HOW CHILDE ROLAND AND ANOTHER CAME TO THE DARK TOWER
Dickson woke with a vague sense of
irritation. As his recollections took form they
produced a very unpleasant picture of Mr. John Heritage.
The poet had loosened all his placid idols, so that
they shook and rattled in the niches where they had
been erstwhile so secure. Mr. McCunn had a mind
of a singular candour, and was prepared most honestly
at all times to revise his views. But by this
iconoclast he had been only irritated and in no way
convinced. “Sich poetry!” he
muttered to himself as he shivered in his bath (a
daily cold tub instead of his customary hot one on
Saturday night being part of the discipline of his
holiday). “And yon blethers about the working-man!”
he ingeminated as he shaved. He breakfasted
alone, having outstripped even the fishermen, and
as he ate he arrived at conclusions. He had a
great respect for youth, but a line must be drawn
somewhere. “The man’s a child,”
he decided, “and not like to grow up. The
way he’s besotted on everything daftlike, if
it’s only new. And he’s no rightly
young either speaks like an auld dominie,
whiles. And he’s rather impident,”
he concluded, with memories of “Dogson."....
He was very clear that he never wanted to see him
again; that was the reason of his early breakfast.
Having clarified his mind by definitions, Dickson
felt comforted. He paid his bill, took an affectionate
farewell of the landlord, and at 7.30 precisely stepped
out into the gleaming morning.
It was such a day as only a Scots
April can show. The cobbled streets of Kirkmichael
still shone with the night’s rain, but the storm
clouds had fled before a mild south wind, and the
whole circumference of the sky was a delicate translucent
blue. Homely breakfast smells came from the houses
and delighted Mr. McCunn’s nostrils; a squalling
child was a pleasant reminder of an awakening world,
the urban counterpart to the morning song of birds;
even the sanitary cart seemed a picturesque vehicle.
He bought his ration of buns and ginger biscuits at
a baker’s shop whence various ragamuffin boys
were preparing to distribute the householders’
bread, and took his way up the Gallows Hill to the
Burgh Muir almost with regret at leaving so pleasant
a habitation.
A chronicle of ripe vintages must
pass lightly over small beer. I will not dwell
on his leisurely progress in the bright weather, or
on his luncheon in a coppice of young firs, or on
his thoughts which had returned to the idyllic.
I take up the narrative at about three o’clock
in the afternoon, when he is revealed seated on a milestone
examining his map. For he had come, all unwitting,
to a turning of the ways, and his choice is the cause
of this veracious history.
The place was high up on a bare moor,
which showed a white lodge among pines, a white cottage
in a green nook by a burnside, and no other marks
of human dwelling. To his left, which was the
east, the heather rose to a low ridge of hill, much
scarred with peat-bogs, behind which appeared the
blue shoulder of a considerable mountain. Before
him the road was lost momentarily in the woods of
a shooting-box, but reappeared at a great distance
climbing a swell of upland which seemed to be the
glacis of a jumble of bold summits. There was
a pass there, the map told him, which led into Galloway.
It was the road he had meant to follow, but as he
sat on the milestone his purpose wavered. For
there seemed greater attractions in the country which
lay to the westward. Mr. McCunn, be it remembered,
was not in search of brown heath and shaggy wood;
he wanted greenery and the Spring.
Westward there ran out a peninsula
in the shape of an isosceles triangle, of which his
present high-road was the base. At a distance
of a mile or so a railway ran parallel to the road,
and he could see the smoke of a goods train waiting
at a tiny station islanded in acres of bog.
Thence the moor swept down to meadows and scattered
copses, above which hung a thin haze of smoke which
betokened a village. Beyond it were further woodlands,
not firs but old shady trees, and as they narrowed
to a point the gleam of two tiny estuaries appeared
on either side. He could not see the final cape,
but he saw the sea beyond it, flawed with catspaws,
gold in the afternoon sun, and on it a small herring
smack flopping listless sails.
Something in the view caught and held
his fancy. He conned his map, and made out the
names. The peninsula was called the Cruives an
old name apparently, for it was in antique lettering.
He vaguely remembered that “cruives”
had something to do with fishing, doubtless in the
two streams which flanked it. One he had already
crossed, the Laver, a clear tumbling water springing
from green hills; the other, the Garple, descended
from the rougher mountains to the south. The
hidden village bore the name of Dalquharter, and the
uncouth syllables awoke some vague recollection in
his mind. The great house in the trees beyond it
must be a great house, for the map showed large policies was
Huntingtower.
The last name fascinated and almost
decided him. He pictured an ancient keep by
the sea, defended by converging rivers, which some
old Comyn lord of Galloway had built to command the
shore road, and from which he had sallied to hunt
in his wild hills.... He liked the way the moor
dropped down to green meadows, and the mystery of the
dark woods beyond. He wanted to explore the
twin waters, and see how they entered that strange
shimmering sea. The odd names, the odd cul-de-sac
of a peninsula, powerfully attracted him. Why
should he not spend a night there, for the map showed
clearly that Dalquharter had an inn? He must
decide promptly, for before him a side-road left the
highway, and the signpost bore the legend, “Dalquharter
and Huntingtower.”
Mr. McCunn, being a cautious and pious
man, took the omens. He tossed a penny heads
go on, tails turn aside. It fell tails.
He knew as soon as he had taken three
steps down the side-road that he was doing something
momentous, and the exhilaration of enterprise stole
into his soul. It occurred to him that this was
the kind of landscape that he had always especially
hankered after, and had made pictures of when he had
a longing for the country on him a wooded
cape between streams, with meadows inland and then
a long lift of heather. He had the same feeling
of expectancy, of something most interesting and curious
on the eve of happening, that he had had long ago when
he waited on the curtain rising at his first play.
His spirits soared like the lark, and he took to
singing. If only the inn at Dalquharter were
snug and empty, this was going to be a day in ten thousand.
Thus mirthfully he swung down the rough grass-grown
road, past the railway, till he came to a point where
heath began to merge in pasture, and dry-stone walls
split the moor into fields. Suddenly his pace
slackened and song died on his lips. For, approaching
from the right by a tributary path was the Poet.
Mr. Heritage saw him afar off and
waved a friendly hand. In spite of his chagrin
Dickson could not but confess that he had misjudged
his critic. Striding with long steps over the
heather, his jacket open to the wind, his face a-glow
and his capless head like a whin-bush for disorder,
he cut a more wholesome figure than in the smoking-room
the night before. He seemed to be in a companionable
mood, for he brandished his stick and shouted greetings.
“Well met!” he cried;
“I was hoping to fall in with you again.
You must have thought me a pretty fair cub last night.”
“I did that,” was the dry answer.
“Well, I want to apologize.
God knows what made me treat you to a university-extension
lecture. I may not agree with you, but every
man’s entitled to his own views, and it was dashed
poor form for me to start jawing you.”
Mr. McCunn had no gift of nursing
anger, and was very susceptible to apologies.
“That’s all right,”
he murmured. “Don’t mention it.
I’m wondering what brought you down here, for
it’s off the road.”
“Caprice. Pure caprice.
I liked the look of this butt-end of nowhere.”
“Same here. I’ve
aye thought there was something terrible nice about
a wee cape with a village at the neck of it and a
burn each side.”
“Now that’s interesting,”
said Mr. Heritage. “You’re obsessed
by a particular type of landscape. Ever read
Freud?”
Dickson shook his head.
“Well, you’ve got an odd
complex somewhere. I wonder where the key lies.
Cape woods two rivers moor
behind. Ever been in love, Dogson?”
Mr. McCunn was startled. “Love”
was a word rarely mentioned in his circle except on
death-beds, “I’ve been a married man for
thirty years,” he said hurriedly.
“That won’t do.
It should have been a hopeless affair-the last sight
of the lady on a spur of coast with water on three
sides that kind of thing, you know, or
it might have happened to an ancestor.... But
you don’t look the kind of breed for hopeless
attachments. More likely some scoundrelly old
Dogson long ago found sanctuary in this sort of place.
Do you dream about it?”
“Not exactly.”
“Well, I do. The queer
thing is that I’ve got the same prepossession
as you. As soon as I spotted this Cruives place
on the map this morning, I saw it was what I was after.
When I came in sight of it I almost shouted.
I don’t very often dream but when I do that’s
the place I frequent. Odd, isn’t it?”
Mr. McCunn was deeply interested at
this unexpected revelation of romance. “Maybe
it’s being in love,” he daringly observed.
The Poet demurred. “No.
I’m not a connoisseur of obvious sentiment.
That explanation might fit your case, but not mine.
I’m pretty certain there’s something
hideous at the back of my complex some
grim old business tucked away back in the ages.
For though I’m attracted by the place, I’m
frightened too!”
There seemed no room for fear in the
delicate landscape now opening before them.
In front, in groves of birch and rowan, smoked the
first houses of a tiny village. The road had
become a green “loaning,” on the ample
margin of which cattle grazed. The moorland still
showed itself in spits of heather, and some distance
off, where a rivulet ran in a hollow, there were signs
of a fire and figures near it. These last Mr.
Heritage regarded with disapproval.
“Some infernal trippers!”
he murmured. “Or Boy Scouts. They
desecrate everything. Why can’t the tunicatus
popellus keep away from a paradise like this!”
Dickson, a democrat who felt nothing incongruous in
the presence of other holiday-makers, was meditating
a sharp rejoinder, when Mr. Heritage’s
tone changed.
“Ye gods! What a village!”
he cried, as they turned a corner. There were
not more than a dozen whitewashed houses, all set in
little gardens of wallflower and daffodil and early
fruit blossom. A triangle of green filled the
intervening space, and in it stood an ancient wooden
pump. There was no schoolhouse or kirk; not even
a post-office only a red box in a cottage
side. Beyond rose the high wall and the dark
trees of the demesne, and to the right up a by-road
which clung to the park edge stood a two-storeyed building
which bore the legend “The Cruives Inn.”
The Poet became lyrical. “At
last!” he cried. “The village of
my dreams! Not a sign of commerce! No
church or school or beastly recreation hall!
Nothing but these divine little cottages and an ancient
pub! Dogson, I warn you, I’m going to have
the devil of a tea.” And he declaimed:
“Thou
shalt hear a song
After a while which Gods may listen to;
But place the flask upon the board and
wait
Until the stranger hath allayed his thirst,
For poets, grasshoppers, and nightingales
Sing cheerily but when the throat is moist.”
Dickson, too, longed with sensual
gusto for tea. But, as they drew nearer, the
inn lost its hospitable look. The cobbles of
the yard were weedy, as if rarely visited by traffic,
a pane in a window was broken, and the blinds hung
tattered. The garden was a wilderness, and the
doorstep had not been scoured for weeks. But
the place had a landlord, for he had seen them approach
and was waiting at the door to meet them.
He was a big man in his shirt sleeves,
wearing old riding breeches unbuttoned at the knees,
and thick ploughman’s boots. He had no
leggings, and his fleshy calves were imperfectly covered
with woollen socks. His face was large and pale,
his neck bulged, and he had a gross unshaven jowl.
He was a type familiar to students of society; not
the innkeeper, which is a thing consistent with good
breeding and all the refinements; a type not unknown
in the House of Lords, especially among recent creations,
common enough in the House of Commons and the City
of London, and by no means infrequent in the governing
circles of Labour; the type known to the discerning
as the Licensed Victualler.
His face was wrinkled in official
smiles, and he gave the travellers a hearty good afternoon.
“Can we stop here for the night?” Dickson
asked.
The landlord looked sharply at him,
and then replied to Mr. Heritage. His expression
passed from official bonhomie to official contrition.
“Impossible, gentlemen.
Quite impossible.... Ye couldn’t have come
at a worse time. I’ve only been here a
fortnight myself, and we haven’t got right shaken
down yet. Even then I might have made shift to
do with ye, but the fact is we’ve illness in
the house, and I’m fair at my wits’ end.
It breaks my heart to turn gentlemen away and me that
keen to get the business started. But there
it is!” He spat vigorously as if to emphasize
the desperation of his quandary.
The man was clearly Scots, but his
native speech was overlaid with something alien, something
which might have been acquired in America or in going
down to the sea in ships. He hitched his breeches,
too, with a nautical air.
“Is there nowhere else we can put up?”
Dickson asked.
“Not in this one-horse place.
Just a wheen auld wives that packed thegether they
haven’t room for an extra hen. But it’s
grand weather, and it’s not above seven miles
to Auchenlochan. Say the word and I’ll
yoke the horse and drive ye there.”
“Thank you. We prefer
to walk,” said Mr. Heritage. Dickson would
have tarried to inquire after the illness in the house,
but his companion hurried him off. Once he
looked back, and saw the landlord still on the doorstep
gazing after them.
“That fellow’s a swine,”
said Mr. Heritage sourly. “I wouldn’t
trust my neck in his pot-house. Now, Dogson,
I’m hanged if I’m going to leave this
place. We’ll find a corner in the village
somehow. Besides, I’m determined on tea.”
The little street slept in the clear
pure light of an early April evening. Blue shadows
lay on the white road, and a delicate aroma of cooking
tantalized hungry nostrils. The near meadows
shone like pale gold against the dark lift of the
moor. A light wind had begun to blow from the
west and carried the faintest tang of salt. The
village at that hour was pure Paradise, and Dickson
was of the Poet’s opinion. At all costs
they must spend the night there.
They selected a cottage whiter and
neater than the others, which stood at a corner, where
a narrow lane turned southward. Its thatched
roof had been lately repaired, and starched curtains
of a dazzling whiteness decorated the small, closely-shut
windows. Likewise it had a green door and a
polished brass knocker.
Tacitly the duty of envoy was entrusted
to Mr. McCunn. Leaving the other at the gate,
he advanced up the little path lined with quartz stones,
and politely but firmly dropped the brass knocker.
He must have been observed, for ere the noise had
ceased the door opened, and an elderly woman stood
before him. She had a sharply-cut face, the
rudiments of a beard, big spectacles on her nose, and
an old-fashioned lace cap on her smooth white hair.
A little grim she looked at first sight, because
of her thin lips and roman nose, but her mild
curious eyes corrected the impression and gave the
envoy confidence.
“Good afternoon, mistress,”
he said, broadening his voice to something more rustical
than his normal Glasgow speech. “Me and
my friend are paying our first visit here, and we’re
terrible taken up with the place. We would like
to bide the night, but the inn is no’ taking
folk. Is there any chance, think you, of a bed
here?”
“I’ll no tell ye a lee,”
said the woman. “There’s twae guid
beds in the loft. But I dinna tak’ lodgers
and I dinna want to be bothered wi’ ye.
I’m an auld wumman and no’ as stoot as
I was. Ye’d better try doun the street.
Eppie Home micht tak’ ye.”
Dickson wore his most ingratiating
smile. “But, mistress, Eppie Home’s
house is no’ yours. We’ve taken a
tremendous fancy to this bit. Can you no’
manage to put up with us for the one night? We’re
quiet auld-fashioned folk and we’ll no’
trouble you much. Just our tea and maybe an
egg to it, and a bowl of porridge in the morning.”
The woman seemed to relent.
“Whaur’s your freend?” she asked,
peering over her spectacles towards the garden gate.
The waiting Mr. Heritage, seeing he eyes moving in
his direction, took off his cap with a brave gesture
and advanced. “Glorious weather, madam,”
he declared.
“English,” whispered Dickson
to the woman, in explanation.
She examined the Poet’s neat
clothes and Mr. McCunn’s homely garments, and
apparently found them reassuring. “Come
in,” she said shortly. “I see ye’re
wilfu’ folk and I’ll hae to dae my
best for ye.”
A quarter of an hour later the two
travellers, having been introduced to two spotless
beds in the loft, and having washed luxuriously at
the pump in the back yard, were seated in Mrs. Morran’s
kitchen before a meal which fulfilled their wildest
dreams. She had been baking that morning, so
there were white scones and barley scones, and oaten
farles, and russet pancakes. There were three
boiled eggs for each of them; there was a segment
of an immense currant cake ("a present from my guid
brither last Hogmanay"); there was skim milk cheese;
there were several kinds of jam, and there was a pot
of dark-gold heather honey. “Try hinny
and aitcake,” said their hostess. “My
man used to say he never fund onything as guid in
a’ his days.”
Presently they heard her story.
Her name was Morran, and she had been a widow these
ten years. Of her family her son was in South
Africa, one daughter a lady’s-maid in London,
and the other married to a schoolmaster in Kyle.
The son had been in France fighting, and had come
safely through. He had spent a month or two with
her before his return, and, she feared, had found
it dull. “There’s no’ a man
body in the place. Naething but auld wives.”
That was what the innkeeper had told
them. Mr. McCunn inquired concerning the inn.
“There’s new folk just
came. What’s this they ca’
them? Robson Dobson aye,
Dobson. What far wad they no’ tak’
ye in? Does the man think he’s a laird
to refuse folk that gait?”
“He said he had illness in the house.”
Mrs. Morran meditated. “Whae
in the world can be lyin’ there? The man
bides his lane. He got a lassie frae Auchenlochan
to cook, but she and her box gaed off in the post-cairt
yestreen. I doot he tell’t ye a lee, though
it’s no for me to juidge him. I’ve
never spoken a word to ane o’ thae new folk.”
Dickson inquired about the “new folk.”
“They’re a’ now
come in the last three weeks, and there’s no’
a man o’ the auld stock left. John Blackstocks
at the Wast Lodge dee’d o’ pneumony last
back-end, and auld Simon Tappie at the Gairdens flitted
to Maybole a year come Mairtinmas. There’s
naebody at the Gairdens noo, but there’s a man
come to the Wast Lodge, a blackavised body wi’
a face like bend-leather. Tam Robison used to
bide at the South Lodge, but Tam got killed about
Mesopotamy, and his wife took the bairns to her guidsire
up at the Garpleheid. I seen the man that’s
in the South Lodge gaun up the street when I was finishin’
my denner a shilpit body and a lameter,
but he hirples as fast as ither folk run. He’s
no’ bonny to look at.. I canna think what
the factor’s ettlin’ at to let sic ill-faured
chiels come about the toun.”
Their hostess was rapidly rising in
Dickson’s esteem. She sat very straight
in her chair, eating with the careful gentility of
a bird, and primming her thin lips after every mouthful
of tea.
“Wha bides in the Big House?”
he asked. “Huntingtower is the name, isn’t
it?”
“When I was a lassie they ca’ed
it Dalquharter Hoose, and Huntingtower was the auld
rickle o’ stanes at the sea-end. But naething
wad serve the last laird’s father but he maun
change the name, for he was clean daft about what
they ca’ antickities. Ye speir whae
bides in the Hoose? Naebody, since the young
laird dee’d. It’s standin’ cauld
and lanely and steikit, and it aince the cheeriest
dwallin’ in a’ Carrick.”
Mrs. Morran’s tone grew tragic.
“It’s a queer warld wi’out the auld
gentry. My faither and my guidsire and his faither
afore him served the Kennedys, and my man Dauvit Morran
was gemkeeper to them, and afore I mairried I was
ane o’ the table-maids. They were kind
folk, the Kennedys, and, like a’ the rale gentry,
maist mindfu’ o’ them that served them.
Sic merry nichts I’ve seen in the auld
Hoose, at Hallowe’en and Hogmanay, and at the
servants’ balls and the waddin’s o’
the young leddies! But the laird bode to waste
his siller in stane and lime, and hadna that much
to leave to his bairns. And now they’re
a’ scattered or deid.”
Her grave face wore the tenderness
which comes from affectionate reminiscence.
“There was never sic a laddie
as young Maister Quentin. No’ a week gaed
by but he was in here, cryin’, ’Phemie
Morran, I’ve come till my tea!’ Fine
he likit my treacle scones, puir man. There wasna
ane in the countryside sae bauld a rider at the hunt,
or sic a skeely fisher. And he was clever at
his books tae, a graund scholar, they said, and ettlin’
at bein’ what they ca’ a dipplemat,
But that’ a’ bye wi’.”
“Quentin Kennedy the
fellow in the Tins?” Heritage asked. “I
saw him in Rome when he was with the Mission.”
“I dinna ken. He was a
brave sodger, but he wasna long fechtin’ in
France till he got a bullet in his breist. Syne
we heard tell o’ him in far awa’ bits
like Russia; and syne cam’ the end o’ the
war and we lookit to see him back, fishin’ the
waters and ridin’ like Jehu as in the auld days.
But wae’s me! It wasna permitted.
The next news we got, the puir laddie was deid o’
influenzy and buried somewhere about France.
The wanchancy bullet maun have weakened his chest,
nae doot. So that’s the end o’ the
guid stock o’ Kennedy o’ Huntingtower,
whae hae been great folk sin’ the time o’
Robert Bruce. And noo the Hoose is shut up till
the lawyers can get somebody sae far left to himsel’
as to tak’ it on lease, and in thae dear days
it’s no’ just onybody that wants a muckle
castle.”
“Who are the lawyers?” Dickson asked.
“Glendonan and Speirs in Embro.
But they never look near the place, and Maister Loudon
in Auchenlochan does the factorin’. He’s
let the public an’ filled the twae lodges, and
he’ll be thinkin’ nae doot that he’s
done eneuch.”
Mrs. Morran had poured some hot water
into the big slop-bowl, and had begun the operation
known as “synding out” the cups.
It was a hint that the meal was over, and Dickson
and Heritage rose from the table. Followed by
an injunction to be back for supper “on the chap
o’ nine,” they strolled out into the evening.
Two hours of some sort of daylight remained, and
the travellers had that impulse to activity which comes
to all men who, after a day of exercise and emptiness,
are stayed with a satisfying tea.
“You should be happy, Dogson,”
said the Poet. “Here we have all the materials
for your blessed romance old mansion, extinct
family, village deserted of men, and an innkeeper
whom I suspect of being a villain. I feel almost
a convert to your nonsense myself. We’ll
have a look at the House.”
They turned down the road which ran
north by the park wall, past the inn, which looked
more abandoned than ever, till they came to an entrance
which was clearly the West Lodge. It had once
been a pretty, modish cottage, with a thatched roof
and dormer windows, but now it was badly in need of
repair. A window-pane was broken and stuffed
with a sack, the posts of the porch were giving inwards,
and the thatch was crumbling under the attentions
of a colony of starlings. The great iron gates
were rusty, and on the coat of arms above them the
gilding was patchy and tarnished. Apparently
the gates were locked, and even the side wicket failed
to open to Heritage’s vigorous shaking.
Inside a weedy drive disappeared among ragged rhododendrons.
The noise brought a man to the lodge
door. He was a sturdy fellow in a suit of black
clothes which had not been made for him. He might
have been a butler en deshabille, but for
the presence of a pair of field boots into which he
had tucked the ends of his trousers. The curious
thing about him was his face, which was decorated with
features so tiny as to give the impression of a monstrous
child. Each in itself was well enough formed,
but eyes, nose, mouth, chin were of a smallness curiously
out of proportion to the head and body. Such an
anomaly might have been redeemed by the expression;
good-humour would have invested it with an air of
agreeable farce. But there was no friendliness
in the man’s face. It was set like a judge’s
in a stony impassiveness.
“May we walk up to the House?”
Heritage asked. “We are here for a night
and should like to have a look at it.”
The man advanced a step. He
had either a bad cold, or a voice comparable in size
to his features.
“There’s no entrance here,”
he said huskily. “I have strict orders.”
“Oh, come now,” said Heritage.
“It can do nobody any harm if you let us in
for half an hour.”
The man advanced another step.
“You shall not come in.
Go away from here. Go away, I tell you.
It is private.” The words spoken by the
small mouth in the small voice had a kind of childish
ferocity.
The travellers turned their back on
him and continued their way.
“Sich a curmudgeon!”
Dickson commented. His face had flushed, for
he was susceptible to rudeness. “Did you
notice? That man’s a foreigner.”
“He’s a brute,”
said Heritage. “But I’m not going
to be done in by that class of lad. There can
be no gates on the sea side, so we’ll work round
that way, for I won’t sleep till I’ve seen
the place.”
Presently the trees grew thinner,
and the road plunged through thickets of hazel till
it came to a sudden stop in a field. There the
cover ceased wholly, and below them lay the glen of
the Laver. Steep green banks descended to a
stream which swept in coils of gold into the eye of
the sunset. A little farther down the channel
broadened, the slopes fell back a little, and a tongue
of glittering sea ran up to meet the hill waters.
The Laver is a gentle stream after it leaves its cradle
heights, a stream of clear pools and long bright shallows,
winding by moorland steadings and upland meadows;
but in its last half-mile it goes mad, and imitates
its childhood when it tumbled over granite shelves.
Down in that green place the crystal water gushed
and frolicked as if determined on one hour of rapturous
life before joining the sedater sea.
Heritage flung himself on the turf.
“This is a good place!
Ye gods, what a good place! Dogson, aren’t
you glad you came? I think everything’s
bewitched to-night. That village is bewitched,
and that old woman’s tea. Good white magic!
And that foul innkeeper and that brigand at the gate.
Black magic! And now here is the home of all
enchantment ’island valley of Avilion’ ’waters
that listen for lovers’ all the rest
of it!”
Dickson observed and marvelled.
“I can’t make you out,
Mr. Heritage. You were saying last night you
were a great democrat, and yet you were objecting to
yon laddies camping on the moor. And you very
near bit the neb off me when I said I liked Tennyson.
And now...” Mr. McCunn’s command
of language was inadequate to describe the transformation.
“You’re a precise, pragmatical
Scot,” was the answer. “Hang it,
man, don’t remind me that I’m inconsistent.
I’ve a poet’s licence to play the fool,
and if you don’t understand me, I don’t
in the least understand myself. All I know is
that I’m feeling young and jolly, and that it’s
the Spring.”
Mr. Heritage was assuredly in a strange
mood. He began to whistle with a far-away look
in his eye.
“Do you know what that is?” he asked suddenly.
Dickson, who could not detect any tune, said “No.”
“It’s an aria from a Russian
opera that came out just before the war. I’ve
forgotten the name of the fellow who wrote it.
Jolly thing, isn’t it? I always remind
myself of it when I’m in this mood, for it is
linked with the greatest experience of my life.
You said, I think, that you had never been in love?”
Dickson replied in the native fashion. “Have
you?” he asked.
“I have, and I am been
for two years. I was down with my battalion on
the Italian front early in 1918, and because I could
speak the language they hoicked me out and sent me
to Rome on a liaison job. It was Easter time
and fine weather, and, being glad to get out of the
trenches, I was pretty well pleased with myself and
enjoying life.... In the place where I stayed
there was a girl. She was a Russian, a princess
of a great family, but a refugee, and of course as
poor as sin.... I remember how badly dressed
she was among all the well-to-do Romans. But,
my God, what a beauty! There was never anything
in the world like her.... She was little more
than a child, and she used to sing that air in the
morning as she went down the stairs.... They sent
me back to the front before I had a chance of getting
to know her, but she used to give me little timid
good mornings, and her voice and eyes were like an
angel’s.... I’m over my head in love,
but it’s hopeless, quite hopeless. I shall
never see her again.”
“I’m sure I’m honoured by your confidence,”
said Dickson reverently.
The Poet, who seemed to draw exhilaration
from the memory of his sorrows, arose and fetched
him a clout on the back. “Don’t talk
of confidence, as if you were a reporter,” he
said. “What about that House? If
we’re to see it before the dark comes we’d
better hustle.”
The green slopes on their left, as
they ran seaward, were clothed towards their summit
with a tangle of broom and light scrub. The two
forced their way through it, and found to their surprise
that on this side there were no defences of the Huntingtower
demesne. Along the crest ran a path which had
once been gravelled and trimmed. Beyond, through
a thicket of laurels and rhododendrons, they came on
a long unkempt aisle of grass, which seemed to be
one of those side avenues often found in connection
with old Scots dwellings. Keeping along this
they reached a grove of beech and holly through which
showed a dim shape of masonry. By a common impulse
they moved stealthily, crouching in cover, till at
the far side of the wood they found a sunk fence and
looked over an acre or two of what had once been lawn
and flower-beds to the front of the mansion.
The outline of the building was clearly
silhouetted against the glowing west, but since they
were looking at the east face the detail was all in
shadow. But, dim as it was, the sight was enough
to give Dickson the surprise of his life. He
had expected something old and baronial. But
this was new, raw and new, not twenty years built.
Some madness had prompted its creator to set up a
replica of a Tudor house in a countryside where the
thing was unheard of. All the tricks were there oriel
windows, lozenged panes, high twisted chimney stacks;
the very stone was red, as if to imitate the mellow
brick of some ancient Kentish manor. It was
new, but it was also decaying. The creepers had
fallen from the walls, the pilasters on the terrace
were tumbling down, lichen and moss were on the doorsteps.
Shuttered, silent, abandoned, it stood like a harsh
memento mori of human hopes.
Dickson had never before been affected
by an inanimate thing with so strong a sense of disquiet.
He had pictured an old stone tower on a bright headland;
he found instead this raw thing among trees. The
decadence of the brand-new repels as something against
nature, and this new thing was decadent. But
there was a mysterious life in it, for though not
a chimney smoked, it seemed to enshrine a personality
and to wear a sinister aura. He felt a lively
distaste, which was almost fear. He wanted to
get far away from it as fast as possible. The
sun, now sinking very low, sent up rays which kindled
the crests of a group of firs to the left of the front
door.
He had the absurd fancy that they
were torches flaming before a bier.
It was well that the two had moved
quietly and kept in shadow. Footsteps fell on
their ears, on the path which threaded the lawn just
beyond the sunk-fence. It was the keeper of the
West Lodge and he carried something on his back, but
both that and his face were indistinct in the half-light.
Other footsteps were heard, coming
from the other side of the lawn. A man’s
shod feet rang on the stone of a flagged path, and
from their irregular fall it was plain that he was
lame. The two men met near the door, and spoke
together. Then they separated, and moved one
down each side of the house. To the two watchers
they had the air of a patrol, or of warders pacing
the corridors of a prison.
“Let’s get out of this,” said Dickson,
and turned to go.
The air had the curious stillness
which precedes the moment of sunset, when the birds
of day have stopped their noises and the sounds of
night have not begun. But suddenly in the silence
fell notes of music. They seemed to come from
the house, a voice singing softly but with great beauty
and clearness.
Dickson halted in his steps.
The tune, whatever it was, was like a fresh wind
to blow aside his depression. The house no longer
looked sepulchral. He saw that the two men had
hurried back from their patrol, had met and exchanged
some message, and made off again as if alarmed by
the music. Then he noticed his companion....
Heritage was on one knee with his
face rapt and listening. He got to his feet and
appeared to be about to make for the House. Dickson
caught him by the arm and dragged him into the bushes,
and he followed unresistingly, like a man in a dream.
They ploughed through the thicket, recrossed the
grass avenue, and scrambled down the hillside to the
banks of the stream.
Then for the first time Dickson observed
that his companion’s face was very white, and
that sweat stood on his temples. Heritage lay
down and lapped up water like a dog. Then he
turned a wild eye on the other.
“I am going back,” he
said. “That is the voice of the girl I
saw in Rome, and it is singing her song!”