HOW A MIDDLE-AGED CRUSADER ACCEPTED A CHALLENGE
The first cocks had just begun to
crow and clocks had not yet struck five when Dickson
presented himself at Mrs. Morran’s back door.
That active woman had already been half an hour out
of bed, and was drinking her morning cup of tea in
the kitchen. She received him with cordiality,
nay, with relief.
“Eh, sir, but I’m glad
to see ye back. Guid kens what’s gaun on
at the Hoose thae days. Mr. Heritage left here
yestreen, creepin’ round by dyke-sides and berry-busses
like a wheasel. It’s a mercy to get a
responsible man in the place. I aye had a notion
ye wad come back, for, thinks I, nevoy Dickson is
no the yin to desert folk in trouble.... Whaur’s
my wee kist?.... Lost, ye say. That’s
a peety, for it’s been my cheesebox thae thirty
year.”
Dickson ascended to the loft, having
announced his need of at least three hours’
sleep. As he rolled into bed his mind was curiously
at ease. He felt equipped for any call that might
be made on him. That Mrs. Morran should welcome
him back as a resource in need gave him a new assurance
of manhood.
He woke between nine and ten to the
sound of rain lashing against the garret window.
As he picked his way out of the mazes of sleep and
recovered the skein of his immediate past, he found
to his disgust that he had lost his composure.
All the flock of fears, that had left him when on
the top of the Glasgow tram-car he had made the great
decision, had flown back again and settled like black
crows on his spirit. He was running a horrible
risk and all for a whim. What business had he
to be mixing himself up in things he did not understand?
It might be a huge mistake, and then he would be
a laughing stock; for a moment he repented his telegram
to Mr. Caw. Then he recanted that suspicion;
there could be no mistake, except the fatal one that
he had taken on a job too big for him. He sat
on the edge of the bed and shivered with his eyes
on the grey drift of rain. He would have felt
more stout-hearted had the sun been shining.
He shuffled to the window and looked
out. There in the village street was Dobson,
and Dobson saw him. That was a bad blunder, for
his reason told him that he should have kept his presence
in Dalquharter hid as long as possible. There
was a knock at the cottage door, and presently Mrs.
Morran appeared.
“It’s the man frae the
inn,” she announced. “He’s
wantin’ a word wi’ ye. Speakin’
verrà ceevil, too.”
“Tell him to come up,”
said Dickson. He might as well get the interview
over. Dobson had seen Loudon and must know of
their conversation. The sight of himself back
again when he had pretended to be off to Glasgow would
remove him effectually from the class of the unsuspected.
He wondered just what line Dobson would take.
The innkeeper obtruded his bulk through
the low door. His face was wrinkled into a smile,
which nevertheless left the small eyes ungenial.
His voice had a loud vulgar cordiality. Suddenly
Dickson was conscious of a resemblance, a resemblance
to somebody whom he had recently seen. It was
Loudon. There was the same thrusting of the chin
forward, the same odd cheek-bones, the same unctuous
heartiness of speech. The innkeeper, well washed
and polished and dressed, would be no bad copy of
the factor. They must be near kin, perhaps brothers.
“Good morning to you, Mr. McCunn.
Man, it’s pitifu’ weather, and just when
the farmers are wanting a dry seed-bed. What
brings ye back here? Ye travel the country like
a drover.”
“Oh, I’m a free man now
and I took a fancy to this place. An idle body
has nothing to do but please himself.”
“I hear ye’re taking a lease of Huntingtower?”
“Now who told you that?”
“Just the clash of the place. Is it true?”
Dickson looked sly and a little annoyed.
“I had maybe had half a thought
of it, but I’ll thank you not to repeat the
story. It’s a big house for a plain man
like me, and I haven’t properly inspected it.”
“Oh, I’ll keep mum, never
fear. But if ye’ve that sort of notion,
I can understand you not being able to keep away from
the place.”
“That’s maybe the fact,” Dickson
admitted.
“Well! It’s just
on that point I want a word with you.”
The innkeeper seated himself unbidden on the chair
which held Dickson’s modest raiment. He
leaned forward and with a coarse forefinger tapped
Dickson’s pyjama-clad knees. “I can’t
have ye wandering about the place. I’m
very sorry, but I’ve got my orders from Mr. Loudon.
So if you think that by bidin’ here you can
see more of the House and the policies, ye’re
wrong, Mr. McCunn. It can’t be allowed,
for we’re no’ ready for ye yet.
D’ye understand? That’s Mr. Loudon’s
orders.... Now, would it not be a far better
plan if ye went back to Glasgow and came back in a
week’s time? I’m thinking of your
own comfort, Mr. McCunn.”
Dickson was cogitating hard.
This man was clearly instructed to get rid of him
at all costs for the next few days. The neighbourhood
had to be cleared for some black business. The
tinklers had been deputed to drive out the Gorbals
Die-Hards, and as for Heritage they seemed to have
lost track of him. He, Dickson, was now the chief
object of their care. But what could Dobson
do if he refused? He dared not show his true
hand. Yet he might, if sufficiently irritated.
It became Dickson’s immediate object to get
the innkeeper to reveal himself by rousing his temper.
He did not stop to consider the policy of this course;
he imperatively wanted things cleared up and the issue
made plain.
“I’m sure I’m much
obliged to you for thinking so much about my comfort,”
he said in a voice into which he hoped he had insinuated
a sneer. “But I’m bound to say you’re
awful suspicious folk about here. You needn’t
be feared for your old policies. There’s
plenty of nice walks about the roads, and I want to
explore the sea-coast.”
The last words seemed to annoy the
innkeeper. “That’s no’ allowed
either,” he said. “The shore’s
as private as the policies.... Well, I wish ye
joy tramping the roads in the glaur.”
“It’s a queer thing,”
said Dickson meditatively, “that you should keep
a hotel and yet be set on discouraging people from
visiting this neighbourhood. I tell you what,
I believe that hotel of yours is all sham. You’ve
some other business, you and these lodgekeepers, and
in my opinion it’s not a very creditable one.”
“What d’ye mean?” asked Dobson sharply.
“Just what I say. You
must expect a body to be suspicious, if you treat
him as you’re treating me.” Loudon
must have told this man the story with which he had
been fobbed off about the half-witted Kennedy relative.
Would Dobson refer to that?
The innkeeper had an ugly look on
his face, but he controlled his temper with an effort.
“There’s no cause for
suspicion,” he said. “As far as I’m
concerned it’s all honest and above-board.”
“It doesn’t look like
it. It looks as if you were hiding something
up in the House which you don’t want me to see.”
Dobson jumped from his chair, his
face pale with anger. A man in pyjamas on a
raw morning does not feel at this bravest, and Dickson
quailed under the expectation of assault. But
even in his fright he realized that Loudon could not
have told Dobson the tale of the half-witted lady.
The last remark had cut clean through all camouflage
and reached the quick.
“What the hell d’ye mean?”
he cried. “Ye’re a spy, are ye?
Ye fat little fool, for two cents I’d wring
your neck.”
Now it is an odd trait of certain
mild people that a suspicion of threat, a hint of
bullying, will rouse some unsuspected obstinacy deep
down in their souls. The insolence of the man’s
speech woke a quiet but efficient little devil in
Dickson.
“That’s a bonny tone to
adopt in addressing a gentleman. If you’ve
nothing to hide what way are you so touchy? I
can’t be a spy unless there’s something
to spy on.”
The innkeeper pulled himself together.
He was apparently acting on instructions, and had
not yet come to the end of them. He made an
attempt at a smile.
“I’m sure I beg your pardon
if I spoke too hot. But it nettled me to hear
ye say that.... I’ll be quite frank with
ye, Mr. McCunn, and, believe me, I’m speaking
in your best interests. I give ye my word there’s
nothing wrong up at the House. I’m on the
side of the law, and when I tell ye the whole story
ye’ll admit it. But I can’t tell
it ye yet.... This is a wild, lonely bit, and
very few folk bide in it. And these are wild
times, when a lot of queer things happen that never
get into the papers. I tell ye it’s for
your own good to leave Dalquharter for the present.
More I can’t say, but I ask ye to look at it
as a sensible man. Ye’re one that’s
accustomed to a quiet life and no’ meant for
rough work. Ye’ll do no good if you stay,
and, maybe, ye’ll land yourself in bad trouble.”
“Mercy on us!” Dickson
exclaimed. “What is it you’re expecting?
Sinn Fein?”
The innkeeper nodded. “Something like
that.”
“Did you ever hear the like? I never did
think much of the Irish.”
“Then ye’ll take my advice
and go home? Tell ye what, I’ll drive ye
to the station.”
Dickson got up from the bed, found
his new safety-razor and began to strop it.
“No, I think I’ll bide. If you’re
right there’ll be more to see than glaury roads.”
“I’m warning ye, fair
and honest. Ye... can’t... be... allowed...
to... stay... here!”
“Well I never!” said Dickson.
“Is there any law in Scotland, think you, that
forbids a man to stop a day or two with his auntie?”
“Ye’ll stay?”
“Ay, I’ll stay.”
“By God, we’ll see about that.”
For a moment Dickson thought that
he would be attacked, and he measured the distance
that separated him from the peg whence hung his waterproof
with the pistol in its pocket. But the man restrained
himself and moved to the door. There he stood
and cursed him with a violence and a venom which Dickson
had not believed possible. The full hand was on
the table now.
“Ye wee pot-bellied, pig-heided
Glasgow grocer” (I paraphrase), “would
you set up to defy me? I tell ye, I’ll
make ye rue the day ye were born.” His
parting words were a brilliant sketch of the maltreatment
in store for the body of the defiant one.
“Impident dog,” said Dickson
without heat. He noted with pleasure that the
innkeeper hit his head violently against the low lintel,
and, missing a step, fell down the loft stairs into
the kitchen, where Mrs. Morran’s tongue could
be heard speeding him trenchantly from the premises.
Left to himself, Dickson dressed leisurely,
and by and by went down to the kitchen and watched
his hostess making broth. The fracas with Dobson
had done him all the good in the world, for it had
cleared the problem of dubieties and had put an edge
on his temper. But he realized that it made
his continued stay in the cottage undesirable.
He was now the focus of all suspicion, and the innkeeper
would be as good as his word and try to drive him
out of the place by force. Kidnapping, most likely,
and that would be highly unpleasant, besides putting
an end to his usefulness. Clearly he must join
the others. The soul of Dickson hungered at
the moment for human companionship. He felt
that his courage would be sufficient for any team-work,
but might waver again if he were left to play a lone
hand.
He lunched nobly off three plates
of Mrs. Morran’s kail an early lunch,
for that lady, having breakfasted at five, partook
of the midday meal about eleven. Then he explored
her library, and settled himself by the fire with
a volume of Covenanting tales, entitled Gleanings
among the mountains. It was a
most practical work for one in his position, for it
told how various eminent saints of that era escaped
the attention of Claverhouse’s dragoons.
Dickson stored up in his memory several of the incidents
in case they should come in handy. He wondered
if any of his forbears had been Covenanters; it comforted
him to think that some old progenitor might have hunkered
behind turf walls and been chased for his life in
the heather. “Just like me,” he reflected.
“But the dragoons weren’t foreigners,
and there was a kind of decency about Claverhouse
too.”
About four o’clock Dougal presented
himself in the back kitchen. He was an even wilder
figure than usual, for his bare legs were mud to the
knees, his kilt and shirt clung sopping to his body,
and, having lost his hat, his wet hair was plastered
over his eyes. Mrs. Morran said, not unkindly,
that he looked “like a wull-cat glowerin’
through a whin buss.”
“How are you, Dougal?”
Dickson asked genially. “Is the peace of
nature smoothing out the creases in your poor little
soul?”
“What’s that ye say?”
“Oh, just what I heard a man say in Glasgow.
How have you got on?”
“No’ so bad. Your
telegram was sent this mornin’. Auld Bill
took it in to Kirkmichael. That’s the
first thing. Second, Thomas Yownie has took
a party to get down the box from the station.
He got Mrs. Sempills’ powny, and he took the
box ayont the Laver by the ford at the herd’s
hoose and got it on to the shore maybe a mile ayont
Laverfoot. He managed to get the machine up as
far as the water, but he could get no farther, for
ye’ll no’ get a machine over the wee waterfa’
just before the Laver ends in the sea. So he
sent one o’ the men back with it to Mrs. Sempill,
and, since the box was ower heavy to carry, he opened
it and took the stuff across in bits. It’s
a’ safe in the hole at the foot o’ the
Huntingtower rocks, and he reports that the rain has
done it no harm. Thomas has made a good job of
it. Ye’ll no’ fickle Thomas Yownie.”
“And what about your camp on the moor?”
“It was broke up afore daylight.
Some of our things we’ve got with us, but most
is hid near at hand. The tents are in the auld
wife’s hen-hoose.” and he jerked his disreputable
head in the direction of the back door.
“Have the tinklers been back?”
“Aye. They turned up about
ten o’clock, no doubt intendin’ murder.
I left Wee Jaikie to watch developments. They
fund him sittin’ on a stone, greetin’
sore. When he saw them, he up and started to
run, and they cried on him to stop, but he wouldn’t
listen. Then they cried out where were the rest,
and he telled them they were feared for their lives
and had run away. After that they offered to
catch him, but ye’ll no’ catch Jaikie
in a hurry. When he had run round about them
till they were wappit, he out wi’ his catty and
got one o’ them on the lug. Syne he made
for the Laverfoot and reported.”
“Man, Dougal, you’ve managed
fine. Now I’ve something to tell you,”
and Dickson recounted his interview with the innkeeper.
“I don’t think it’s safe for me
to bide here, and if I did, I wouldn’t be any
use, hiding in cellars and such like, and not daring
to stir a foot. I’m coming with you to
the House. Now tell me how to get there.”
Dougal agreed to this view.
“There’s been nothing doing at the Hoose
the day, but they’re keepin’ a close watch
on the policies. The cripus may come any moment.
There’s no doubt, Mr. McCunn, that ye’re
in danger, for they’ll serve you as the tinklers
tried to serve us. Listen to me. Ye’ll
walk up the station road, and take the second turn
on your left, a wee grass road that’ll bring
ye to the ford at the herd’s hoose. Cross
the Laver there’s a plank bridge and
take straight across the moor in the direction of
the peakit hill they call Grey Carrick. Ye’ll
come to a big burn, which ye must follow till ye get
to the shore. Then turn south, keepin’
the water’s edge till ye reach the Laver, where
you’ll find one o’ us to show ye the rest
of the road.... I must be off now, and I advise
ye not to be slow of startin’, for wi’
this rain the water’s risin’ quick.
It’s a mercy it’s such coarse weather,
for it spoils the veesibility.”
“Auntie Phemie,” said
Dickson a few minutes later, “will you oblige
me by coming for a short walk?”
“The man’s daft,” was the answer.
“I’m not. I’ll
explain if you’ll listen.... You see,”
he concluded, “the dangerous bit for me is just
the mile out of the village. They’ll no’
be so likely to try violence if there’s somebody
with me that could be a witness. Besides, they’ll
maybe suspect less if they just see a decent body
out for a breath of air with his auntie.”
Mrs. Morran said nothing, but retired,
and returned presently equipped for the road.
She had indued her feet with goloshes and pinned up
her skirts till they looked like some demented Paris
mode. An ancient bonnet was tied under her chin
with strings, and her equipment was completed by an
exceedingly smart tortoise-shell-handled umbrella,
which, she explained, had been a Christmas present
from her son.
“I’ll convoy ye as far
as the Laverfoot herd’s,” she announced.
“The wife’s a freend o’ mine and
will set me a bit on the road back. Ye needna
fash for me. I’m used to a’ weathers.”
The rain had declined to a fine drizzle,
but a tearing wind from the south-west scoured the
land. Beyond the shelter of the trees the moor
was a battle-ground of gusts which swept the puddles
into spindrift and gave to the stagnant bog-pools
the appearance of running water. The wind was
behind the travellers, and Mrs. Morran, like a full-rigged
ship, was hustled before it, so that Dickson, who had
linked arms with her, was sometimes compelled to trot.
“However will you get home,
mistress?” he murmured anxiously.
“Fine. The wind will fa’
at the darkenin’. This’ll be a sair
time for ships at sea.”
Not a soul was about, so they breasted
the ascent of the station road and turned down the
grassy bypath to the Laverfoot herd’s. The
herd’s wife saw them from afar and was at the
door to receive them.
“Megsty! Phemie Morran!”
she shrilled. “Wha wad ettle to see ye
on a day like this? John’s awa’
at Dumfries, buyin’ tups. Come in, the
baith o’ ye. The kettle’s on the
boil.”
“This is my nevoy Dickson,”
said Mrs. Morran. “He’s gaun to stretch
his legs ayont the burn, and come back by the Ayr road.
But I’ll be blithe to tak’ my tea wi’
ye, Elspeth.... Now, Dickson, I’ll expect
ye hame on the chap o’ seeven.”
He crossed the rising stream on a
swaying plank and struck into the moorland, as Dougal
had ordered, keeping the bald top of Grey Carrick
before him. In that wild place with the tempest
battling overhead he had no fear of human enemies.
Steadily he covered the ground, till he reached the
west-flowing burn, that was to lead him to the shore.
He found it an entertaining companion, swirling into
black pools, foaming over little falls, and lying
in dark canal-like stretches in the flats. Presently
it began to descend steeply in a narrow green gully,
where the going was bad, and Dickson, weighted with
pack and waterproof, had much ado to keep his feet
on the sodden slopes. Then, as he rounded a
crook of hill, the ground fell away from his feet,
the burn swept in a water-slide to the boulders of
the shore, and the storm-tossed sea lay before him.
It was now that he began to feel nervous.
Being on the coast again seemed to bring him inside
his enemies’ territory, and had not Dobson specifically
forbidden the shore? It was here that they might
be looking for him. He felt himself out of condition,
very wet and very warm, but he attained a creditable
pace, for he struck a road which had been used by
manure-carts collecting seaweed. There were faint
marks on it, which he took to be the wheels of Dougal’s
“machine” carrying the provision-box.
Yes. On a patch of gravel there was a double
set of tracks, which showed how it had returned to
Mrs. Sempill. He was exposed to the full force
of the wind, and the strenuousness of his bodily exertions
kept his fears quiescent, till the cliffs on his left
sunk suddenly and the valley of the Laver lay before
him.
A small figure rose from the shelter
of a boulder, the warrior who bore the name of Old
Bill. He saluted gravely.
“Ye’re just in time.
The water has rose three inches since I’ve been
here. Ye’d better strip.”
Dickson removed his boots and socks.
“Breeks too,” commanded the boy; “there’s
deep holes ayont thae stanes.”
Dickson obeyed, feeling very chilly,
and rather improper. “Now follow me,”
said the guide. The next moment he was stepping
delicately on very sharp pebbles, holding on to the
end of the scout’s pole, while an icy stream
ran to his knees.
The Laver as it reaches the sea broadens
out to the width of fifty or sixty yards and tumbles
over little shelves of rock to meet the waves.
Usually it is shallow, but now it was swollen to an
average depth of a foot or more, and there were deeper
pockets. Dickson made the passage slowly and
miserably, sometimes crying out with pain as his toes
struck a sharper flint, once or twice sitting down
on a boulder to blow like a whale, once slipping on
his knees and wetting the strange excrescence about
his middle, which was his tucked-up waterproof.
But the crossing was at length achieved, and on a
patch of sea-pinks he dried himself perfunctorily
and hastily put on his garments. Old Bill, who
seemed to be regardless of wind or water, squatted
beside him and whistled through his teeth.
Above them hung the sheer cliffs of
the Huntingtower cape, so sheer that a man below was
completely hidden from any watcher on the top.
Dickson’s heart fell, for he did not profess
to be a cragsman and had indeed a horror of precipitous
places. But as the two scrambled along the foot,
they passed deep-cut gullies and fissures, most of
them unclimbable, but offering something more hopeful
than the face. At one of these Old Bill halted,
and led the way up and over a chaos of fallen rock
and loose sand. The grey weather had brought
on the dark prematurely, and in the half-light it
seemed that this ravine was blocked by an unscalable
nose of rock. Here Old Bill whistled, and there
was a reply from above. Round the corner of the
nose came Dougal.
“Up here,” he commanded.
“It was Mr. Heritage that fund this road.”
Dickson and his guide squeezed themselves
between the nose and the cliff up a spout of stones,
and found themselves in an upper storey of the gulley,
very steep, but practicable even for one who was no
cragsman. This in turn ran out against a wall
up which there led only a narrow chimney. At
the foot of this were two of the Die-Hards, and there
were others above, for a rope hung down, by the aid
of which a package was even now ascending.
“That’s the top,”
said Dougal, pointing to the rim of sky, “and
that’s the last o’ the supplies.”
Dickson noticed that he spoke in a whisper, and that
all the movements of the Die-Hards were judicious and
stealthy. “Now, it’s your turn.
Take a good grip o’ the rope, and ye’ll
find plenty holes for your feet. It’s no
more than ten yards and ye’re well held above.”
Dickson made the attempt and found
it easier than he expected. The only trouble
was his pack and waterproof, which had a tendency to
catch on jags of rock. A hand was reached out
to him, he was pulled over the edge, and then pushed
down on his face. When he lifted his head Dougal
and the others had joined him, and the whole company
of the Die-Hards was assembled on a patch of grass
which was concealed from the landward view by a thicket
of hazels. Another, whom he recognized as Heritage,
was coiling up the rope.
“We’d better get all the
stuff into the old Tower for the present,” Heritage
was saying. “It’s too risky to move
it into the House now. We’ll need the thickest
darkness for that, after the moon is down. Quick,
for the beastly thing will be rising soon, and before
that we must all be indoors.”
Then he turned to Dickson and gripped
his hand. “You’re a high class of
sportsman, Dogson. And I think you’re just
in time.”
“Are they due to-night?”
Dickson asked in an excited whisper, faint against
the wind.
“I don’t know about They.
But I’ve got a notion that some devilish queer
things will happen before to-morrow morning.”