had just witnessed. Her eyes gleamed
a trifle more brightly than before. That was the
only difference.
I looked at Sandie in dismay at the
task assigned to us, but he had risen, and now beckoned
me to the coffin side. Handling the poor corpse
as reverently as we could we found it very difficult
to re-confine it to its resting-place, for the muscles
had turned so stiff and rigid that we had to exert
force, and seek heavy stones from outside to keep the
lid shut down securely.
This done, and the door fastened against
the return of the fugitive, at the old woman’s
command, though I felt sure in my own mind that the
man would never come back again of his own accord,
Sandie and I took the battered sconce and dying wick
and went up to the bedroom above.
We sat upon the bed, smoked another
pipe and conversed about the soul-stirring incidents
we had just been witnesses of.
‘Do you remember,’ asked
Sandie, ’the mediaeval legend of the dead man’s
wounds bleeding afresh in the presence of his murderer?
I believe that the spirit of the dead man down below
us must have been moved by the presence of his daughter’s
murderer.’
’To think of our having come
across in such a mysterious and fortuitous way the
poor daughter Jean!’ I said, occupied
by another aspect of these extraordinary occurrences.
As we smoked and talked thus our dip
went out, which was an intimation that we had better
try to sleep.
We slept but fitfully, and rose early
to help prepare our breakfast. Scarcely had we
finished our repast when a neighbour arrived with a
cart and horse wherewith he had promised to ‘lift’
the corpse and convey it over the rough track down
the valley to the spot where the hearse from Middleton
was to meet it.
We found a rope and bound the coffin-lid
lightly down, and having given our promise to our
hostess to recover, if we could, the body of her daughter
Jean and give it proper burial, we bade her good-bye
for the present and set off to the inn where the ‘Dean’
would be anxiously expecting us.
We related our experiences to the
‘Dean,’ we got the Inspector to come up,
but failed entirely to discover the body in the Linn.
For my part I thought the thunderstorm might be accountable
for the disappearance, but Sandie had his own opinion
on this matter. As to the criminal, some say
he escaped the country, but I firmly believe he perished
in a peat-hag, and to this day haunts the bleak spaces
of Cross Fell.