‘An eye for an eye, and a
tooth for a tooth,’ so Donald Macgregor
muttered to himself as he strode cautiously down the
water of Coquet, halting at the many crooks of that
wayward water to spy out the land as he went forward.
He had already good suspicions of
where his quarry was harboured, for he had seen and
interviewed drovers who had returned from the great
Stagshawbank Fair, and had gleaned certain information
of his foster-brother Alastair.
But more than this he had to direct
his feet; there was in his ears the echo of Alastair’s
pibroch the piobaireachd which
he was to hear whenever the Laird would be in trouble
or wanting him.
Onward the piobaireachd led
him down the water of amber-coloured Coquet and
now round the last crook he had just turned he saw
a building of dark grey stone upon the edge of the
haugh below him.
He halted at once, retraced his steps,
and hid himself in the bracken, for he knew from the
descriptions given him that the Slyme ale-house lay
there below him the last place on the English
border at which Alastair had been seen or heard of.
The Slyme ale-house had an ill repute, and was said
to be haunted moreover; none would lie there the night
who had anything to lose ’twas the
haunt of kites and ‘corbie craws.’
As he watched and waited there stole down from the
fells above him ‘oncome’ of mist or ‘haar’
from the eastward, which soon drew a plaid of hodden
grey above the shoulder of Shillmoor. On the
lower level a ray of white light still showed like
the gleam of a malevolent eye behind a mask.
Meantime a cold mist came stealing
up the valley. The eerie lonely aspect of all
about him made Donald shiver and earnestly debate his
intention.
Spying about, he saw an outcrop of
rock some two hundred yards further along the fell
side. Thither he crawled like a rogue collie,
and watched therefrom, keen-eyed as a kestrel, the
ale-house below.
He had some strips of meat with him
and oatmeal in a bag, and with this he satisfied his
hunger as he lay at watch. All the while the
piobaireachd was still sounding in his ears.
Through the mist he could see two
cows ‘coming home’ on the haugh below
slowly and sedately to their milking.
Now three figures emerged from the
inn; a tall, thin man came first a collie
at his heels that was at once sent off to
round up a hirsel of ewes on the hill.
A woman followed, calling ‘guss-guss’
to the pig routing on the bank; finally a third figure short,
misshapen a hunchback, as the watcher noted,
who called ‘coop-coop’ to a rough pony
cropping grass in the intake beyond the inn.
Shortly this gear was rounded up and
driven into the walled enclosure a half
pound attached to the western end of the buildings.
The three figures followed their stock
within, and the watcher surmising that all were housed
for the night cautiously made his way down the slope,
but on a sudden all three reappeared, and the watcher
dropped like a shot rabbit straight into a bed of
thistles and nettles, fearful of discovery.
It seemed that they were about to
secure themselves and their flocks against evil by
way of charm and spell, for round about the ale-house
they bent their steps the way of the sun brandishing
rowan boughs and chanting a fragment of ancient rhyme:
’By the rowan’s power
By the thorn’s might Safe i’ the
bower Be all our insight!’
Having perambulated round their buildings
and wall three successive times they disappeared within,
and the watcher heard to his gratification the sound
of bolt and bar being pushed home.
The solitary watcher smiled to himself the
secret smile of the Highlander who has grasped the
situation and knows how to make profit thereof unknown
to others.
The tall, thin man was the innkeeper evidently
a timorous fellow; the hunchback was his ’man’ malevolent
probably, the doer of the other’s dark behests;
whilst the woman was presumably his wife, the cook
and housekeeper of the ale-house.
Well, while they slept he would investigate
and complete his plans for the early morn at the time
when all three would reappear and drive forth their
flocks again.
There was a small haystack at the
west end of the inn, which Donald marked out as his
resting-place for the night. Thither he made his
cautious way the piobaireachd sounding
ever more clearly in his ears.
When he reached the haystack the melody
seemed to be intensified; then suddenly he heard it
no more.
Ha! a flash of inspiration shook him.
This must be the very spot where Alastair was done
to death perhaps even buried here.
He looked about him and noted that the wind was freshening
and the mist was scurrying in dense clouds above as
if it might lift, and then the moon might light him
to further discovery.
Thus reflecting he sat down behind
the stack, and waited patiently for the moon to rise
and shine above the mist.
An hour passed, then a faint glimmer
showed in the east above Shillmoor’s edge.
He stood up and peeped round the stack;
he could distinguish the rounded moon nearly
at the full beating with white wings like
an owl through the tangled mist.
In another quarter of an hour he could
see sufficiently well to commence investigation.
He noted as he searched the ground about him that quite
recently the earth had been disturbed just beyond the
verge of the haystack. A space had evidently
been roughly dug over a space that seemed
the size of a grave.
Hereupon he sought for some instrument
wherewith to make further investigation, and by good
luck soon hit upon an old, broken-shafted spade that
lay in a small potato croft adjoining. With this
he set to work to howk the turf away, and found it
light to work, for it had been loosely shovelled in,
and came away with ease. Working incessantly,
at four feet below the excavated turf, he saw an object
lying loose, which he seized in excited, trembling
hands, and surveyed in the moonlight. Ay, it
was Alastair’s bonnet, for there was the blackcock’s
tail feathers which Alastair had always proudly worn
in right of his birth. Stained with blood the
bonnet itself cloven in twain with a blow from hatchet
or axe. ‘My bonny Alastair!’ he groaned
aloud. ’Dear laddie! But, by Gott ye’ll
be avenged fine the morn’s morning!’ Reverently
he went on with his howking, and soon Alastair’s
pale face showed in the moonlight, stained with soil,
and bloody under the gash above his forehead.
Donald kneeled down in the grave and
kissed like a lover his foster-brother on the brow.
Then pondering awhile he muttered
brokenly, ’I’ll hap ye in again, Alastair,
beloved; when I’ve a sign to bury wi’ ye
that will prove to ye my troth.’
So saying he sat down beside the grave
and cleaned Alastair’s bonnet, then placed it
on his own head in token of his vow, and waited for
the dawn and his revenge.
He did not sleep, but thought again
of the past: how he had had the care of the young
fatherless Laird, had learned him to stalk the red
deer and draw salmon from the river; how Alastair
had even outstripped his teacher, and how each after
Culloden’s fight had saved the other’s
life. Then, finally, how he had counselled Alastair
to turn drover with him till the ‘Redcoats’
should depart, as the best method to avoid capture,
and how constantly Alastair’s high spirits led
them into danger. And now it was all over all
over save the final duty to his brother. As he
thus meditated long and deeply the hours went swiftly
by, and it was with a sudden shock that he heard the
bolts and bars being withdrawn on the further side
of the inn. Instantly he sprang to his feet, prepared
for action. He left his sword ready in the scabbard,
and his dag primed for use. Then he stole round
the corner, and there saw the tall man and the hunchback
before him.
‘’Tis his wraith!’
cried the tall man, noticing the bonnet, and swung
back in his terror, as he tried to cross himself by
way of charm.
‘I tell’t ye,’ quoth
the hunchback unperturbed, ‘that we should ha’
driven a stake through his inside to prevent him from
walkin’ this gate.’
‘Whisht ye, haud your damned
whisht!’ cried the other in a fury, his knees
shaking in terror. Then turning servilely towards
Donald, whom he now perceived to be a stranger, ’Ye
are welcome, sir, to any ale or Rhenish my poor inn
affords, for ye will be a Highland grazier yen
of our best customers,’ he ended in an attempt
at a bow.
‘Draw and defend your nainsel’,’
was Donald’s reply.
The tall man laid his hand to his
whinger at his side, and shouted to his ‘man,’
‘Draw, Jarret, and knife this murdering Scots
villain.’
The hunchback, nothing loath, produced
an evil-looking jockteleg, and hastened to his master’s
assistance.
‘Knife him i’ the back,’
cried the former, ‘whiles I haud him i’
play i’ front.’
The hunchback was so furious in his
attack, which he pressed right home within Donald’s
guard, that Donald was unable to ward off the tall
man in front of him.
Then just as the innkeeper had Donald
at his mercy, and was in the very act of striking
home, his arm was suddenly paralysed, a spasm of terror
shook him through and through, his eyes glazed over.
‘There’s twa o’ them,’
he muttered, and instead of striking he shrank his
hand back as if to ward off a new assailant, and Donald
had a momentary vision of his brother by his side.
The innkeeper made a pass, then his whinger dropped;
he turned to flee, tripped and fell upon his face,
and lay motionless his whinger by his side.
At this the hunchback broke into rage, ‘Ye’re
no worth fightin’ for,’ he cried in his
fury, gave a kick at his fallen master, and fled to
the inn door.
Donald fired his dag at his retreating
foe, winged him in the shoulder, and hastened his
retreat, but failed to bring him down. The door
was slammed to, the bolt was shot. The hunchback
had gained his city of refuge.
All was quiet; Donald was victorious;
he looked upon the fallen innkeeper, turned him over,
and saw that his eyes were fixed in death.
‘Ye hae helped fine to your
ain vengeance, Alastair,’ he said quietly, as
he picked up the fallen whinger. ’Ye niver
failed me yet; and I haena failed ye.’
Then Donald carried the whinger with
him and went back to the graveside, still open to
the sky.
‘I ha’ paid the debt,
Alastair,’ said Donald, taking off his bonnet
and laying the whinger in the grave as proof of his
fealty, ’and it is farewell, my brother.’
Kneeling down he reverently happed
him in afresh, then rising with a heart contented,
whistled triumphant as a pibroch, and took the airt
of Scotland by way of Cocklawfoot, murmuring to himself,
’an eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.’