The Project Gutenberg EBook of Huntingtower, by John Buchan

This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever.  You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net


Title: Huntingtower

Author: John Buchan

Posting Date: May 19, 2009 [EBook #3782]
Release Date: February, 2003
First Posted: June 12, 2001

Language: English

Character set encoding: ASCII

*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HUNTINGTOWER ***




Produced by Edward A. White, Robert F. Jaffe, and Kirsten
Tozer. HTML version by Al Haines.










HUNTINGTOWER


BY

JOHN BUCHAN




To  W. P. Ker.



If the Professor of Poetry in the University of Oxford has not
forgotten the rock whence he was hewn, this simple story may give an
hour of entertainment.  I offer it to you because I think you have met
my friend Dickson McCunn, and I dare to hope that you may even in your
many sojournings in the Westlands have encountered one or other of the
Gorbals Die-Hards. If you share my kindly feeling for Dickson, you will
be interested in some facts which I have lately ascertained about his
ancestry.  In his veins there flows a portion of the redoubtable blood
of the Nicol Jarvies.  When the Bailie, you remember, returned from his
journey to Rob Roy beyond the Highland Line, he espoused his
housekeeper Mattie, "an honest man's daughter and a near cousin o' the
Laird o' Limmerfield."  The union was blessed with a son, who succeeded
to the Bailie's business and in due course begat daughters, one of whom
married a certain Ebenezer McCunn, of whom there is record in the
archives of the Hammermen of Glasgow. Ebenezer's grandson, Peter by
name, was Provost of Kirkintilloch, and his second son was the father
of my hero by his marriage with Robina Dickson, oldest daughter of one
Robert Dickson, a tenant-farmer in the Lennox.  So there are coloured
threads in Mr. McCunn's pedigree, and, like the Bailie, he can count
kin, should he wish, with Rob Roy himself through "the auld wife ayont
the fire at Stuckavrallachan."

Such as it is, I dedicate to you the story, and ask for no better
verdict on it than that of that profound critic of life and literature,
Mr. Huckleberry Finn, who observed of the Pilgrim's Progress that he
"considered the statements interesting, but tough."

J.B.




CONTENTS.


Prologue


1. How a Retired Provision Merchant felt the Impulse of Spring.

2. Of Mr. John Heritage and the Difference in Points of View.

3. How Childe Roland and Another came to the Dark tower.

4. Dougal.

5. Of the Princess in the Tower.

6. How Mr. McCunn departed with Relief and returned with Resolution.

7. Sundry Doings in the Mirk.

8. How a Middle-aged Crusader accepted a Challenge.

9. The First Battle of the Cruives.

10. Deals with an Escape and a Journey.

11. Gravity out of Bed.

12. How Mr. McCunn committed an Assault upon an Ally.

13. The Coming of the Danish Brig.

14. The Second Battle of the Cruives.

15. The Gorbals Die-Hards go into Action.

16. In which a Princess leaves a Dark Tower and a Provision Merchant
    returns to his Family.




HUNTINGTOWER.


PROLOGUE.

The girl came into the room with a darting movement like a swallow,
looked round her with the same birdlike quickness, and then ran across
the polished floor to where a young man sat on a sofa with one leg laid
along it.

"I have saved you this dance, Quentin," she said, pronouncing the name
with a pretty staccato.  "You must be lonely not dancing, so I will sit
with you.  What shall we talk about?"

The young man did not answer at once, for his gaze was held by her
face.  He had never dreamed that the gawky and rather plain little girl
whom he had romped with long ago in Paris would grow into such a being.
The clean delicate lines of her figure, the exquisite pure colouring of
hair and skin, the charming young arrogance of the eyes--this was
beauty, he reflected, a miracle, a revelation. Her virginal fineness
and her dress, which was the tint of pale fire, gave her the air of a
creature of ice and flame.

"About yourself, please, Saskia," he said.  "Are you happy now that you
are a grown-up lady?"

"Happy!"  Her voice had a thrill in it like music, frosty music. "The
days are far too short.  I grudge the hours when I must sleep. They say
it is sad for me to make my debut in a time of war. But the world is
very kind to me, and after all it is a victorious war for our Russia.
And listen to me, Quentin.  To-morrow I am to be allowed to begin
nursing at the Alexander Hospital.  What do you think of that?"

The time was January 1916, and the place a room in the great Nirski
Palace.  No hint of war, no breath from the snowy streets, entered that
curious chamber where Prince Peter Nirski kept some of the chief of his
famous treasures.  It was notable for its lack of drapery and
upholstering--only a sofa or two and a few fine rugs on the cedar
floor.  The walls were of a green marble veined like malachite, the
ceiling was of darker marble inlaid with white intaglios. Scattered
everywhere were tables and cabinets laden with celadon china, and
carved jade, and ivories, and shimmering Persian and Rhodian vessels.
In all the room there was scarcely anything of metal and no touch of
gilding or bright colour.  The light came from green alabaster censers,
and the place swam in a cold green radiance like some cavern below the
sea.  The air was warm and scented, and though it was very quiet there,
a hum of voices and the strains of dance music drifted to it from the
pillared corridor in which could be seen the glare of lights from the
great ballroom beyond.

The young man had a thin face with lines of suffering round the mouth
and eyes.  The warm room had given him a high colour, which increased
his air of fragility.  He felt a little choked by the place, which
seemed to him for both body and mind a hot-house, though he knew very
well that the Nirski Palace on this gala evening was in no way typical
of the land or its masters.  Only a week ago he had been eating black
bread with its owner in a hut on the Volhynian front.

"You have become amazing, Saskia," he said.  "I won't pay my old
playfellow compliments; besides, you must be tired of them.  I wish you
happiness all the day long like a fairy-tale Princess.  But a crock
like me can't do much to help you to it.  The service seems to be the
wrong way round, for here you are wasting your time talking to me."

She put her hand on his.  "Poor Quentin!  Is the leg very bad?"

He laughed.  "O, no.  It's mending famously.  I'll be able to get about
without a stick in another month, and then you've got to teach me all
the new dances."

The jigging music of a two-step floated down the corridor.  It made the
young man's brow contract, for it brought to him a vision of dead faces
in the gloom of a November dusk.  He had once had a friend who used to
whistle that air, and he had seen him die in the Hollebeke mud.  There
was something macabre in the tune....  He was surely morbid this
evening, for there seemed something macabre about the house, the room,
the dancing, all Russia....  These last days he had suffered from a
sense of calamity impending, of a dark curtain drawing down upon a
splendid world.  They didn't agree with him at the Embassy, but he
could not get rid of the notion.

The girl saw his sudden abstraction.

"What are you thinking about?" she asked.  It had been her favourite
question as a child.

"I was thinking that I rather wished you were still in Paris."

"But why?"

"Because I think you would be safer."

"Oh, what nonsense, Quentin dear!  Where should I be safe if not in my
own Russia, where I have friends--oh, so many, and tribes and tribes of
relations?  It is France and England that are unsafe with the German
guns grumbling at their doors.... My complaint is that my life is too
cosseted and padded.  I am too secure, and I do not want to be secure."

The young man lifted a heavy casket from a table at his elbow.  It was
of dark green imperial jade, with a wonderfully carved lid.  He took
off the lid and picked up three small oddments of ivory--a priest with
a beard, a tiny soldier, and a draught-ox.  Putting the three in a
triangle, he balanced the jade box on them.

"Look, Saskia!  If you were living inside that box you would think it
very secure.  You would note the thickness of the walls and the
hardness of the stone, and you would dream away in a peaceful green
dusk.  But all the time it would be held up by trifles--brittle
trifles."

She shook her head.  "You do not understand.  You cannot understand. We
are a very old and strong people with roots deep, deep in the earth."

"Please God you are right," he said.  "But, Saskia, you know that if I
can ever serve you, you have only to command me.  Now I can do no more
for you than the mouse for the lion--at the beginning of the story. But
the story had an end, you remember, and some day it may be in my power
to help you.  Promise to send for me."

The girl laughed merrily.  "The King of Spain's daughter," she quoted,

  "Came to visit me,
  And all for the love
  Of my little nut-tree."


The other laughed also, as a young man in the uniform of the
Preobrajenski Guards approached to claim the girl.  "Even a nut-tree
may be a shelter in a storm," he said.

"Of course I promise, Quentin," she said.  "Au revoir.  Soon I will
come and take you to supper, and we will talk of nothing but nut-trees."

He watched the two leave the room, her gown glowing like a tongue of
fire in that shadowy archway.  Then he slowly rose to his feet, for he
thought that for a little he would watch the dancing. Something moved
beside him, and he turned in time to prevent the jade casket from
crashing to the floor.  Two of the supports had slipped.

He replaced the thing on its proper table and stood silent for a moment.

"The priest and the soldier gone, and only the beast of burden left. If
I were inclined to be superstitious, I should call that a dashed bad
omen."




CHAPTER I

HOW A RETIRED PROVISION MERCHANT FELT THE IMPULSE OF SPRING


Mr. Dickson McCunn completed the polishing of his smooth cheeks with
the towel, glanced appreciatively at their reflection in the
looking-glass, and then permitted his eyes to stray out of the window.
In the little garden lilacs were budding, and there was a gold line of
daffodils beside the tiny greenhouse.  Beyond the sooty wall a birch
flaunted its new tassels, and the jackdaws were circling about the
steeple of the Guthrie Memorial Kirk.  A blackbird whistled from a
thorn-bush, and Mr. McCunn was inspired to follow its example. He began
a tolerable version of "Roy's Wife of Aldivalloch."

He felt singularly light-hearted, and the immediate cause was his
safety razor.  A week ago he had bought the thing in a sudden fit of
enterprise, and now he shaved in five minutes, where before he had
taken twenty, and no longer confronted his fellows, at least one day in
three, with a countenance ludicrously mottled by sticking-plaster.
Calculation revealed to him the fact that in his fifty-five years,
having begun to shave at eighteen, he had wasted three thousand three
hundred and seventy hours--or one hundred and forty days--or between
four and five months--by his neglect of this admirable invention.  Now
he felt that he had stolen a march on Time.  He had fallen heir, thus
late, to a fortune in unpurchasable leisure.

He began to dress himself in the sombre clothes in which he had been
accustomed for thirty-five years and more to go down to the shop in
Mearns Street.  And then a thought came to him which made him discard
the grey-striped trousers, sit down on the edge of his bed, and muse.

Since Saturday the shop was a thing of the past.  On Saturday at
half-past eleven, to the accompaniment of a glass of dubious sherry, he
had completed the arrangements by which the provision shop in Mearns
Street, which had borne so long the legend of D. McCunn, together with
the branches in Crossmyloof and the Shaws, became the property of a
company, yclept the United Supply Stores, Limited. He had received in
payment cash, debentures and preference shares, and his lawyers and his
own acumen had acclaimed the bargain. But all the week-end he had been
a little sad.  It was the end of so old a song, and he knew no other
tune to sing.  He was comfortably off, healthy, free from any
particular cares in life, but free too from any particular duties.
"Will I be going to turn into a useless old man?" he asked himself.

But he had woke up this Monday to the sound of the blackbird, and the
world, which had seemed rather empty twelve hours before, was now brisk
and alluring.  His prowess in quick shaving assured him of his youth.
"I'm no' that dead old," he observed, as he sat on the edge of he bed,
to his reflection in the big looking-glass.

It was not an old face.  The sandy hair was a little thin on the top
and a little grey at the temples, the figure was perhaps a little too
full for youthful elegance, and an athlete would have censured the neck
as too fleshy for perfect health.  But the cheeks were rosy, the skin
clear, and the pale eyes singularly childlike. They were a little weak,
those eyes, and had some difficulty in looking for long at the same
object, so that Mr. McCunn did not stare people in the face, and had,
in consequence, at one time in his career acquired a perfectly
undeserved reputation for cunning. He shaved clean, and looked
uncommonly like a wise, plump schoolboy. As he gazed at his simulacrum
he stopped whistling "Roy's Wife" and let his countenance harden into a
noble sternness.  Then he laughed, and observed in the language of his
youth that there was "life in the auld dowg yet."  In that moment the
soul of Mr. McCunn conceived the Great Plan.

The first sign of it was that he swept all his business garments
unceremoniously on to the floor.  The next that he rootled at the
bottom of a deep drawer and extracted a most disreputable tweed suit.
It had once been what I believe is called a Lovat mixture, but was now
a nondescript sub-fusc, with bright patches of colour like moss on
whinstone.  He regarded it lovingly, for it had been for twenty years
his holiday wear, emerging annually for a hallowed month to be stained
with salt and bleached with sun.  He put it on, and stood shrouded in
an odour of camphor.  A pair of thick nailed boots and a flannel shirt
and collar completed the equipment of the sportsman.  He had another
long look at himself in the glass, and then descended whistling to
breakfast.  This time the tune was "Macgregors' Gathering," and the
sound of it stirred the grimy lips of a man outside who was delivering
coals--himself a Macgregor--to follow suit.  Mr McCunn was a very
fountain of music that morning.

Tibby, the aged maid, had his newspaper and letters waiting by his
plate, and a dish of ham and eggs frizzling near the fire.  He fell to
ravenously but still musingly, and he had reached the stage of scones
and jam before he glanced at his correspondence.  There was a letter
from his wife now holidaying at the Neuk Hydropathic. She reported that
her health was improving, and that she had met various people who had
known somebody else whom she had once known herself.  Mr. McCunn read
the dutiful pages and smiled. "Mamma's enjoying herself fine," he
observed to the teapot. He knew that for his wife the earthly paradise
was a hydropathic, where she put on her afternoon dress and every jewel
she possessed when she rose in the morning, ate large meals of which
the novelty atoned for the nastiness, and collected an immense casual
acquaintance, with whom she discussed ailments, ministers, sudden
deaths, and the intricate genealogies of her class.  For his part he
rancorously hated hydropathics, having once spent a black week under
the roof of one in his wife's company.  He detested the food, the
Turkish baths (he had a passionate aversion to baring his body before
strangers), the inability to find anything to do and the compulsion to
endless small talk.  A thought flitted over his mind which he was too
loyal to formulate.  Once he and his wife had had similar likings, but
they had taken different roads since their child died.  Janet!  He saw
again--he was never quite free from the sight--the solemn little
white-frocked girl who had died long ago in the Spring.

It may have been the thought of the Neuk Hydropathic, or more likely
the thin clean scent of the daffodils with which Tibby had decked the
table, but long ere breakfast was finished the Great Plan had ceased to
be an airy vision and become a sober well-masoned structure.  Mr.
McCunn--I may confess it at the start--was an incurable romantic.

He had had a humdrum life since the day when he had first entered his
uncle's shop with the hope of some day succeeding that honest grocer;
and his feet had never strayed a yard from his sober rut. But his mind,
like the Dying Gladiator's, had been far away. As a boy he had voyaged
among books, and they had given him a world where he could shape his
career according to his whimsical fancy. Not that Mr. McCunn was what
is known as a great reader. He read slowly and fastidiously, and sought
in literature for one thing alone.  Sir Walter Scott had been his first
guide, but he read the novels not for their insight into human
character or for their historical pageantry, but because they gave him
material wherewith to construct fantastic journeys.  It was the same
with Dickens. A lit tavern, a stage-coach, post-horses, the clack of
hoofs on a frosty road, went to his head like wine.  He was a Jacobite
not because he had any views on Divine Right, but because he had always
before his eyes a picture of a knot of adventurers in cloaks, new
landed from France among the western heather.

On this select basis he had built up his small library--Defoe, Hakluyt,
Hazlitt and the essayists, Boswell, some indifferent romances, and a
shelf of spirited poetry.  His tastes became known, and he acquired a
reputation for a scholarly habit.  He was president of the Literary
Society of the Guthrie Memorial Kirk, and read to its members a variety
of papers full of a gusto which rarely became critical.  He had been
three times chairman at Burns Anniversary dinners, and had delivered
orations in eulogy of the national Bard; not because he greatly admired
him--he thought him rather vulgar--but because he took Burns as an
emblem of the un-Burns-like literature which he loved.  Mr. McCunn was
no scholar and was sublimely unconscious of background.  He grew his
flowers in his small garden-plot oblivious of their origin so long as
they gave him the colour and scent he sought.  Scent, I say, for he
appreciated more than the mere picturesque.  He had a passion for words
and cadences, and would be haunted for weeks by a cunning phrase,
savouring it as a connoisseur savours a vintage. Wherefore long ago,
when he could ill afford it, he had purchased the Edinburgh Stevenson.
They were the only large books on his shelves, for he had a liking for
small volumes--things he could stuff into his pocket in that sudden
journey which he loved to contemplate.

Only he had never taken it.  The shop had tied him up for eleven months
in the year, and the twelfth had always found him settled decorously
with his wife in some seaside villa.  He had not fretted, for he was
content with dreams.  He was always a little tired, too, when the
holidays came, and his wife told him he was growing old. He consoled
himself with tags from the more philosophic of his authors, but he
scarcely needed consolation.  For he had large stores of modest
contentment.

But now something had happened.  A spring morning and a safety razor
had convinced him that he was still young.  Since yesterday he was a
man of a large leisure.  Providence had done for him what he would
never have done for himself.  The rut in which he had travelled so long
had given place to open country.  He repeated to himself one of the
quotations with which he had been wont to stir the literary young men
at the Guthrie Memorial Kirk:

  "What's a man's age?  He must hurry more, that's all;
  Cram in a day, what his youth took a year to hold:
  When we mind labour, then only, we're too old--
  What age had Methusalem when he begat Saul?

He would go journeying--who but he?--pleasantly."

It sounds a trivial resolve, but it quickened Mr. McCunn to the depths
of his being.  A holiday, and alone!  On foot, of course, for he must
travel light.  He would buckle on a pack after the approved fashion.
He had the very thing in a drawer upstairs, which he had bought some
years ago at a sale.  That and a waterproof and a stick, and his outfit
was complete.  A book, too, and, as he lit his first pipe, he
considered what it should be.  Poetry, clearly, for it was the Spring,
and besides poetry could be got in pleasantly small bulk.  He stood
before his bookshelves trying to select a volume, rejecting one after
another as inapposite.  Browning--Keats, Shelley--they seemed more
suited for the hearth than for the roadside.  He did not want anything
Scots, for he was of opinion that Spring came more richly in England
and that English people had a better notion of it.  He was tempted by
the Oxford Anthology, but was deterred by its thickness, for he did not
possess the thin-paper edition.  Finally he selected Izaak Walton.  He
had never fished in his life, but The Compleat Angler seemed to fit his
mood. It was old and curious and learned and fragrant with the youth of
things.  He remembered its falling cadences, its country songs and wise
meditations.  Decidedly it was the right scrip for his pilgrimage.

Characteristically he thought last of where he was to go.  Every bit of
the world beyond his front door had its charms to the seeing eye. There
seemed nothing common or unclean that fresh morning.  Even a walk among
coal-pits had its attractions.... But since he had the right to choose,
he lingered over it like an epicure.  Not the Highlands, for Spring
came late among their sour mosses.  Some place where there were fields
and woods and inns, somewhere, too, within call of the sea.  It must
not be too remote, for he had no time to waste on train journeys; nor
too near, for he wanted a countryside untainted. Presently he thought
of Carrick.  A good green land, as he remembered it, with purposeful
white roads and public-houses sacred to the memory of Burns; near the
hills but yet lowland, and with a bright sea chafing on its shores.  He
decided on Carrick, found a map, and planned his journey.

Then he routed out his knapsack, packed it with a modest change of
raiment, and sent out Tibby to buy chocolate and tobacco and to cash a
cheque at the Strathclyde Bank.  Till Tibby returned he occupied
himself with delicious dreams.... He saw himself daily growing browner
and leaner, swinging along broad highways or wandering in bypaths.  He
pictured his seasons of ease, when he unslung his pack and smoked in
some clump of lilacs by a burnside--he remembered a phrase of
Stevenson's somewhat like that.  He would meet and talk with all sorts
of folk; an exhilarating prospect, for Mr. McCunn loved his kind.
There would be the evening hour before he reached his inn, when,
pleasantly tired, he would top some ridge and see the welcoming lights
of a little town.  There would be the lamp-lit after-supper time when
he would read and reflect, and the start in the gay morning, when
tobacco tastes sweetest and even fifty-five seems young.  It would be
holiday of the purest, for no business now tugged at his coat-tails.
He was beginning a new life, he told himself, when he could cultivate
the seedling interests which had withered beneath the far-reaching
shade of the shop.  Was ever a man more fortunate or more free?

Tibby was told that he was going off for a week or two.  No letters
need be forwarded, for he would be constantly moving, but Mrs. McCunn
at the Neuk Hydropathic would be kept informed of his whereabouts.
Presently he stood on his doorstep, a stocky figure in ancient tweeds,
with a bulging pack slung on his arm, and a stout hazel stick in his
hand.  A passer-by would have remarked an elderly shopkeeper bent
apparently on a day in the country, a common little man on a prosaic
errand.  But the passer-by would have been wrong, for he could not see
into the heart.  The plump citizen was the eternal pilgrim; he was
Jason, Ulysses, Eric the Red, Albuquerque, Cortez--starting out to
discover new worlds.

Before he left Mr. McCunn had given Tibby a letter to post. That
morning he had received an epistle from a benevolent acquaintance, one
Mackintosh, regarding a group of urchins who called themselves the
"Gorbals Die-Hards."  Behind the premises in Mearns Street lay a tract
of slums, full of mischievous boys, with whom his staff waged truceless
war.  But lately there had started among them a kind of unauthorized
and unofficial Boy Scouts, who, without uniform or badge or any kind of
paraphernalia, followed the banner of Sir Robert Baden-Powell and
subjected themselves to a rude discipline.  They were far too poor to
join an orthodox troop, but they faithfully copied what they believed
to be the practices of more fortunate boys.  Mr. McCunn had witnessed
their pathetic parades, and had even passed the time of day with their
leader, a red-haired savage called Dougal.  The philanthropic
Mackintosh had taken an interest in the gang and now desired
subscriptions to send them to camp in the country.

Mr. McCunn, in his new exhilaration, felt that he could not deny to
others what he proposed for himself.  His last act before leaving was
to send Mackintosh ten pounds.




CHAPTER II

OF MR. JOHN HERITAGE AND THE DIFFERENCE IN POINTS OF VIEW


Dickson McCunn was never to forget the first stage in that pilgrimage.
A little after midday he descended from a grimy third-class carriage at
a little station whose name I have forgotten.  In the village nearby he
purchased some new-baked buns and ginger biscuits, to which he was
partial, and followed by the shouts of urchins, who admired his
pack--"Look at the auld man gaun to the schule"--he emerged into open
country.   The late April noon gleamed like a frosty morning, but the
air, though tonic, was kind.  The road ran over sweeps of moorland
where curlews wailed, and into lowland pastures dotted with very white,
very vocal lambs.  The young grass had the warm fragrance of new milk.
As he went he munched his buns, for he had resolved to have no
plethoric midday meal, and presently he found the burnside nook of his
fancy, and halted to smoke.  On a patch of turf close to a grey stone
bridge he had out his Walton and read the chapter on "The Chavender or
Chub."  The collocation of words delighted him and inspired him to
verse.  "Lavender or Lub"--"Pavender or Pub"-"Gravender or Grub"--but
the monosyllables proved too vulgar for poetry.  Regretfully he
desisted.

The rest of the road was as idyllic as the start.  He would tramp
steadily for a mile or so and then saunter, leaning over bridges to
watch the trout in the pools, admiring from a dry-stone dyke the
unsteady gambols of new-born lambs, kicking up dust from strips of
moor-burn on the heather.  Once by a fir-wood he was privileged to
surprise three lunatic hares waltzing.  His cheeks glowed with the sun;
he moved in an atmosphere of pastoral, serene and contented. When the
shadows began to lengthen he arrived at the village of Cloncae, where
he proposed to lie.  The inn looked dirty, but he found a decent widow,
above whose door ran the legend in home-made lettering, "Mrs. brockie
tea and Coffee," and who was willing to give him quarters.  There he
supped handsomely off ham and eggs, and dipped into a work called
Covenanting Worthies, which garnished a table decorated with
sea-shells.  At half-past nine precisely he retired to bed and
unhesitating sleep.

Next morning he awoke to a changed world.  The sky was grey and so low
that his outlook was bounded by a cabbage garden, while a surly wind
prophesied rain.  It was chilly, too, and he had his breakfast beside
the kitchen fire.  Mrs. Brockie could not spare a capital letter for
her surname on the signboard, but she exalted it in her talk.  He heard
of a multitude of Brockies, ascendant, descendant, and collateral, who
seemed to be in a fair way to inherit the earth. Dickson listened
sympathetically, and lingered by the fire.  He felt stiff from
yesterday's exercise, and the edge was off his spirit.

The start was not quite what he had pictured.  His pack seemed heavier,
his boots tighter, and his pipe drew badly.  The first miles were all
uphill, with a wind tingling his ears, and no colours in the landscape
but brown and grey.  Suddenly he awoke to the fact that he was dismal,
and thrust the notion behind him.  He expanded his chest and drew in
long draughts of air.  He told himself that this sharp weather was
better than sunshine.  He remembered that all travellers in romances
battled with mist and rain.  Presently his body recovered comfort and
vigour, and his mind worked itself into cheerfulness.

He overtook a party of tramps and fell into talk with them.  He had
always had a fancy for the class, though he had never known anything
nearer it than city beggars.  He pictured them as philosophic
vagabonds, full of quaint turns of speech, unconscious Borrovians. With
these samples his disillusionment was speedy.  The party was made up of
a ferret-faced man with a red nose, a draggle-tailed woman, and a child
in a crazy perambulator.  Their conversation was one-sided, for it
immediately resolved itself into a whining chronicle of misfortunes and
petitions for relief.  It cost him half a crown to be rid of them.

The road was alive with tramps that day.  The next one did the
accosting.  Hailing Mr. McCunn as "Guv'nor," he asked to be told the
way to Manchester.  The objective seemed so enterprising that Dickson
was impelled to ask questions, and heard, in what appeared to be in the
accents of the Colonies, the tale of a career of unvarying calamity.
There was nothing merry or philosophic about this adventurer.  Nay,
there was something menacing.  He eyed his companion's waterproof
covetously, and declared that he had had one like it which had been
stolen from him the day before.  Had the place been lonely he might
have contemplated highway robbery, but they were at the entrance to a
village, and the sight of a public-house awoke his thirst.  Dickson
parted with him at the cost of sixpence for a drink.

He had no more company that morning except an aged stone-breaker whom
he convoyed for half a mile.  The stone-breaker also was soured with
the world.  He walked with a limp, which, he said, was due to an
accident years before, when he had been run into by "ane of thae damned
velocipeeds."  The word revived in Dickson memories of his youth, and
he was prepared to be friendly.  But the ancient would have none of it.
He inquired morosely what he was after, and, on being told remarked
that he might have learned more sense. "It's a daft-like thing for an
auld man like you to be traivellin' the roads.  Ye maun be ill-off for
a job."  Questioned as to himself, he became, as the newspapers say,
"reticent," and having reached his bing of stones, turned rudely to his
duties.  "Awa' hame wi' ye," were his parting words.  "It's idle
scoondrels like you that maks wark for honest folk like me."

The morning was not a success, but the strong air had given Dickson
such an appetite that he resolved to break his rule, and, on reaching
the little town of Kilchrist, he sought luncheon at the chief hotel.
There he found that which revived his spirits. A solitary bagman shared
the meal, who revealed the fact that he was in the grocery line.  There
followed a well-informed and most technical conversation.  He was drawn
to speak of the United Supply Stores, Limited, of their prospects and
of their predecessor, Mr. McCunn, whom he knew well by repute but had
never met. "Yon's the clever one." he observed.  "I've always said
there's no longer head in the city of Glasgow than McCunn.  An
old-fashioned firm, but it has aye managed to keep up with the times.
He's just retired, they tell me, and in my opinion it's a big loss to
the provision trade...."  Dickson's heart glowed within him.  Here was
Romance; to be praised incognito; to enter a casual inn and find that
fame had preceded him.  He warmed to the bagman, insisted on giving him
a liqueur and a cigar, and finally revealed himself. "I'm Dickson
McCunn," he said, "taking a bit holiday.  If there's anything I can do
for you when I get back, just let me know."  With mutual esteem they
parted.

He had need of all his good spirits, for he emerged into an unrelenting
drizzle.  The environs of Kilchrist are at the best unlovely, and in
the wet they were as melancholy as a graveyard. But the encounter with
the bagman had worked wonders with Dickson, and he strode lustily into
the weather, his waterproof collar buttoned round his chin.  The road
climbed to a bare moor, where lagoons had formed in the ruts, and the
mist showed on each side only a yard or two of soaking heather.  Soon
he was wet; presently every part of him--boots, body, and pack--was one
vast sponge. The waterproof was not water-proof, and the rain
penetrated to his most intimate garments.  Little he cared.  He felt
lighter, younger, than on the idyllic previous day.  He enjoyed the
buffets of the storm, and one wet mile succeeded another to the
accompaniment of Dickson's shouts and laughter.  There was no one
abroad that afternoon, so he could talk aloud to himself and repeat his
favourite poems.  About five in the evening there presented himself at
the Black Bull Inn at Kirkmichael a soaked, disreputable, but most
cheerful traveller.

Now the Black Bull at Kirkmichael is one of the few very good inns left
in the world.  It is an old place and an hospitable, for it has been
for generations a haunt of anglers, who above all other men understand
comfort.  There are always bright fires there, and hot water, and old
soft leather armchairs, and an aroma of good food and good tobacco, and
giant trout in glass cases, and pictures of Captain Barclay of Urie
walking to London and Mr. Ramsay of Barnton winning a horse-race, and
the three-volume edition of the Waverley Novels with many volumes
missing, and indeed all those things which an inn should have.  Also
there used to be--there may still be--sound vintage claret in the
cellars.  The Black Bull expects its guests to arrive in every stage of
dishevelment, and Dickson was received by a cordial landlord, who
offered dry garments as a matter of course.  The pack proved to have
resisted the elements, and a suit of clothes and slippers were provided
by the house. Dickson, after a glass of toddy, wallowed in a hot bath,
which washed all the stiffness out of him.  He had a fire in his
bedroom, beside which he wrote the opening passages of that diary he
had vowed to keep, descanting lyrically upon the joys of ill weather.
At seven o'clock, warm and satisfied in soul, and with his body clad in
raiment several sizes too large for it, he descended to dinner.

At one end of the long table in the dining-room sat a group of anglers.
They looked jovial fellows, and Dickson would fain have joined them;
but, having been fishing all day in the Lock o' the Threshes, they were
talking their own talk, and he feared that his admiration for Izaak
Walton did not qualify him to butt into the erudite discussions of
fishermen.  The landlord seemed to think likewise, for he drew back a
chair for him at the other end, where sat a young man absorbed in a
book.  Dickson gave him good evening, and got an abstracted reply.  The
young man supped the Black Bull's excellent broth with one hand, and
with the other turned the pages of his volume. A glance convinced
Dickson that the work was French, a literature which did not interest
him.  He knew little of the tongue and suspected it of impropriety.

Another guest entered and took the chair opposite the bookish young
man.  He was also young--not more than thirty-three--and to Dickson's
eye was the kind of person he would have liked to resemble. He was tall
and free from any superfluous flesh; his face was lean, fine-drawn, and
deeply sunburnt, so that the hair above showed oddly pale; the hands
were brown and beautifully shaped, but the forearm revealed by the
loose cuffs of his shirt was as brawny as a blacksmith's.  He had
rather pale blue eyes, which seemed to have looked much at the sun, and
a small moustache the colour of ripe hay. His voice was low and
pleasant, and he pronounced his words precisely, like a foreigner.

He was very ready to talk, but in defiance of Dr. Johnson's warning,
his talk was all questions.  He wanted to know everything about the
neighbourhood--who lived in what houses, what were the distances
between the towns, what harbours would admit what class of vessel.
Smiling agreeably, he put Dickson through a catechism to which he knew
none of the answers.  The landlord was called in, and proved more
helpful.  But on one matter he was fairly at a loss. The catechist
asked about a house called Darkwater, and was met with a shake of the
head.  "I know no sic-like name in this countryside, sir," and the
catechist looked disappointed.

The literary young man said nothing, but ate trout abstractedly, one
eye on his book.  The fish had been caught by the anglers in the Loch
o' the Threshes, and phrases describing their capture floated from the
other end of the table.  The young man had a second helping, and then
refused the excellent hill mutton that followed, contenting himself
with cheese.  Not so Dickson and the catechist. They ate everything
that was set before them, topping up with a glass of port.  Then the
latter, who had been talking illuminatingly about Spain, rose, bowed,
and left the table, leaving Dickson, who liked to linger over his
meals, to the society of the ichthyophagous student.

He nodded towards the book. "Interesting?" he asked.

The young man shook his head and displayed the name on the cover.
"Anatole France.  I used to be crazy about him, but now he seems rather
a back number."  Then he glanced towards the just-vacated chair.
"Australian," he said.

"How d'you know?"

"Can't mistake them.  There's nothing else so lean and fine produced on
the globe to-day.  I was next door to them at Pozieres and saw them
fight.  Lord!  Such men!  Now and then you had a freak, but most looked
like Phoebus Apollo."

Dickson gazed with a new respect at his neighbour, for he had not
associated him with battle-fields.  During the war he had been a
fervent patriot, but, though he had never heard a shot himself, so many
of his friends' sons and nephews, not to mention cousins of his own,
had seen service, that he had come to regard the experience as
commonplace.  Lions in Africa and bandits in Mexico seemed to him novel
and romantic things, but not trenches and airplanes which were the
whole world's property.  But he could scarcely fit his neighbour into
even his haziest picture of war.  The young man was tall and a little
round-shouldered; he had short-sighted, rather prominent brown eyes,
untidy black hair and dark eyebrows which came near to meeting.  He
wore a knickerbocker suit of bluish-grey tweed, a pale blue shirt, a
pale blue collar, and a dark blue tie--a symphony of colour which
seemed too elaborately considered to be quite natural.  Dickson had set
him down as an artist or a newspaper correspondent, objects to him of
lively interest.  But now the classification must be reconsidered.

"So you were in the war," he said encouragingly.

"Four blasted years," was the savage reply. "And I never want to hear
the name of the beastly thing again."

"You said he was an Australian," said Dickson, casting back.  "But I
thought Australians had a queer accent, like the English."

"They've all kind of accents, but you can never mistake their voice.
It's got the sun in it.  Canadians have got grinding ice in theirs, and
Virginians have got butter.  So have the Irish.  In Britain there are
no voices, only speaking-tubes.  It isn't safe to judge men by their
accent only.  You yourself I take to be Scotch, but for all I know you
may be a senator from Chicago or a Boer General."

"I'm from Glasgow.  My name's Dickson McCunn."  He had a faint hope
that the announcement might affect the other as it had affected the
bagman at Kilchrist.

"Golly, what a name!" exclaimed the young man rudely.

Dickson was nettled.  "It's very old Highland," he said.  "It means the
son of a dog."

"Which--Christian name or surname?"  Then the young man appeared to
think he had gone too far, for he smiled pleasantly.  "And a very good
name too.  Mine is prosaic by comparison.  They call me John Heritage."

"That," said Dickson, mollified, "is like a name out of a book. With
that name by rights you should be a poet."

Gloom settled on the young man's countenance.  "It's a dashed sight too
poetic.  It's like Edwin Arnold and Alfred Austin and Dante Gabriel
Rossetti.  Great poets have vulgar monosyllables for names, like Keats.
The new Shakespeare when he comes along will probably be called Grubb
or Jubber, if he isn't Jones.  With a name like yours I might have a
chance.  You should be the poet."

"I'm very fond of reading," said Dickson modestly.

A slow smile crumpled Mr. Heritage's face.  "There's a fire in the
smoking-room," he observed as he rose.  "We'd better bag the armchairs
before these fishing louts take them."  Dickson followed obediently.
This was the kind of chance acquaintance for whom he had hoped, and he
was prepared to make the most of him.

The fire burned bright in the little dusky smoking-room, lighted by one
oil-lamp.  Mr. Heritage flung himself into a chair, stretched his long
legs, and lit a pipe.

"You like reading?" he asked.  "What sort?  Any use for poetry?"

"Plenty," said Dickson.  "I've aye been fond of learning it up and
repeating it to myself when I had nothing to do.  In church and waiting
on trains, like.  It used to be Tennyson, but now it's more Browning.
I can say a lot of Browning."

The other screwed his face into an expression of disgust.  "I know the
stuff. 'Damask cheeks and dewy sister eyelids.' Or else the Ercles
vein--'God's in His Heaven, all's right with the world.' No good, Mr.
McCunn.  All back numbers.  Poetry's not a thing of pretty round
phrases or noisy invocations.  It's life itself, with the tang of the
raw world in it--not a sweetmeat for middle-class women in parlours."

"Are you a poet, Mr. Heritage?"

"No, Dogson, I'm a paper-maker."

This was a new view to Mr. McCunn.  "I just once knew a paper-maker,"
he observed reflectively, "They called him Tosh.  He drank a bit."

"Well, I don't drink," said the other.  "I'm a paper-maker, but that's
for my bread and butter.  Some day for my own sake I may be a poet."

"Have you published anything?"

The eager admiration in Dickson's tone gratified Mr. Heritage. He drew
from his pocket a slim book.  "My firstfruits," he said, rather shyly.

Dickson received it with reverence.  It was a small volume in grey
paper boards with a white label on the back, and it was lettered:
WHORLS-JOHN HERITAGE'S BOOK.  He turned the pages and read a little.
"It's a nice wee book," he observed at length.

"Good God, if you call it nice, I must have failed pretty badly," was
the irritated answer.

Dickson read more deeply and was puzzled.  It seemed worse than the
worst of Browning to understand.  He found one poem about a garden
entitled "Revue."  "Crimson and resonant clangs the dawn," said the
poet.  Then he went on to describe noonday:

  "Sunflowers, tall Grenadiers, ogle the roses' short-skirted ballet.
  The fumes of dark sweet wine hidden in frail petals
  Madden the drunkard bees."

This seemed to him an odd way to look at things, and he boggled over a
phrase about an "epicene lily."  Then came evening: "The painted gauze
of the stars flutters in a fold of twilight crape," sang Mr. Heritage;
and again, "The moon's pale leprosy sloughs the fields."

Dickson turned to other verses which apparently enshrined the writer's
memory of the trenches.  They were largely compounded of oaths, and
rather horrible, lingering lovingly over sights and smells which every
one is aware of, but most people contrive to forget.  He did not like
them.  Finally he skimmed a poem about a lady who turned into a bird.
The evolution was described with intimate anatomical details which
scared the honest reader.

He kept his eyes on the book, for he did not know what to say. The
trick seemed to be to describe nature in metaphors mostly drawn from
music-halls and haberdashers' shops, and, when at a loss, to fall to
cursing.  He thought it frankly very bad, and he laboured to find words
which would combine politeness and honesty.

"Well?" said the poet.

"There's a lot of fine things here, but--but the lines don't just seem
to scan very well."

Mr. Heritage laughed.  "Now I can place you exactly.  You like the meek
rhyme and the conventional epithet.  Well, I don't.  The world has
passed beyond that prettiness.  You want the moon described as a
Huntress or a gold disc or a flower--I say it's oftener like a beer
barrel or a cheese.  You want a wealth of jolly words and real things
ruled out as unfit for poetry.  I say there's nothing unfit for poetry.
Nothing, Dogson!  Poetry's everywhere, and the real thing is commoner
among drabs and pot-houses and rubbish-heaps than in your Sunday
parlours.  The poet's business is to distil it out of rottenness, and
show that it is all one spirit, the thing that keeps the stars in their
place.... I wanted to call my book 'Drains,' for drains are sheer
poetry carrying off the excess and discards of human life to make the
fields green and the corn ripen. But the publishers kicked.  So I
called it 'Whorls,' to express my view of the exquisite involution of
all things.  Poetry is the fourth dimension of the soul.... Well, let's
hear about your taste in prose."

Mr. McCunn was much bewildered, and a little inclined to be cross. He
disliked being called Dogson, which seemed to him an abuse of his
etymological confidences.  But his habit of politeness held.

He explained rather haltingly his preferences in prose.

Mr. Heritage listened with wrinkled brows.

"You're even deeper in the mud than I thought," he remarked. "You live
in a world of painted laths and shadows.  All this passion for the
picturesque! Trash, my dear man, like a schoolgirl's novelette heroes.
You make up romances about gipsies and sailors, and the blackguards
they call pioneers, but you know nothing about them.  If you did, you
would find they had none of the gilt and gloss you imagine.  But the
great things they have got in common with all humanity you ignore.
It's like--it's like sentimentalising about a pancake because it looked
like a buttercup, and all the while not knowing that it was good to
eat."

At that moment the Australian entered the room to get a light for his
pipe.  He wore a motor-cyclist's overalls and appeared to be about to
take the road.  He bade them good night, and it seemed to Dickson that
his face, seen in the glow of the fire, was drawn and anxious, unlike
that of the agreeable companion at dinner.

"There," said Mr. Heritage, nodding after the departing figure. "I dare
say you have been telling yourself stories about that chap--life in the
bush, stockriding and the rest of it. But probably he's a bank-clerk
from Melbourne.... Your romanticism is one vast self-delusion, and it
blinds your eye to the real thing. We have got to clear it out, and
with it all the damnable humbug of the Kelt."

Mr. McCunn, who spelt the word with a soft "C," was puzzled. "I thought
a kelt was a kind of a no-weel fish," he interposed.

But the other, in the flood-tide of his argument, ignored the
interruption.  "That's the value of the war," he went on. "It has burst
up all the old conventions, and we've got to finish the destruction
before we can build.  It is the same with literature and religion, and
society and politics.  At them with the axe, say I. I have no use for
priests and pedants.  I've no use for upper classes and middle classes.
There's only one class that matters, the plain man, the workers, who
live close to life."

"The place for you," said Dickson dryly, "is in Russia among the
Bolsheviks."

Mr. Heritage approved.  "They are doing a great work in their own
fashion.  We needn't imitate all their methods--they're a trifle crude
and have too many Jews among them--but they've got hold of the right
end of the stick.  They seek truth and reality."

Mr. McCunn was slowly being roused.

"What brings you wandering hereaways?" he asked.

"Exercise," was the answer.  "I've been kept pretty closely tied up all
winter.  And I want leisure and quiet to think over things."

"Well, there's one subject you might turn your attention to. You'll
have been educated like a gentleman?"

"Nine wasted years--five at Harrow, four at Cambridge."

"See here, then.  You're daft about the working-class and have no use
for any other.  But what in the name of goodness do you know about
working-men?...  I come out of them myself, and have lived next door to
them all my days.  Take them one way and another, they're a decent
sort, good and bad like the rest of us.  But there's a wheen daft folk
that would set them up as models--close to truth and reality, says you.
It's sheer ignorance, for you're about as well acquaint with the
working-man as with King Solomon.  You say I make up fine stories about
tinklers and sailor-men because I know nothing about them.  That's
maybe true.  But you're at the same job yourself. You ideelise the
working man, you and your kind, because you're ignorant.  You say that
he's seeking for truth, when he's only looking for a drink and a rise
in wages.  You tell me he's near reality, but I tell you that his
notion of reality is often just a short working day and looking on at a
footba'-match on Saturday.... And when you run down what you call the
middle-classes that do three-quarters of the world's work and keep the
machine going and the working-man in a job, then I tell you you're
talking havers.  Havers!"

Mr. McCunn, having delivered his defence of the bourgeoisie, rose
abruptly and went to bed.  He felt jarred and irritated. His innocent
little private domain had been badly trampled by this stray bull of a
poet.  But as he lay in bed, before blowing out his candle, he had
recourse to Walton, and found a passage on which, as on a pillow, he
went peacefully to sleep:


"As I left this place, and entered into the next field, a second
pleasure entertained me; 'twas a handsome milkmaid, that had not yet
attained so much age and wisdom as to load her mind with any fears of
many things that will never be, as too many men too often do; but she
cast away all care, and sang like a nightingale; her voice was good,
and the ditty fitted for it; it was the smooth song that was made by
Kit Marlow now at least fifty years ago.  And the milkmaid's mother
sung an answer to it, which was made by Sir Walter Raleigh in his
younger days.  They were old-fashioned poetry, but choicely good; I
think much better than the strong lines that are now in fashion in this
critical age."




CHAPTER III

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!"




CHAPTER IV

DOUGAL


"You'll do nothing of the kind," said Dickson.  "You're coming home to
your supper.  It was to be on the chap of nine."

"I'm going back to that place."

The man was clearly demented and must be humoured.  "Well, you must
wait till the morn's morning.  It's very near dark now, and those are
two ugly customers wandering about yonder.  You'd better sleep the
night on it."

Mr. Heritage seemed to be persuaded.  He suffered himself to be led up
the now dusky slopes to the gate where the road from the village ended.
He walked listlessly like a man engaged in painful reflection.  Once
only he broke the silence.

"You heard the singing?" he asked.

Dickson was a very poor hand at a lie.  "I heard something," he
admitted.

"You heard a girl's voice singing?"

"It sounded like that," was the admission.  "But I'm thinking it might
have been a seagull."

"You're a fool," said the Poet rudely.

The return was a melancholy business, compared to the bright speed of
the outward journey.  Dickson's mind was a chaos of feelings, all of
them unpleasant.  He had run up against something which he violently,
blindly detested, and the trouble was that he could not tell why.  It
was all perfectly absurd, for why on earth should an ugly house, some
overgrown trees, and a couple of ill-favoured servants so malignly
affect him?  Yet this was the fact; he had strayed out of Arcady into a
sphere that filled him with revolt and a nameless fear.  Never in his
experience had he felt like this, this foolish childish panic which
took all the colour and zest out of life.  He tried to laugh at himself
but failed.  Heritage, stumbling along by his side, effectually crushed
his effort to discover humour in the situation.  Some exhalation from
that infernal place had driven the Poet mad.  And then that voice
singing! A seagull, he had said.  More like a nightingale, he
reflected--a bird which in the flesh he had never met.

Mrs. Morran had the lamp lit and a fire burning in her cheerful
kitchen.  The sight of it somewhat restored Dickson's equanimity, and
to his surprise he found that he had an appetite for supper. There was
new milk, thick with cream, and most of the dainties which had appeared
at tea, supplemented by a noble dish of shimmering "potted-head."  The
hostess did not share their meal, being engaged in some duties in the
little cubby-hole known as the back kitchen.

Heritage drank a glass of milk but would not touch food.

"I called this place Paradise four hours ago," he said.  "So it is, but
I fancy it is next door to Hell.  There is something devilish going on
inside that park wall, and I mean to get to the bottom of it."

"Hoots!  Nonsense!"  Dickson replied with affected cheerfulness.
"To-morrow you and me will take the road for Auchenlochan. We needn't
trouble ourselves about an ugly old house and a wheen impident
lodge-keepers."

"To-morrow I'm going to get inside the place.  Don't come unless you
like, but it's no use arguing with me.  My mind is made up."

Heritage cleared a space on the table and spread out a section of a
large-scale Ordnance map.

"I must clear my head about the topography, the same as if this were a
battle-ground.  Look here, Dogson....  The road past the inn that we
went by to-night runs north and south."  He tore a page from a
note-book and proceeded to make a rough sketch....  "One end we know
abuts on the Laver glen, and the other stops at the South Lodge. Inside
the wall which follows the road is a long belt of plantation--mostly
beeches and ash--then to the west a kind of park, and beyond that the
lawns of the house.  Strips of plantation with avenues between follow
the north and south sides of the park.  On the sea side of the House
are the stables and what looks like a walled garden, and beyond them
what seems to be open ground with an old dovecot marked, and the ruins
of Huntingtower keep.  Beyond that there is more open ground, till you
come to the cliffs of the cape. Have you got that?... It looks possible
from the contouring to get on to the sea cliffs by following the Laver,
for all that side is broken up into ravines.... But look at the other
side--the Garple glen. It's evidently a deep-cut gully, and at the
bottom it opens out into a little harbour.  There's deep water there,
you observe.  Now the House on the south side--the Garple side--is
built fairly close to the edge of the cliffs.  Is that all clear in
your head?  We can't reconnoitre unless we've got a working notion of
the lie of the land."

Dickson was about to protest that he had no intention of reconnoitring,
when a hubbub arose in the back kitchen. Mrs. Morran's voice was heard
in shrill protest.

"Ye ill laddie!  Eh--ye--ill--laddie! (crescendo)  Makin' a hash o' my
back door wi' your dirty feet!  What are ye slinkin' roond here for,
when I tell't ye this mornin' that I wad sell ye nae mair scones till
ye paid for the last lot?  Ye're a wheen thievin' hungry callants, and
if there were a polisman in the place I'd gie ye in chairge.... What's
that ye say?  Ye're no' wantin' meat?  Ye want to speak to the
gentlemen that's bidin' here?  Ye ken the auld ane, says you?  I
believe it's a muckle lee, but there's the gentlemen to answer ye
theirsels."

Mrs. Morran, brandishing a dishclout dramatically, flung open the door,
and with a vigorous push propelled into the kitchen a singular figure.

It was a stunted boy, who from his face might have been fifteen years
old, but had the stature of a child of twelve.  He had a thatch of
fiery red hair above a pale freckled countenance. His nose was snub,
his eyes a sulky grey-green, and his wide mouth disclosed large and
damaged teeth.  But remarkable as was his visage, his clothing was
still stranger.  On his head was the regulation Boy Scout hat, but it
was several sizes too big, and was squashed down upon his immense red
ears.  He wore a very ancient khaki shirt, which had once belonged to a
full-grown soldier, and the spacious sleeves were rolled up at the
shoulders and tied with string, revealing a pair of skinny arms.  Round
his middle hung what was meant to be a kilt--a kilt of home
manufacture, which may once have been a tablecloth, for its bold
pattern suggested no known clan tartan.  He had a massive belt, in
which was stuck a broken gully-knife, and round his neck was knotted
the remnant of what had once been a silk bandanna.  His legs and feet
were bare, blue, scratched, and very dirty, and this toes had the
prehensile look common to monkeys and small boys who summer and winter
go bootless. In his hand was a long ash-pole, new cut from some coppice.

The apparition stood glum and lowering on the kitchen floor. As Dickson
stared at it he recalled Mearns Street and the band of irregular Boy
Scouts who paraded to the roll of tin cans. Before him stood Dougal,
Chieftain of the Gorbals Die-Hards. Suddenly he remembered the
philanthropic Mackintosh, and his own subscription of ten pounds to the
camp fund.  It pleased him to find the rascals here, for in the
unpleasant affairs on the verge of which he felt himself they were a
comforting reminder of the peace of home.

"I'm glad to see you, Dougal," he said pleasantly.  "How are you all
getting on?"  And then, with a vague reminiscence of the Scouts'
code--"Have you been minding to perform a good deed every day?"

The Chieftain's brow darkened.

"'Good Deeds!'" he repeated bitterly.  "I tell ye I'm fair wore out wi'
good deeds.  Yon man Mackintosh tell't me this was going to be a grand
holiday.  Holiday!  Govey Dick!  It's been like a Setterday night in
Main Street--a' fechtin', fechtin'."

No collocation of letters could reproduce Dougal's accent, and I will
not attempt it.  There was a touch of Irish in it, a spice of
music-hall patter, as well as the odd lilt of the Glasgow vernacular.
He was strong in vowels, but the consonants, especially the letter "t,"
were only aspirations.

"Sit down and let's hear about things," said Dickson.

The boy turned his head to the still open back door, where Mrs. Morran
could be heard at her labours.  He stepped across and shut it. "I'm no'
wantin' that auld wife to hear," he said.  Then he squatted down on the
patchwork rug by the hearth, and warmed his blue-black shins. Looking
into the glow of the fire, he observed, "I seen you two up by the Big
Hoose the night."

"The devil you did," said Heritage, roused to a sudden attention. "And
where were you?"

"Seven feet from your head, up a tree.  It's my chief hidy-hole, and
Gosh! I need one, for Lean's after me wi' a gun.  He had a shot at me
two days syne."

Dickson exclaimed, and Dougal with morose pride showed a rent in his
kilt.  "If I had had on breeks, he'd ha' got me."

"Who's Lean?" Heritage asked.

"The man wi' the black coat.  The other--the lame one--they ca'
Spittal."

"How d'you know?"

"I've listened to them crackin' thegither."

"But what for did the man want to shoot at you?" asked the scandalized
Dickson.

"What for?  Because they're frightened to death o' onybody going near
their auld Hoose.  They're a pair of deevils, worse nor any Red Indian,
but for a' that they're sweatin' wi' fright.  What for? says you.
Because they're hiding a Secret.  I knew it as soon as I seen the man
Lean's face.  I once seen the same kind o' scoondrel at the Picters.
When he opened his mouth to swear, I kenned he was a foreigner, like
the lads down at the Broomielaw.  That looked black, but I hadn't got
at the worst of it.  Then he loosed off at me wi' his gun."

"Were you not feared?" said Dickson.

"Ay, I was feared.  But ye'll no' choke off the Gorbals Die-Hards wi' a
gun.  We held a meetin' round the camp fire, and we resolved to get to
the bottom o' the business.  Me bein' their Chief, it was my duty to
make what they ca' a reckonissince, for that was the dangerous job.  So
a' this day I've been going on my belly about thae policies.  I've
found out some queer things."

Heritage had risen and was staring down at the small squatting figure.

"What have you found out?  Quick.  Tell me at once."  His voice was
sharp and excited.

"Bide a wee," said the unwinking Dougal.  "I'm no' going to let ye into
this business till I ken that ye'll help.  It's a far bigger job than I
thought.  There's more in it than Lean and Spittal. There's the big man
that keeps the public--Dobson, they ca' him. He's a Namerican, which
looks bad.  And there's two-three tinklers campin' down in the Garple
Dean.  They're in it, for Dobson was colloguin' wi' them a' mornin'.
When I seen ye, I thought ye were more o' the gang, till I mindit that
one o' ye was auld McCunn that has the shop in Mearns Street.  I seen
that ye didna' like the look o' Lean, and I followed ye here, for I was
thinkin' I needit help."

Heritage plucked Dougal by the shoulder and lifted him to his feet.

"For God's sake, boy," he cried, "tell us what you know!"

"Will ye help?"

"Of course, you little fool."

"Then swear," said the ritualist.  From a grimy wallet he extracted a
limp little volume which proved to be a damaged copy of a work entitled
Sacred Songs and Solos.  "Here!  Take that in your right hand and put
your left hand on my pole, and say after me.  'I swear no' to blab what
is telled me in secret, and to be swift and sure in obeyin' orders,
s'help me God!'  Syne kiss the bookie."

Dickson at first refused, declaring that it was all havers, but
Heritage's docility persuaded him to follow suit. The two were sworn.

"Now," said Heritage.

Dougal squatted again on the hearth-rug, and gathered the eyes of his
audience.  He was enjoying himself.

"This day," he said slowly, "I got inside the Hoose."

"Stout fellow," said Heritage; "and what did you find there?"

"I got inside that Hoose, but it wasn't once or twice I tried. I found
a corner where I was out o' sight o' anybody unless they had come there
seekin' me, and I sklimmed up a rone pipe, but a' the windies were
lockit and I verra near broke my neck.  Syne I tried the roof, and a
sore sklim I had, but when I got there there were no skylights.  At the
end I got in by the coal-hole.  That's why ye're maybe thinkin' I'm no'
very clean."

Heritage's patience was nearly exhausted.

"I don't want to hear how you got in.  What did you find, you little
devil?"

"Inside the Hoose," said Dougal slowly (and there was a melancholy
sense of anti-climax in his voice, as of one who had hoped to speak of
gold and jewels and armed men)--"inside that Hoose there's nothing but
two women."

Heritage sat down before him with a stern face.

"Describe them," he commanded.

"One o' them is dead auld, as auld as the wife here.  She didn't look
to me very right in the head."

"And the other?"

"Oh, just a lassie."

"What was she like?"

Dougal seemed to be searching for adequate words.  "She is..." he
began.  Then a popular song gave him inspiration.  "She's pure as the
lully in the dell!"

In no way discomposed by Heritage's fierce interrogatory air, he
continued: "She's either foreign or English, for she couldn't
understand what I said, and I could make nothing o' her clippit tongue.
But I could see she had been greetin'.  She looked feared, yet kind o'
determined.  I speired if I could do anything for her, and when she got
my meaning she was terrible anxious to ken if I had seen a man--a big
man, she said, wi' a yellow beard.  She didn't seem to ken his name, or
else she wouldna' tell me.  The auld wife was mortal feared, and was
aye speakin' in a foreign langwidge.  I seen at once that what
frightened them was Lean and his friends, and I was just starting to
speir about them when there came a sound like a man walkin' along the
passage.  She was for hidin' me in behind a sofy, but I wasn't going to
be trapped like that, so I got out by the other door and down the
kitchen stairs and into the coal-hole.  Gosh, it was a near thing!"


The boy was on his feet.  "I must be off to the camp to give out the
orders for the morn.  I'm going back to that Hoose, for it's a fight
atween the Gorbals Die-Hards and the scoondrels that are frightenin'
thae women.  The question is, Are ye comin' with me?  Mind, ye've
sworn. But if ye're no, I'm going mysel', though I'll no' deny I'd be
glad o' company.  You anyway--" he added, nodding at Heritage. "Maybe
auld McCunn wouldn't get through the coal-hole."

"You're an impident laddie," said the outraged Dickson.  "It's no'
likely we're coming with you.  Breaking into other folks' houses! It's
a job for the police!"

"Please yersel'," said the Chieftain, and looked at Heritage.

"I'm on," said that gentleman.

"Well, just you set out the morn as if ye were for a walk up the Garple
glen.  I'll be on the road and I'll have orders for ye."

Without more ado Dougal left by way of the back kitchen.  There was a
brief denunciation from Mrs. Morran, then the outer door banged and he
was gone.

The Poet sat still with his head in his hands, while Dickson, acutely
uneasy, prowled about the floor.  He had forgotten even to light his
pipe.  "You'll not be thinking of heeding that ragamuffin boy," he
ventured.

"I'm certainly going to get into the House tomorrow," Heritage
answered, "and if he can show me a way so much the better. He's a
spirited youth.  Do you breed many like him in Glasgow?"

"Plenty," said Dickson sourly.  "See here, Mr. Heritage.  You can't
expect me to be going about burgling houses on the word of a blagyird
laddie.  I'm a respectable man--aye been.  Besides, I'm here for a
holiday, and I've no call to be mixing myself up in strangers' affairs."

"You haven't.  Only you see, I think there's a friend of mine in that
place, and anyhow there are women in trouble.  If you like, we'll say
goodbye after breakfast, and you can continue as if you had never
turned aside to this damned peninsula.  But I've got to stay."

Dickson groaned.  What had become of his dream of idylls, his gentle
bookish romance?  Vanished before a reality which smacked horribly of
crude melodrama and possibly of sordid crime.  His gorge rose at the
picture, but a thought troubled him.  Perhaps all romance in its hour
of happening was rough and ugly like this, and only shone rosy in
retrospect.  Was he being false to his deepest faith?

"Let's have Mrs. Morran in," he ventured.  "She's a wise old body and
I'd like to hear her opinion of this business.  We'll get common sense
from her."

"I don't object," said Heritage.  "But no amount of common sense will
change my mind."

Their hostess forestalled them by returning at that moment to the
kitchen.

"We want your advice, mistress," Dickson told her, and accordingly,
like a barrister with a client, she seated herself carefully in the big
easy chair, found and adjusted her spectacles, and waited with hands
folded on her lap to hear the business.  Dickson narrated their
pre-supper doings, and gave a sketch of Dougal's evidence. His
exposition was cautious and colourless, and without conviction. He
seemed to expect a robust incredulity in his hearer.

Mrs. Morran listened with the gravity of one in church.  When Dickson
finished she seemed to meditate.  "There's no blagyird trick that would
surprise me in thae new folk.  What's that ye ca' them--Lean and
Spittal?  Eppie Home threepit to me they were furriners, and these are
no furrin names."

"What I want to hear from you, Mrs. Morran," said Dickson impressively,
"is whether you think there's anything in that boy's story?"

"I think it's maist likely true.  He's a terrible impident callant, but
he's no' a leear."

"Then you think that a gang of ruffians have got two lone women shut up
in that house for their own purposes?"

"I wadna wonder."

"But it's ridiculous!  This is a Christian and law-abiding country.
What would the police say?"

"They never troubled Dalquharter muckle.  There's no' a polisman nearer
than Knockraw--yin Johnnie Trummle, and he's as useless as a frostit
tattie."

"The wiselike thing, as I think," said Dickson, "would be to turn the
Procurator-Fiscal on to the job.  It's his business, no' ours."

"Well, I wadna say but ye're richt,' said the lady.

"What would you do if you were us?" Dickson's tone was subtly
confidential.  "My friend here wants to get into the House the morn
with that red-haired laddie to satisfy himself about the facts. I say
no.  Let sleeping dogs lie, I say, and if you think the beasts are mad,
report to the authorities.  What would you do yourself?"

"If I were you," came the emphatic reply, "I would tak' the first train
hame the morn, and when I got hame I wad bide there.  Ye're a dacent
body, but ye're no' the kind to be traivellin' the roads."

"And if you were me?' Heritage asked with his queer crooked smile.

"If I was young and yauld like you I wad gang into the Hoose, and I
wadna rest till I had riddled oot the truith and jyled every scoondrel
about the place.  If ye dinna gang, 'faith I'll kilt my coats and gang
mysel'.  I havena served the Kennedys for forty year no' to hae the
honour o' the Hoose at my hert.... Ye've speired my advice, sirs, and
ye've gotten it.  Now I maun clear awa' your supper."

Dickson asked for a candle, and, as on the previous night, went
abruptly to bed.  The oracle of prudence to which he had appealed had
betrayed him and counselled folly.  But was it folly?  For him,
assuredly, for Dickson McCunn, late of Mearns Street, Glasgow,
wholesale and retail provision merchant, elder in the Guthrie Memorial
Kirk, and fifty-five years of age.  Ay, that was the rub. He was
getting old.  The woman had seen it and had advised him to go home.
Yet the plea was curiously irksome, though it gave him the excuse he
needed.  If you played at being young, you had to take up the
obligations of youth, and he thought derisively of his boyish
exhilaration of the past days.  Derisively, but also sadly. What had
become of that innocent joviality he had dreamed of, that happy morning
pilgrimage of Spring enlivened by tags from the poets?  His goddess had
played him false.  Romance had put upon him too hard a trial.

He lay long awake, torn between common sense and a desire to be loyal
to some vague whimsical standard.  Heritage a yard distant appeared
also to be sleepless, for the bed creaked with his turning. Dickson
found himself envying one whose troubles, whatever they might be, were
not those of a divided mind.




CHAPTER V

OF THE PRINCESS IN THE TOWER


Very early the next morning, while Mrs. Morran was still cooking
breakfast, Dickson and Heritage might have been observed taking the air
in the village street.  It was the Poet who had insisted upon this
walk, and he had his own purpose.  They looked at the spires of smoke
piercing the windless air, and studied the daffodils in the cottage
gardens.  Dickson was glum, but Heritage seemed in high spirits. He
varied his garrulity with spells of cheerful whistling.

They strode along the road by the park wall till they reached the inn.
There Heritage's music waxed peculiarly loud.  Presently from the yard,
unshaven and looking as if he had slept in this clothes, came Dobson
the innkeeper.

"Good morning," said the poet.  "I hope the sickness in your house is
on the mend?"

"Thank ye, it's no worse," was the reply, but in the man's heavy face
there was little civility.  His small grey eyes searched their faces.

"We're just waiting for breakfast to get on the road again. I'm jolly
glad we spent the night here.  We found quarters after all, you know."

"So I see.  Whereabouts, may I ask?"

"Mrs. Morran's.  We could always have got in there, but we didn't want
to fuss an old lady, so we thought we'd try the inn first. She's my
friend's aunt."

At this amazing falsehood Dickson started, and the man observed his
surprise.  The eyes were turned on him like a searchlight. They roused
antagonism in his peaceful soul, and with that antagonism came an
impulse to back up the Poet.  "Ay," he said, "she's my auntie Phemie,
my mother's half-sister."

The man turned on Heritage.

"Where are ye for the day?"

"Auchenlochan," said Dickson hastily.  He was still determined to shake
the dust of Dalquharter from his feet.

The innkeeper sensibly brightened.  "Well, ye'll have a fine walk. I
must go in and see about my own breakfast.  Good day to ye, gentlemen."

"That," said Heritage as they entered the village street again, "is the
first step in camouflage, to put the enemy off his guard."

"It was an abominable lie," said Dickson crossly.

"Not at all.  It was a necessary and proper ruse de guerre. It
explained why we spent the right here, and now Dobson and his friends
can get about their day's work with an easy mind. Their suspicions are
temporarily allayed, and that will make our job easier."

"I'm not coming with you."

"I never said you were.  By 'we' I refer to myself and the red-headed
boy."

"Mistress, you're my auntie," Dickson informed Mrs. Morran as she set
the porridge on the table.  "This gentleman has just been telling the
man at the inn that you're my Auntie Phemie."

For a second their hostess looked bewildered.  Then the corners of her
prim mouth moved upwards in a slow smile.

"I see," she said.  "Weel, maybe it was weel done.  But if ye're my
nevoy ye'll hae to keep up my credit, for we're a bauld and siccar lot."

Half an hour later there was a furious dissension when Dickson
attempted to pay for the night's entertainment.  Mrs. Morran would have
none of it.  "Ye're no' awa' yet," she said tartly, and the matter was
complicated by Heritage's refusal to take part in the debate.  He stood
aside and grinned, till Dickson in despair returned his notecase to his
pocket, murmuring darkly the "he would send it from Glasgow."

The road to Auchenlochan left the main village street at right angles
by the side of Mrs. Morran's cottage.  It was a better road than that
by which they had come yesterday, for by it twice daily the postcart
travelled to the post-town.  It ran on the edge of the moor and on the
lip of the Garple glen, till it crossed that stream and, keeping near
the coast, emerged after five miles into the cultivated flats of the
Lochan valley.  The morning was fine, the keen air invited to high
spirits, plovers piped entrancingly over the bent and linnets sang in
the whins, there was a solid breakfast behind him, and the promise of a
cheerful road till luncheon. The stage was set for good humour, but
Dickson's heart, which should have been ascending with the larks, stuck
leadenly in his boots. He was not even relieved at putting Dalquharter
behind him. The atmosphere of that unhallowed place lay still on his
soul. He hated it, but he hated himself more.  Here was one, who had
hugged himself all his days as an adventurer waiting his chance,
running away at the first challenge of adventure; a lover of Romance
who fled from the earliest overture of his goddess.  He was ashamed and
angry, but what else was there to do?  Burglary in the company of a
queer poet and a queerer urchin?  It was unthinkable.

Presently, as they tramped silently on, they came to the bridge beneath
which the peaty waters of the Garple ran in porter-coloured pools and
tawny cascades.  From a clump of elders on the other side Dougal
emerged.  A barefoot boy, dressed in much the same parody of a Boy
Scout's uniform, but with corduroy shorts instead of a kilt, stood
before him at rigid attention.  Some command was issued, the child
saluted, and trotted back past the travellers with never a look at
them.  Discipline was strong among the Gorbals Die-Hards; no Chief of
Staff ever conversed with his General under a stricter etiquette.

Dougal received the travellers with the condescension of a regular
towards civilians.

"They're off their gawrd," he announced.  "Thomas Yownie has been
shadowin' them since skreigh o' day, and he reports that Dobson and
Lean followed ye till ye were out o' sight o' the houses, and syne Lean
got a spy-glass and watched ye till the road turned in among the trees.
That satisfied them, and they're both away back to their jobs.  Thomas
Yownie's the fell yin.  Ye'll no fickle Thomas Yownie."

Dougal extricated from his pouch the fag of a cigarette, lit it, and
puffed meditatively.  "I did a reckonissince mysel' this morning. I was
up at the Hoose afore it was light, and tried the door o' the
coal-hole.  I doot they've gotten on our tracks, for it was
lockit--aye, and wedged from the inside."

Dickson brightened.  Was the insane venture off?

"For a wee bit I was fair beat.  But I mindit that the lassie was
allowed to walk in a kind o' a glass hoose on the side farthest away
from the Garple.  That was where she was singin' yest'reen.  So I
reckonissinced in that direction, and I fund a queer place." Sacred
Songs and Solos was requisitioned, and on a page of it Dougal proceeded
to make marks with the stump of a carpenter's pencil. "See here," he
commanded.  "There's the glass place wi' a door into the Hoose.  That
door maun be open or the lassie maun hae the key, for she comes there
whenever she likes.  Now' at each end o' the place the doors are
lockit, but the front that looks on the garden is open, wi' muckle
posts and flower-pots.  The trouble is that that side there' maybe
twenty feet o' a wall between the pawrapet and the ground.  It's an
auld wall wi' cracks and holes in it, and it wouldn't be ill to sklim.
That's why they let her gang there when she wants, for a lassie
couldn't get away without breakin' her neck."

"Could we climb it?" Heritage asked.

The boy wrinkled his brows.  "I could manage it mysel'--I think--and
maybe you.  I doubt if auld McCunn could get up.  Ye'd have to be
mighty carefu' that nobody saw ye, for your hinder end, as ye were
sklimmin', wad be a grand mark for a gun."

"Lead on," said Heritage.  "We'll try the verandah."

They both looked at Dickson, and Dickson, scarlet in the face, looked
back at them.  He had suddenly found the thought of a solitary march to
Auchenlochan intolerable.  Once again he was at the parting of the
ways, and once more caprice determined his decision.  That the
coal-hole was out of the question had worked a change in his views,
Somehow it seemed to him less burglarious to enter by a verandah.  He
felt very frightened but--for the moment--quite resolute.

"I'm coming with you," he said.

"Sportsman," said Heritage, and held out his hand.  "Well done, the
auld yin," said the Chieftain of the Gorbals Die-Hards.  Dickson's
quaking heart experienced a momentary bound as he followed Heritage
down the track into the Garple Dean.

The track wound through a thick covert of hazels, now close to the
rushing water, now high upon the bank so that clear sky showed through
the fringes of the wood.  When they had gone a little way Dougal halted
them.

"It's a ticklish job," he whispered.  "There's the tinklers, mind,
that's campin' in the Dean.  If they're still in their camp we can get
by easy enough, but they're maybe wanderin' about the wud after
rabbits.... Then we maun ford the water, for ye'll no' cross it lower
down where it's deep.... Our road is on the Hoose side o' the Dean, and
it's awfu' public if there's onybody on the other side, though it's hid
well enough from folk up in the policies.... Ye maun do exactly what I
tell ye.  When we get near danger I'll scout on ahead, and I daur ye to
move a hair o' your heid till I give the word."

Presently, when they were at the edge of the water, Dougal announced
his intention of crossing.  Three boulders in the stream made a bridge
for an active man, and Heritage hopped lightly over.  Not so Dickson,
who stuck fast on the second stone, and would certainly have fallen in
had not Dougal plunged into the current and steadied him with a grimy
hand.  The leap was at last successfully taken, and the three scrambled
up a rough scaur, all reddened with iron springs, till they struck a
slender track running down the Dean on its northern side.  Here the
undergrowth was very thick, and they had gone the better part of half a
mile before the covert thinned sufficiently to show them the stream
beneath.  Then Dougal halted them with a finger on his lips, and crept
forward alone.

He returned in three minutes.  "Coast's clear," he whispered.  "The
tinklers are eatin' their breakfast.  They're late at their meat though
they're up early seekin' it."

Progress was now very slow and secret, and mainly on all fours. At one
point Dougal nodded downward, and the other two saw on a patch of turf,
where the Garple began to widen into its estuary, a group of figures
round a small fire.  There were four of them, all men, and Dickson
thought he had never seen such ruffianly-looking customers.  After that
they moved high up the slope, in a shallow glade of a tributary burn,
till they came out of the trees and found themselves looking seaward.

On one side was the House, a hundred yards or so back from the edge,
the roof showing above the precipitous scarp.  Half-way down the slope
became easier, a jumble of boulders and boiler-plates, till it reached
the waters of the small haven, which lay calm as a mill-pond in the
windless forenoon.  The haven broadened out at its foot and revealed a
segment of blue sea.  The opposite shore was flatter, and showed what
looked like an old wharf and the ruins of buildings, behind which rose
a bank clad with scrub and surmounted by some gnarled and wind-crooked
firs.

"There's dashed little cover here," said Heritage.

"There's no muckle," Dougal assented.  "But they canna see us from the
policies, and it's no' like there's anybody watchin' from the Hoose.
The danger is somebody on the other side, but we'll have to risk it.
Once among thae big stones we're safe.  Are ye ready?"

Five minutes later Dickson found himself gasping in the lee of a
boulder, while Dougal was making a cast forward.  The scout returned
with a hopeful report.  "I think we're safe till we get into the
policies.  There's a road that the auld folk made when ships used to
come here.  Down there it's deeper than Clyde at the Broomielaw.  Has
the auld yin got his wind yet?  There's no time to waste."

Up that broken hillside they crawled, well in the cover of the tumbled
stones, till they reached a low wall which was the boundary of the
garden.  The House was now behind them on their right rear, and as they
topped the crest they had a glimpse of an ancient dovecot and the ruins
of the old Huntingtower on the short thymy turf which ran seaward to
the cliffs.  Dougal led them along a sunk fence which divided the downs
from the lawns behind the house, and, avoiding the stables, brought
them by devious ways to a thicket of rhododendrons and broom.  On all
fours they travelled the length of the place, and came to the edge
where some forgotten gardeners had once tended a herbaceous border.
The border was now rank and wild, and, lying flat under the shade of an
azalea, and peering through the young spears of iris, Dickson and
Heritage regarded the north-western facade of the house.

The ground before them had been a sunken garden, from which a steep
wall, once covered with creepers and rock plants, rose to a long
verandah, which was pillared and open on that side; but at each end
built up half-way and glazed for the rest.  There was a glass roof, and
inside untended shrubs sprawled in broken plaster vases.

"Ye maun bide here," said Dougal, "and no cheep above your breath.
Afore we dare to try that wall, I maun ken where Lean and Spittal and
Dobson are.  I'm off to spy the policies."  He glided out of sight
behind a clump of pampas grass.

For hours, so it seemed, Dickson was left to his own unpleasant
reflections.  His body, prone on the moist earth, was fairly
comfortable, but his mind was ill at ease.  The scramble up the
hillside had convinced him that he was growing old, and there was no
rebound in his soul to counter the conviction.  He felt listless,
spiritless--an apathy with fright trembling somewhere at the back of
it.  He regarded the verandah wall with foreboding. How on earth could
he climb that?  And if he did there would be his exposed hinder-parts
inviting a shot from some malevolent gentleman among the trees.  He
reflected that he would give a large sum of money to be out of this
preposterous adventure.

Heritage's hand was stretched towards him, containing two of Mrs.
Morran's jellied scones, of which the Poet had been wise enough to
bring a supply in his pocket.  The food cheered him, for he was growing
very hungry, and he began to take an interest in the scene before him
instead of his own thoughts.  He observed every detail of the verandah.
There was a door at one end, he noted, giving on a path which wound
down to the sunk garden.  As he looked he heard a sound of steps and
saw a man ascending this path.

It was the lame man whom Dougal had called Spittal, the dweller in the
South Lodge.  Seen at closer quarters he was an odd-looking being, lean
as a heron, wry-necked, but amazingly quick on his feet. Had not Mrs.
Morran said that he hobbled as fast as other folk ran? He kept his eyes
on the ground and seemed to be talking to himself as he went, but he
was alert enough, for the dropping of a twig from a dying magnolia
transferred him in an instant into a figure of active vigilance.  No
risks could be run with that watcher.  He took a key from his pocket,
opened the garden door and entered the verandah. For a moment his
shuffle sounded on its tiled floor, and then he entered the door
admitting from the verandah to the House.  It was clearly unlocked, for
there came no sound of a turning key.

Dickson had finished the last crumbs of his scones before the man
emerged again.  He seemed to be in a greater hurry than ever as he
locked the garden door behind him and hobbled along the west front of
the House till he was lost to sight.  After that the time passed
slowly.  A pair of yellow wagtails arrived and played at hide-and-seek
among the stuccoed pillars.  The little dry scratch of their claws was
heard clearly in the still air.  Dickson had almost fallen asleep when
a smothered exclamation from Heritage woke him to attention.  A girl
had appeared in the verandah.

Above the parapet he saw only her body from the waist up. She seemed to
be clad in bright colours, for something red was round her shoulders
and her hair was bound with an orange scarf. She was tall--that he
could tell, tall and slim and very young. Her face was turned seaward,
and she stood for a little scanning the broad channel, shading her eyes
as if to search for something on the extreme horizon.  The air was very
quiet and he thought that he could hear her sigh.  Then she turned and
re-entered the House, while Heritage by his side began to curse under
his breathe with a shocking fervour.


One of Dickson's troubles had been that he did not believe Dougal's
story, and the sight of the girl removed one doubt.  That bright exotic
thing did not belong to the Cruives or to Scotland at all, and that she
should be in the House removed the place from the conventional dwelling
to which the laws against burglary applied.

There was a rustle among the rhododendrons and the fiery face of Dougal
appeared.  He lay between the other two, his chin on his hands, and
grunted out his report.

"After they had their dinner Dobson and Lean yokit a horse and went off
to Auchenlochan.  I seen them pass the Garple brig, so that's two
accounted for.  Has Spittal been round here?"

"Half an hour ago," said Heritage, consulting a wrist watch.

"It was him that keepit me waitin' so long.  But he's safe enough now,
for five minutes syne he was splittin' firewood at the back door o' his
hoose.... I've found a ladder, an auld yin in yon lot o' bushes.  It'll
help wi' the wall.  There!  I've gotten my breath again and we can
start."

The ladder was fetched by Heritage and proved to be ancient and wanting
many rungs, but sufficient in length.  The three stood silent for a
moment, listening like stags, and then ran across the intervening lawn
to the foot of the verandah wall. Dougal went up first, then Heritage,
and lastly Dickson, stiff and giddy from his long lie under the bushes.
Below the parapet the verandah floor was heaped with old garden litter,
rotten matting, dead or derelict bulbs, fibre, withies, and strawberry
nets.  It was Dougal's intention to pull up the ladder and hide it
among the rubbish against the hour of departure.  But Dickson had
barely put his foot on the parapet when there was a sound of steps
within the House approaching the verandah door.

The ladder was left alone.  Dougal's hand brought Dickson summarily to
the floor, where he was fairly well concealed by a mess of matting.
Unfortunately his head was in the vicinity of some upturned pot-plants,
so that a cactus ticked his brow and a spike of aloe supported
painfully the back of his neck.  Heritage was prone behind two old
water-butts, and Dougal was in a hamper which had once contained seed
potatoes.  The house door had panels of opaque glass, so the new-comer
could not see the doings of the three till it was opened, and by that
time all were in cover.

The man--it was Spittal--walked rapidly along the verandah and out of
the garden door.  He was talking to himself again, and Dickson, who had
a glimpse of his face, thought he looked both evil and furious. Then
came some anxious moments, for had the man glanced back when he was
once outside, he must have seen the tell-tale ladder.  But he seemed
immersed in his own reflections, for he hobbled steadily along the
house front till he was lost to sight.

"That'll be the end o' them the day," said Dougal, as he helped
Heritage to pull up the ladder and stow it away.  "We've got the place
to oursels, now.  Forward, men, forward."  He tried the handle of the
House door and led the way in.

A narrow paved passage took them into what had once been the garden
room, where the lady of the house had arranged her flowers, and the
tennis racquets and croquet mallets had been kept.  It was very dusty,
and on the cobwebbed walls still hung a few soiled garden overalls. A
door beyond opened into a huge murky hall, murky, for the windows were
shuttered, and the only light came through things like port-holes far
up in the wall.  Dougal, who seemed to know his way about, halted them.
"Stop here till I scout a bit.  The women bide in a wee room through
that muckle door."  Bare feet stole across the oak flooring, there was
the sound of a door swinging on its hinges, and then silence and
darkness.  Dickson put out a hand for companionship and clutched
Heritage's; to his surprise it was cold and all a-tremble. They
listened for voices, and thought they could detect a far-away sob.

It was some minutes before Dougal returned.  "A bonny kettle o' fish,"
he whispered.  "They're both greetin'.  We're just in time. Come on,
the pair o' ye."

Through a green baize door they entered a passage which led to the
kitchen regions, and turned in at the first door on their right. From
its situation Dickson calculated that the room lay on the seaward side
of the House next to the verandah.  The light was bad, for the two
windows were partially shuttered, but it had plainly been a
smoking-room, for there were pipe-racks by the hearth, and on the walls
a number of old school and college photographs, a couple of oars with
emblazoned names, and a variety of stags' and roebucks' heads. There
was no fire in the grate, but a small oil-stove burned inside the
fender.  In a stiff-backed chair sat an elderly woman, who seemed to
feel the cold, for she was muffled to the neck in a fur coat. Beside
her, so that the late afternoon light caught her face and head, stood a
girl.

Dickson's first impression was of a tall child.  The pose, startled and
wild and yet curiously stiff and self-conscious, was that of a child
striving to remember a forgotten lesson.  One hand clutched a
handkerchief, the other was closing and unclosing on a knob of the
chair back.  She was staring at Dougal, who stood like a gnome in the
centre of the floor.  "Here's the gentlemen I was tellin' ye about,"
was his introduction, but her eyes did not move.

Then Heritage stepped forward.  "We have met before, Mademoiselle," he
said.  "Do you remember Easter in 1918--in the house in the Trinita dei
Monte?"

The girl looked at him.

"I do not remember," she said slowly.

"But I was the English officer who had the apartments on the floor
below you.  I saw you every morning.  You spoke to me sometimes."

"You are a soldier?" she asked, with a new note in her voice.

"I was then--till the war finished."

"And now?  Why have you come here?"

"To offer you help if you need it.  If not, to ask your pardon and go
away."

The shrouded figure in the chair burst suddenly into rapid hysterical
talk in some foreign tongue which Dickson suspected of being French.
Heritage replied in the same language, and the girl joined in with
sharp questions.  Then the Poet turned to Dickson.

"This is my friend.  If you will trust us we will do our best to help
you."

The eyes rested on Dickson's face, and he realized that he was in the
presence of something the like of which he had never met in his life
before.  It was a loveliness greater than he had imagined was permitted
by the Almighty to His creatures.  The little face was more square than
oval, with a low broad brow and proud exquisite eyebrows. The eyes were
of a colour which he could never decide on; afterwards he used to
allege obscurely that they were the colour of everything in Spring.
There was a delicate pallor in the cheeks, and the face bore signs of
suffering and care, possibly even of hunger; but for all that there was
youth there, eternal and triumphant!  Not youth such as he had known
it, but youth with all history behind it, youth with centuries of
command in its blood and the world's treasures of beauty and pride in
its ancestry.  Strange, he thought, that a thing so fine should be so
masterful.  He felt abashed in every inch of him.

As the eyes rested on him their sorrowfulness seemed to be shot with
humour.  A ghost of a smile lurked there, to which Dickson promptly
responded.  He grinned and bowed.

"Very pleased to meet you, Mem.  I'm Mr. McCunn from Glasgow."

"You don't even know my name," she said.

"We don't," said Heritage.

"They call me Saskia.  This," nodding to the chair, "is my cousin
Eugenie.... We are in very great trouble.  But why should I tell you? I
do not know you.  You cannot help me."

"We can try," said Heritage.  "Part of your trouble we know already
through that boy.  You are imprisoned in this place by scoundrels. We
are here to help you to get out.  We want to ask no questions--only to
do what you bid us."

"You are not strong enough," she said sadly.  "A young man--an old
man--and a little boy.  There are many against us, and any moment there
may be more."

It was Dougal's turn to break in,  "There's Lean and Spittal and Dobson
and four tinklers in the Dean--that's seven; but there's us three and
five more Gorbals Die-hards--that's eight."

There was something in the boy's truculent courage that cheered her.

"I wonder," she said, and her eyes fell on each in turn.

Dickson felt impelled to intervene.

"I think this is a perfectly simple business.  Here's a lady shut up in
this house against her will by a wheen blagyirds.  This is a free
country and the law doesn't permit that.  My advice is for one of us to
inform the police at Auchenlochan and get Dobson and his friends took
up and the lady set free to do what she likes.  That is, if these folks
are really molesting her, which is not yet quite clear to my mind."

"Alas! It is not so simple as that," she said.  "I dare not invoke your
English law, for perhaps in the eyes of that law I am a thief."

"Deary me, that's a bad business," said the startled Dickson.

The two women talked together in some strange tongue, and the elder
appeared to be pleading and the younger objecting.  Then Saskia seemed
to come to a decision.

"I will tell you all," and she looked straight at Heritage.  "I do not
think you would be cruel or false, for you have honourable faces....
Listen, then.  I am a Russian, and for two years have been an exile. I
will not now speak of my house, for it is no more, or how I escaped,
for it is the common tale of all of us.  I have seen things more
terrible than any dream and yet lived, but I have paid a price for such
experience.  First I went to Italy where there were friends, and I
wished only to have peace among kindly people.  About poverty I do not
care, for, to us, who have lost all the great things, the want of bread
is a little matter.  But peace was forbidden me, for I learned that we
Russians had to win back our fatherland again, and that the weakest
must work in that cause.  So I was set my task, and it was very
hard.... There were others still hidden in Russia which must be brought
to a safe place.  In that work I was ordered to share."

She spoke in almost perfect English, with a certain foreign precision.
Suddenly she changed to French, and talked rapidly to Heritage.

"She has told me about her family," he said, turning to Dickson. "It is
among the greatest in Russia, the very greatest after the throne."
Dickson could only stare.

"Our enemies soon discovered me," she went on.  "Oh, but they are very
clever, these enemies, and they have all the criminals of the world to
aid them.  Here you do not understand what they are. You good people in
England think they are well-meaning dreamers who are forced into
violence by the persecution of Western Europe. But you are wrong.  Some
honest fools there are among them, but the power--the true power--lies
with madmen and degenerates, and they have for allies the special devil
that dwells in each country. That is why they cast their nets as wide
as mankind."

She shivered, and for a second her face wore a look which Dickson never
forgot, the look of one who has looked over the edge of life into the
outer dark.

"There were certain jewels of great price which were about to be turned
into guns and armies for our enemies.  These our people recovered, and
the charge of them was laid on me.  Who would suspect, they said, a
foolish girl?  But our enemies were very clever, and soon the hunt was
cried against me.  They tried to rob me of them, but they failed, for I
too had become clever.  Then they asked for the help of the law--first
in Italy and then in France. Ah, it was subtly done.  Respectable
bourgeois, who hated the Bolsheviki but had bought long ago the bonds
of my country, desired to be repaid their debts out of the property of
the Russian crown which might be found in the West.  But behind them
were the Jews, and behind the Jews our unsleeping enemies.  Once I was
enmeshed in the law I would be safe for them, and presently they would
find the hiding-place of the treasure, and while the bourgeois were
clamouring in the courts it would be safe in their pockets.  So I fled.
For months I have been fleeing and hiding.  They have tried to kidnap
me many times, and once they have tried to kill me, but I, too, have
become clever--oh, so clever.  And I have learned not to fear."

This simple recital affected Dickson's honest soul with the liveliest
indignation.  "Sich doings!" he exclaimed, and he could not forbear
from whispering to Heritage an extract from that gentleman's
conversation the first night at Kirkmichael. "We needn't imitate all
their methods, but they've got hold of the right end of the stick.
They seek truth and reality."  The reply from the Poet was an angry
shrug.

"Why and how did you come here?" he asked.

"I always meant to come to England, for I thought it the sanest place
in a mad world.  Also it is a good country to hide in, for it is apart
from Europe, and your police, as I thought, do not permit evil men to
be their own law.  But especially I had a friend, a Scottish gentleman,
whom I knew in the days when we Russians were still a nation.  I saw
him again in Italy, and since he was kind and brave I told him some
part of my troubles.  He was called Quentin Kennedy, and now he is
dead.  He told me that in Scotland he had a lonely chateau, where I
could hide secretly and safely, and against the day when I might be
hard-pressed he gave me a letter to his steward, bidding him welcome me
as a guest when I made application. At that time I did not think I
would need such sanctuary, but a month ago the need became urgent, for
the hunt in France was very close on me.  So I sent a message to the
steward as Captain Kennedy told me."

"What is his name?" Heritage asked.

She spelt it, "Monsieur Loudon--L-O-U-D-O-N in the town of
Auchenlochan."

"The factor," said Dickson, "And what then?"

"Some spy must have found me out.  I had a letter from this Loudon
bidding me come to Auchenlochan.  There I found no steward to receive
me, but another letter saying that that night a carriage would be in
waiting to bring me here.  It was midnight when we arrived, and we were
brought in by strange ways to this house, with no light but a single
candle.  Here we were welcomed indeed, but by an enemy."

"Which?" asked Heritage. "Dobson or Lean or Spittal?"

"Dobson I do not know.  Leon was there.  He is no Russian, but a
Belgian who was a valet in my father's service till he joined the
Bolsheviki.  Next day the Lett Spidel came, and I knew that I was in
very truth entrapped.  For of all our enemies he is, save one, the most
subtle and unwearied."

Her voice had trailed off into flat weariness.  Again Dickson was
reminded of a child, for her arms hung limp by her side; and her slim
figure in its odd clothes was curiously like that of a boy in a school
blazer.  Another resemblance perplexed him.  She had a hint of
Janet--about the mouth--Janet, that solemn little girl those twenty
years in her grave.

Heritage was wrinkling his brows.  "I don't think I quite understand.
The jewels?  You have them with you?"

She nodded.

"These men wanted to rob you.  Why didn't they do it between here and
Auchenlochan?  You had no chance to hide them on the journey. Why did
they let you come here where you were in a better position to baffle
them?"

She shook her head.  "I cannot explain--except, perhaps, that Spidel
had not arrived that night, and Leon may have been waiting
instructions."

The other still looked dissatisfied.  "They are either clumsier
villains than I take them to be, or there is something deeper in the
business than we understand.  These jewels--are they here?"

His tone was so sharp that she looked startled--almost suspicious. Then
she saw that in his face which reassured her.  "I have them hidden
here.  I have grown very skilful in hiding things."

"Have they searched for them?"

"The first day they demanded them of me.  I denied all knowledge. Then
they ransacked this house--I think they ransack it daily, but I am too
clever for them.  I am not allowed to go beyond the verandah, and when
at first I disobeyed there was always one of them in wait to force me
back with a pistol behind my head.  Every morning Leon brings us food
for the day--good food, but not enough, so that Cousin Eugenie is
always hungry, and each day he and Spidel question and threaten me.
This afternoon Spidel has told me that their patience is at an end.  He
has given me till tomorrow at noon to produce the jewels.  If not, he
says I will die."

"Mercy on us!" Dickson exclaimed.

"There will be no mercy for us," she said solemnly.  "He and his kind
think as little of shedding blood as of spilling water.  But I do not
think he will kill me.  I think I will kill him first, but after that I
shall surely die.  As for Cousin Eugenie, I do not know."

Her level matter-of-fact tone seemed to Dickson most shocking, for he
could not treat it as mere melodrama.  It carried a horrid conviction.
"We must get you out of this at once," he declared.

"I cannot leave.  I will tell you why.  When I came to this country I
appointed one to meet me here.  He is a kinsman who knows England well,
for he fought in your army.  With him by my side I have no fear. It is
altogether needful that I wait for him."

"Then there is something more which you haven't told us?" Heritage
asked.

Was there the faintest shadow of a blush on her cheek?  "There is
something more," she said.

She spoke to Heritage in French, and Dickson caught the name "Alexis"
and a word which sounded like "prance."  The Poet listened eagerly and
nodded.  "I have heard of him," he said.

"But have you not seen him?  A tall man with a yellow beard, who bears
himself proudly.  Being of my mother's race he has eyes like mine."

"That's the man she was askin' me about yesterday," said Dougal, who
had squatted on the floor.

Heritage shook his head.  "We only came here last night.  When did you
expect Prince--your friend."

"I hoped to find him here before me.  Oh, it is his not coming that
terrifies me.  I must wait and hope.  But if he does not come in time
another may come before him."

"The ones already here are not all the enemies that threaten you?"

"Indeed, no.  The worst has still to come, and till I know he is here I
do not greatly fear Spidel or Leon.  They receive orders and do not
give them."

Heritage ran a perplexed hand through his hair.  The sunset which had
been flaming for some time in the unshuttered panes was now passing
into the dark.  The girl lit a lamp after first shuttering the rest of
the windows.  As she turned up the wick the odd dusty room and its
strange company were revealed more clearly, and Dickson saw with a
shock how haggard was the beautiful face.  A great pity seized him and
almost conquered his timidity.

"It is very difficult to help you," Heritage was saying.  "You won't
leave this place, and you won't claim the protection of the law. You
are very independent, Mademoiselle, but it can't go on for ever. The
man you fear may arrive at any moment.  At any moment, too, your
treasure may by discovered."

"It is that that weighs on me," she cried.  "The jewels!  They are my
solemn trust, but they burden me terribly.  If I were only rid of them
and knew them to be safe I should face the rest with a braver mind."

"If you'll take my advice," said Dickson slowly, "you'll get them
deposited in a bank and take a receipt for them.  A Scotch bank is no'
in a hurry to surrender a deposit without it gets the proper authority."

Heritage brought his hands together with a smack.  "That's an idea.
Will you trust us to take these things and deposit them safely?"

For a little she was silent and her eyes were fixed on each of the trio
in turn.  "I will trust you," she said at last.  "I think you will not
betray me."

"By God, we won't!" said the Poet fervently.  "Dogson, it's up to you.
You march off to Glasgow in double quick time and place the stuff in
your own name in your own bank.  There's not a moment to lose. D'you
hear?"

"I will that." To his own surprise Dickson spoke without hesitation.
Partly it was because of his merchant's sense of property, which made
him hate the thought that miscreants should acquire that to which they
had no title; but mainly it was the appeal in those haggard childish
eyes.  "But I'm not going to be tramping the country in the night
carrying a fortune and seeking for trains that aren't there.  I'll go
the first thing in the morning."

"Where are they?" Heritage asked.

"That I do not tell.  But I will fetch them."

She left the room, and presently returned with three odd little parcels
wrapped in leather and tied with thongs of raw hide. She gave them to
Heritage, who held them appraisingly in his hand and then passed them
on to Dickson.

"I do not ask about their contents.  We take them from you as they are,
and, please God, when the moment comes they will be returned to you as
you gave them.  You trust us, Mademoiselle?"

"I trust you, for you are a soldier.  Oh, and I thank you from my
heart, my friends."  She held out a hand to each, which caused Heritage
to grow suddenly very red.

"I will remain in the neighbourhood to await developments," he said.
"We had better leave you now.  Dougal, lead on."

Before going, he took the girl's hand again, and with a sudden movement
bent and kissed it.  Dickson shook it heartily.  "Cheer up, Mem," he
observed.  "There's a better time coming."  His last recollection of
her eyes was of a soft mistiness not far from tears. His pouch and pipe
had strange company jostling them in his pocket as he followed the
others down the ladder into the night.

Dougal insisted that they must return by the road of the morning. "We
daren't go by the Laver, for that would bring us by the public-house.
If the worst comes to the worst, and we fall in wi' any of the deevils,
they must think ye've changed your mind and come back from
Auchenlochan."

The night smelt fresh and moist as if a break in the weather were
imminent.  As they scrambled along the Garple Dean a pinprick of light
below showed where the tinklers were busy by their fire. Dickson's
spirits suffered a sharp fall and he began to marvel at his temerity.
What in Heaven's name had he undertaken?  To carry very precious
things, to which certainly he had no right, through the enemy to
distant Glasgow.  How could he escape the notice of the watchers?  He
was already suspect, and the sight of him back again in Dalquharter
would double that suspicion.  He must brazen it out, but he distrusted
his powers with such tell-tale stuff in his pockets.  They might murder
him anywhere on the moor road or in an empty railway carriage.  An
unpleasant memory of various novels he had read in which such things
happened haunted his mind.... There was just one consolation.  This job
over, he would be quit of the whole business.  And honourably quit,
too, for he would have played a manly part in a most unpleasant affair.
He could retire to the idyllic with the knowledge that he had not been
wanting when Romance called.  Not a soul should ever hear of it, but he
saw himself in the future tramping green roads or sitting by his winter
fireside pleasantly retelling himself the tale.

Before they came to the Garple bridge Dougal insisted that they should
separate, remarking that "it would never do if we were seen thegither."
Heritage was despatched by a short cut over fields to the left, which
eventually, after one or two plunges into ditches, landed him safely in
Mrs. Morran's back yard.  Dickson and Dougal crossed the bridge and
tramped Dalquharter-wards by the highway. There was no sign of human
life in that quiet place with owls hooting and rabbits rustling in the
undergrowth.  Beyond the woods they came in sight of the light in the
back kitchen, and both seemed to relax their watchfulness when it was
most needed.  Dougal sniffed the air and looked seaward.

"It's coming on to rain," he observed.  "There should be a muckle star
there, and when you can't see it it means wet weather wi' this wind."

"What star?" Dickson asked.

"The one wi' the Irish-lukkin' name.  What's that they call it?
O'Brien?"  And he pointed to where the constellation of the hunter
should have been declining on the western horizon.

There was a bend of the road behind them, and suddenly round it came a
dogcart driven rapidly.  Dougal slipped like a weasel into a bush, and
presently Dickson stood revealed in the glare of a lamp. The horse was
pulled up sharply and the driver called out to him. He saw that it was
Dobson the innkeeper with Leon beside him.

"Who is it?" cried the voice.  "Oh, you! I thought ye were off the day?"

Dickson rose nobly to the occasion.

"I thought myself I was.  But I didn't think much of Auchenlochan, and
I took a fancy to come back and spend the last night of my holiday with
my Auntie.  I'm off to Glasgow first thing the morn's morn."

"So!" said the voice.  "Queer thing I never saw ye on the Auchenlochan
road, where ye can see three mile before ye."

"I left early and took it easy along the shore."

"Did ye so?  Well, good-sight to ye."

Five minutes later Dickson walked into Mrs. Morran's kitchen, where
Heritage was busy making up for a day of short provender.

"I'm for Glasgow to-morrow, Auntie Phemie," he cried.  "I want you to
loan me a wee trunk with a key, and steek the door and windows, for
I've a lot to tell you."




CHAPTER VI

HOW MR. McCUNN DEPARTED WITH RELIEF AND RETURNED WITH RESOLUTION


At seven o'clock on the following morning the post-cart, summoned by an
early message from Mrs. Morran, appeared outside the cottage. In it sat
the ancient postman, whose real home was Auchenlochan, but who slept
alternate nights in Dalquharter, and beside him Dobson the innkeeper.
Dickson and his hostess stood at the garden-gate, the former with his
pack on his back, and at his feet a small stout wooden box, of the kind
in which cheeses are transported, garnished with an immense padlock.
Heritage for obvious reasons did not appear; at the moment he was
crouched on the floor of the loft watching the departure through a gap
in the dimity curtains.

The traveller, after making sure that Dobson was looking, furtively
slipped the key of the trunk into his knapsack.

"Well, good-bye, Auntie Phemie," he said.  "I'm sure you've been awful
kind to me, and I don't know how to thank you for all you're sending."

"Tuts, Dickson, my man, they're hungry folk about Glesca that'll be
glad o' my scones and jeelie.  Tell Mirren I'm rale pleased wi' her
man, and haste ye back soon."

The trunk was deposited on the floor of the cart, and Dickson clambered
into the back seat.  He was thankful that he had not to sit next to
Dobson, for he had tell-tale stuff on his person.  The morning was wet,
so he wore his waterproof, which concealed his odd tendency to
stoutness about the middle.

Mrs. Morran played her part well, with all the becoming gravity of an
affectionate aunt, but as soon as the post-cart turned the bend of the
road her demeanour changed.  She was torn with convulsions of silent
laughter.  She retreated to the kitchen, sank into a chair, wrapped her
face in her apron and rocked.  Heritage, descending, found her
struggling to regain composure.  "D'ye ken his wife's name?" she
gasped.  "I ca'ed her Mirren!  And maybe the body's no' mairried! Hech
sirs!  Hech sirs!"

Meanwhile Dickson was bumping along the moor-road on the back of the
post-cart.  He had worked out a plan, just as he had been used
aforetime to devise a deal in foodstuffs.  He had expected one of the
watchers to turn up, and was rather relieved that it should be Dobson,
whom he regarded as "the most natural beast" of the three. Somehow he
did not think that he would be molested before he reached the station,
since his enemies would still be undecided in their minds.  Probably
they only wanted to make sure that he had really departed to forget all
about him.  But if not, he had his plan ready.

"Are you travelling to-day?" he asked the innkeeper.

"Just as far as the station to see about some oil-cake I'm expectin'.
What's in your wee kist?  Ye came here wi' nothing but the bag on your
back."

"Ay, the kist is no' mine.  It's my auntie's.  She's a kind body, and
nothing would serve but she must pack a box for me to take back. Let me
see.  There's a baking of scones; three pots of honey and one of
rhubarb jam--she was aye famous for her rhubarb jam; a mutton ham,
which you can't get for love or money in Glasgow; some home-made black
puddings, and a wee skim-milk cheese.  I doubt I'll have to take a cab
from the station."

Dobson appeared satisfied, lit a short pipe, and relapsed into
meditation.  The long uphill road, ever climbing to where far off
showed the tiny whitewashed buildings which were the railway station,
seemed interminable this morning.  The aged postman addressed strange
objurgations to his aged horse and muttered reflections to himself, the
innkeeper smoked, and Dickson stared back into the misty hollow where
lay Dalquharter.  The south-west wind had brought up a screen of rain
clouds and washed all the countryside in a soft wet grey.  But the eye
could still travel a fair distance, and Dickson thought he had a
glimpse of a figure on a bicycle leaving the village two miles back.
He wondered who it could be.  Not Heritage, who had no bicycle.
Perhaps some woman who was conspicuously late for the train.  Women
were the chief cyclists nowadays in country places.

Then he forgot about the bicycle and twisted his neck to watch the
station. It was less than a mile off now, and they had no time to
spare, for away to the south among the hummocks of the bog he saw the
smoke of the train coming from Auchenlochan.  The postman also saw it
and whipped up his beast into a clumsy canter.  Dickson, always nervous
being late for trains, forced his eyes away and regarded again the road
behind him.  Suddenly the cyclist had become quite plain--a little more
than a mile behind--a man, and pedalling furiously in spite of the
stiff ascent.  It could only be one person--Leon.  He must have
discovered their visit to the House yesterday and be on the way to warn
Dobson.  If he reached the station before the train, there would be no
journey to Glasgow that day for one respectable citizen.

Dickson was in a fever of impatience and fright.  He dared not abjure
the postman to hurry, lest Dobson should turn his head and descry his
colleague.  But that ancient man had begun to realize the shortness of
time and was urging the cart along at a fair pace, since they were now
on the flatter shelf of land which carried the railway.

Dickson kept his eyes fixed on the bicycle and his teeth shut tight on
his lower lip.  Now it was hidden by the last dip of hill; now it
emerged into view not a quarter of a mile behind, and its rider gave
vent to a shrill call.  Luckily the innkeeper did not hear, for at that
moment with a jolt the cart pulled up at the station door, accompanied
by the roar of the incoming train.

Dickson whipped down from the back seat and seized the solitary porter.
"Label the box for Glasgow and into the van with it,  Quick, man, and
there'll be a shilling for you."  He had been doing some rapid thinking
these last minutes and had made up his mind.  If Dobson and he were
alone in a carriage he could not have the box there; that must be
elsewhere, so that Dobson could not examine it if he were set on
violence, somewhere in which it could still be a focus of suspicion and
attract attention from his person,  He took his ticket, and rushed on
to the platform, to find the porter and the box at the door of the
guard's van.  Dobson was not there.  With the vigour of a fussy
traveller he shouted directions to the guard to take good care of his
luggage, hurled a shilling at the porter, and ran for a carriage. At
that moment he became aware of Dobson hurrying through the entrance. He
must have met Leon and heard news from him, for his face was red and
his ugly brows darkening.

The train was in motion.  "Here, you" Dobson's voice shouted. "Stop!  I
want a word wi' ye."  Dickson plunged at a third-class carriage, for he
saw faces behind the misty panes, and above all things then he feared
an empty compartment.  He clambered on to the step, but the handle
would not turn, and with a sharp pang of fear he felt the innkeeper's
grip on his arm.  Then some Samaritan from within let down the window,
opened the door, and pulled him up. He fell on a seat, and a second
later Dobson staggered in beside him.

Thank Heaven, the dirty little carriage was nearly full.  There were
two herds, each with a dog and a long hazel crook, and an elderly woman
who looked like a ploughman's wife out for a day's marketing. And there
was one other whom Dickson recognized with peculiar joy--the bagman in
the provision line of business whom he had met three days before at
Kilchrist.

The recognition was mutual.  "Mr. McCunn!" the bagman exclaimed. "My,
but that was running it fine!  I hope you've had a pleasant holiday,
sir?"

"Very pleasant.  I've been spending two nights with friends down
hereaways.  I've been very fortunate in the weather, for it has broke
just when I'm leaving."

Dickson sank back on the hard cushions.  It had been a near thing, but
so far he had won.  He wished his heart did not beat so fast, and he
hoped he did not betray his disorder in his face. Very deliberately he
hunted for his pipe and filled it slowly. Then he turned to Dobson,  "I
didn't know you were travelling the day. What about your oil-cake?"

"I've changed my mind," was the gruff answer.

"Was that you I heard crying on me when we were running for the train?"

"Ay.  I thought ye had forgot about your kist."

"No fear," said Dickson.  "I'm no' likely to forget my auntie's scones."

He laughed pleasantly and then turned to the bagman.  Thereafter the
compartment hummed with the technicalities of the grocery trade. He
exerted himself to draw out his companion, to have him refer to the
great firm of D. McCunn, so that the innkeeper might be ashamed of his
suspicions.  What nonsense to imagine that a noted and wealthy Glasgow
merchant--the bagman's tone was almost reverential--would concern
himself with the affairs of a forgotten village and a tumble-down house!

Presently the train drew up at Kirkmichael station.  The woman
descended, and Dobson, after making sure that no one else meant to
follow her example, also left the carriage.  A porter was shouting:
"Fast train to Glasgow--Glasgow next stop."  Dickson watched the
innkeeper shoulder his way through the crowd in the direction of the
booking office.  "He's off to send a telegram," he decided. "There'll
be trouble waiting for me at the other end."

When the train moved on he found himself disinclined for further talk.
He had suddenly become meditative, and curled up in a corner with his
head hard against the window pane, watching the wet fields and
glistening roads as they slipped past.  He had his plans made for his
conduct at Glasgow, but, Lord! how he loathed the whole business! Last
night he had had a kind of gusto in his desire to circumvent villainy;
at Dalquharter station he had enjoyed a momentary sense of triumph; now
he felt very small, lonely, and forlorn.  Only one thought far at the
back of his mind cropped up now and then to give him comfort.  He was
entering on the last lap.  Once get this detestable errand done and he
would be a free man, free to go back to the kindly humdrum life from
which he should never have strayed. Never again, he vowed, never again.
Rather would he spend the rest of his days in hydropathics than come
within the pale of such horrible adventures.  Romance, forsooth!  This
was not the mild goddess he had sought, but an awful harpy who battened
on the souls of men.

He had some bad minutes as the train passed through the suburbs and
along the grimy embankment by which the southern lines enter the city.
But as it rumbled over the river bridge and slowed down before the
terminus his vitality suddenly revived.  He was a business man, and
there was now something for him to do.

After a rapid farewell to the bagman, he found a porter and hustled his
box out of the van in the direction of the left-luggage office. Spies,
summoned by Dobson's telegram, were, he was convinced, watching his
every movement, and he meant to see that they missed nothing. He
received his ticket for the box, and slowly and ostentatiously stowed
it away in his pack.  Swinging the said pack on his arm, he sauntered
through the entrance hall to the row of waiting taxi-cabs, and selected
the oldest and most doddering driver.  He deposited the pack inside on
the seat, and then stood still as if struck with a sudden thought.

"I breakfasted terrible early," he told the driver.  "I think I'll have
a bite to eat.  Will you wait?"

"Ay," said the man, who was reading a grubby sheet of newspaper. "I'll
wait as long as ye like, for it's you that pays."

Dickson left his pack in the cab and, oddly enough for a careful man,
he did not shut the door.  He re-entered the station, strolled to the
bookstall, and bought a Glasgow Herald.  His steps then tended to the
refreshment-room, where he ordered a cup of coffee and two Bath buns,
and seated himself at a small table.  There he was soon immersed in the
financial news, and though he sipped his coffee he left the buns
untasted.  He took out a penknife and cut various extracts from the
Herald, bestowing them carefully in his pocket.  An observer would have
seen an elderly gentleman absorbed in market quotations.

After a quarter of an hour had been spent in this performance he
happened to glance at the clock and rose with an exclamation. He
bustled out to his taxi and found the driver still intent upon his
reading.  "Here I am at last," he said cheerily, and had a foot on the
step, when he stopped suddenly with a cry.  It was a cry of alarm, but
also of satisfaction.

"What's become of my pack?  I left it on the seat, and now it's gone!
There's been a thief here."

The driver, roused from his lethargy, protested in the name of his gods
that no one had been near it.  "Ye took it into the station wi' ye," he
urged.

"I did nothing of the kind.  Just you wait here till I see the
inspector.  A bonny watch YOU keep on a gentleman's things."

But Dickson did not interview the railway authorities.  Instead he
hurried to the left-luggage office.  "I deposited a small box here a
short time ago.  I mind the number.  Is it here still?"

The attendant glanced at the shelf.  "A wee deal box with iron bands.
It was took out ten minutes syne.  A man brought the ticket and took it
away on his shoulder."

"Thank you.  There's been a mistake, but the blame's mine.  My man
mistook my orders."

Then he returned to the now nervous taxi-driver.  "I've taken it up
with the station-master and he's putting the police on. You'll likely
be wanted, so I gave him your number.  It's a fair disgrace that there
should be so many thieves about this station. It's not the first time
I've lost things.  Drive me to West George Street and look sharp."  And
he slammed the door with the violence of an angry man.

But his reflections were not violent, for he smiled to himself. "That
was pretty neat.  They'll take some time to get the kist open, for I
dropped the key out of the train after we left Kirkmichael. That gives
me a fair start.  If I hadn't thought of that, they'd have found some
way to grip me and ripe me long before I got to the Bank." He shuddered
as he thought of the dangers he had escaped.  "As it is, they're off
the track for half an hour at least, while they're rummaging among
Auntie Phemie's scones."  At the thought he laughed heartily, and when
he brought the taxi-cab to a standstill by rapping on the front window,
he left it with a temper apparently restored. Obviously he had no
grudge against the driver, who to his immense surprise was rewarded
with ten shillings.

Three minutes later Mr. McCunn might have been seen entering the head
office of the Strathclyde Bank and inquiring for the manager. There was
no hesitation about him now, for his foot was on his native heath.  The
chief cashier received him with deference in spite of his unorthodox
garb, for he was not the least honoured of the bank's customers.  As it
chanced he had been talking about him that very morning to a gentleman
from London.  "The strength of this city," he had said, tapping his
eyeglasses on his knuckles, "does not lie in its dozen very rich men,
but in the hundred or two homely folk who make no parade of wealth.
Men like Dickson McCunn, for example, who live all their life in a
semi-detached villa and die worth half a million."  And the Londoner
had cordially assented.

So Dickson was ushered promptly into an inner room, and was warmly
greeted by Mr. Mackintosh, the patron of the Gorbals Die-Hards.

"I must thank you for your generous donation, McCunn.  Those boys will
get a little fresh air and quiet after the smoke and din of Glasgow. A
little country peace to smooth out the creases in their poor little
souls."

"Maybe," said Dickson, with a vivid recollection of Dougal as he had
last seen him.  Somehow he did not think that peace was likely to be
the portion of that devoted band.  "But I've not come here to speak
about that."

He took off his waterproof; then his coat and waistcoat; and showed
himself a strange figure with sundry bulges about the middle. The
manager's eyes grew very round.  Presently these excrescences were
revealed as linen bags sewn on to his shirt, and fitting into the
hollow between ribs and hip.  With some difficulty he slit the bags and
extracted three hide-bound packages.

"See here, Mackintosh," he said solemnly.  "I hand you over these
parcels, and you're to put them in the innermost corner of your strong
room.  You needn't open them.  Just put them away as they are, and
write me a receipt for them.  Write it now."

Mr. Mackintosh obediently took pen in hand.

"What'll I call them?" he asked.

"Just the three leather parcels handed to you by Dickson McCunn, Esq.,
naming the date."

Mr. Mackintosh wrote.  He signed his name with his usual flourish and
handed the slip to his client.

"Now," said Dickson, "you'll put that receipt in the strong box where
you keep my securities and you'll give it up to nobody but me in person
and you'll surrender the parcels only on presentation of the receipt.
D'you understand?"

"Perfectly.  May I ask any questions?"

"You'd better not if you don't want to hear lees.'

"What's in the packages?"  Mr. Mackintosh weighed them in his hand.

"That's asking," said Dickson.  "But I'll tell ye this much.  It's
jools."

"Your own?"

"No, but I'm their trustee."

"Valuable?"

"I was hearing they were worth more than a million pounds."

"God bless my soul," said the startled manager.  "I don't like this
kind of business, McCunn."

"No more do I.  But you'll do it to oblige an old friend and a good
customer.  If you don't know much about the packages you know all about
me.  Now, mind, I trust you."

Mr. Mackintosh forced himself to a joke.  "Did you maybe steal them?"

Dickson grinned.  "Just what I did.  And that being so, I want you to
let me out by the back door."

When he found himself in the street he felt the huge relief of a boy
who had emerged with credit from the dentist's chair. Remembering that
here would be no midday dinner for him at home, his first step was to
feed heavily at a restaurant.  He had, so far as he could see,
surmounted all his troubles, his one regret being that he had lost his
pack, which contained among other things his Izaak Walton and his
safety razor.  He bought another razor and a new Walton, and mounted an
electric tram car en route for home.

Very contented with himself he felt as the car swung across the Clyde
bridge.  He had done well--but of that he did not want to think, for
the whole beastly thing was over.  He was going to bury that memory, to
be resurrected perhaps on a later day when the unpleasantness had been
forgotten.  Heritage had his address, and knew where to come when it
was time to claim the jewels.  As for the watchers, they must have
ceased to suspect him, when they discovered the innocent contents of
his knapsack and Mrs. Morran's box.  Home for him, and a luxurious tea
by his own fireside; and then an evening with his books, for Heritage's
nonsense had stimulated his literary fervour.  He would dip into his
old favourites again to confirm his faith.  To-morrow he would go for a
jaunt somewhere--perhaps down the Clyde, or to the South of England,
which he had heard was a pleasant, thickly peopled country. No more
lonely inns and deserted villages for him; henceforth he would make
certain of comfort and peace.

The rain had stopped, and, as the car moved down the dreary vista of
Eglinton street, the sky opened into fields of blue and the April sun
silvered the puddles.  It was in such place and under such weather that
Dickson suffered an overwhelming experience.

It is beyond my skill, being all unlearned in the game of
psycho-analysis, to explain how this thing happened.  I concern myself
only with facts. Suddenly the pretty veil of self-satisfaction was rent
from top to bottom, and Dickson saw a figure of himself within, a smug
leaden little figure which simpered and preened itself and was hollow
as a rotten nut. And he hated it.

The horrid truth burst on him that Heritage had been right. He only
played with life.  That imbecile image was a mere spectator, content to
applaud, but shrinking from the contact of reality. It had been all
right as a provision merchant, but when it fancied itself capable of
higher things it had deceived itself. Foolish little image with its
brave dreams and its swelling words from Browning!  All make-believe of
the feeblest.  He was a coward, running away at the first threat of
danger.  It was as if he were watching a tall stranger with a wand
pointing to the embarrassed phantom that was himself, and ruthlessly
exposing its frailties! And yet the pitiless showman was himself
too--himself as he wanted to be, cheerful, brave, resourceful,
indomitable.

Dickson suffered a spasm of mortal agony.  "Oh, I'm surely not so bad
as all that," he groaned.  But the hurt was not only in his pride. He
saw himself being forced to new decisions, and each alternative was of
the blackest.  He fairly shivered with the horror of it. The car
slipped past a suburban station from which passengers were
emerging--comfortable black-coated men such as he had once been. He was
bitterly angry with Providence for picking him out of the great crowd
of sedentary folk for this sore ordeal.  "Why was I tethered to sich a
conscience?" was his moan.  But there was that stern inquisitor with
his pointer exploring his soul.  "You flatter yourself you have done
your share," he was saying.  "You will make pretty stories about it to
yourself, and some day you may tell your friends, modestly disclaiming
any special credit.  But you will be a liar, for you know you are
afraid.  You are running away when the work is scarcely begun, and
leaving it to a few boys and a poet whom you had the impudence the
other day to despise.  I think you are worse than a coward.  I think
you are a cad."

His fellow-passengers on the top of the car saw an absorbed middle-aged
gentleman who seemed to have something the matter with his bronchial
tubes. They could not guess at the tortured soul.  The decision was
coming nearer, the alternatives loomed up dark and inevitable.  On one
side was submission to ignominy, on the other a return to that place
which he detested, and yet loathed himself for detesting.  "It seems
I'm not likely to have much peace either way," he reflected dismally.

How the conflict would have ended had it continued on these lines I
cannot say.  The soul of Mr. McCunn was being assailed by moral and
metaphysical adversaries with which he had not been trained to deal.
But suddenly it leapt from negatives to positives.  He saw the face of
the girl in the shuttered House, so fair and young and yet so haggard.
It seemed to be appealing to him to rescue it from a great loneliness
and fear.  Yes, he had been right, it had a strange look of his
Janet--the wide-open eyes, the solemn mouth.  What was to become of
that child if he failed her in her need?

Now Dickson was a practical man, and this view of the case brought him
into a world which he understood.  "It's fair ridiculous," he
reflected. "Nobody there to take a grip of things.  Just a wheen
Gorbals keelies and the lad Heritage.  Not a business man among the
lot."

The alternatives, which hove before him like two great banks of cloud,
were altering their appearance.  One was becoming faint and tenuous;
the other, solid as ever, was just a shade less black. He lifted his
eyes and saw in the near distance the corner of the road which led to
his home.  "I must decide before I reach that corner," he told himself.

Then his mind became apathetic.  He began to whistle dismally through
his teeth, watching the corner as it came nearer.  The car stopped with
a jerk.  "I'll go back," he said aloud, clambering down the steps. The
truth was he had decided five minutes before when he first saw Janet's
face.

He walked briskly to his house, entirely refusing to waste any more
energy on reflection.  "This is a business proposition," he told
himself, "and I'm going to handle it as sich."  Tibby was surprised to
see him and offered him tea in vain.  "I'm just back for a few minutes.
Let's see the letters."

There was one from his wife.  She proposed to stay another week at the
Neuk Hydropathic and suggested that he might join her and bring her
home.  He sat down and wrote a long affectionate reply, declining, but
expressing his delight that she was soon returning. "That's very likely
the last time Mamma will hear from me," he reflected, but--oddly
enough--without any great fluttering of the heart.

Then he proceeded to be furiously busy.  He sent out Tibby to buy
another knapsack and to order a cab and to cash a considerable cheque.
In the knapsack he packed a fresh change of clothing and the new safety
razor, but no books, for he was past the need of them. That done, he
drove to his solicitors.

"What like a firm are Glendonan and Speirs in Edinburgh?" he asked the
senior partner.

"Oh, very respectable.  Very respectable indeed.  Regular Edinburgh
W.S. Lot.  Do a lot of factoring."

"I want you to telephone through to them and inquire about a place in
Carrick called Huntingtower, near the village of Dalquharter. I
understand it's to let, and I'm thinking of taking a lease of it."

The senior partner after some delay got through to Edinburgh, and was
presently engaged in the feverish dialectic which the long-distance
telephone involves.  "I want to speak to Mr. Glendonan himself.... Yes,
yes, Mr. Caw of Paton and Linklater.... Good afternoon....
Huntingtower.  Yes, in Carrick.  Not to let?  But I understand it's
been in the market for some months.  You say you've an idea it has just
been let.  But my client is positive that you're mistaken, unless the
agreement was made this morning....  You'll inquire?  Ah, I see. The
actual factoring is done by your local agent, Mr. James Loudon, in
Auchenlochan.  You think my client had better get into touch with him
at once.  Just wait a minute, please."

He put his hand over the receiver.  "Usual Edinburgh way of doing
business," he observed caustically.  "What do you want done?"

"I'll run down and see this Loudon.  Tell Glendonan and Spiers to
advise him to expect me, for I'll go this very day."

Mr. Caw resumed his conversation.  "My client would like a telegram
sent at once to Mr. Loudon introducing him.  He's Mr. Dickson McCunn of
Mearns Street--the great provision merchant, you know.  Oh, yes! Good
for any rent.  Refer if you like to the Strathclyde Bank, but you can
take my word for it.  Thank you.  Then that's settled. Good-bye."

Dickson's next visit was to a gunmaker who was a fellow-elder with him
in the Guthrie Memorial Kirk.

"I want a pistol and a lot of cartridges," he announced.  "I'm not
caring what kind it is, so long as it is a good one and not too big."

"For yourself?" the gunmaker asked.  "You must have a license, I doubt,
and there's a lot of new regulations."

"I can't wait on a license.  It's for a cousin of mine who's off to
Mexico at once.  You've got to find some way of obliging an old friend,
Mr. McNair."

Mr. McNair scratched his head.  "I don't see how I can sell you one.
But I'll tell you what I'll do--I'll lend you one.  It belongs to my
nephew, Peter Tait, and has been lying in a drawer ever since he came
back from the front.  He has no use for it now that he's a placed
minister."

So Dickson bestowed in the pockets of his water-proof a service
revolver and fifty cartridges, and bade his cab take him to the shop in
Mearns Street.  For a moment the sight of the familiar place struck a
pang to his breast, but he choked down unavailing regrets. He ordered a
great hamper of foodstuffs--the most delicate kind of tinned goods, two
perfect hams, tongues, Strassburg pies, chocolate, cakes, biscuits,
and, as a last thought, half a dozen bottles of old liqueur brandy.  It
was to be carefully packed, addressed to Mrs. Morran, Dalquharter
Station, and delivered in time for him to take down by the 7.33 train.
Then he drove to the terminus and dined with something like a desperate
peace in his heart.

On this occasion he took a first-class ticket, for he wanted to be
alone. As the lights began to be lit in the wayside stations and the
clear April dusk darkened into night, his thoughts were sombre yet
resigned. He opened the window and let the sharp air of the
Renfrewshire uplands fill the carriage.  It was fine weather again
after the rain, and a bright constellation--perhaps Dougal's friend
O'Brien--hung in the western sky.  How happy he would have been a week
ago had he been starting thus for a country holiday!  He could sniff
the faint scent of moor-burn and ploughed earth which had always been
his first reminder of Spring.  But he had been pitchforked out of that
old happy world and could never enter it again.  Alas! for the roadside
fire, the cosy inn, the Compleat Angler, the Chavender or Chub!

And yet--and yet!  He had done the right thing, though the Lord alone
knew how it would end.  He began to pluck courage from his very
melancholy, and hope from his reflections upon the transitoriness of
life.  He was austerely following Romance as he conceived it, and if
that capricious lady had taken one dream from him she might yet reward
him with a better.  Tags of poetry came into his head which seemed to
favour this philosophy--particularly some lines of Browning on which he
used to discourse to his Kirk Literary Society. Uncommon silly, he
considered, these homilies of his must have been, mere twitterings of
the unfledged.  But now he saw more in the lines, a deeper
interpretation which he had earned the right to make.


  "Oh world, where all things change and nought abides,
  Oh life, the long mutation--is it so?
  Is it with life as with the body's change?--
  Where, e'en tho' better follow, good must pass."



That was as far as he could get, though he cudgelled his memory to
continue.  Moralizing thus, he became drowsy, and was almost asleep
when the train drew up at the station of Kirkmichael.




CHAPTER VII

SUNDRY DOINGS IN THE MIRK


From Kirkmichael on the train stopped at every station, but no
passenger seemed to leave or arrive at the little platforms white in
the moon.  At Dalquharter the case of provisions was safely transferred
to the porter with instructions to take charge of it till it was sent
for.  During the next few minutes Dickson's mind began to work upon his
problem with a certain briskness.  It was all nonsense that the law of
Scotland could not be summoned to the defence. The jewels had been
safely got rid of, and who was to dispute their possession?  Not Dobson
and his crew, who had no sort of title, and were out for naked robbery.
The girl had spoken of greater dangers from new enemies--kidnapping,
perhaps.  Well, that was felony, and the police must be brought in.
Probably if all were known the three watchers had criminal records,
pages long, filed at Scotland Yard.  The man to deal with that side of
the business was Loudon the factor, and to him he was bound in the
first place. He had made a clear picture in his head of this Loudon--a
derelict old country writer, formal, pedantic, lazy, anxious only to
get an unprofitable business off his hands with the least possible
trouble, never going near the place himself, and ably supported in his
lethargy by conceited Edinburgh Writers to the Signet.  "Sich notions
of business!" he murmured.  "I wonder that there's a single county
family in Scotland no' in the bankruptcy court!"  It was his mission to
wake up Mr. James Loudon.

Arrived at Auchenlochan he went first to the Salutation Hotel, a
pretentious place sacred to golfers.  There he engaged a bedroom for
the night and, having certain scruples, paid for it in advance. He also
had some sandwiches prepared which he stowed in his pack, and filled
his flask with whisky.  "I'm going home to Glasgow by the first train
in the to-morrow," he told the landlady, "and now I've got to see a
friend.  I'll not be back till late."  He was assured that there would
be no difficulty about his admittance at any hour, and directed how to
find Mr. Loudon's dwelling.

It was an old house fronting direct on the street, with a fanlight
above the door and a neat brass plate bearing the legend "Mr. James
Loudon, Writer."  A lane ran up one side leading apparently to a
garden, for the moonlight showed the dusk of trees. In front was the
main street of Auchenlochan, now deserted save for a single roysterer,
and opposite stood the ancient town house, with arches where the
country folk came at the spring and autumn hiring fairs.  Dickson rang
the antiquated bell, and was presently admitted to a dark hall floored
with oilcloth, where a single gas-jet showed that on one side was the
business office and on the other the living-rooms.  Mr. Loudon was at
supper, he was told, and he sent in his card.  Almost at once the door
at the end on the left side was flung open and a large figure appeared
flourishing a napkin.  "Come in, sir, come in," it cried. "I've just
finished a bite of meat.  Very glad to see you. Here, Maggie, what
d'you mean by keeping the gentleman standing in that outer darkness?"

The room into which Dickson was ushered was small and bright, with a
red paper on the walls, a fire burning, and a big oil lamp in the
centre of a table.  Clearly Mr. Loudon had no wife, for it was a
bachelor's den in every line of it.  A cloth was laid on a corner of
the table, in which stood the remnants of a meal. Mr. Loudon seemed to
have been about to make a brew of punch, for a kettle simmered by the
fire, and lemons and sugar flanked a pot-bellied whisky decanter of the
type that used to be known as a "mason's mell."

The sight of the lawyer was a surprise to Dickson and dissipated his
notions of an aged and lethargic incompetent.  Mr. Loudon was a
strongly built man who could not be a year over fifty.  He had a ruddy
face, clean shaven except for a grizzled moustache; his grizzled hair
was thinning round the temples; but his skin was unwrinkled and his
eyes had all the vigour of youth.  His tweed suit was well cut, and the
buff waistcoat with flaps and pockets and the plain leather watchguard
hinted at the sportsman, as did the half-dozen racing prints on the
wall.  A pleasant high-coloured figure he made; his voice had the frank
ring due to much use out of doors; and his expression had the singular
candour which comes from grey eyes with large pupils and a narrow iris.

"Sit down, Mr. McCunn.  Take the arm-chair by the fire.  I've had a
wire from Glendonan and Speirs about you.  I was just going to have a
glass of toddy--a grand thing for these uncertain April nights. You'll
join me?  No?  Well, you'll smoke anyway.  There's cigars at your
elbow.  Certainly, a pipe if you like.  This is Liberty Hall."

Dickson found some difficulty in the part for which he had cast
himself. He had expected to condescend upon an elderly inept and give
him sharp instructions; instead he found himself faced with a jovial,
virile figure which certainly did not suggest incompetence.  It has
been mentioned already that he had always great difficulty in looking
any one in the face, and this difficulty was intensified when he found
himself confronted with bold and candid eyes.  He felt abashed and a
little nervous.

"I've come to see you about Huntingtower House," he began.

"I know, so Glendonans informed me.  Well, I'm very glad to hear it.
The place has been standing empty far too long, and that is worse for a
new house than an old house.  There's not much money to spend on it
either, unless we can make sure of a good tenant.  How did you hear
about it?"

"I was taking a bit holiday and I spent a night at Dalquharter with an
old auntie of mine.  You must understand I've just retired from
business, and I'm thinking of finding a country place.  I used to have
the provision shop in Mearns Street--now the United Supply Stores,
Limited.  You've maybe heard of it?"

The other bowed and smiled.  "Who hasn't?  The name of Dickson McCunn
is known far beyond the city of Glasgow."

Dickson was not insensible of the flattery, and he continued with more
freedom.  "I took a walk and got a glisk of the House, and I liked the
look of it.  You see, I want a quiet bit a good long way from a town,
and at the same time a house with all modern conveniences.  I suppose
Huntingtower has that?"

"When it was built fifteen years ago it was considered a model--six
bathrooms, its own electric light plant, steam heating, and independent
boiler for hot water, the whole bag of tricks.  I won't say but what
some of these contrivances will want looking to, for the place has been
some time empty, but there can be nothing very far wrong, and I can
guarantee that the bones of the house are good."

"Well, that's all right," said Dickson.  "I don't mind spending a
little money myself if the place suits me.  But of that, of course, I'm
not yet certain, for I've only had a glimpse of the outside. I wanted
to get into the policies, but a man at the lodge wouldn't let me.
They're a mighty uncivil lot down there."

"I'm very sorry to hear that," said Mr. Loudon in a tone of concern.

"Ay, and if I take the place I'll stipulate that you get rid of the
lodgekeepers."

"There won't be the slightest difficulty about that, for they are only
weekly tenants.  But I'm vexed to hear they were uncivil. I was glad to
get any tenant that offered, and they were well recommended to me."

"They're foreigners."

"One of them is--a Belgian refugee that Lady Morewood took an interest
in.  But the other--Spittal, they call him--I thought he was Scotch."

"He's not that.  And I don't like the innkeeper either.  I would want
him shifted."

Dr. Loudon laughed.  "I dare say Dobson is a rough diamond. There's
worse folk in the world all the same, but I don't think he will want to
stay.  He only went there to pass the time till he heard from his
brother in Vancouver.  He's a roving spirit, and will be off overseas
again."

"That's all right!" said Dickson, who was beginning to have horrid
suspicions that he might be on a wild-goose chase after all. "Well, the
next thing is for me to see over the House."

"Certainly.  I'd like to go with you myself.  What day would suit you?
Let me see.  This is Friday.  What about this day week?"

"I was thinking of to-morrow.  Since I'm down in these parts I may as
well get the job done."

Mr. Loudon looked puzzled.  "I quite see that.  But I don't think it's
possible.  You see, I have to consult the owners and get their consent
to a lease.  Of course they have the general purpose of letting,
but--well, they're queer folk the Kennedys," and his face wore the
half-embarrassed smile of an honest man preparing to make confidences.
"When poor Mr. Quentin died, the place went to his two sisters in joint
ownership.  A very bad arrangement, as you can imagine.  It isn't
entailed, and I've always been pressing them to sell, but so far they
won't hear of it.  They both married Englishmen, so it will take a day
or two to get in touch with them. One, Mrs. Stukely, lives in
Devonshire.  The other--Miss Katie that was--married Sir Frances
Morewood, the general, and I hear that she's expected back in London
next Monday from the Riviera.  I'll wire and write first thing
to-morrow morning.  But you must give me a day or two."

Dickson felt himself waking up.  His doubts about his own sanity were
dissolving, for, as his mind reasoned, the factor was prepared to do
anything he asked--but only after a week had gone.  What he was
concerned with was the next few days.

"All the same I would like to have a look at the place to-morrow, even
if nothing comes of it."

Mr. Loudon looked seriously perplexed.  "You will think me absurdly
fussy, Mr. McCunn, but I must really beg of you to give up the idea.
The Kennedys, as I have said, are--well, not exactly like other people,
and I have the strictest orders not to let any one visit the house
without their express leave.  It sounds a ridiculous rule, but I assure
you it's as much as my job is worth to disregard it."

"D'you mean to say not a soul is allowed inside the House?"

"Not a soul."

"Well, Mr. Loudon, I'm going to tell you a queer thing, which I think
you ought to know.  When I was taking a walk the other night--your
Belgian wouldn't let me into the policies, but I went down the
glen--what's that they call it? the Garple Dean--I got round the back
where the old ruin stands and I had a good look at the House. I tell
you there was somebody in it."

"It would be Spittal, who acts as caretaker."

"It was not.  It was a woman.  I saw her on the verandah."

The candid grey eyes were looking straight at Dickson, who managed to
bring his own shy orbs to meet them.  He thought that he detected a
shade of hesitation.  Then Mr. Loudon got up from his chair and stood
on the hearthrug looking down at his visitor.  He laughed, with some
embarrassment, but ever so pleasantly.

"I really don't know what you will think of me, Mr. McCunn. Here are
you, coming to do us all a kindness, and lease that infernal white
elephant, and here have I been steadily hoaxing you for the last five
minutes.  I humbly ask your pardon.  Set it down to the loyalty of an
old family lawyer.  Now, I am going to tell you the truth and take you
into our confidence, for I know we are safe with you.  The Kennedys
are--always have been--just a wee bit queer.  Old inbred stock, you
know.  They will produce somebody like poor Mr. Quentin, who was as
sane as you or me, but as a rule in every generation there is one
member of the family--or more--who is just a little bit---" and he
tapped his forehead.  "Nothing violent, you understand, but just not
quite 'wise and world-like,' as the old folk say.  Well, there's a
certain old lady, an aunt of Mr. Quentin and his sisters, who has
always been about tenpence in the shilling.  Usually she lives at
Bournemouth, but one of her crazes is a passion for Huntingtower, and
the Kennedys have always humoured her and had her to stay every spring.
When the House was shut up that became impossible, but this year she
took such a craving to come back, that Lady Morewood asked me to
arrange it. It had to be kept very quiet, but the poor old thing is
perfectly harmless, and just sits and knits with her maid and looks out
of the seaward windows.  Now you see why I can't take you there
to-morrow. I have to get rid of the old lady, who in any case was
travelling south early next week.  Do you understand?"

"Perfectly," said Dickson with some fervour.  He had learned exactly
what he wanted.  The factor was telling him lies.  Now he knew where to
place Mr. Loudon.

He always looked back upon what followed as a very creditable piece of
play-acting for a man who had small experience in that line.

"Is the old lady a wee wizened body, with a black cap and something
like a white cashmere shawl round her shoulders?"

"You describe her exactly," Mr. Loudon replied eagerly.

"That would explain the foreigners."

"Of course.  We couldn't have natives who would make the thing the
clash of the countryside."

"Of course not.  But it must be a difficult job to keep a business like
that quiet.  Any wandering policeman might start inquiries. And
supposing the lady became violent?"

"Oh, there's no fear of that.  Besides, I've a position in this
country--Deputy Fiscal and so forth--and a friend of the Chief
Constable. I think I may be trusted to do a little private explaining
if the need arose."

"I see," said Dickson.  He saw, indeed, a great deal which would give
him food for furious thought.  "Well, I must possess my soul in
patience.  Here's my Glasgow address, and I look to you to send me a
telegram whenever you're ready for me.  I'm at the Salutation to-night,
and go home to-morrow with the first train.  Wait a minute"--and he
pulled out his watch--"there's a train stops at Auchenlochan at 10.17.
I think I'll catch that.... Well Mr. Loudon, I'm very much obliged to
you, and I'm glad to think that it'll no' be long till we renew our
acquaintance."

The factor accompanied him to the door, diffusing geniality. "Very
pleased indeed to have met you.  A pleasant journey and a quick return."

The street was still empty.  Into a corner of the arches opposite the
moon was shining, and Dickson retired thither to consult his map of the
neighbourhood.  He found what he wanted, and, as he lifted his eyes,
caught sight of a man coming down the causeway. Promptly he retired
into the shadow and watched the new-comer. There could be no mistake
about the figure; the bulk, the walk, the carriage of the head marked
it for Dobson.  The innkeeper went slowly past the factor's house; then
halted and retraced his steps; then, making sure that the street was
empty, turned into the side lane which led to the garden.

This was what sailors call a cross-bearing, and strengthened Dickson's
conviction.  He delayed no longer, but hurried down the side street by
which the north road leaves the town.

He had crossed the bridge of Lochan and was climbing the steep ascent
which led to the heathy plateau separating that stream from the Garple
before he had got his mind quite clear on the case. FIRST, Loudon was
in the plot, whatever it was; responsible for the details of the girl's
imprisonment, but not the main author. That must be the Unknown who was
still to come, from whom Spidel took his orders.  Dobson was probably
Loudon's special henchman, working directly under him.  SECONDLY, the
immediate object had been the jewels, and they were happily safe in the
vaults of the incorruptible Mackintosh. But, THIRD--and this only on
Saskia's evidences--the worst danger to her began with the arrival of
the Unknown.  What could that be? Probably, kidnapping.  He was
prepared to believe anything of people like Bolsheviks.  And, FOURTH,
this danger was due within the next day or two.  Loudon had been quite
willing to let him into the house and to sack all the watchers within a
week from that date. The natural and right thing was to summon the aid
of the law, but, FIFTH, that would be a slow business with Loudon able
to put spokes in the wheels and befog the authorities, and the mischief
would be done before a single policeman showed his face in Dalquharter.
Therefore, SIXTH, he and Heritage must hold the fort in the meantime,
and he would send a wire to his lawyer, Mr. Caw, to get to work with
the constabulary.  SEVENTH, he himself was probably free from suspicion
in both Loudon's and Dobson's minds as a harmless fool. But that
freedom would not survive his reappearance in Dalquharter. He could
say, to be sure, that he had come back to see his auntie, but that
would not satisfy the watchers, since, so far as they knew, he was the
only man outside the gang who was aware that people were dwelling in
the House.  They would not tolerate his presence in the neighbourhood.

He formulated his conclusions as if it were an ordinary business deal,
and rather to his surprise was not conscious of any fear.  As he pulled
together the belt of his waterproof he felt the reassuring bulges in
its pockets which were his pistol and cartridges.  He reflected that it
must be very difficult to miss with a pistol if you fired it at, say,
three yards, and if there was to be shooting that would be his range.
Mr. McCunn had stumbled on the precious truth that the best way to be
rid of quaking knees is to keep a busy mind.

He crossed the ridge of the plateau and looked down on the Garple glen.
There were the lights of Dalquharter--or rather a single light, for the
inhabitants went early to bed.  His intention was to seek quarters with
Mrs. Morran, when his eye caught a gleam in a hollow of the moor a
little to the east.  He knew it for the camp-fire around which Dougal's
warriors bivouacked.  The notion came to him to go there instead, and
hear the news of the day before entering the cottage. So he crossed the
bridge, skirted a plantation of firs, and scrambled through the broom
and heather in what he took to be the right direction.

The moon had gone down, and the quest was not easy.  Dickson had come
to the conclusion that he was on the wrong road, when he was summoned
by a voice which seemed to arise out of the ground.

"Who goes there?"

"What's that you say?"

"Who goes there?"  The point of a pole was held firmly against his
chest.

"I'm Mr. McCunn, a friend of Dougal's."

"Stand, friend." The shadow before him whistled and another shadow
appeared.  "Report to the Chief that there's a man here, name o'
McCunn, seekin' for him."

Presently the messenger returned with Dougal and a cheap lantern which
he flashed in Dickson's face.

"Oh, it's you," said that leader, who had his jaw bound up as if he had
the toothache.  "What are ye doing back here?"

"To tell the truth, Dougal," was the answer, "I couldn't stay away. I
was fair miserable when I thought of Mr. Heritage and you laddies left
to yourselves.  My conscience simply wouldn't let me stop at home, so
here I am."

Dougal grunted, but clearly he approved, for from that moment he
treated Dickson with a new respect.  Formerly when he had referred to
him at all it had been as "auld McCunn."  Now it was "Mister McCunn."
He was given rank as a worthy civilian ally.  The bivouac was a
cheerful place in the wet night.  A great fire of pine roots and old
paling posts hissed in the fine rain, and around it crouched several
urchins busy making oatmeal cakes in the embers.  On one side a
respectable lean-to had been constructed by nailing a plank to two
fir-trees, running sloping poles thence to the ground, and thatching
the whole with spruce branches and heather.  On the other side two
small dilapidated home-made tents were pitched.  Dougal motioned his
companion into the lean-to, where they had some privacy from the rest
of the band.

"Well, what's your news?"  Dickson asked.  He noticed that the
Chieftain seemed to have been comprehensively in the wars, for apart
from the bandage on his jaw, he had numerous small cuts on his brow,
and a great rent in one of his shirt sleeves.  Also he appeared to be
going lame, and when he spoke a new gap was revealed in his large teeth.

"Things," said Dougal solemnly, "has come to a bonny cripus. This very
night we've been in a battle."

He spat fiercely, and the light of war burned in his eyes.

"It was the tinklers from the Garple Dean.  They yokit on us about
seven o'clock, just at the darkenin'.  First they tried to bounce us.
We weren't wanted here, they said, so we'd better clear.  I telled them
that it was them that wasn't wanted.  'Awa' to Finnick,' says I. 'D'ye
think we take our orders from dirty ne'er-do-weels like you?' 'By God,'
says they, 'we'll cut your lights out,' and then the battle started."

"What happened?' Dickson asked excitedly.

"They were four muckle men against six laddies, and they thought they
had an easy job!  Little they kenned the Gorbals Die-Hards! I had been
expectin' something of the kind, and had made my plans. They first
tried to pu' down our tents and burn them.  I let them get within five
yards, reservin' my fire.  The first volley--stones from our hands and
our catties--halted them, and before they could recover three of us had
got hold o' burnin' sticks frae the fire and were lammin' into them.
We kinnled their claes, and they fell back swearin' and stampin' to get
the fire out.  Then I gave the word and we were on them wi' our pales,
usin' the points accordin' to instructions. My orders was to keep a
good distance, for if they had grippit one o' us he'd ha' been done
for.  They were roarin' mad by now, and twae had out their knives, but
they couldn't do muckle, for it was gettin' dark, and they didn't ken
the ground like us, and were aye trippin' and tumblin'. But they
pressed us hard, and one o' them landed me an awful clype on the jaw.
They were still aiming at our tents, and I saw that if they got near
the fire again it would be the end o' us. So I blew my whistle for
Thomas Yownie, who was in command o' the other half of us, with
instructions to fall upon their rear. That brought Thomas up, and the
tinklers had to face round about and fight a battle on two fronts.  We
charged them and they broke, and the last seen o' them they were
coolin' their burns in the Garple."

"Well done, man.  Had you many casualties?"

"We're a' a wee thing battered, but nothing to hurt.  I'm the worst,
for one o' them had a grip o' me for about three seconds, and Gosh! he
was fierce."

"They're beaten off for the night, anyway?"

"Ay, for the night.  But they'll come back, never fear.  That's why I
said that things had come to a cripus."

"What's the news from the House?"

"A quiet day, and no word o' Lean or Dobson."

Dickson nodded.  "They were hunting me."

"Mr. Heritage has gone to bide in the Hoose.  They were watchin' the
Garple Dean, so I took him round by the Laver foot and up the rocks.
He's a souple yin, yon.  We fund a road up the rocks and got in by the
verandy.  Did ye ken that the lassie had a pistol? Well, she has, and
it seems that Mr. Heritage is a good shot wi' a pistol, so there's some
hope thereaways.... Are the jools safe?"

"Safe in the bank.  But the jools were not the main thing."

Dougal nodded.  "So I was thinkin'.  The lassie wasn't muckle the
easier for gettin' rid o' them.  I didn't just quite understand what
she said to Mr. Heritage, for they were aye wanderin' into foreign
langwidges, but it seems she's terrible feared o' somebody that may
turn up any moment.  What's the reason I can't say.  She's maybe got a
secret, or maybe it's just that she's ower bonny."

"That's the trouble," said Dickson, and proceeded to recount his
interview with the factor, to which Dougal gave close attention. "Now
the way I read the thing is this.  There's a plot to kidnap that lady
for some infernal purpose, and it depends on the arrival of some person
or persons, and it's due to happen in the next day or two. If we try to
work it through the police alone, they'll beat us, for Loudon will
manage to hang the business up until it's too late. So we must take on
the job ourselves.  We must stand a siege, Mr. Heritage and me and you
laddies, and for that purpose we'd better all keep together.  It won't
be extra easy to carry her off from all of us, and if they do manage it
we'll stick to their heels....  Man, Dougal, isn't it a queer thing
that whiles law-abiding folk have to make their own laws?...  So my
plan is that the lot of us get into the House and form a garrison.  If
you don't, the tinklers will come back and you'll no' beat them in the
daylight."

"I doubt no'," said Dougal.  "But what about our meat?"

"We must lay in provisions.  We'll get what we can from Mrs. Morran,
and I've left a big box of fancy things at Dalquharter station. Can you
laddies manage to get it down here?"

Dougal reflected.  "Ay, we can hire Mrs. Sempill's powny, the same that
fetched our kit."

"Well, that's your job to-morrow.  See, I'll write you a line to the
station-master.  And will you undertake to get it some way into the
House?"

"There's just the one road open--by the rocks.  It'll have to be done.
It CAN be done."

"And I've another job.  I'm writing this telegram to a friend in
Glasgow who will put a spoke in Mr. Loudon's wheel.  I want one of you
to go to Kirkmichael to send it from the telegraph office there."

Dougal placed the wire to Mr. Caw in his bosom.  "What about yourself?
We want somebody outside to keep his eyes open.  It's bad strawtegy to
cut off your communications."

Dickson thought for a moment.  "I believe you're right.  I believe the
best plan for me is to go back to Mrs. Morran's as soon as the old
body's like to be awake.  You can always get at me there, for it's easy
to slip into her back kitchen without anybody in the village seeing
you.... Yes, I'll do that, and you'll come and report developments to
me.  And now I'm for a bite and a pipe. It's hungry work travelling the
country in the small hours."

"I'm going to introjuice ye to the rest o' us," said Dougal. "Here,
men!" he called, and four figures rose from the side of the fire.  As
Dickson munched a sandwich he passed in review the whole company of the
Gorbals Die-Hards, for the pickets were also brought in, two others
taking their places.  There was Thomas Yownie, the Chief of Staff, with
a wrist wound up in the handkerchief which he had borrowed from his
neck.  There was a burly lad who wore trousers much too large for him,
and who was known as Peer Pairson, a contraction presumably for Peter
Paterson.  After him came a lean tall boy who answered to the name of
Napoleon.  There was a midget of a child, desperately sooty in the face
either from battle or from fire-tending, who was presented as Wee
Jaikie.  Last came the picket who had held his pole at Dickson's chest,
a sandy-haired warrior with a snub nose and the mouth and jaw of a
pug-dog.  He was Old Bill, or, in Dougal's parlance, "Auld Bull."

The Chieftain viewed his scarred following with a grim content. "That's
a tough lot for ye, Mr. McCunn.  Used a' their days wi' sleepin' in
coal-rees and dunnies and dodgin' the polis.  Ye'll no beat the Gorbals
Die-Hards."

"You're right, Dougal," said Dickson.  "There's just the six of you. If
there were a dozen, I think this country would be needing some new kind
of a government."




CHAPTER VIII

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' verra 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."




CHAPTER IX

THE FIRST BATTLE OF THE CRUIVES


The old keep of Huntingtower stood some three hundred yards from the
edge of the cliffs, a gnarled wood of hazels and oaks protecting it
from the sea-winds.  It was still in fair preservation, having till
twenty years before been an adjunct of the house of Dalquharter, and
used as kitchen, buttery, and servants' quarters.  There had been
residential wings attached, dating from the mid-eighteenth century, but
these had been pulled down and used for the foundations of the new
mansion.  Now it stood a lonely shell, its three storeys, each a single
great room connected by a spiral stone staircase, being dedicated to
lumber and the storage of produce.  But it was dry and intact, its
massive oak doors defied any weapon short of artillery, its narrow
unglazed windows would scarcely have admitted a cat--a place
portentously strong, gloomy, but yet habitable.

Dougal opened the main door with a massy key.  "The lassie fund it," he
whispered to Dickson, "somewhere about the kitchen--and I guessed it
was the key o' this castle.  I was thinkin' that if things got ower hot
it would be a good plan to flit here.  Change our base, like." The
Chieftain's occasional studies in war had trained his tongue to a
military jargon.

In the ground room lay a fine assortment of oddments, including old
bedsteads and servants' furniture, and what looked like ancient
discarded deerskin rugs.  Dust lay thick over everything, and they
heard the scurry of rats.  A dismal place, indeed, but Dickson felt
only its strangeness.  The comfort of being back again among allies had
quickened his spirit to an adventurous mood.  The old lords of
Huntingtower had once quarrelled and revelled and plotted here, and now
here he was at the same game.  Present and past joined hands over the
gulf of years.  The saga of Huntingtower was not ended.

The Die-Hards had brought with them their scanty bedding, their
lanterns and camp-kettles.  These and the provisions from Mearns Street
were stowed away in a corner.

"Now for the Hoose, men," said Dougal.  They stole over the downs to
the shrubbery, and Dickson found himself almost in the same place as he
had lain in three days before, watching a dusky lawn, while the wet
earth soaked through his trouser knees and the drip from the azaleas
trickled over his spine.  Two of the boys fetched the ladder and placed
it against the verandah wall.  Heritage first, then Dickson, darted
across the lawn and made the ascent.  The six scouts followed, and the
ladder was pulled up and hidden among the verandah litter. For a second
the whole eight stood still and listened.  There was no sound except
the murmur of the now falling wind and the melancholy hooting of owls.
The garrison had entered the Dark Tower.

A council in whispers was held in the garden-room.

"Nobody must show a light," Heritage observed.  "It mustn't be known
that we're here.  Only the Princess will have a lamp.  Yes"--this in
answer to Dickson--"she knows that we're coming--you too. We'll hunt
for quarters later upstairs.  You scouts, you must picket every
possible entrance.  The windows are safe, I think, for they are locked
from the inside.  So is the main door.  But there's the verandah door,
of which they have a key, and the back door beside the kitchen, and I'm
not at all sure that there's not a way in by the boiler-house.  You
understand.  We're holding his place against all comers.  We must
barricade the danger points.  The headquarters of the garrison will be
in the hall, where a scout must be always on duty.  You've all got
whistles?  Well, if there's an attempt on the verandah door the picket
will whistle once, if at the back door twice, if anywhere else three
times, and it's everybody's duty, except the picket who whistles, to
get back to the hall for orders."

"That's so," assented Dougal.

"If the enemy forces an entrance we must overpower him.  Any means you
like.  Sticks or fists, and remember if it's a scrap in the dark to
make for the man's throat.  I expect you little devils have eyes like
cats.  The scoundrels must be kept away from the ladies at all costs.
If the worst comes to the worst, the Princess has a revolver."

"So have I," said Dickson.  "I got it in Glasgow."

"The deuce you have!  Can you use it?"

"I don't know."

"Well, you can hand it over to me, if you like.  But it oughtn't to
come to shooting, if it's only the three of them.  The eight of us
should be able to manage three and one of them lame.  If the others
turn up--well, God help us all!  But we've got to make sure of one
thing, that no one lays hands on the Princess so long as there's one of
us left alive to hit out."

"Ye needn't be feared for that," said Dougal.  There was no light in
the room, but Dickson was certain that the morose face of the Chieftain
was lit with unholy joy.

"Then off with you.  Mr. McCunn and I will explain matters to the
ladies."

When they were alone, Heritage's voice took a different key. "We're in
for it, Dogson, old man.  There's no doubt these three scoundrels
expect reinforcements at any moment, and with them will be one who is
the devil incarnate.  He's the only thing on earth that that brave girl
fears.  It seems he is in love with her and has pestered her for years.
She hated the sight of him, but he wouldn't take no, and being a
powerful man--rich and well-born and all the rest of it--she had a
desperate time.  I gather he was pretty high in favour with the old
Court.  Then when the Bolsheviks started he went over to them, like
plenty of other grandees, and now he's one of their chief brains--none
of your callow revolutionaries, but a man of the world, a kind of
genius, she says, who can hold his own anywhere.  She believes him to
be in this country, and only waiting the right moment to turn up.  Oh,
it sounds ridiculous, I know, in Britain in the twentieth century, but
I learned in the war that civilization anywhere is a very thin crust.
There are a hundred ways by which that kind of fellow could bamboozle
all our law and police and spirit her away.  That's the kind of crowd
we have to face."

"Did she say what he was like in appearance?"

"A face like an angel--a lost angel, she says."

Dickson suddenly had an inspiration.

"D'you mind the man you said was an Australian--at Kirkmichael? I
thought myself he was a foreigner.  Well, he was asking for a place he
called Darkwater, and there's no sich place in the countryside. I
believe he meant Dalquharter.  I believe he's the man she's feared of."

A gasped "By Jove!" came from the darkness.  "Dogson, you've hit it.
That was five days ago, and he must have got on the right trail by this
time.  He'll be here to-night.  That's why the three have been lying so
quiet to-day.  Well, we'll go through with it, even if we haven't a
dog's chance!  Only I'm sorry that you should be mixed up in such a
hopeless business."

"Why me more than you?"

"Because it's all pure pride and joy for me to be here.  Good God, I
wouldn't be elsewhere for worlds.  It's the great hour of my life. I
would gladly die for her."

"Tuts, that's no' the way to talk, man.  Time enough to speak about
dying when there's no other way out.  I'm looking at this thing in a
business way.  We'd better be seeing the ladies."

They groped into the pitchy hall, somewhere in which a Die-Hard was on
picket, and down the passage to the smoking-room.  Dickson blinked in
the light of a very feeble lamp and Heritage saw that his hands were
cumbered with packages.  He deposited them on a sofa and made a ducking
bow.

"I've come back, Mem, and glad to be back.  Your jools are in safe
keeping, and not all the blagyirds in creation could get at them. I've
come to tell you to cheer up--a stout heart to a stey brae, as the old
folk say.  I'm handling this affair as a business proposition, so don't
be feared, Mem.  If there are enemies seeking you, there's friends on
the road too.... Now, you'll have had your dinner, but you'd maybe like
a little dessert."

He spread before them a huge box of chocolates, the best that Mearns
Street could produce, a box of candied fruits, and another of salted
almonds.  Then from his hideously overcrowded pockets he took another
box, which he offered rather shyly.  "That's some powder for your
complexion.  They tell me that ladies find it useful whiles."

The girl's strained face watched him at first in mystification, and
then broke slowly into a smile.  Youth came back into it, the smile
changed to a laugh, a low rippling laugh like far-away bells. She took
both his hands.

"You are kind," she said, "you are kind and brave.  You are a de-ar."

And then she kissed him.

Now, as far as Dickson could remember, no one had ever kissed him
except his wife.  The light touch of her lips on his forehead was like
the pressing of an electric button which explodes some powerful charge
and alters the face of a countryside.  He blushed scarlet; then he
wanted to cry; then he wanted to sing.  An immense exhilaration seized
him, and I am certain that if at that moment the serried ranks of
Bolshevy had appeared in the doorway, Dickson would have hurled himself
upon them with a joyful shout.

Cousin Eugenie was earnestly eating chocolates, but Saskia had other
business.

"You will hold the house?" she asked.

"Please God, yes," said Heritage.  "I look at it this way. The time is
very near when your three gaolers expect the others, their masters.
They have not troubled you in the past two days as they threatened,
because it was not worth while.  But they won't want to let you out of
their sight in the final hours, so they will almost certainly come here
to be on the spot.  Our object is to keep them out and confuse their
plans.  Somewhere in this neighbourhood, probably very near, is the man
you fear most.  If we nonplus the three watchers, they'll have to
revise their policy, and that means a delay, and every hour's delay is
a gain.  Mr. McCunn has found out that the factor Loudon is in the
plot, and he has purchase enough, it seems, to blanket for a time any
appeal to the law.  But Mr. McCunn has taken steps to circumvent him,
and in twenty-four hours we should have help here."

"I do not want the help of your law," the girl interrupted. "It will
entangle me.'

"Not a bit of it," said Dickson cheerfully.  "You see, Mem, they've
clean lost track of the jools, and nobody knows where they are but me.
I'm a truthful man, but I'll lie like a packman if I'm asked questions.
For the rest, it's a question of kidnapping, I understand, and that's a
thing that's not to be allowed.  My advice is to go to our beds and get
a little sleep while there's a chance of it. The Gorbals Die-Hards are
grand watch-dogs."

This view sounded so reasonable that it was at once acted upon. The
ladies' chamber was next door to the smoking-room--what had been the
old schoolroom.  Heritage arranged with Saskia that the lamp was to be
kept burning low, and that on no account were they to move unless
summoned by him.  Then he and Dickson made their way to the hall, where
there was a faint glimmer from the moon in the upper unshuttered
windows--enough to reveal the figure of Wee Jaikie on duty at the foot
of the staircase.  They ascended to the second floor, where, in a large
room above the hall, Heritage had bestowed his pack. He had managed to
open a fold of the shutters, and there was sufficient light to see two
big mahogany bedsteads without mattresses or bedclothes, and wardrobes
and chests of drawers sheeted in holland. Outside the wind was rising
again, but the rain had stopped. Angry watery clouds scurried across
the heavens.

Dickson made a pillow of his waterproof, stretched himself on one of
the bedsteads, and, so quiet was his conscience and so weary his body
from the buffetings of the past days, was almost instantly asleep. It
seemed to him that he had scarcely closed his eyes when he was awakened
by Dougal's hand pinching his shoulder.  He gathered that the moon was
setting, for the room was pitchy dark.

"The three o' them is approachin' the kitchen door," whispered the
Chieftain.  "I seen them from a spy-hole I made out o' a ventilator."

"Is it barricaded?" asked Heritage, who had apparently not been asleep.

"Aye, but I've thought o' a far better plan.  Why should we keep them
out?  They'll be safer inside.  Listen!  We might manage to get them in
one at a time.  If they can't get in at the kitchen door, they'll send
one o' them round to get in by another door and open to them.  That
gives us a chance to get them separated, and lock them up.  There's
walth o' closets and hidy-holes all over the place, each with good
doors and good keys to them.  Supposin' we get the three o' them shut
up--the others, when they come, will have nobody to guide them.  Of
course some time or other the three will break out, but it may be ower
late for them.  At present we're besieged and they're roamin' the
country.  Would it no' be far better if they were the ones lockit up
and we were goin' loose?"

"Supposing they don't come in one at a time?"  Dickson objected.

"We'll make them," said Dougal firmly.  "There's no time to waste. Are
ye for it?"

"Yes," said Heritage.  "Who's at the kitchen door?"

"Peter Paterson.  I told him no' to whistle, but to wait on me.... Keep
your boots off.  Ye're better in your stockin' feet.  Wait you in the
hall and see ye're well hidden, for likely whoever comes in will have a
lantern.  Just you keep quiet unless I give ye a cry. I've planned it
a' out, and we're ready for them."

Dougal disappeared, and Dickson and Heritage, with their boots tied
round their necks by their laces, crept out to the upper landing. The
hall was impenetrably dark, but full of voices, for the wind was
talking in the ceiling beams, and murmuring through the long passages.
The walls creaked and muttered and little bits of plaster fluttered
down. The noise was an advantage for the game of hide-and-seek they
proposed to play, but it made it hard to detect the enemy's approach.
Dickson, in order to get properly wakened, adventured as far as the
smoking-room.  It was black with night, but below the door of the
adjacent room a faint line of light showed where the Princess's lamp
was burning.  He advanced to the window, and heard distinctly a foot on
the grovel path that led to the verandah.  This sent him back to the
hall in search of Dougal, whom he encountered in the passage. That boy
could certainly see in the dark, for he caught Dickson's wrist without
hesitation.

"We've got Spittal in the wine-cellar," he whispered triumphantly. "The
kitchen door was barricaded, and when they tried it, it wouldn't open.
'Bide here,' says Dobson to Spittal, 'and we'll go round by another
door and come back and open to ye.'  So off they went, and by that time
Peter Paterson and me had the barricade down.  As we expected, Spittal
tries the key again and it opens quite easy.  He comes in and locks it
behind him, and, Dobson having took away the lantern, he gropes his way
very carefu' towards the kitchen.  There's a point where the
wine-cellar door and the scullery door are aside each other. He should
have taken the second, but I had it shut so he takes the first. Peter
Paterson gave him a wee shove and he fell down the two-three steps into
the cellar, and we turned the key on him.  Yon cellar has a grand door
and no windies."

"And Dobson and Leon are at the verandah door?  With a light?"

"Thomas Yownie's on duty there.  Ye can trust him.  Ye'll no fickle
Thomas Yownie."

The next minutes were for Dickson a delirium of excitement not
unpleasantly shot with flashes of doubt and fear.  As a child he had
played hide-and-seek, and his memory had always cherished the delights
of the game.  But how marvellous to play it thus in a great empty
house, at dark of night, with the heaven filled with tempest, and with
death or wounds as the stakes!

He took refuge in a corner where a tapestry curtain and the side of a
Dutch awmry gave him shelter, and from where he stood he could see the
garden-room and the beginning of the tiled passage which led to the
verandah door.  That is to say, he could have seen these things if
there had been any light, which there was not.  He heard the soft
flitting of bare feet, for a delicate sound is often audible in a din
when a loud noise is obscured.  Then a gale of wind blew towards him,
as from an open door, and far away gleamed the flickering light of a
lantern.

Suddenly the light disappeared and there was a clatter on the floor and
a breaking of glass.  Either the wind or Thomas Yownie.

The verandah door was shut, a match spluttered and the lantern was
relit.  Dobson and Leon came into the hall, both clad in long
mackintoshes which glistened from the weather.  Dobson halted and
listened to the wind howling in the upper spaces.  He cursed it
bitterly, looked at his watch, and then made an observation which woke
the liveliest interest in Dickson lurking beside the awmry and Heritage
ensconced in the shadow of a window-seat.

"He's late.  He should have been here five minutes syne.  It would be a
dirty road for his car."

So the Unknown was coming that night.  The news made Dickson the more
resolved to get the watchers under lock and key before reinforcements
arrived, and so put grit in their wheels.  Then his party must
escape--flee anywhere so long as it was far from Dalquharter.

"You stop here," said Dobson, "I'll go down and let Spidel in. We want
another lamp.  Get the one that the women use, and for God's sake get a
move on."

The sound of his feet died in the kitchen passage and then rung again
on the stone stairs.  Dickson's ear of faith heard also the soft patter
of naked feet as the Die-Hards preceded and followed him. He was
delivering himself blind and bound into their hands.

For a minute or two there was no sound but the wind, which had found a
loose chimney cowl on the roof and screwed out of it an odd sound like
the drone of a bagpipe.  Dickson, unable to remain any longer in one
place, moved into the centre of the hall, believing that Leon had gone
to the smoking-room.  It was a dangerous thing to do, for suddenly a
match was lit a yard from him.  He had the sense to drop low, and so
was out of the main glare of the light.  The man with the match
apparently had no more, judging by his execrations. Dickson stood stock
still, longing for the wind to fall so that he might hear the sound of
the fellow's boots on the stone floor. He gathered that they were
moving towards the smoking-room.

"Heritage," he whispered as loud as he dared, bet there was no answer.

Then suddenly a moving body collided with him.  He jumped a step back
and then stood at attention.  "Is that you, Dobson?"  a voice asked.

Now behold the occasional advantage of a nick-name.  Dickson thought he
was being addressed as "Dogson" after the Poet's fashion.  Had he
dreamed it was Leon he would not have replied, but fluttered off into
the shadows, and so missed a piece of vital news.

"Ay, it's me." he whispered.

His voice and accent were Scotch, like Dobson's, and Leon suspected
nothing.

"I do not like this wind," he grumbled.  "The Captain's letter said at
dawn, but there is no chance of the Danish brig making your little
harbour in this weather.  She must lie off and land the men by boats.
That I do not like.  It is too public."

The news--tremendous news, for it told that the new-comers would come
by sea, which had never before entered Dickson's head--so interested
him that he stood dumb and ruminating.  The silence made the Belgian
suspect; he put out a hand and felt a waterproofed arm which might have
been Dobson's.  But the height of the shoulder proved that it was not
the burly innkeeper.  There was an oath, a quick movement, and Dickson
went down with a knee on his chest and two hands at his throat.

"Heritage," he gasped.  "Help!"

There was a sound of furniture scraped violently on the floor. A gurgle
from Dickson served as a guide, and the Poet suddenly cascaded over the
combatants.  He felt for a head, found Leon's and gripped the neck so
savagely that the owner loosened his hold on Dickson.  The last-named
found himself being buffeted violently by heavy-shod feet which seemed
to be manoeuvring before an unseen enemy.  He rolled out of the road
and encountered another pair of feet, this time unshod.  Then came the
sound of a concussion, as if metal or wood had struck some part of a
human frame, and then a stumble and fall.

After that a good many things all seemed to happen at once. There was a
sudden light, which showed Leon blinking with a short loaded
life-preserver in his hand, and Heritage prone in front of him on the
floor.  It also showed Dickson the figure of Dougal, and more than one
Die-Hard in the background.  The light went out as suddenly as it had
appeared.  There was a whistle and a hoarse "Come on, men," and then
for two seconds there was a desperate silent combat.  It ended with
Leon's head meeting the floor so violently that its possessor became
oblivious of further proceedings. He was dragged into a cubby-hole,
which had once been used for coats and rugs, and the door locked on
him.  Then the light sprang forth again.  It revealed Dougal and five
Die-Hards, somewhat the worse for wear; it revealed also Dickson
squatted with outspread waterproof very like a sitting hen.

"Where's Dobson?" he asked.

"In the boiler-house," and for once Dougal's gravity had laughter in
it. "Govey Dick! but yon was a fecht!  Me and Peter Paterson and Wee
Jaikie started it, but it was the whole company afore the end. Are ye
better, Jaikie?"

"Ay, I'm better," said a pallid midget.

"He kickit Jaikie in the stomach and Jaikie was seeck," Dougal
explained. "That's the three accounted for.  I think mysel' that Dobson
will be the first to get out, but he'll have his work letting out the
others. Now, I'm for flittin' to the old Tower.  They'll no ken where
we are for a long time, and anyway yon place will be far easier to
defend. Without they kindle a fire and smoke us out, I don't see how
they'll beat us.  Our provisions are a' there, and there's a grand well
o' water inside.  Forbye there's the road down the rocks that'll keep
our communications open.... But what's come to Mr. Heritage?"

Dickson to his shame had forgotten all about his friend.  The Poet lay
very quiet with his head on one side and his legs crooked limply. Blood
trickled over his eyes from an ugly scar on his forehead. Dickson felt
his heart and pulse and found them faint but regular. The man had got a
swinging blow and might have a slight concussion; for the present he
was unconscious.

"All the more reason why we should flit," said Dougal.  "What d'ye say,
Mr. McCunn?"

"Flit, of course, but further than the old Tower.  What's the time?" He
lifted Heritage's wrist and saw from his watch that it was half-past
three.  "Mercy.  It's nearly morning.  Afore we put these blagyirds
away, they were conversing, at least Leon and Dobson were. They said
that they expected somebody every moment, but that the car would be
late.  We've still got that Somebody to tackle. Then Leon spoke to me
in the dark, thinking I was Dobson, and cursed the wind, saying it
would keep the Danish brig from getting in at dawn as had been
intended.  D'you see what that means? The worst of the lot, the ones
the ladies are in terror of, are coming by sea.  Ay, and they can
return by sea.  We thought that the attack would be by land, and that
even if they succeeded we could hang on to their heels and follow them,
till we got them stopped. But that's impossible!  If they come in from
the water, they can go out by the water, and there'll never be more
heard tell of the ladies or of you or me."

Dougal's face was once again sunk in gloom.  "What's your plan, then?"

"We must get the ladies away from here--away inland, far from the sea.
The rest of us must stand a siege in the old Tower, so that the enemy
will think we're all there.  Please God we'll hold out long enough for
help to arrive.  But we mustn't hang about here.  There's the man
Dobson mentioned--he may come any second, and we want to be away first.
Get the ladder, Dougal.... Four of you take Mr. Heritage, and two come
with me and carry the ladies' things.  It's no' raining, but the wind's
enough to take the wings off a seagull."

Dickson roused Saskia and her cousin, bidding them be ready in ten
minutes.  Then with the help of the Die-Hards he proceeded to transport
the necessary supplies--the stove, oil, dishes, clothes and wraps; more
than one journey was needed of small boys, hidden under clouds of
baggage.  When everything had gone he collected the keys, behind which,
in various quarters of the house, three gaolers fumed impotently, and
gave them to Wee Jaikie to dispose of in some secret nook.  Then he led
the two ladies to the verandah, the elder cross and sleepy, the younger
alert at the prospect of movement.

"Tell me again," she said.  "You have locked all the three up, and they
are now the imprisoned?"

"Well, it was the boys that, properly speaking, did the locking up."

"It is a great--how do you say?--a turning of the tables. Ah--what is
that?"

At the end of the verandah there was a clattering down of pots which
could not be due to the wind, since the place was sheltered. There was
as yet only the faintest hint of light, and black night still lurked in
the crannies.  Followed another fall of pots, as from a clumsy
intruder, and then a man appeared, clear against the glass door by
which the path descended to the rock garden. It was the fourth man,
whom the three prisoners had awaited. Dickson had no doubt at all about
his identity.  He was that villain from whom all the others took their
orders, the man whom the Princess shuddered at.  Before starting he had
loaded his pistol. Now he tugged it from his waterproof pocket, pointed
it at the other and fired.

The man seemed to be hit, for he spun round and clapped a hand to his
left arm.  Then he fled through the door, which he left open.

Dickson was after him like a hound.  At the door he saw him running and
raised his pistol for another shot.  Then he dropped it, for he saw
something in the crouching, dodging figure which was familiar.

"A mistake," he explained to Jaikie when he returned.  "But the shot
wasn't wasted.  I've just had a good try at killing the factor!"




CHAPTER X

DEALS WITH AN ESCAPE AND A JOURNEY


Five scouts' lanterns burned smokily in the ground room of the keep
when Dickson ushered his charges through its cavernous door. The lights
flickered in the gusts that swept after them and whistled through the
slits of the windows, so that the place was full of monstrous shadows,
and its accustomed odour of mould and disuse was changed to a salty
freshness.  Upstairs on the first floor Thomas Yownie had deposited the
ladies' baggage, and was busy making beds out of derelict iron
bedsteads and the wraps brought from their room.  On the ground floor
on a heap of litter covered by an old scout's blanket lay Heritage,
with Dougal in attendance.

The Chieftain had washed the blood from the Poet's brow, and the touch
of cold water was bringing him back his senses.  Saskia with a cry flew
to him, and waved off Dickson who had fetched one of the bottles of
liqueur brandy.  She slipped a hand inside his shirt and felt the
beating of his heart.  Then her slim fingers ran over his forehead.

"A bad blow," she muttered, "but I do not think he is ill. There is no
fracture.  When I nursed in the Alexander Hospital I learnt much about
head wounds.  Do not give him cognac if you value his life."

Heritage was talking now and with strange tongues.  Phrases like "lined
Digesters" and "free sulphurous acid" came from his lips. He implored
some one to tell him if "the first cook" was finished, and he upbraided
some one else for "cooling off" too fast.

The girl raised her head.  "But I fear he has become mad," she said.

"Wheesht, Mem," said Dickson, who recognized the jargon. "He's a
papermaker."

Saskia sat down on the litter and lifted his head so that it rested on
her breast.  Dougal at her bidding brought a certain case from her
baggage, and with swift, capable hands she made a bandage and rubbed
the wound with ointment before tying it up.  Then her fingers seemed to
play about his temples and along his cheeks and neck. She was the
professional nurse now, absorbed, sexless.  Heritage ceased to babble,
his eyes shut and he was asleep.

She remained where she was, so that the Poet, when a few minutes later
he woke, found himself lying with his head in her lap. She spoke first,
in an imperative tone: "You are well now. Your head does not ache.  You
are strong again."

"No.  Yes," he murmured.  Then more clearly: "Where am I? Oh, I
remember, I caught a lick on the head.  What's become of the brutes?"

Dickson, who had extracted food from the Mearns Street box and was
pressing it on the others, replied through a mouthful of Biscuit:
"We're in the old Tower.  The three are lockit up in the House. Are you
feeling better, Mr. Heritage?"

The Poet suddenly realized Saskia's position and the blood came to his
pale face.  He got to his feet with an effort and held out a hand to
the girl.  "I'm all right now, I think.  Only a little dicky on my
legs.  A thousand thanks, Princess.  I've given you a lot of trouble."

She smiled at him tenderly.  "You say that when you have risked your
life for me."

"There's no time to waste," the relentless Dougal broke in. "Comin'
over here, I heard a shot.  What was it?"

"It was me," said Dickson.  "I was shootin' at the factor."

"Did ye hit him?"

"I think so, but I'm sorry to say not badly.  When I last saw him he
was running too quick for a sore hurt man.  When I fired I thought it
was the other man--the one they were expecting."

Dickson marvelled at himself, yet his speech was not bravado, but the
honest expression of his mind.  He was keyed up to a mood in which he
feared nothing very much, certainly not the laws of his country. If he
fell in with the Unknown, he was entirely resolved, if his Maker
permitted him, to do murder as being the simplest and justest solution.
And if in the pursuit of this laudable intention he happened to wing
lesser game it was no fault of his.

"Well, it's a pity ye didn't get him," said Dougal, "him being what we
ken him to be.... I'm for holding a council o' war, and considerin' the
whole position.  So far we haven't done that badly. We've shifted our
base without serious casualties.  We've got a far better position to
hold, for there's too many ways into yon Hoose, and here there's just
one.  Besides, we've fickled the enemy. They'll take some time to find
out where we've gone.  But, mind you, we can't count on their staying
long shut up.  Dobson's no safe in the boiler-house, for there's a
skylight far up and he'll see it when the light comes and maybe before.
So we'd better get our plans ready. A word with ye, Mr. McCunn," and he
led Dickson aside.

"D'ye ken what these blagyirds were up to?" he whispered fiercely in
Dickson's ear.  "They were goin' to pushion the lassie.  How do I ken,
says you?  Because Thomas Yownie heard Dobson say to Lean at the
scullery door, 'Have ye got the dope?' he says, and Lean says, 'Aye.'
Thomas mindit the word for he had heard about it at the Picters."

Dickson exclaimed in horror.

"What d'ye make o' that?  I'll tell ye.  They wanted to make sure of
her, but they wouldn't have thought o' dope unless the men they
expectit were due to arrive at any moment.  As I see it, we've to face
a siege not by the three but by a dozen or more, and it'll no' be long
till it starts.  Now, isn't it a mercy we're safe in here?"

Dickson returned to the others with a grave face.

"Where d'you think the new folk are coming from?" he asked.

Heritage answered, "From Auchenlochan, I suppose?  Or perhaps down from
the hills?"

"You're wrong."  And he told of Leon's mistaken confidences to him in
the darkness.  "They are coming from the sea, just like the old
pirates."

"The sea," Heritage repeated in a dazed voice.

"Ay, the sea.  Think what that means.  If they had been coming by the
roads, we could have kept track of them, even if they beat us, and some
of these laddies could have stuck to them and followed them up till
help came.  It can't be such an easy job to carry a young lady against
her will along Scotch roads.  But the sea's a different matter.  If
they've got a fast boat they could be out of the Firth and away beyond
the law before we could wake up a single policeman.  Ay, and even if
the Government took it up and warned all the ports and ships at sea,
what's to hinder them to find a hidy-hole about Ireland--or Norway?  I
tell you, it's a far more desperate business than I thought, and it'll
no' do to wait on and trust that the Chief Constable will turn up afore
the mischief's done."

"The moral," said Heritage, "is that there can be no surrender. We've
got to stick it out in this old place at all costs."

"No," said Dickson emphatically.  "The moral is that we must shift the
ladies.  We've got the chance while Dobson and his friends are locked
up.  Let's get them as far away as we can from the sea.  They're far
safer tramping the moors, and it's no' likely the new folk will dare to
follow us."

"But I cannot go."  Saskia, who had been listening intently, shook her
head.  "I promised to wait here till my friend came. If I leave I shall
never find him."

"If you stay you certainly never will, for you'll be away with the
ruffians.  Take a sensible view, Mem.  You'll be no good to your friend
or your friend to you if before night you're rocking in a ship."

The girl shook her head again, gently but decisively.  "It was our
arrangement.  I cannot break it.  Besides, I am sure that he will come
in time, for he has never failed---"

There was a desperate finality about the quiet tones and the weary face
with the shadow of a smile on it.

Then Heritage spoke.  "I don't think your plan will quite do, Dogson.
Supposing we all break for the hinterland and the Danish brig finds the
birds flown, that won't end the trouble.  They will get on the
Princess's trail, and the whole persecution will start again. I want to
see things brought to a head here and now.  If we can stick it out here
long enough, we may trap the whole push and rid the world of a pretty
gang of miscreants.  Let them show their hand, and then, if the police
are here by that time, we can jug the lot for piracy or something
worse."

"That's all right," said Dougal, "but we'd put up a better fight if we
had the women off our mind.  I've aye read that when a castle was going
to be besieged the first thing was to get rid of the civilians."

"Sensible to the last, Dougal," said Dickson approvingly. "That's just
what I'm saying.  I'm strong for a fight, but put the ladies in a safe
bit first, for they're our weak point."

"Do you think that if you were fighting my enemies I would consent to
be absent?" came Saskia's reproachful question.

"'Deed no, Mem," said Dickson heartily.  His martial spirit was with
Heritage, but his prudence did not sleep, and he suddenly saw a way of
placating both.  "Just you listen to what I propose. What do we amount
to?  Mr. Heritage, six laddies, and myself--and I'm no more used to
fighting than an old wife.  We've seven desperate villains against us,
and afore night they may be seventy. We've a fine old castle here, but
for defence we want more than stone walls--we want a garrison.  I tell
you we must get help somewhere. Ay, but how, says you?  Well, coming
here I noticed a gentleman's house away up ayont the railway and close
to the hills.  The laird's maybe not at home, but there will be men
there of some kind--gamekeepers and woodmen and such like.  My plan is
to go there at once and ask for help. Now, it's useless me going alone,
for nobody would listen to me. They'd tell me to go back to the shop or
they'd think me demented. But with you, Mem, it would be a different
matter.  They wouldn't disbelieve you.  So I want you to come with me,
and to come at once, for God knows how soon our need will be sore.
We'll leave your cousin with Mrs. Morran in the village, for bed's the
place for her, and then you and me will be off on our business."

The girl looked at Heritage, who nodded.  "It's the only way," he said.
"Get every man jack you can raise, and if it's humanly possible get a
gun or two.  I believe there's time enough, for I don't see the brig
arriving in broad daylight."

"D'you not?" Dickson asked rudely.  "Have you considered what day this
is? It's the Sabbath, the best of days for an ill deed.  There's no
kirk hereaways, and everybody in the parish will be sitting indoors by
the fire."  He looked at his watch.  "In half an hour it'll be light.
Haste you, Mem, and get ready.  Dougal, what's the weather?"

The Chieftain swung open the door, and sniffed the air.  The wind had
fallen for the time being, and the surge of the tides below the rocks
rose like the clamour of a mob.  With the lull, mist and a thin drizzle
had cloaked the world again.

To Dickson's surprise Dougal seemed to be in good spirits. He began to
sing to a hymn tune a strange ditty.


"Class-conscious we are, and class-conscious wull be Till our fit's on
the neck o' the Boorjoyzee."


"What on earth are you singing?"  Dickson inquired.

Dougal grinned.  "Wee Jaikie went to a Socialist Sunday School last
winter because he heard they were for fechtin' battles. Ay, and they
telled him he was to join a thing called an International, and Jaikie
thought it was a fitba' club.  But when he fund out there was no magic
lantern or swaree at Christmas he gie'd it the chuck. They learned him
a heap o' queer songs.  That's one."

"What does the last word mean?"

"I don't ken.  Jaikie thought it was some kind of a draigon."

"It's a daft-like thing anyway.... When's high water?"

Dougal answered that to the best of his knowledge it fell between four
and five in the afternoon.

"Then that's when we may expect the foreign gentry if they think to
bring their boat in to the Garplefoot.... Dougal, lad, I trust you to
keep a most careful and prayerful watch.  You had better get the
Die-Hards out of the Tower and all round the place afore Dobson and Co.
get loose, or you'll no' get a chance later. Don't lose your mobility,
as the sodgers say.  Mr. Heritage can hold the fort, but you laddies
should be spread out like a screen."

"That was my notion," said Dougal.  "I'll detail two Die-Hards--Thomas
Yownie and Wee Jaikie--to keep in touch with ye and watch for you
comin' back.  Thomas ye ken already; ye'll no fickle Thomas Yownie.
But don't be mistook about Wee Jaikie.  He's terrible fond of greetin',
but it's no fright with him but excitement. It's just a habit he's
gotten.  When ye see Jaikie begin to greet, you may be sure that
Jaikie's gettin' dangerous."

The door shut behind them and Dickson found himself with his two
charges in a world dim with fog and rain and the still lingering
darkness. The air was raw, and had the sour smell which comes from
soaked earth and wet boughs when the leaves are not yet fledged.  Both
the women were miserably equipped for such an expedition.  Cousin
Eugenie trailed heavy furs, Saskia's only wrap was a bright-coloured
shawl about her shoulders, and both wore thin foreign shoes.  Dickson
insisted on stripping off his trusty waterproof and forcing it on the
Princess, on whose slim body it hung very loose and very short.  The
elder woman stumbled and whimpered and needed the constant support of
his arm, walking like a townswoman from the knees.  But Saskia swung
from the hips like a free woman, and Dickson had much ado to keep up
with her. She seemed to delight in the bitter freshness of the dawn,
inhaling deep breaths of it, and humming fragments of a tune.

Guided by Thomas Yownie they took the road which Dickson and Heritage
had travelled the first evening, through the shrubberies on the north
side of the House and the side avenue beyond which the ground fell to
the Laver glen.  On their right the House rose like a dark cloud, but
Dickson had lost his terror of it.  There were three angry men inside
it, he remembered: long let them stay there.  He marvelled at his mood,
and also rejoiced, for his worst fear had always been that he might
prove a coward.  Now he was puzzled to think how he could ever be
frightened again, for his one object was to succeed, and in that
absorption fear seemed to him merely a waste of time.  "It all comes of
treating the thing as a business proposition," he told himself.

But there was far more in his heart than this sober resolution. He was
intoxicated with the resurgence of youth and felt a rapture of audacity
which he never remembered in his decorous boyhood. "I haven't been
doing badly for an old man," he reflected with glee. What, oh what had
become of the pillar of commerce, the man who might have been a bailie
had he sought municipal honours, the elder in the Guthrie Memorial
Kirk, the instructor of literary young men? In the past three days he
had levanted with jewels which had once been an Emperor's and certainly
were not his; he had burglariously entered and made free of a strange
house; he had played hide-and-seek at the risk of his neck and had
wrestled in the dark with a foreign miscreant; he had shot at an
eminent solicitor with intent to kill; and he was now engaged in
tramping the world with a fairytale Princess. I blush to confess that
of each of his doings he was unashamedly proud, and thirsted for many
more in the same line.  "Gosh, but I'm seeing life," was his
unregenerate conclusion.

Without sight or sound of a human being, they descended to the Laver,
climbed again by the cart track, and passed the deserted West Lodge and
inn to the village.  It was almost full dawn when the three stood in
Mrs. Morran's kitchen.

"I've brought you two ladies, Auntie Phemie," said Dickson.

They made an odd group in that cheerful place, where the new-lit fire
was crackling in the big grate--the wet undignified form of Dickson,
unshaven of cheek and chin and disreputable in garb; the shrouded
figure of Cousin Eugenie, who had sunk into the arm-chair and closed
her eyes; the slim girl, into whose face the weather had whipped a glow
like blossom; and the hostess, with her petticoats kilted and an
ancient mutch on her head.

Mrs. Morran looked once at Saskia, and then did a thing which she had
not done since her girlhood.  She curtseyed.

"I'm proud to see ye here, Mem.  Off wi' your things, and I'll get ye
dry claes,  Losh, ye're fair soppin'  And your shoon! Ye maun change
your feet.... Dickson! Awa' up to the loft, and dinna you stir till I
give ye a cry.  The leddies will change by the fire. And You,
Mem"--this to Cousin Eugenie--"the place for you's your bed. I'll
kinnle a fire ben the hoose in a jiffey.  And syne ye'll have
breakfast--ye'll hae a cup o' tea wi' me now, for the kettle's just on
the boil.  Awa' wi' ye. Dickson," and she stamped her foot.

Dickson departed, and in the loft washed his face, and smoked a pipe on
the edge of the bed, watching the mist eddying up the village street.
From below rose the sounds of hospitable bustle, and when after some
twenty minutes' vigil he descended, he found Saskia toasting stockinged
toes by the fire in the great arm-chair, and Mrs. Morran setting the
table.

"Auntie Phemie, hearken to me.  We've taken on too big a job for two
men and six laddies, and help we've got to get, and that this very
morning.  D'you mind the big white house away up near the hills ayont
the station and east of the Ayr road?  It looked like a gentleman's
shooting lodge.  I was thinking of trying there.  Mercy!"

The exclamation was wrung from him by his eyes settling on Saskia and
noting her apparel.  Gone were her thin foreign clothes, and in their
place she wore a heavy tweed skirt cut very short, and thick homespun
stockings, which had been made for some one with larger feet than hers.
A pair of the coarse low-heeled shoes which country folk wear in the
farmyard stood warming by the hearth.  She still had her russet jumper,
but round her neck hung a grey wool scarf, of the kind known as a
"Comforter."  Amazingly pretty she looked in Dickson's eyes, but with a
different kind of prettiness.  The sense of fragility had fled, and he
saw how nobly built she was for all her exquisiteness. She looked like
a queen, he thought, but a queen to go gipsying through the world with.

"Ay, they're some o' Elspeth's things, rale guid furthy claes," said
Mrs. Morran complacently.  "And the shoon are what she used to gang
about the byres wi' when she was in the Castlewham dairy. The leddy was
tellin' me she was for trampin' the hills, and thae things will keep
her dry and warm.... I ken the hoose ye mean. They ca' it the Mains of
Garple.  And I ken the man that bides in it. He's yin Sir Erchibald
Roylance.  English, but his mither was a Dalziel. I'm no weel acquaint
wi' his forbears, but I'm weel eneuch acquaint wi' Sir Erchie, and
'better a guid coo than a coo o' a guid kind,' as my mither used to
say.  He used to be an awfu' wild callont, a freend o' puir Maister
Quentin, and up to ony deevilry. But they tell me he's a quieter lad
since the war, as sair lamed by fa'in oot o' an airyplane."

"Will he be at the Mains just now?" Dickson asked.

"I wadna wonder.  He has a muckle place in England, but he aye used to
come here in the back-end for the shootin' and in April for birds. He's
clean daft about birds.  He'll be out a' day at the craig watchin'
solans, or lyin' a' mornin' i' the moss lookin' at bog-blitters."

"Will he help, think you?"

"I'll wager he'll help.  Onyway it's your best chance, and better a wee
bush than nae beild.  Now, sit in to your breakfast."

It was a merry meal.  Mrs. Morran dispensed tea and gnomic wisdom.
Saskia ate heartily, speaking little, but once or twice laying her hand
softly on her hostess's gnarled fingers.  Dickson was in such spirits
that he gobbled shamelessly, being both hungry and hurried, and he
spoke of the still unconquered enemy with ease and disrespect, so that
Mrs. Morran was moved to observe that there was "naething sae bauld as
a blind mear."  But when in a sudden return of modesty he belittled his
usefulness and talked sombrely of his mature years he was told that he
"wad never be auld wi' sae muckle honesty." Indeed it was very clear
that Mrs. Morran approved of her nephew. They did not linger over
breakfast, for both were impatient to be on the road.  Mrs. Morran
assisted Saskia to put on Elspeth's shoes. "'Even a young fit finds
comfort in an auld bauchle,' as my mother, honest woman, used to say."
Dickson's waterproof was restored to him, and for Saskia an old
raincoat belonging to the son in South Africa was discovered, which
fitted her better.  "Siccan weather," said the hostess, as she opened
the door to let in a swirl of wind. "The deil's aye kind to his ain.
Haste ye back, Mem, and be sure I'll tak' guid care o' your leddy
cousin."

The proper way to the Mains of Garple was either by the station and the
Ayr road, or by the Auchenlochan highway, branching off half a mile
beyond the Garple bridge.  But Dickson, who had been studying the map
and fancied himself as a pathfinder, chose the direct route across the
Long Muir as being at once shorter and more sequestered. With the dawn
the wind had risen again, but it had shifted towards the north-west and
was many degrees colder.  The mist was furling on the hills like sails,
the rain had ceased, and out at sea the eye covered a mile or two of
wild water.  The moor was drenching wet, and the peat bogs were
brimming with inky pools, so that soon the travellers were soaked to
the knees.  Dickson had no fear of pursuit, for he calculated that
Dobson and his friends, even if they had got out, would be busy looking
for the truants in the vicinity of the House and would presently be
engaged with the old Tower.  But he realized, too, that speed on his
errand was vital, for at any moment the Unknown might arrive from the
sea.

So he kept up a good pace, half-running, half-striding, till they had
passed the railway, and he found himself gasping with a stitch in his
side, and compelled to rest in the lee of what had once been a
sheepfold.  Saskia amazed him.  She moved over the rough heather like a
deer, and it was her hand that helped him across the deeper hags.
Before such youth and vigour he felt clumsy and old.  She stood looking
down at him as he recovered his breath, cool, unruffled, alert as
Diana. His mind fled to Heritage, and it occurred to him suddenly that
the Poet had set his affections very high.  Loyalty drove him to speak
for his friend.

"I've got the easy job," he said.  "Mr. Heritage will have the whole
pack on him in that old Tower, and him with such a sore clout on his
head.  I've left him my pistol.  He's a terrible brave man!"

She smiled.

"Ay, and he's a poet too."

"So?" she said.  "I did not know.  He is very young."

"He's a man of very high ideels."

She puzzled at the word, and then smiled.  "He is like many of our
young men in Russia, the students--his mind is in a ferment and he does
not know what he wants.  But he is brave."

This seemed to Dickson's loyal soul but a chilly tribute.

"I think he is in love with me," she continued.

He looked up startled, and saw in her face that which gave him a view
into a strange new world.  He had thought that women blushed when they
talked of love, but he eyes were as grave and candid as a boy's. Here
was one who had gone through waters so deep that she had lost the
foibles of sex.  Love to her was only a word of ill omen, a threat on
the lips of brutes, an extra battalion of peril in an army of
perplexities.  He felt like some homely rustic who finds himself swept
unwittingly into the moonlight hunt of Artemis and her maidens.

"He is a romantic," she said.  "I have known so many like him."

"He's no that," said Dickson shortly.  "Why he used to be aye laughing
at me for being romantic.  He's one that's looking for truth and
reality,  he says, and he's terrible down on the kind of poetry I like
myself."

She smiled.  "They all talk so.  But you, my friend Dickson" (she
pronounced the name in two staccato syllables ever so prettily), "you
are different.  Tell me about yourself."

"I'm just what you see--a middle-aged retired grocer."

"Grocer?" she queried.  "Ah, yes, epicier.  But you are a very
remarkable epicier.  Mr. Heritage I understand, but you and those
little boys--no.  I am sure of one thing--you are not a romantic. You
are too humorous and--and--I think you are like Ulysses, for it would
not be easy to defeat you."

Her eyes were kind, nay affectionate, and Dickson experienced a
preposterous rapture in his soul, followed by a sinking, as he realized
how far the job was still from being completed.

"We must be getting on, Mem," he said hastily, and the two plunged
again into the heather.

The Ayr road was crossed, and the fir wood around the Mains became
visible, and presently the white gates of the entrance. A wind-blown
spire of smoke beyond the trees proclaimed that the house was not
untenanted.  As they entered the drive the Scots firs were tossing in
the gale, which blew fiercely at this altitude, but, the dwelling
itself being more in the hollow, the daffodil clumps on the lawn were
but mildly fluttered.

The door was opened by a one-armed butler who bore all the marks of the
old regular soldier.  Dickson produced a card and asked to see his
master on urgent business.  Sir Archibald was at home, he was told, and
had just finished breakfast.  The two were led into a large bare
chamber which had all the chill and mustiness of a bachelor's
drawing-room.  The butler returned, and said Sir Archibald would see
him.  "I'd better go myself first and prepare the way, Mem," Dickson
whispered, and followed the man across the hall.

He found himself ushered into a fair-sized room where a bright fire was
burning.  On a table lay the remains of breakfast, and the odour of
food mingled pleasantly with the scent of peat. The horns and heads of
big game, foxes' masks, the model of a gigantic salmon, and several
bookcases adorned the walls, and books and maps were mixed with
decanters and cigar-boxes on the long sideboard.  After the wild out of
doors the place seemed the very shrine of comfort.  A young man sat in
an arm-chair by the fire with a leg on a stool; he was smoking a pipe,
and reading the Field, and on another stool at his elbow was a pile of
new novels. He was a pleasant brown-faced young man, with remarkably
smooth hair and a roving humorous eye.

"Come in, Mr. McCunn.  Very glad to see you.  If, as I take it, you're
the grocer, you're a household name in these parts. I get all my
supplies from you, and I've just been makin' inroads on one of your
divine hams.  Now, what can I do for you?"

"I'm very proud to hear what you say, Sir Archibald.  But I've not come
on business.  I've come with the queerest story you ever heard in your
life and I've come to ask your help."

"Go ahead.  A good story is just what I want this vile mornin'."

"I'm not here alone.  I've a lady with me."

"God bless my soul!  A lady!"

"Ay, a princess.  She's in the next room."

The young man looked wildly at him and waved the book he had been
reading.

"Excuse me, Mr. McCunn, but are you quite sober?  I beg your pardon. I
see you are.  But you know, it isn't done.  Princesses don't as a rule
come here after breakfast to pass the time of day. It's more absurd
than this shocker I've been readin'."

"All the same it's a fact.  She'll tell you the story herself, and
you'll believe her quick enough.  But to prepare your mind I'll just
give you a sketch of the events of the last few days."

Before the sketch was concluded the young man had violently rung the
bell. "Sime," he shouted to the servant, "clear away this mess and lay
the table again.  Order more breakfast, all the breakfast you can get.
Open the windows and get the tobacco smoke out of the air. Tidy up the
place for there's a lady comin'.  Quick, you juggins!"

He was on his feet now, and, with his arm in Dickson's, was heading for
the door.

"My sainted aunt!  And you topped off with pottin' at the factor. I've
seen a few things in my day, but I'm blessed if I ever met a bird like
you!"




CHAPTER XI

GRAVITY OUT OF BED


It is probable that Sir Archibald Roylance did not altogether believe
Dickson's tale; it may be that he considered him an agreeable romancer,
or a little mad, or no more than a relief to the tedium of a wet Sunday
morning.  But his incredulity did not survive one glance at Saskia as
she stood in that bleak drawing-room among Victorian water-colours and
faded chintzes.  The young man's boyishness deserted him.  He stopped
short in his tracks, and made a profound and awkward bow.  "I am at
your service, Mademoiselle," he said, amazed at himself.  The words
seemed to have come out of a confused memory of plays and novels.

She inclined her head--a little on one side, and looked towards Dickson.

"Sir Archibald's going to do his best for us," said that squire of
dames. "I was telling him that we had had our breakfast."

"Let's get out of this sepulchre," said their host, who was recovering
himself.  "There's a roasting fire in my den.  Of course you'll have
something to eat--hot coffee, anyhow--I've trained my cook to make
coffee like a Frenchwoman.  The housekeeper will take charge of you, if
you want to tidy up, and you must excuse our ramshackle ways, please. I
don't believe there's ever been a lady in this house before, you know."

He led her to the smoking-room and ensconced her in the great chair by
the fire.  Smilingly she refused a series of offers which ranged from a
sheepskin mantle which he had got in the Pamirs and which he thought
might fit her, to hot whisky and water as a specific against a chill.
But she accepted a pair of slippers and deftly kicked off the brogues
provided by Mrs. Morran.  Also, while Dickson started rapaciously on a
second breakfast, she allowed him to pour her out a cup of coffee.

"You are a soldier?" she asked.

"Two years infantry--5th Battalion Lennox Highlanders, and then Flying
Corps.  Top-hole time I had too till the day before the Armistice, when
my luck gave out and I took a nasty toss. Consequently I'm not as fast
on my legs now as I'd like to be."

"You were a friend of Captain Kennedy?"

"His oldest.  We were at the same private school, and he was at
m'tutors, and we were never much separated till he went abroad to cram
for the Diplomatic and I started east to shoot things."

"Then I will tell you what I told Captain Kennedy."  Saskia, looking
into the heart of the peats, began the story of which we have already
heard a version, but she told it differently, for she was telling it to
one who more or less belonged to her own world.  She mentioned names at
which the other nodded.  She spoke of a certain Paul Abreskov. "I heard
of him at Bokhara in 1912," said Sir Archie, and his face grew solemn.
Sometimes she lapsed into French, and her hearer's brow wrinkled, but
he appeared to follow.  When she had finished he drew a long breath.

"My aunt!  What a time you've been through!  I've seen pluck in my day,
but yours!  It's not thinkable.  D'you mind if I ask a question,
Princess?  Bolshevism we know all about, and I admit Trotsky and his
friends are a pretty effective push; but how on earth have they got a
world-wide graft going in the time so that they can stretch their net
to an out-of-the-way spot like this? It looks as if they had struck a
Napoleon somewhere."

"You do not understand," she said.  "I cannot make any one
understand--except a Russian.  My country has been broken to pieces,
and there is no law in it; therefore it is a nursery of crime.  So
would England be, or France, if you had suffered the same misfortunes.
My people are not wickeder than others, but for the moment they are
sick and have no strength.  As for the government of the Bolsheviki it
matters little, for it will pass.  Some parts of it may remain, but it
is a government of the sick and fevered, and cannot endure in health.
Lenin may be a good man--I do not think so, but I do not know--but if
he were an archangel he could not alter things.  Russia is mortally
sick and therefore all evil is unchained, and the criminals have no one
to check them.  There is crime everywhere in the world, and the
unfettered crime in Russia is so powerful that it stretches its hand to
crime throughout the globe and there is a great mobilizing everywhere
of wicked men.  Once you boasted that law was international and that
the police in one land worked with the police of all others. To-day
that is true about criminals.  After a war evil passions are loosed,
and, since Russia is broken, in her they can make their
headquarters.... It is not Bolshevism, the theory, you need fear, for
that is a weak and dying thing.  It is crime, which to-day finds its
seat in my country, but is not only Russian.  It has no fatherland. It
is as old as human nature and as wide as the earth."

"I see," said Sir Archie.  "Gad, here have I been vegetatin' and
thinkin' that all excitement had gone out of life with the war, and
sometimes even regrettin' that the beastly old thing was over, and all
the while the world fairly hummin' with interest.  And Loudon too!"

"I would like your candid opinion on yon factor, Sir Archibald," said
Dickson.

"I can't say I ever liked him, and I've once or twice had a row with
him, for used to bring his pals to shoot over Dalquharter and he didn't
quite play the game by me.  But I know dashed little about him, for
I've been a lot away.  Bit hairy about the heels, of course.  A great
figure at local race-meetin's, and used to toady old Carforth and the
huntin' crowd.  He has a pretty big reputation as a sharp lawyer and
some of the thick-headed lairds swear by him, but Quentin never could
stick him.  It's quite likely he's been gettin' into Queer Street, for
he was always speculatin' in horseflesh, and I fancy he plunged a bit
on the Turf. But I can't think how he got mixed up in this show."

"I'm positive Dobson's his brother."

"And put this business in his way.  That would explain it all right....
He must be runnin' for pretty big stakes, for that kind of lad don't
dabble in crime for six-and-eightpence.... Now for the layout. You've
got three men shut up in Dalquharter House, who by this time have
probably escaped.  One of you--what's his name?--Heritage?--is in the
old Tower, and you think that they think the Princess is still there
and will sit round the place like terriers.  Sometime to-day the Danish
brig wall arrive with reinforcements, and then there will be a hefty
fight.  Well, the first thing to be done it to get rid of Loudon's
stymie with the authorities.  Princess, I'm going to carry you off in
my car to the Chief Constable.  The second thing is for you after that
to stay on here.  It's a deadly place on a wet day, but it's safe
enough."

Saskia shook her head and Dickson spoke for her.

"You'll no' get her to stop here.  I've done my best, but she's
determined to be back at Dalquharter.  You see she's expecting a
friend, and besides, if here's going to be a battle she'd like to be in
it.  Is that so, Mem?"

Sir Archie looked helplessly around him, and the sight of the girl's
face convinced him that argument would be fruitless.  "Anyhow she must
come with me to the Chief Constable.  Lethington's a slow bird on the
wing, and I don't see myself convincin' him that he must get busy
unless I can produce the Princess.  Even then it may be a tough job,
for it's Sunday, and in these parts people go to sleep till Monday
mornin'."

"That's just what I'm trying to get at," said Dickson.  "By all means
go to the Chief Constable, and tell him it's life or death. My lawyer
in Glasgow, Mr. Caw, will have been stirring him up yesterday, and you
two should complete the job... But what I'm feared is that he'll not be
in time.  As you say, it's the Sabbath day, and the police are terrible
slow.  Now any moment that brig may be here, and the trouble will
start.  I'm wanting to save the Princess, but I'm wanting too to give
these blagyirds the roughest handling they ever got in their lives.
Therefore I say there's no time to lose. We're far ower few to put up a
fight, and we want every man you've got about this place to hold the
fort till the police come."

Sir Archibald looked upon the earnest flushed face of Dickson with
admiration.  "I'm blessed if you're not the most whole-hearted brigand
I've ever struck."

"I'm not.  I'm just a business man."

"Do you realize that you're levying a private war and breaking every
law of the land?"

"Hoots!" said Dickson.  "I don't care a docken about the law. I'm for
seeing this job through.  What force can you produce?"

"Only cripples, I'm afraid.  There's Sime, my butler.  He was a
Fusilier Jock and, as you saw, has lost an arm.  Then McGuffog the
keeper is a good man, but he's still got a Turkish bullet in his thigh.
The chauffeur, Carfrae, was in the Yeomanry, and lost half a foot; and
there's myself, as lame as a duck.  The herds on the home farm are no
good, for one's seventy and the other is in bed with jaundice. The
Mains can produce four men, but they're rather a job lot."

"They'll do fine," said Dickson heartily.  "All sodgers, and no doubt
all good shots.  Have you plenty guns?"

Sir Archie burst into uproarious laughter.  "Mr. McCunn, you're a man
after my own heart.  I'm under your orders.  If I had a boy I'd put him
into the provision trade, for it's the place to see fightin'. Yes,
we've no end of guns.  I advise shot-guns, for they've more stoppin'
power in a rush than a rifle, and I take it it's a rough-and-tumble
we're lookin' for."

"Right," said Dickson.  "I saw a bicycle in the hall.  I want you to
lend it me, for I must be getting back.  You'll take the Princess and
do the best you can with the Chief Constable."

"And then?"

"Then you'll load up your car with your folk, and come down the hill to
Dalquharter.  There'll be a laddie, or maybe more than one, waiting for
you on this side the village to give you instructions. Take your orders
from them.  If it's a red-haired ruffian called Dougal you'll be wise
to heed what he says, for he has a grand head for battles."

Five minutes later Dickson was pursuing a quavering course like a snipe
down the avenue.  He was a miserable performer on a bicycle. Not for
twenty years had he bestridden one, and he did not understand such new
devices as free-wheels and change of gears.  The mounting had been the
worst part, and it had only been achieved by the help of a rockery.  He
had begun by cutting into two flower-beds, and missing a birch tree by
inches.  But he clung on desperately, well knowing that if he fell off
it would be hard to remount, and at length he gained the avenue.  When
he passed the lodge gates he was riding fairly straight, and when he
turned off the Ayr highway to the side road that led to Dalquharter he
was more or less master of his machine.

He crossed the Garple by an ancient hunch-backed bridge, observing even
in his absorption with the handle-bars that the stream was in roaring
spate.  He wrestled up the further hill with aching calf-muscles, and
got to the top just before his strength gave out. Then as the road
turned seaward he had the slope with him, and enjoyed some respite.  It
was no case for putting up his feet, for the gale was blowing hard on
his right cheek, but the downward grade enabled him to keep his course
with little exertion.  His anxiety to get back to the scene of action
was for the moment appeased, since he knew he was making as good speed
as the weather allowed, so he had leisure for thought.

But the mind of this preposterous being was not on the business before
him.  He dallied with irrelevant things--with the problems of youth and
love.  He was beginning to be very nervous about Heritage, not as the
solitary garrison of the old Tower, but as the lover of Saskia. That
everybody should be in love with her appeared to him only proper, for
he had never met her like, and assumed that it did not exist. The
desire of the moth for the star seemed to him a reasonable thing, since
hopeless loyalty and unrequited passion were the eternal stock-in-trade
of romance.  He wished he were twenty-five himself to have the chance
of indulging in such sentimentality for such a lady. But Heritage was
not like him and would never be content with a romantic folly.... He
had been in love with her for two years--a long time.  He spoke about
wanting to die for her, which was a flight beyond Dickson himself.  "I
doubt it will be what they call a 'grand passion,'" he reflected with
reverence.  But it was hopeless; he saw quite clearly that it was
hopeless.

Why, he could not have explained, for Dickson's instincts were subtler
than his intelligence.  He recognized that the two belonged to
different circles of being, which nowhere intersected.  That mysterious
lady, whose eyes had looked through life to the other side, was no mate
for the Poet.  His faithful soul was agitated, for he had developed for
Heritage a sincere affection.  It would break his heart, poor man.
There was he holding the fort alone and cheering himself with
delightful fancies about one remoter than the moon.  Dickson wanted
happy endings, and here there was no hope of such.  He hated to admit
that life could be crooked, but the optimist in him was now fairly
dashed.

Sir Archie might be the fortunate man, for of course he would soon be
in love with her, if he were not so already.  Dickson like all his
class had a profound regard for the country gentry. The business Scot
does not usually revere wealth, though he may pursue it earnestly, nor
does he specially admire rank in the common sense.  But for ancient
race he has respect in his bones, though it may happen that in public
he denies it, and the laird has for him a secular association with good
family.... Sir Archie might do. He was young, good-looking, obviously
gallant... But no!  He was not quite right either.  Just a trifle too
light in weight, too boyish and callow.  The Princess must have youth,
but it should be mighty youth, the youth of a Napoleon or a Caesar.  He
reflected that the Great Montrose, for whom he had a special
veneration, might have filled the bill. Or young Harry with his beaver
up?  Or Claverhouse in the picture with the flush of temper on his
cheek?

The meditations of the match-making Dickson came to an abrupt end. He
had been riding negligently, his head bent against the wind, and his
eyes vaguely fixed on the wet hill-gravel of the road.  Of his
immediate environs he was pretty well unconscious.  Suddenly he was
aware of figures on each side of him who advanced menacingly.  Stung to
activity he attempted to increase his pace, which was already good, for
the road at this point descended steeply.  Then, before he could
prevent it, a stick was thrust into his front wheel, and the next
second he was describing a curve through the air.  His head took the
ground, he felt a spasm of blinding pain, and then a sense of horrible
suffocation before his wits left him.

"Are ye sure it's the richt man, Ecky?" said a voice which he did not
hear.

"Sure.  It's the Glesca body Dobson telled us to look for yesterday.
It's a pund note atween us for this job.  We'll tie him up in the wud
till we've time to attend to him."

"Is he bad?"

"It doesna maitter," said the one called Ecky.  "He'll be deid onyway
long afore the morn."


Mrs. Morran all forenoon was in a state of un-Sabbatical disquiet.
After she had seen Saskia and Dickson start she finished her
housewifely duties, took Cousin Eugenie her breakfast, and made
preparation for the midday dinner.  The invalid in the bed in the
parlour was not a repaying subject.  Cousin Eugenie belonged to that
type of elderly women who, having been spoiled in youth, find the rest
of life fall far short of their expectations. Her voice had acquired a
perpetual wail, and the corners of what had once been a pretty mouth
drooped in an eternal peevishness. She found herself in a morass of
misery and shabby discomfort, but had her days continued in an even
tenor she would still have lamented.  "A dingy body," was Mrs. Morran's
comment, but she laboured in kindness.  Unhappily they had no common
language, and it was only by signs that the hostess could discover her
wants and show her goodwill.  She fed her and bathed her face, saw to
the fire and left her to sleep.  "I'm boilin' a hen to mak' broth for
your denner, Mem.  Try and get a bit sleep now." The purport of the
advice was clear, and Cousin Eugenie turned obediently on her pillow.

It was Mrs. Morran's custom of a Sunday to spend the morning in devout
meditation.  Some years before she had given up tramping the five miles
to kirk, on the ground that having been a regular attendant for fifty
years she had got all the good out of it that was probable. Instead she
read slowly aloud to herself the sermon printed in a certain religious
weekly which reached her every Saturday, and concluded with a chapter
or two of the Bible.  But to-day something had gone wrong with her
mind.  She could not follow the thread of the Reverend Doctor
MacMichael's discourse.  She could not fix her attention on the
wanderings and misdeeds of Israel as recorded in the Book of Exodus.
She must always be getting up to look at the pot on the fire, or to
open the back door and study the weather. For a little she fought
against her unrest, and then she gave up the attempt at concentration.
She took the big pot off the fire and allowed it to simmer, and
presently she fetched her boots and umbrella, and kilted her
petticoats.  "I'll be none the waur o' a breath o' caller air," she
decided.

The wind was blowing great guns but there was only the thinnest
sprinkle of rain.  Sitting on the hen-house roof and munching a raw
turnip was a figure which she recognized as the smallest of the
Die-Hards.  Between bites he was singing dolefully to the tune of
"Annie Laurie" one of the ditties of his quondam Sunday School:

  "The Boorjoys' brays are bonnie,
  Too-roo-ra-roo-raloo,
  But the Workers of the World
  Wull gar them a' look blue,
  And droon them in the sea,
  And--for bonnie Annie Laurie
  I'll lay me down and dee."


"Losh, laddie," she cried, "that's cauld food for the stomach. Come
indoors about midday and I'll gie ye a plate o' broth!" The Die-Hard
saluted and continued on the turnip.

She took the Auchenlochan road across the Garple bridge, for that was
the best road to the Mains, and by it Dickson and the others might be
returning.  Her equanimity at all seasons was like a Turk's, and she
would not have admitted that anything mortal had power to upset or
excite her: nevertheless it was a fast-beating heart that she now bore
beneath her Sunday jacket.  Great events, she felt, were on the eve of
happening, and of them she was a part. Dickson's anxiety was hers, to
bring things to a business-like conclusion. The honour of Huntingtower
was at stake and of the old Kennedys. She was carrying out Mr.
Quentin's commands, the dead boy who used to clamour for her treacle
scones.  And there was more than duty in it, for youth was not dead in
her old heart, and adventure had still power to quicken it.

Mrs. Morran walked well, with the steady long paces of the Scots
countrywoman.  She left the Auchenlochan road and took the side path
along the tableland to the Mains.  But for the surge of the gale and
the far-borne boom of the furious sea there was little noise; not a
bird cried in the uneasy air.  With the wind behind her Mrs. Morran
breasted the ascent till she had on her right the moorland running
south to the Lochan valley and on her left Garple chafing in its deep
forested gorges.  Her eyes were quick and she noted with interest a
weasel creeping from a fern-clad cairn.  A little way on she passed an
old ewe in difficulties and assisted it to rise.  "But for me, my
wumman, ye'd hae been braxy ere nicht," she told it as it departed
bleating. Then she realized that she had come a certain distance.
"Losh, I maun be gettin' back or the hen will be spiled," she cried,
and was on the verge of turning.

But something caught her eye a hundred yards farther on the road. It
was something which moved with the wind like a wounded bird, fluttering
from the roadside to a puddle and then back to the rushes. She advanced
to it, missed it, and caught it.

It was an old dingy green felt hat, and she recognized it as Dickson's.

Mrs. Morran's brain, after a second of confusion, worked fast and
clearly. She examined the road and saw that a little way on the gravel
had been violently agitated.  She detected several prints of hobnailed
boots. There were prints, too, on a patch of peat on the south side
behind a tall bank of sods.  "That's where they were hidin'," she
concluded. Then she explored on the other side in a thicket of hazels
and wild raspberries, and presently her perseverance was rewarded.  The
scrub was all crushed and pressed as if several persons had been
forcing a passage. In a hollow was a gleam of something white.  She
moved towards it with a quaking heart, and was relieved to find that it
was only a new and expensive bicycle with the front wheel badly buckled.

Mrs. Morran delayed no longer.  If she had walked well on her out
journey, she beat all records on the return.  Sometimes she would run
till her breath failed; then she would slow down till anxiety once more
quickened her pace.  To her joy, on the Dalquharter side of the Garple
bridge she observed the figure of a Die-Hard.  Breathless, flushed,
with her bonnet awry and her umbrella held like a scimitar, she seized
on the boy.

"Awfu' doin's!  They've grippit Maister McCunn up the Mains road just
afore the second milestone and forenent the auld bucht.  I fund his
hat, and a bicycle's lyin' broken in the wud.  Haste ye, man, and get
the rest and awa' and seek him.  It'll be the tinklers frae the Dean.
I'd gang misel' but my legs are ower auld.  Ah, laddie, dinna stop to
speir questions.  They'll hae him murdered or awa' to sea.  And maybe
the leddy was wi' him and they've got them baith.  Wae's me!  Wae's me!"

The Die-Hard, who was Wee Jaikie, did not delay.  His eyes had filled
with tears at her news, which we know to have been his habit. When Mrs.
Morran, after indulging in a moment of barbaric keening, looked back
the road she had come, she saw a small figure trotting up the hill like
a terrier who has been left behind.  As he trotted he wept bitterly.
Jaikie was getting dangerous.




CHAPTER XII

HOW MR. McCUNN COMMITTED AN ASSAULT UPON AN ALLY


Dickson always maintained that his senses did not leave him for more
than a second or two, but he admitted that he did not remember very
clearly the events of the next few hours.  He was conscious of a bad
pain above his eyes, and something wet trickling down his cheek. There
was a perpetual sound of water in his ears and of men's voices. He
found himself dropped roughly on the ground and forced to walk, and was
aware that his legs were inclined to wobble.  Somebody had a grip on
each arm, so that he could not defend his face from the brambles, and
that worried him, for his whole head seemed one aching bruise and he
dreaded anything touching it.  But all the time he did not open his
mouth, for silence was the one duty that his muddled wits enforced.  He
felt that he was not the master of his mind, and he dreaded what he
might disclose if he began to babble.

Presently there came a blank space of which he had no recollection at
all. The movement had stopped, and he was allowed to sprawl on the
ground. He thought that his head had got another whack from a bough,
and that the pain put him into a stupor.  When he awoke he was alone.

He discovered that he was strapped very tightly to a young Scotch fir.
His arms were bent behind him and his wrists tied together with cords
knotted at the back of the tree; his legs were shackled, and further
cords fastened them to the bole.  Also there was a halter round the
trunk and just under his chin, so that while he breathed freely enough,
he could not move his head.  Before him was a tangle of bracken and
scrub, and beyond that the gloom of dense pines; but as he could see
only directly in front his prospect was strictly circumscribed.

Very slowly he began to take his bearings.  The pain in his head was
now dulled and quite bearable, and the flow of blood had stopped, for
he felt the encrustation of it beginning on his cheeks. There was a
tremendous noise all around him, and he traced this to the swaying of
tree-tops in the gale.  But there was an undercurrent of deeper
sound--water surely, water churning among rocks.  It was a stream--the
Garple of course--and then he remembered where he was and what had
happened.

I do not wish to portray Dickson as a hero, for nothing would annoy him
more; but I am bound to say that his first clear thought was not of his
own danger.  It was intense exasperation at the miscarriage of his
plans.  Long ago he should have been with Dougal arranging operations,
giving him news of Sir Archie, finding out how Heritage was faring,
deciding how to use the coming reinforcements. Instead he was trussed
up in a wood, a prisoner of the enemy, and utterly useless to his side.
He tugged at his bonds, and nearly throttled himself.  But they were of
good tarry cord and did not give a fraction of an inch.  Tears of
bitter rage filled his eyes and made furrows on his encrusted cheek.
Idiot that he had been, he had wrecked everything!  What would Saskia
and Dougal and Sir Archie do without a business man by their side?
There would be a muddle, and the little party would walk into a trap.
He saw it all very clearly. The men from the sea would overpower them,
there would be murder done, and an easy capture of the Princess; and
the police would turn up at long last to find an empty headland.

He had also most comprehensively wrecked himself, and at the thought
genuine panic seized him.  There was no earthly chance of escape, for
he was tucked away in this infernal jungle till such time as his
enemies had time to deal with him.  As to what that dealing would be
like he had no doubts, for they knew that he had been their chief
opponent. Those desperate ruffians would not scruple to put an end to
him. His mind dwelt with horrible fascination upon throat-cutting, no
doubt because of the presence of the cord below his chin. He had heard
it was not a painful death; at any rate he remembered a clerk he had
once had, a feeble, timid creature, who had twice attempted suicide
that way.  Surely it could not be very bad, and it would soon be over.

But another thought came to him.  They would carry him off in the ship
and settle with him at their leisure.  No swift merciful death for him.
He had read dreadful tales of the Bolsheviks' skill in torture, and now
they all came back to him--stories of Chinese mercenaries, and men
buried alive, and death by agonizing inches.  He felt suddenly very
cold and sick, and hung in his bonds, for he had no strength in his
limbs.  Then the pressure on this throat braced him, and also quickened
his numb mind.  The liveliest terror ran like quicksilver through his
veins.

He endured some moments of this anguish, till after many despairing
clutches at his wits he managed to attain a measure of self-control. He
certainly wasn't going to allow himself to become mad. Death was death
whatever form it took, and he had to face death as many better men had
done before him.  He had often thought about it and wondered how he
should behave if the thing came to him.  Respectably, he had hoped;
heroically, he had sworn in his moments of confidence.  But he had
never for an instant dreamed of this cold, lonely, dreadful business.
Last Sunday, he remembered, he had basking in the afternoon sun in his
little garden and reading about the end of Fergus MacIvor in WAVERLEY
and thrilling to the romance of it; and Tibby had come out and summoned
him in to tea.  Then he had rather wanted to be a Jacobite in the '45
and in peril of his neck, and now Providence had taken him most
terribly at his word.

A week ago---!  He groaned at the remembrance of that sunny garden. In
seven days he had found a new world and tried a new life, and had come
now to the end of it.  He did not want to die, less now than ever with
such wide horizons opening before him. But that was the worst of it, he
reflected, for to have a great life great hazards must be taken, and
there was always the risk of this sudden extinguisher.... Had he to
choose again, far better the smooth sheltered bypath than this accursed
romantic highway on to which he had blundered.... No, by Heaven, no!
Confound it, if he had to choose he would do it all again.  Something
stiff and indomitable in his soul was bracing him to a manlier humour.
There was no one to see the figure strapped to the fir, but had there
been a witness he would have noted that at this stage Dickson shut his
teeth and that his troubled eyes looked very steadily before him.

His business, he felt, was to keep from thinking, for if he thought at
all there would be a flow of memories--of his wife, his home, his
books, his friends--to unman him.  So he steeled himself to blankness,
like a sleepless man imagining white sheep in a gate.... He noted a
robin below the hazels, strutting impudently.  And there was a tit on a
bracken frond, which made the thing sway like one of the see-saws he
used to play with as a boy.  There was no wind in that undergrowth, and
any movement must be due to bird or beast.  The tit flew off, and the
oscillations of the bracken slowly died away.  Then they began again,
but more violently, and Dickson could not see the bird that caused
them. It must be something down at the roots of the covert, a rabbit,
perhaps, or a fox, or a weasel.

He watched for the first sign of the beast, and thought he caught a
glimpse of tawny fur.  Yes, there it was--pale dirty yellow, a weasel
clearly.  Then suddenly the patch grow larger, and to his amazement he
looked at a human face--the face of a pallid small boy.

A head disentangled itself, followed by thin shoulders, and then by a
pair of very dirty bare legs.  The figure raised itself and looked
sharply round to make certain that the coast was clear. Then it stood
up and saluted, revealing the well-known lineaments of Wee Jaikie.

At the sight Dickson knew that he was safe by that certainty of
instinct which is independent of proof, like the man who prays for a
sign and has his prayer answered.  He observed that the boy was quietly
sobbing.  Jaikie surveyed the position for an instant with red-rimmed
eyes and then unclasped a knife, feeling the edge of the blade on his
thumb.  He darted behind the fir, and a second later Dickson's wrists
were free.  Then he sawed at the legs, and cut the shackles which tied
them together, and then--most circumspectly--assaulted the cord which
bound Dickson's neck to the trunk.  There now remained only the two
bonds which fastened the legs and the body to the tree.

There was a sound in the wood different from the wind and stream.
Jaikie listened like a startled hind.

"They're comin' back," he gasped.  "Just you bide where ye are and let
on ye're still tied up."

He disappeared in the scrub as inconspicuously as a rat, while two of
the tinklers came up the slope from the waterside. Dickson in a fever
of impatience cursed Wee Jaikie for not cutting his remaining bonds so
that he could at least have made a dash for freedom. And then he
realized that the boy had been right.  Feeble and cramped as he was, he
would have stood no chance in a race.

One of the tinklers was the man called Ecky.  He had been running hard,
and was mopping his brow.

"Hob's seen the brig," he said.  "It's droppin' anchor ayont the
Dookits whaur there's a bield frae the wund and deep water. They'll be
landit in half an 'oor.  Awa' you up to the Hoose and tell Dobson, and
me and Sim and Hob will meet the boats at the Garplefit."

The other cast a glance towards Dickson.

"What about him?" he asked.

The two scrutinized their prisoner from a distance of a few paces.
Dickson, well aware of his peril, held himself as stiff as if every
bond had been in place.  The thought flashed on him that if he were too
immobile they might think he was dying or dead, and come close to
examine him.  If they only kept their distance, the dusk of the wood
would prevent them detecting Jaikie's handiwork.

"What'll you take to let me go?" he asked plaintively.

"Naething that you could offer, my mannie," said Ecky.

"I'll give you a five-pound note apiece."

"Produce the siller," said the other.

"It's in my pocket."

"It's no' that.  We riped your pooches lang syne."

"I'll take you to Glasgow with me and pay you there.  Honour bright."

Ecky spat.  "D'ye think we're gowks?  Man, there's no siller ye could
pay wad mak' it worth our while to lowse ye.  Bide quiet there and
ye'll see some queer things ere nicht.  C'way, Davie."

The two set off at a good pace down the stream, while Dickson's pulsing
heart returned to its normal rhythm.  As the sound of their feet died
away Wee Jaikie crawled out from cover, dry-eyed now and very
business-like.  He slit the last thongs, and Dickson fell limply on his
face.

"Losh, laddie, I'm awful stiff," he groaned.  "Now, listen. Away all
your pith to Dougal, and tell him that the brig's in and the men will
be landing inside the hour.  Tell him I'm coming as fast as my legs
will let me.  The Princess will likely be there already and Sir
Archibald and his men, but if they're no', tell Dougal they're coming.
Haste you, Jaikie.  And see here, I'll never forget what you've done
for me the day.  You're a fine wee laddie!"

The obedient Die-Hard disappeared, and Dickson painfully and
laboriously set himself to climb the slope.  He decided that his
quickest and safest route lay by the highroad, and he had also some
hopes of recovering his bicycle.  On examining his body he seemed to
have sustained no very great damage, except a painful cramping of legs
and arms and a certain dizziness in the head.  His pockets had been
thoroughly rifled, and he reflected with amusement that he, the
well-to-do Mr. McCunn, did not possess at the moment a single copper.

But his spirits were soaring, for somehow his escape had given him an
assurance of ultimate success.  Providence had directly interfered on
his behalf by the hand of Wee Jaikie, and that surely meant that it
would see him through.  But his chief emotion was an ardour of
impatience to get to the scene of action.  He must be at Dalquharter
before the men from the sea; he must find Dougal and discover his
dispositions.  Heritage would be on guard in the Tower, and in a very
little the enemy would be round it.  It would be just like the Princess
to try and enter there, but at all costs that must be hindered.  She
and Sir Archie must not be cornered in stone walls, but must keep their
communications open and fall on the enemy's flank.  Oh, if the police
would only come it time, what a rounding up of miscreants that day
would see!

As the trees thinned on the brow of the slope and he saw the sky, he
realized that the afternoon was far advanced.  It must be well on for
five o'clock.  The wind still blew furiously, and the oaks on the
fringes of the wood were whipped like saplings.  Ruefully he admitted
that the gale would not defeat the enemy.  If the brig found a
sheltered anchorage on the south side of the headland beyond the
Garple, it would be easy enough for boats to make the Garple mouth,
though it might be a difficult job to get out again.  The thought
quickened his steps, and he came out of cover on to the public road
without a prior reconnaissance.  Just in front of him stood a
motor-bicycle.  Something had gone wrong with it for its owner was
tinkering at it, on the side farthest from Dickson.  A wild hope seized
him that this might be the vanguard of the police, and he went boldly
towards it.  The owner, who was kneeling, raised his face at the sound
of footsteps and Dickson looked into his eyes.

He recognized them only too well.  They belonged to the man he had seen
in the inn at Kirkmichael, the man whom Heritage had decided to be an
Australian, but whom they now know to be their arch-enemy--the man
called Paul who had persecuted the Princess for years and whom alone of
all beings on earth she feared.  He had been expected before, but had
arrived now in the nick of time while the brig was casting anchor.
Saskia had said that he had a devil's brain, and Dickson, as he stared
at him, saw a fiendish cleverness in his straight brows and a
remorseless cruelty in his stiff jaw and his pale eyes.

He achieved the bravest act of his life.  Shaky and dizzy as he was,
with freedom newly opened to him and the mental torments of his
captivity still an awful recollection, he did not hesitate. He saw
before him the villain of the drama, the one man that stood between the
Princess and peace of mind.  He regarded no consequences, gave no heed
to his own fate, and thought only how to put his enemy out of action.
There was a by spanner lying on the ground.  He seized it and with all
his strength smote at the man's face.

The motor-cyclist, kneeling and working hard at his machine, had raised
his head at Dickson's approach and beheld a wild apparition--a short
man in ragged tweeds, with a bloody brow and long smears of blood on
his cheeks.  The next second he observed the threat of attack, and
ducked his head so that the spanner only grazed his scalp. The
motor-bicycle toppled over, its owner sprang to his feet, and found the
short man, very pale and gasping, about to renew the assault. In such a
crisis there was no time for inquiry, and the cyclist was well trained
in self-defence.  He leaped the prostrate bicycle, and before his
assailant could get in a blow brought his left fist into violent
contact with his chin.  Dickson tottered a step or two and then
subsided among the bracken.

He did not lose his senses, but he had no more strength in him. He felt
horribly ill, and struggled in vain to get up.  The cyclist, a gigantic
figure, towered above him.  "Who the devil are you?" he was asking.
"What do you mean by it?"

Dickson had no breath for words, and knew that if he tried to speak he
would be very sick.  He could only stare up like a dog at the angry
eyes.  Angry beyond question they were, but surely not malevolent.
Indeed, as they looked at the shameful figure on the ground, amusement
filled them.  The face relaxed into a smile.

"Who on earth are you?" the voice repeated.  And then into it came
recognition.  "I've seen you before.  I believe you're the little man I
saw last week at the Black Bull.  Be so good as to explain why you want
to murder me."

Explanation was beyond Dickson, but his conviction was being woefully
shaken.  Saskia had said her enemy was a beautiful as a devil--he
remembered the phrase, for he had thought it ridiculous. This man was
magnificent, but there was nothing devilish in his lean grave face.

"What's your name?" the voice was asking.

"Tell me yours first," Dickson essayed to stutter between spasms of
nausea.

"My name is Alexander Nicholson," was the answer.

"Then you're no' the man."  It was a cry of wrath and despair.

"You're a very desperate little chap.  For whom had I the honour to be
mistaken?"

Dickson had now wriggled into a sitting position and had clasped his
hands above his aching head.

"I thought you were a Russian, name of Paul," he groaned.

"Paul!  Paul who?"

"Just Paul.  A Bolshevik and an awful bad lot."

Dickson could not see the change which his words wrought in the other's
face.  He found himself picked up in strong arms and carried to a
bog-pool where his battered face was carefully washed, his throbbing
brows laved, and a wet handkerchief bound over them. Then he was given
brandy in the socket of a flask, which eased his nausea.  The cyclist
ran his bicycle to the roadside, and found a seat for Dickson behind
the turf-dyke of the old bucht.

"Now you are going to tell me everything," he said.  "If the Paul who
is your enemy is the Paul I think him, then we are allies."

But Dickson did not need this assurance.  His mind had suddenly
received a revelation.  The Princess had expected an enemy, but also a
friend.  Might not this be the long-awaited friend, for whose sake she
was rooted to Huntingtower with all its terrors?

"Are you sure your name's no' Alexis?"  he asked.

"In my own country I was called Alexis Nicolaevitch, for I am a
Russian. But for some years I have made my home with your folk, and I
call myself Alexander Nicholson, which is the English form.  Who told
you about Alexis?

"Give me your hand," said Dickson shamefacedly.  "Man, she's been
looking for you for weeks.  You're terribly behind the fair."

"She!" he cried.  "For God's sake, tell me what you mean."

"Ay, she--the Princess.  But what are we havering here for? I tell you
at this moment she's somewhere down about the old Tower, and there's
boatloads of blagyirds landing from the sea.  Help me up, man, for I
must be off.  The story will keep.  Losh, it's very near the darkening.
If you're Alexis, you're just about in time for a battle."

But Dickson on his feet was but a frail creature.  He was still
deplorably giddy, and his legs showed an unpleasing tendency to
crumple. "I'm fair done," he moaned.  "You see, I've been tied up all
day to a tree and had two sore bashes on my head.  Get you on that
bicycle and hurry on, and I'll hirple after you the best I can.  I'll
direct you the road, and if you're lucky you'll find a Die-Hard about
the village. Away with you, man, and never mind me."

"We go together," said the other quietly.  "You can sit behind me and
hang on to my waist.  Before you turned up I had pretty well got the
thing in order."

Dickson in a fever of impatience sat by while the Russian put the
finishing touches to the machine, and as well as his anxiety allowed
put him in possession of the main facts of the story. He told of how he
and Heritage had come to Dalquharter, of the first meeting with Saskia,
of the trip to Glasgow with the jewels, of the exposure of Loudon the
factor, of last night's doings in the House, and of the journey that
morning to the Mains of Garple.  He sketched the figures on the
scene--Heritage and Sir Archie, Dobson and his gang, the Gorbals
Die-Hards.  He told of the enemy's plans so far as he knew them.

"Looked at from a business point of view," he said, "the situation's
like this.  There's Heritage in the Tower, with Dobson, Leon, and
Spidel sitting round him.  Somewhere about the place there's the
Princess and Sir Archibald and three men with guns from the Mains.
Dougal and his five laddies are running loose in the policies. And
there's four tinklers and God knows how many foreign ruffians pushing
up from the Garplefoot, and a brig lying waiting to carry off the
ladies.  Likewise there's the police, somewhere on the road, though the
dear kens when they'll turn up.  It's awful the incompetence of our
Government, and the rates and taxes that high!... And there's you and
me by this roadside, and me no more use than a tattie-bogle.... That's
the situation, and the question is what's our plan to be?  We must keep
the blagyirds in play till the police come, and at the same time we
must keep the Princess out of danger.  That's why I'm wanting back, for
they've sore need of  a business head.  Yon Sir Archibald's a fine
fellow, but I doubt he'll be a bit rash, and the Princess is no' to
hold or bind. Our first job is to find Dougal and get a grip of the
facts."

"I am going to the Princess," said the Russian.

"Ay, that'll be best.  You'll be maybe able to manage her, for you'll
be well acquaint."

"She is my kinswoman.  She is also my affianced wife."

"Keep us!" Dickson exclaimed, with a doleful thought of Heritage. "What
ailed you then no' to look after her better?"

"We have been long separated, because it was her will.  She had work to
do and disappeared from me, though I searched all Europe for her. Then
she sent me word, when the danger became extreme, and summoned me to
her aid.  But she gave me poor directions, for she did not know her own
plans very clearly.  She spoke of a place called Darkwater, and I have
been hunting half Scotland for it.  It was only last night that I heard
of Dalquharter and guessed that that might be the name. But I was far
down in Galloway, and have ridden fifty miles today."

"It's a queer thing, but I wouldn't take you for a Russian."

Alexis finished his work and put away his tools.

"For the present," he said, "I am an Englishman, till my country comes
again to her senses.  Ten years ago I left Russia, for I was sick of
the foolishness of my class and wanted a free life in a new world.  I
went to Australia and made good as an engineer. I am a partner in a
firm which is pretty well known even in Britain. When war broke out I
returned to fight for my people, and when Russia fell out of the war, I
joined the Australians in France and fought with them till the
Armistice.  And now I have only one duty left, to save the Princess and
take her with me to my new home till Russia is a nation once more."

Dickson whistled joyfully.  "So Mr. Heritage was right.  He aye said
you were an Australian.... And you're a business man!  That's grand
hearing and puts my mind at rest.  You must take charge of the party at
the House, for Sir Archibald's a daft young lad and Mr. Heritage is a
poet.  I thought I would have to go myself, but I doubt I would just be
a hindrance with my dwaibly legs.  I'd be better outside, watching for
the police.... Are you ready, sir?"

Dickson not without difficulty perched himself astride the luggage
carrier, firmly grasping the rider round the middle. The machine
started, but it was evidently in a bad way, for it made poor going till
the descent towards the main Auchenlochan road. On the slope it warmed
up and they crossed the Garple bridge at a fair pace.  There was to be
no pleasant April twilight, for the stormy sky had already made dusk,
and in a very little the dark would fall.  So sombre was the evening
that Dickson did not notice a figure in the shadow of the roadside
pines till it whistled shrilly on its fingers.  He cried on Alexis to
stop, and, this being accomplished with some suddenness, fell off at
Dougal's feet.

"What's the news?" he demanded.

Dougal glanced at Alexis and seemed to approve his looks.

"Napoleon has just reported that three boatloads, making either
twenty-three or twenty-four men--they were gey ill to count--has landed
at Garplefit and is makin' their way to the auld Tower. The tinklers
warned Dobson and soon it'll be a' bye wi' Heritage."

"The Princess is not there?" was Dickson's anxious inquiry.

"Na, na.  Heritage is there his lone.  They were for joinin' him, but I
wouldn't let them.  She came wi' a man they call Sir Erchibald and
three gamekeepers wi' guns.  I stoppit their cawr up the road and
tell't them the lie o' the land.  Yon Sir Erchibald has poor notions o'
strawtegy.  He was for bangin' into the auld Tower straight away and
shootin' Dobson if he tried to stop them.  'Havers,' say I, 'let them
break their teeth on the Tower, thinkin' the leddy's inside, and
that'll give us time, for Heritage is no' the lad to surrender in a
hurry.'"

"Where are they now?"

"In the Hoose o' Dalquharter, and a sore job I had gettin' them in.
We've shifted our base again, without the enemy suspectin'."

"Any word of the police?"

"The polis!" and Dougal spat cynically.  "It seems they're a dour crop
to shift.  Sir Erchibald was sayin' that him and the lassie had been to
the Chief Constable, but the man was terrible auld and slow. They
persuadit him, but he threepit that it would take a long time to
collect his men and that there was no danger o' the brig landin' before
night.  He's wrong there onyway, for they're landit."

"Dougal," said Dickson, "you've heard the Princess speak of a friend
she was expecting here called Alexis.  This is him. You can address him
as Mr. Nicholson.  Just arrived in the nick of time.  You must get him
into the House, for he's the best right to be beside the lady... Jaikie
would tell you that I've been sore mishandled the day, and am no' very
fit for a battle. But Mr. Nicholson's a business man and he'll do as
well. You're keeping the Die-Hards outside, I hope?"

"Ay.  Thomas Yownie's in charge, and Jaikie will be in and out with
orders. They've instructions to watch for the polis, and keep an eye on
the Garplefit.  It's a mortal long front to hold, but there's no other
way.  I must be in the hoose mysel'.  Thomas Yownie's headquarters is
the auld wife's hen-hoose."

At that moment in a pause of the gale came the far-borne echo of a shot.

"Pistol," said Alexis.

"Heritage," said Dougal.  "Trade will be gettin' brisk with him. Start
your machine and I'll hang on ahint.  We'll try the road by the West
Lodge."

Presently the pair disappeared in the dusk, the noise of the engine was
swallowed up in the wild orchestra of the wind, and Dickson hobbled
towards the village in a state of excitement which made him oblivious
of his wounds.  That lonely pistol shot was, he felt, the bell to ring
up the curtain on the last act of the play.




CHAPTER XIII

THE COMING OF THE DANISH BRIG


Mr. John Heritage, solitary in the old Tower, found much to occupy his
mind.  His giddiness was passing, though the dregs of a headache
remained, and his spirits rose with his responsibilities. At daybreak
he breakfasted out of the Mearns Street provision box, and made tea in
one of the Die-Hard's camp kettles.  Next he gave some attention to his
toilet, necessary after the rough-and-tumble of the night.  He made
shift to bathe in icy water from the Tower well, shaved, tidied up his
clothes and found a clean shirt from his pack. He carefully brushed his
hair, reminding himself that thus had the Spartans done before
Thermopylae.  The neat and somewhat pallid young man that emerged from
these rites then ascended to the first floor to reconnoitre the
landscape from the narrow unglazed windows.

If any one had told him a week ago that he would be in so strange a
world he would have quarrelled violently with his informant. A week ago
he was a cynical clear-sighted modern, a contemner of illusions, a
swallower of formulas, a breaker of shams--one who had seen through the
heroical and found it silly.  Romance and such-like toys were
playthings for fatted middle-age, not for strenuous and cold-eyed
youth.  But the truth was that now he was altogether spellbound by
these toys.  To think that he was serving his lady was rapture-ecstasy,
that for her he was single-handed venturing all. He rejoiced to be
alone with his private fancies.  His one fear was that the part he had
cast himself for might be needless, that the men from the sea would not
come, or that reinforcements would arrive before he should be called
upon.  He hoped alone to make a stand against thousands.  What the
upshot might be he did not trouble to inquire.  Of course the Princess
would be saved, but first he must glut his appetite for the heroic.

He made a diary of events that day, just as he used to do at the front.
At twenty minutes past eight he saw the first figure coming from the
House. It was Spidel, who limped round the Tower, tried the door, and
came to a halt below the window.  Heritage stuck out his head and
wished him good morning, getting in reply an amazed stare.  The man was
not disposed to talk, though Heritage made some interesting
observations on the weather, but departed quicker than he came, in the
direction of the West Lodge.

Just before nine o'clock he returned with Dobson and Leon. They made a
very complete reconnaissance of the Tower, and for a moment Heritage
thought that they were about to try to force an entrance.  They tugged
and hammered at the great oak door, which he had further strengthened
by erecting behind it a pile of the heaviest lumber he could find in
the place.  It was imperative that they should not get in, and he got
Dickson's pistol ready with the firm intention of shooting them if
necessary.  But they did nothing, except to hold a conference in the
hazel clump a hundred yards to the north, when Dobson seemed to be
laying down the law, and Leon spoke rapidly with a great fluttering of
hands.  They were obviously puzzled by the sight of Heritage, whom they
believed to have left the neighbourhood.  Then Dobson went off, leaving
Leon and Spidel on guard, one at the edge of the shrubberies between
the Tower and the House, the other on the side nearest the Laver glen.
These were their posts, but they did sentry-go around the building, and
passed so close to Heritage's window that he could have tossed a
cigarette on their heads.

It occurred to him that he ought to get busy with camouflage. They must
be convinced that the Princess was in the place, for he wanted their
whole mind to be devoted to the siege. He rummaged among the ladies'
baggage, and extracted a skirt and a coloured scarf.  The latter he
managed to flutter so that it could be seen at the window the next time
one of the watchers came within sight.  He also fixed up the skirt so
that the fringe of it could be seen, and, when Leon appeared below, he
was in the shadow talking rapid French in a very fair imitation of the
tones of Cousin Eugenie.  The ruse had its effect, for Leon promptly
went off to tell Spidel, and when Dobson appeared he too was given the
news.  This seemed to settle their plans, for all three remained on
guard, Dobson nearest to the Tower, seated on an outcrop of rock with
his mackintosh collar turned up, and his eyes usually on the misty sea.

By this time it was eleven o'clock, and the next three hours passed
slowly with Heritage.  He fell to picturing the fortunes of his
friends. Dickson and the Princess should by this time be far inland,
out of danger and in the way of finding succour.  He was confident that
they would return, but he trusted not too soon, for he hoped for a run
for his money as Horatius in the Gate.  After that he was a little torn
in his mind.  He wanted the Princess to come back and to be somewhere
near if there was a fight going, so that she might be a witness of his
devotion.  But she must not herself run any risk, and he became anxious
when he remembered her terrible sangfroid.  Dickson could no more
restrain her than a child could hold a greyhound.... But of course it
would never come to that.  The police would turn up long before the
brig appeared--Dougal had thought that would not be till high tide,
between four and five--and the only danger would be to the pirates. The
three watchers would be put in the bag, and the men from the sea would
walk into a neat trap.  This reflection seemed to take all the colour
out of Heritage's prospect.  Peril and heroism were not to be his
lot--only boredom.

A little after twelve two of the tinklers appeared with some news which
made Dobson laugh and pat them on the shoulder.  He seemed to be giving
them directions, pointing seaward and southward.  He nodded to the
Tower, where Heritage took the opportunity of again fluttering Saskia's
scarf athwart the window.  The tinklers departed at a trot, and Dobson
lit his pipe as if well pleased.  He had some trouble with it in the
wind, which had risen to an uncanny violence.  Even the solid Tower
rocked with it, and the sea was a waste of spindrift and low scurrying
cloud.  Heritage discovered a new anxiety--this time about the
possibility of the brig landing at all.  He wanted a complete bag, and
it would be tragic if they got only the three seedy ruffians now
circumambulating his fortress.

About one o'clock he was greatly cheered by the sight of Dougal. At the
moment Dobson was lunching off a hunk of bread and cheese directly
between the Tower and the House, just short of the crest of the ridge
on the other side of which lay the stables and the shrubberies; Leon
was on the north side opposite the Tower door, and Spidel was at the
south end near the edge of the Garple glen. Heritage, watching the
ridge behind Dobson and the upper windows of the House which appeared
over it, saw on the very crest something like a tuft of rusty bracken
which he had not noticed before. Presently the tuft moved, and a hand
shot up from it waving a rag of some sort.  Dobson at the moment was
engaged with a bottle of porter, and Heritage could safely wave a hand
in reply.  He could now make out clearly the red head of Dougal.

The Chieftain, having located the three watchers, proceeded to give an
exhibition of his prowess for the benefit of the lonely inmate of the
Tower.  Using as cover a drift of bracken, he wormed his way down till
he was not six yards from Dobson, and Heritage had the privilege of
seeing his grinning countenance a very little way above the innkeeper's
head.  Then he crawled back and reached the neighbourhood of Leon, who
was sitting on a fallen Scotch fir. At that moment it occurred to the
Belgian to visit Dobson. Heritage's breath stopped, but Dougal was
ready, and froze into a motionless blur in the shadow of a hazel bush.
Then he crawled very fast into the hollow where Leon had been sitting,
seized something which looked like a bottle, and scrambled back to the
ridge. At the top he waved the object, whatever it was, but Heritage
could not reply, for Dobson happened to be looking towards the window.
That was the last he saw of the Chieftain, but presently he realized
what was the booty he had annexed.  It must be Leon's life-preserver,
which the night before had broken Heritage's head.

After that cheering episode boredom again set in.  He collected some
food from the Mearns Street box, and indulged himself with a glass of
liqueur brandy.  He was beginning to feel miserably cold, so he carried
up some broken wood and made a fire on the immense hearth in the upper
chamber.  Anxiety was clouding his mind again, for it was now two
o'clock, and there was no sign of the reinforcements which Dickson and
the Princess had gone to find.  The minutes passed, and soon it was
three o'clock, and from the window he saw only the top of the gaunt
shuttered House, now and then hidden by squalls of sleet, and Dobson
squatted like an Eskimo, and trees dancing like a witch-wood in the
gale.  All the vigour of the morning seemed to have gone out of his
blood; he felt lonely and apprehensive and puzzled. He wished he had
Dickson beside him, for that little man's cheerful voice and complacent
triviality would be a comfort.... Also, he was abominably cold.  He put
on his waterproof, and turned his attention to the fire.  It needed
re-kindling, and he hunted in his pockets for paper, finding only the
slim volume lettered WHORLS.

I set it down as the most significant commentary on his state of mind.
He regarded the book with intense disfavour, tore it in two, and used a
handful of its fine deckle-edged leaves to get the fire going. They
burned well, and presently the rest followed.  Well for Dickson's peace
of soul that he was not a witness of such vandalism.

A little warmer but in no way more cheerful, he resumed his watch near
the window.  The day was getting darker, and promised an early dusk.
His watch told him that it was after four, and still nothing had
happened. Where on earth were Dickson and the Princess?  Where in the
name of all that was holy were the police?  Any minute now the brig
might arrive and land its men, and he would be left there as a
burnt-offering to their wrath.  There must have been an infernal muddle
somewhere.... Anyhow the Princess was out of the trouble, but where the
Lord alone knew.... Perhaps the reinforcements were lying in wait for
the boats at the Garplefoot.  That struck him as a likely explanation,
and comforted him.  Very soon he might hear the sound of an engagement
to the south, and the next thing would be Dobson and his crew in
flight. He was determined to be in the show somehow and would be very
close on their heels.  He felt a peculiar dislike to all three, but
especially to Leon.  The Belgian's small baby features had for four
days set him clenching his fists when he thought of them.

The next thing he saw was one of the tinklers running hard towards the
Tower.  He cried something to Dobson, which woke the latter to
activity. The innkeeper shouted to Leon and Spidel, and the tinkler was
excitedly questioned.  Dobson laughed and slapped his thigh. He gave
orders to the others, and himself joined the tinkler and hurried off in
the direction of the Garplefoot.  Something was happening there,
something of ill omen, for the man's face and manner had been
triumphant.  Were the boats landing?

As Heritage puzzled over this event, another figure appeared on the
scene.  It was a big man in knickerbockers and mackintosh, who came
round the end of the House from the direction of the South Lodge.  At
first he thought it was the advance-guard from his own side, the help
which Dickson had gone to find, and he only restrained himself in time
from shouting a welcome. But surely their supports would not advance so
confidently in enemy country.  The man strode over the slopes as if
looking for somebody; then he caught sight of Leon and waved to him to
come. Leon must have known him, for he hastened to obey.

The two were about thirty yards from Heritage's window.  Leon was
telling some story volubly, pointing now to the Tower and now towards
the sea.  The big man nodded as if satisfied.  Heritage noted that his
right arm was tied up, and that the mackintosh sleeve was empty, and
that brought him enlightenment.  It was Loudon the factor, whom Dickson
had winged the night before.  The two of them passed out of view in the
direction of Spidel.

The sight awoke Heritage to the supreme unpleasantness of his position.
He was utterly alone on the headland, and his allies had vanished into
space, while the enemy plans, moving like clockwork, were approaching
their consummation.  For a second he thought of leaving the Tower and
hiding somewhere in the cliffs.  He dismissed the notion unwillingly,
for he remembered the task that had been set him.  He was there to hold
the fort to the last--to gain time, though he could not for the life of
him see what use time was to be when all the strategy of his own side
seemed to have miscarried.  Anyhow, the blackguards would be sold, for
they would not find the Princess.  But he felt a horrid void in the pit
of his stomach, and a looseness about his knees.

The moments passed more quickly as he wrestled with his fears. The next
he knew the empty space below his window was filling with figures.
There was a great crowd of them, rough fellows with seamen's coats,
still dripping as if they had had a wet landing.  Dobson was with them,
but for the rest they were strange figures.

Now that the expected had come at last Heritage's nerves grew calmer.
He made out that the newcomers were trying the door, and he waited to
hear it fall, for such a mob could soon force it.  But instead a voice
called from beneath.

"Will you please open to us?" it called.

He stuck his head out and saw a little group with one man at the head
of it, a young man clad in oilskins whose face was dim in the murky
evening.  The voice was that of a gentleman.

"I have orders to open to no one," Heritage replied.

"Then I fear we must force an entrance," said the voice.

"You can go to the devil," said Heritage.

That defiance was the screw which his nerves needed.  His temper had
risen, he had forgotten all about the Princess, he did not even
remember his isolation.  His job was to make a fight for it. He ran up
the staircase which led to the attics of the Tower, for he recollected
that there was a window there which looked over the space before the
door.  The place was ruinous, the floor filled with holes, and a part
of the roof sagged down in a corner.  The stones around the window were
loose and crumbling, and he managed to pull several out so that the
slit was enlarged.  He found himself looking down on a crowd of men,
who had lifted the fallen tree on which Leon had perched, and were
about to use it as a battering ram.

"The first fellow who comes within six yards of the door I shoot," he
shouted.

There was a white wave below as every face was turned to him. He ducked
back his head in time as a bullet chipped the side of the window.

But his position was a good one, for he had a hole in the broken wall
through which he could see, and could shoot with his hand at the edge
of the window while keeping his body in cover. The battering party
resumed their task, and as the tree swung nearer, he fired at the
foremost of them.  He missed, but the shot for a moment suspended
operations.

Again they came on, and again he fired.  This time he damaged somebody,
for the trunk was dropped.

A voice gave orders, a sharp authoritative voice.  The battering squad
dissolved, and there was a general withdrawal out of the line of fire
from the window.  Was it possible that he had intimidated them? He
could hear the sound of voices, and then a single figure came into
sight again, holding something in its hand.

He did not fire for he recognized the futility of his efforts. The
baseball swing of the figure below could not be mistaken. There was a
roar beneath, and a flash of fire, as the bomb exploded on the door.
Then came a rush of men, and the Tower had fallen. Heritage clambered
through a hole in the roof and gained the topmost parapet.  He had
still a pocketful of cartridges, and there in a coign of the old
battlements he would prove an ugly customer to the pursuit.  Only one
at a time could reach that siege perilous.... They would not take long
to search the lower rooms, and then would be hot on the trail of the
man who had fooled them. He had not a scrap of fear left or even of
anger--only triumph at the thought of how properly those ruffians had
been sold. "Like schoolboys they who unaware"--instead of two women
they had found a man with a gun.  And the Princess was miles off and
forever beyond their reach.  When they had settled with him they would
no doubt burn the House down, but that would serve them little. From
his airy pinnacle he could see the whole sea-front of Huntingtower, a
blur in the dusk but for the ghostly eyes of its white-shuttered
windows.

Something was coming from it, running lightly over the lawns, lost for
an instant in the trees, and then appearing clear on the crest of the
ridge where some hours earlier Dougal had lain. With horror he saw that
it was a girl.  She stood with the wind plucking at her skirts and
hair, and she cried in a high, clear voice which pierced even the
confusion of the gale.  What she cried he could not tell, for it was in
a strange tongue....

But it reached the besiegers.  There was a sudden silence in the din
below him and then a confusion of shouting.  The men seemed to be
pouring out of the gap which had been the doorway, and as he peered
over the parapet first one and then another entered his area of vision.
The girl on the ridge, as soon as she saw that she had attracted
attention, turned and ran back, and after her up the slopes went the
pursuit bunched like hounds on a good scent.

Mr. John Heritage, swearing terribly, started to retrace his steps.




CHAPTER XIV

THE SECOND BATTLE OF THE CRUIVES


The military historian must often make shift to write of battles with
slender data, but he can pad out his deficiencies by learned parallels.
If his were the talented pen describing this, the latest action fought
on British soil against a foreign foe, he would no doubt be crippled by
the absence of written orders and war diaries. But how eloquently he
would descant on the resemblance between Dougal and Gouraud--how the
plan of leaving the enemy to waste his strength upon a deserted
position was that which on the 15th of July 1918 the French general had
used with decisive effect in Champagne! But Dougal had never heard of
Gouraud, and I cannot claim that, like the Happy Warrior, he

           "through the heat of conflict kept the law
  In calmness made, and saw what he foresaw."


I have had the benefit of discussing the affair with him and his
colleagues, but I should offend against historic truth if I represented
the main action as anything but a scrimmage--a "soldiers' battle," the
historian would say, a Malplaquet, an Albuera.

Just after half-past three that afternoon the Commander-in-Chief was
revealed in a very bad temper.  He had intercepted Sir Archie's car,
and, since Leon was known to be fully occupied, had brought it in by
the West Lodge, and hidden it behind a clump of laurels. There he had
held a hoarse council of war.  He had cast an appraising eye over Sime
the butler, Carfrae the chauffeur, and McGuffog the gamekeeper, and his
brows had lightened when he beheld Sir Archie with an armful of guns
and two big cartridge-magazines.  But they had darkened again at the
first words of the leader of the reinforcements.

"Now for the Tower," Sir Archie had observed cheerfully.  "We should be
a match for the three watchers, my lad, and it's time that poor devil
What's-his-name was relieved."

"A bonny-like plan that would be," said Dougal.  "Man, ye would be
walkin' into the very trap they want.  In an hour, or maybe two, the
rest will turn up from the sea and they'd have ye tight by the neck.
Na, na!  It's time we're wantin', and the longer they think we're a' in
the auld Tower the better for us.  What news o' the polis?"

He listened to Sir Archie's report with a gloomy face.

"Not afore the darkenin'?  They'll be ower late--the polis are aye ower
late.  It looks as if we had the job to do oursels. What's your notion?"

"God knows," said the baronet, whose eyes were on Saskia.  "What's
yours?"

The deference conciliated Dougal.  "There's just the one plan that's
worth a docken.  There's five o' us here, and there's plenty weapons.
Besides there's five Die-Hards somewhere about, and though they've
never tried it afore they can be trusted to loose off a gun. My advice
is to hide at the Garplefoot and stop the boats landin'. We'd have the
tinklers on our flank, no doubt, but I'm not muckle feared o' them.  It
wouldn't be easy for the boats to get in wi' this tearin' wind and us
firin' volleys from the shore."

Sir Archie stared at him with admiration.  "You're a hearty young
fire-eater.  But, Great Scott! we can't go pottin' at strangers before
we find out their business.  This is a law-abidin' country, and we're
not entitled to start shootin' except in self-defence. You can wash
that plan out, for it ain't feasible."

Dougal spat cynically.  "For all that it's the right strawtegy. Man, we
might sink the lot, and then turn and settle wi' Dobson, and all afore
the first polisman showed his neb.  It would be a grand performance.
But I was feared ye wouldn't be for it.... Well, there's just the one
other thing to do.  We must get inside the Hoose and put it in a state
of defence.  Heritage has McCunn's pistol, and he'll keep them busy for
a bit.  When they've finished wi' him and find the place is empty,
they'll try the Hoose and we'll give them a warm reception.  That
should keep us goin' till the polis arrive, unless they're comin' wi'
the blind carrier."

Sir Archie nodded.  "But why put ourselves in their power at all?
They're at present barking up the wrong tree.  Let them bark up another
wrong 'un.  Why shouldn't the House remain empty?  I take it we're here
to protect the Princess.  Well, we'll have done that if they go off
empty-handed."

Dougal looked up to the heavens.  "I wish McCunn was here," he sighed.
"Ay, we've got to protect the Princess, and there's just the one way to
do it, and that's to put an end to this crowd o' blagyirds. If they
gang empty-handed, they'll come again another day, either here or
somewhere else, and it won't be long afore they get the lassie. But if
we finish with them now she can sit down wi' an easy mind. That's why
we've got to hang on to them till the polis comes. There's no way out
o' this business but a battle."

He found an ally.  "Dougal is right," said Saskia.  "If I am to have
peace, by some way or other the fangs of my enemies must be drawn for
ever."

He swung round and addressed her formally.  "Mem, I'm askin' ye for the
last time.  Will ye keep out of this business?  Will ye gang back and
sit doun aside Mrs. Morran's fire and have your teas and wait till we
come for ye.  Ye can do no good, and ye're puttin' yourself terrible in
the enemy's power.  If we're beat and ye're no' there, they get very
little satisfaction, but if they get you they get what they've come
seekin'.  I tell ye straight--ye're an encumbrance."

She laughed mischievously.  "I can shoot better than you," she said.

He ignored the taunt.  "Will ye listen to sense and fall to the rear?"

"I will not," she said.

"Then gang your own gait.  I'm ower wise to argy-bargy wi' women. The
Hoose be it!"

It was a journey which sorely tried Dougal's temper.  The only way in
was by the verandah, but the door at the west end had been locked, and
the ladder had disappeared.  Now, of his party three were lame, one
lacked an arm, and one was a girl; besides, there were the guns and
cartridges to transport.  Moreover, at more than one point before the
verandah was reached the route was commanded by a point on the ridge
near the old Tower, and that had been Spidel's position when Dougal
made his last reconnaissance.  It behoved to pass these points swiftly
and unobtrusively, and his company was neither swift nor unobtrusive.
McGuffog had a genius for tripping over obstacles, and Sir Archie was
for ever proffering his aid to Saskia, who was in a position to give
rather than to receive, being far the most active of the party. Once
Dougal had to take the gamekeeper's head and force it down, a
performance which would have led to an immediate assault but for Sir
Archie's presence.  Nor did the latter escape.  "Will ye stop heedin'
the lassie, and attend to your own job," the Chieftain growled. "Ye're
makin' as much noise as a roadroller."

Arrived at the foot of the verandah wall there remained the problem of
the escalade.  Dougal clambered up like a squirrel by the help of
cracks in the stones, and he could be heard trying the handle of the
door into the House.  He was absent for about five minutes, and then
his head peeped over the edge accompanied by the hooks of an iron
ladder. "From the boiler-house," he informed them as they stood clear
for the thing to drop.  It proved to be little more than half the
height of the wall.

Saskia ascended first, and had no difficulty in pulling herself over
the parapet.  Then came the guns and ammunition, and then the one-armed
Sime, who turned out to be an athlete.  But it was no easy matter
getting up the last three.  Sir Archie anathematized his frailties.
"Nice old crock to go tiger--shootin' with," he told the Princess. "But
set me to something where my confounded leg don't get in the way, and
I'm still pretty useful!"  Dougal, mopping his brow with the rag he
called his handkerchief, observed sourly that he objected to going
scouting with a herd of elephants.

Once indoors his spirits rose.  The party from the Mains had brought
several electric torches, and the one lamp was presently found and lit.
"We can't count on the polis," Dougal announced, "and when the
foreigners is finished wi' the Tower they'll come on here.  If no', we
must make them. What is it the sodgers call it?  Forcin' a battle?  Now
see here! There's the two roads into this place, the back door and the
verandy, leavin' out the front door which is chained and lockit.
They'll try those two roads first, and we must get them well barricaded
in time.  But mind, if there's a good few o' them, it'll be an easy job
to batter in the front door or the windies, so we maun be ready for
that."

He told off a fatigue party--the Princess, Sir Archie, and McGuffog--to
help in moving furniture to the several doors.  Sime and Carfrae
attended to the kitchen entrance, while he himself made a tour of the
ground-floor windows.  For half an hour the empty house was loud with
strange sounds.  McGuffog, who was a giant in strength, filled the
passage at the verandah end with an assortment of furniture ranging
from a grand piano to a vast mahogany sofa, while Saskia and Sir Archie
pillaged the bedrooms and packed up the interstices with mattresses in
lieu of sandbags.  Dougal on his turn saw fit to approve the work.

"That'll fickle the blagyirds.  Down at the kitchen door we've got a
mangle, five wash-tubs, and the best part of a ton o' coal. It's the
windies I'm anxious about, for they're ower big to fill up. But I've
gotten tubs of water below them and a lot o' wire-nettin' I fund in the
cellar."

Sir Archie morosely wiped his brow.  "I can't say I ever hated a job
more," he told Saskia.  "It seems pretty cool to march into somebody
else's house and make free with his furniture.  I hope to goodness our
friends from the sea do turn up, or we'll look pretty foolish. Loudon
will have a score against me he won't forget."

"Ye're no' weakenin'?" asked Dougal fiercely.

"Not a bit.  Only hopin' somebody hasn't made a mighty big mistake."

"Ye needn't be feared for that.  Now you listen to your instructions.
We're terrible few for such a big place, but we maun make up for
shortness o' numbers by extra mobility.  The gemkeeper will keep the
windy that looks on the verandy, and fell any man that gets through.
You'll hold the verandy door, and the ither lame man--is't Carfrae ye
call him?--will keep the back door.  I've telled the one-armed man, who
has some kind of a head on him, that he maun keep on the move, watchin'
to see if they try the front door or any o' the other windies. If they
do, he takes his station there.  D'ye follow?"

Sir Archie nodded gloomily.

"What is my post?" Saskia asked.

"I've appointed ye my Chief of Staff," was the answer.  "Ye see we've
no reserves.  If this door's the dangerous bit, it maun be reinforced
from elsewhere; and that'll want savage thinkin'. Ye'll have to be aye
on the move, Mem, and keep me informed. If they break in at two bits,
we're beat, and there'll be nothing for it but to retire to our last
position.  Ye ken the room ayont the hall where they keep the coats.
That's our last trench, and at the worst we fall back there and stick
it out.  It has a strong door and a wee windy, so they'll no' be able
to get in on our rear. We should be able to put up a good defence
there, unless they fire the place over our heads.... Now, we'd better
give out the guns."

"We don't want any shootin' if we can avoid it," said Sir Archie, who
found his distaste for Dougal growing, though he was under the spell of
the one being there who knew precisely his own mind.

"Just what I was goin' to say.  My instructions is, reserve your fire,
and don't loose off till you have a man up against the end o' your
barrel."

"Good Lord, we'll get into a horrible row.  The whole thing may be a
mistake, and we'll be had up for wholesale homicide. No man shall fire
unless I give the word."

The Commander-in-Chief looked at him darkly.  Some bitter retort was on
his tongue, but he restrained himself.

"It appears," he said, "that ye think I'm doin' all this for fun. I'll
no' argy wi' ye.  There can be just the one general in a battle, but
I'll give ye permission to say the word when to fire.... Macgreegor!"
he muttered, a strange expletive only used in moments of deep emotion.
"I'll wager ye'll be for sayin' the word afore I'd say it mysel'."

He turned to the Princess.  "I hand over to you, till I am back, for I
maun be off and see to the Die-Hards.  I wish I could bring them in
here, but I daren't lose my communications.  I'll likely get in by the
boiler-house skylight when I come back, but it might be as well to keep
a road open here unless ye're actually attacked."

Dougal clambered over the mattresses and the grand piano; a flicker of
waning daylight appeared for a second as he squeezed through the door,
and Sir Archie was left staring at the wrathful countenance of
McGuffog. He laughed ruefully.

"I've been in about forty battles, and here's that little devil rather
worried about my pluck and talkin' to me like a corps commander to a
newly joined second-lieutenant.  All the same he's a remarkable child,
and we'd better behave as if we were in for a real shindy.  What do you
think, Princess?"

"I think we are in for what you call a shindy.  I am in command,
remember. I order you to serve out the guns."

This was done, a shot-gun and a hundred cartridges to each, while
McGuffog, who was a marksman, was also given a sporting Mannlicher, and
two other rifles, a .303 and a small-bore Holland, were kept in reserve
in the hall.  Sir Archie, free from Dougal's compelling presence, gave
the gamekeeper peremptory orders not to shoot till he was bidden, and
Carfrae at the kitchen door was warned to the same effect.  The
shuttered house, where the only light apart from the garden-room was
the feeble spark of the electric torches, had the most disastrous
effect upon his spirits.  The gale which roared in the chimney and
eddied among the rafters of the hall seemed an infernal commotion in a
tomb.

"Let's go upstairs," he told Saskia; "there must be a view from the
upper windows."

"You can see the top of the old Tower, and part of the sea," she said.
"I know it well, for it was my only amusement to look at it. On clear
days, too, one could see high mountains far in the west." His
depression seemed to have affected her, for she spoke listlessly,
unlike the vivid creature who had led the way in.

In a gaunt west-looking bedroom, the one in which Heritage and Dickson
had camped the night before, they opened a fold of the shutters and
looked out into a world of grey wrack and driving rain. The Tower roof
showed mistily beyond the ridge of down, but its environs were not in
their prospect.  The lower regions of the House had been gloomy enough,
but this bleak place with its drab outlook struck a chill to Sir
Archie's soul.  He dolefully lit a cigarette.

"This is a pretty rotten show for you," he told her.  "It strikes me as
a rather unpleasant brand of nightmare."

"I have been living with nightmares for three years," she said wearily.

He cast his eyes round the room.  "I think the Kennedys were mad to
build this confounded barrack.  I've always disliked it, and old
Quentin hadn't any use for it either.  Cold, cheerless, raw
monstrosity! It hasn't been a very giddy place for you, Princess."

"It has been my prison, when I hoped it would be a sanctuary.  But it
may yet be my salvation."

"I'm sure I hope so.  I say, you must be jolly hungry.  I don't suppose
there's any chance of tea for you."

She shook her head.  She was looking fixedly at the Tower, as if she
expected something to appear there, and he followed her eyes.

"Rum old shell, that.  Quentin used to keep all kinds of live stock
there, and when we were boys it was our castle where we played at bein'
robber chiefs.  It'll be dashed queer if the real thing should turn up
this time.  I suppose McCunn's Poet is roostin' there all by his lone.
Can't say I envy him his job."

Suddenly she caught his arm.  "I see a man," she whispered. "There!  He
is behind those far bushes.  There is his head again!"

It was clearly a man, but he presently disappeared, for he had come
round by the south end of the House, past the stables, and had now gone
over the ridge.

"The cut of his jib us uncommonly like Loudon, the factor. I thought
McCunn had stretched him on a bed of pain.  Lord, if this thing should
turn out a farce, I simply can't face Loudon.... I say, Princess, you
don't suppose by any chance that McCunn's a little bit wrong in the
head?"

She turned her candid eyes on him.  "You are in a very doubting mood."

"My feet are cold and I don't mind admittin' it.  Hanged if I know what
it is, but I don't feel this show a bit real.  If it isn't, we're in a
fair way to make howlin' idiots of ourselves, and get pretty well
embroiled with the law.  It's all right for the red-haired boy, for he
can take everything seriously, even play.  I could do the same thing
myself when I was a kid.  I don't mind runnin' some kind of risk--I've
had a few in my time--but this is so infernally outlandish, and I--I
don't quite believe in it.  That is to say, I believe in it right
enough when I look at you or listen to McCunn, but as soon as my eyes
are off you I begin to doubt again.  I'm gettin' old and I've a stake
in the country, and I daresay I'm gettin' a bit of a prig--anyway I
don't want to make a jackass of myself.  Besides, there's this foul
weather and this beastly house to ice my feet."

He broke off with an exclamation, for on the grey cloud-bounded stage
in which the roof of the Tower was the central feature, actors had
appeared.  Dim hurrying shapes showed through the mist, dipping over
the ridge, as if coming from the Garplefoot.

She seized his arm and he saw that her listlessness was gone. Her eyes
were shining.

"It is they," she cried.  "The nightmare is real at last. Do you doubt
now?"

He could only stare, for these shapes arriving and vanishing like wisps
of fog still seemed to him phantasmal.  The girl held his arm tightly
clutched, and craned towards the window space.  He tried to open the
frame, and succeeded in smashing the glass.  A swirl of wind drove
inwards and blew a loose lock of Saskia's hair across his brow.

"I wish Dougal were back," he muttered, and then came the crack of a
shot.

The pressure on his arm slackened, and a pale face was turned to him.
"He is alone--Mr. Heritage.  He has no chance.  They will kill him like
a dog."

"They'll never get in," he assured her.  "Dougal said the place could
hold out for hours."

Another shot followed and presently a third.  She twined her hands and
her eyes were wild.

"We can't leave him to be killed," she gasped.

"It's the only game.  We're playin' for time, remember. Besides, he
won't be killed.  Great Scott!"

As he spoke, a sudden explosion cleft the drone of the wind and a patch
of gloom flashed into yellow light.

"Bomb!" he cried.  "Lord, I might have thought of that."

The girl had sprung back from the window.  "I cannot bear it. I will
not see him murdered in sight of his friends.  I am going to show
myself, and when they see me they will leave him.... No, you must stay
here.  Presently they will be round this house. Don't be afraid for
me--I am very quick of foot."

"For God's sake, don't!  Here, Princess, stop," and he clutched at her
skirt.  "Look here, I'll go."

"You can't.  You have been wounded.  I am in command, you know. Keep
the door open till I come back."

He hobbled after her, but she easily eluded him.  She was smiling now,
and blew a kiss to him.  "La, la, la," she trilled, as she ran down the
stairs.  He heard her voice below, admonishing McGuffog. Then he pulled
himself together and went back to the window. He had brought the little
Holland with him, and he poked its barrel through the hole in the glass.

"Curse my game leg," he said, almost cheerfully, for the situation was
now becoming one with which he could cope.  "I ought to be able to hold
up the pursuit a bit.  My aunt!  What a girl!"

With the rifle cuddled to his shoulder he watched a slim figure come
into sight on the lawn, running towards the ridge.  He reflected that
she must have dropped from the high verandah wall.  That reminded him
that something must be done to make the wall climbable for her return,
so he went down to McGuffog, and the two squeezed through the
barricaded door to the verandah.  The boilerhouse ladder was still in
position, but it did not reach half the height, so McGuffog was adjured
to stand by to help, and in the meantime to wait on duty by the wall.
Then he hurried upstairs to his watch-tower.

The girl was in sight, almost on the crest of the high ground. There
she stood for a moment, one hand clutching at her errant hair, the
other shielding her eyes from the sting of the rain.  He heard her cry,
as Heritage had heard her, but since the wind was blowing towards him
the sound came louder and fuller.  Again she cried, and then stood
motionless with her hands above her head.  It was only for an instant,
for the next he saw she had turned and was racing down the slope,
jumping the little scrogs of hazel like a deer.  On the ridge appeared
faces, and then over it swept a mob of men.

She had a start of some fifty yards, and laboured to increase it,
having doubtless the verandah wall in mind.  Sir Archie, sick with
anxiety, nevertheless spared time to admire her prowess.  "Gad! she's a
miler," he ejaculated.  "She'll do it.  I'm hanged if she don't do it."

Against men in seamen's boots and heavy clothing she had a clear
advantage. But two shook themselves loose from the pack and began to
gain on her. At the main shrubbery they were not thirty yards behind,
and in her passage through it her skirts must have delayed her, for
when she emerged the pursuit had halved the distance.  He got the
sights of the rifle on the first man, but the lawns sloped up towards
the house, and to his consternation he found that the girl was in the
line of fire. Madly he ran to the other window of the room, tore back
the shutters, shivered the glass, and flung his rifle to his shoulder.
The fellow was within three yards of her, but, thank God! he had now a
clear field. He fired low and just ahead of him, and had the
satisfaction to see him drop like a rabbit, shot in the leg.  His
companion stumbled over him, and for a moment the girl was safe.

But her speed was failing.  She passed out of sight on the verandah
side of the house, and the rest of the pack had gained ominously over
the easier ground of the lawn.  He thought for a moment of trying to
stop them by his fire, but realized that if every shot told there would
still be enough of them left to make sure of her capture. The only
chance was at the verandah, and he went downstairs at a pace undreamed
of since the days when he had two whole legs.

McGuffog, Mannlicher in hand, was poking his neck over the wall. The
pursuit had turned the corner and were about twenty yards off; the girl
was at the foot of the ladder, breathless, drooping with fatigue. She
tried to climb, limply and feebly, and very slowly, as if she were too
giddy to see clear.  Above were two cripples, and at her back the van
of the now triumphant pack.

Sir Archie, game leg or no, was on the parapet preparing to drop down
and hold off the pursuit were it only for seconds. But at that moment
he was aware that the situation had changed.

At the foot of the ladder a tall man seemed to have sprung out of the
ground.  He caught the girl in his arms, climbed the ladder, and
McGuffog's great hands reached down and seized her and swung her into
safety.  Up the wall, by means of cracks and tufts, was shinning a
small boy.

The stranger coolly faced the pursuers, and at the sight of him they
checked, those behind stumbling against those in front. He was speaking
to them in a foreign tongue, and to Sir Archie's ear the words were
like the crack of a lash.  The hesitation was only for a moment, for a
voice among them cried out, and the whole pack gave tongue shrilly and
surged on again.  But that instant of check had given the stranger his
chance.  He was up the ladder, and, gripping the parapet, found rest
for his feet in a fissure. Then he bent down, drew up the ladder,
handed it to McGuffog, and with a mighty heave pulled himself over the
top.

He seemed to hope to defend the verandah, but the door at the west end
was being assailed by a contingent of the enemy, and he saw that its
thin woodwork was yielding.

"Into the House," he cried, as he picked up the ladder and tossed it
over the wall on the pack surging below.  He was only just in time, for
the west door yielded.  In two steps he had followed McGuffog through
the chink into the passage, and the concussion of the grand piano
pushed hard against the verandah door from within coincided with the
first battering on the said door from without.

In the garden-room the feeble lamp showed a strange grouping. Saskia
had sunk into a chair to get her breath, and seemed too dazed to be
aware of her surroundings.  Dougal was manfully striving to appear at
his ease, but his lip was quivering.

"A near thing that time," he observed.  "It was the blame of that man's
auld motor-bicycle."

The stranger cast sharp eyes around the place and company.

"An awkward corner, gentlemen," he said.  "How many are there of you?
Four men and a boy?  And you have placed guards at all the entrances?"

"They have bombs," Sir Archie reminded him.

"No doubt.  But I do not think they will use them here--or their guns,
unless there is no other way.  Their purpose is kidnapping, and they
hope to do it secretly and slip off without leaving a trace. If they
slaughter us, as they easily can, the cry will be out against them, and
their vessel will be unpleasantly hunted. Half their purpose is already
spoiled, for it's no longer secret.... They may break us by sheer
weight, and I fancy the first shooting will be done by us.  It's the
windows I'm afraid of."

Some tone in his quiet voice reached the girl in the wicker chair. She
looked up wildly, saw him, and with a cry of "Alesha" ran to his arms.
There she hung, while his hand fondled her hair, like a mother with a
scared child.  Sir Archie, watching the whole thing in some
stupefaction, thought he had never in his days seen more nobly matched
human creatures.

"It is my friend," she cried triumphantly, "the friend whom I appointed
to meet me here.  Oh, I did well to trust him. Now we need not fear
anything."

As if in ironical answer came a great crashing at the verandah door,
and the twanging of chords cruelly mishandled.  The grand piano was
suffering internally from the assaults of the boiler-house ladder.

"Wull I gie them a shot?" was McGuffog's hoarse inquiry.

"Action stations," Alexis ordered, for the command seemed to have
shifted to him from Dougal.  "The windows are the danger. The boy will
patrol the ground floor, and give us warning, and I and this man,"
pointing to Sime, "will be ready at the threatened point. And, for
God's sake, no shooting, unless I give the word.  If we take them on at
that game we haven't a chance."

He said something to Saskia in Russian and she smiled assent and went
to Sir Archie's side.  "You and I must keep this door," she said.

Sir Archie was never very clear afterwards about the events of the next
hour.  The Princess was in the maddest spirits, as if the burden of
three years had slipped from her and she was back in her first
girlhood.  She sang as she carried more lumber to the pile--perhaps the
song which had once entranced Heritage, but Sir Archie had no ear for
music.  She mocked at the furious blows which rained at the other end,
for the door had gone now, and in the windy gap could be seen a blur of
dark faces.  Oddly enough, he found his own spirits mounting to meet
hers.  It was real business at last, the qualms of the civilian had
been forgotten, and there was rising in him that joy in a scrap which
had once made him one of the most daring airmen on the Western Front.
The only thing that worried him now was the coyness about shooting.
What on earth were his rifles and shot-guns for unless to be used?  He
had seen the enemy from the verandah wall, and a more ruffianly crew he
had never dreamed of. They meant the uttermost business, and against
such it was surely the duty of good citizens to wage whole-hearted war.

The Princess was humming to herself a nursery rhyme.  "THE KING OF
SPAIN'S DAUGHTER," she crooned, "CAME TO VISIT ME, AND ALL FOR THE
SAKE----Oh, that poor piano!"  In her clear voice she cried something
in Russian, and the wind carried a laugh from the verandah. At the
sound of it she stopped.  "I had forgotten," she said. "Paul is there.
I had forgotten."  After that she was very quiet, but she redoubled her
labours at the barricade.

To the man it seemed that the pressure from without was slackening. He
called to McGuffog to ask about the garden-room window, and the reply
was reassuring.  The gamekeeper was gloomily contemplating Dougal's
tubs of water and wire-netting, as he might have contemplated a vermin
trap.

Sir Archie was growing acutely anxious--the anxiety of the defender of
a straggling fortress which is vulnerable at a dozen points. It seemed
to him that strange noises were coming from the rooms beyond the hall.
Did the back door lie that way?  And was not there a smell of smoke in
the air?  If they tried fire in such a gale the place would burn like
matchwood.

He left his post and in the hall found Dougal.

"All quiet," the Chieftain reported.  "Far ower quiet.  I don't like
it. The enemy's no' puttin' out his strength yet.  The Russian says a'
the west windies are terrible dangerous.  Him and the chauffeur's doin'
their best, but ye can't block thae muckle glass panes."

He returned to the Princess, and found that the attack had indeed
languished on that particular barricade.  The withers of the grand
piano were left unwrung, and only a faint scuffling informed him that
the verandah was not empty.  "They're gathering for an attack
elsewhere," he told himself.  But what if that attack were a feint?  He
and McGuffog must stick to their post, for in his belief the verandah
door and the garden-room window were the easiest places where an entry
in mass could be forced.  Suddenly Dougal's whistle blew, and with it
came a most almighty crash somewhere towards the west side. With a
shout of "Hold Tight, McGuffog," Sir Archie bolted into the hall, and,
led by the sound, reached what had once been the ladies' bedroom. A
strange sight met his eyes, for the whole framework of one window
seemed to have been thrust inward, and in the gap Alexis was swinging a
fender. Three of the enemy were in the room--one senseless on the
floor, one in the grip of Sime, whose single hand was tightly clenched
on his throat, and one engaged with Dougal in a corner.  The Die-Hard
leader was sore pressed, and to his help Sir Archie went.  The fresh
assault made the seaman duck his head, and Dougal seized the occasion
to smite him hard with something which caused him to roll over.  It was
Leon's life-preserver which he had annexed that afternoon.

Alexis at the window seemed to have for a moment daunted the attack.
"Bring that table," he cried, and the thing was jammed into the gap.
"Now you"--this to Sime--"get the man from the back door to hold this
place with his gun.  There's no attack there.  It's about time for
shooting now, or we'll have them in our rear.  What in heaven is that?"

It was McGuffog whose great bellow resounded down the corridor. Sir
Archie turned and shuffled back, to be met by a distressing spectacle.
The lamp, burning as peacefully as it might have burned on an old
lady's tea-table, revealed the window of the garden-room driven bodily
inward, shutters and all, and now forming an inclined bridge over
Dougal's ineffectual tubs.  In front of it stood McGuffog, swinging his
gun by the barrel and yelling curses, which, being mainly couched in
the vernacular, were happily meaningless to Saskia.  She herself stood
at the hall door, plucking at something hidden in her breast.  He saw
that it was a little ivory-handled pistol.

The enemy's feint had succeeded, for even as Sir Archie looked three
men leaped into the room.  On the neck of one the butt of McGuffog's
gun crashed, but two scrambled to their feet and made for the girl. Sir
Archie met the first with his fist, a clean drive on the jaw, followed
by a damaging hook with his left that put him out of action. The other
hesitated for an instant and was lost, for McGuffog caught him by the
waist from behind and sent him through the broken frame to join his
comrades without.

"Up the stairs," Dougal was shouting, for the little room beyond the
hall was clearly impossible.  "Our flank's turned.  They're pourin'
through the other windy."  Out of a corner of his eye Sir Archie caught
sight of Alexis, with Sime and Carfrae in support, being slowly forced
towards them along the corridor.  "Upstairs," he shouted. "Come on,
McGuffog.  Lead on, Princess."  He dashed out the lamp, and the place
was in darkness.

With this retreat from the forward trench line ended the opening phase
of the battle.  It was achieved in good order, and position was taken
up on the first floor landing, dominating the main staircase and the
passage that led to the back stairs.  At their back was a short
corridor ending in a window which gave on the north side of the House
above the verandah, and from which an active man might descend to the
verandah roof.  It had been carefully reconnoitred beforehand by
Dougal, and his were the dispositions.

The odd thing was that the retreating force were in good heart. The
three men from the Mains were warming to their work, and McGuffog wore
an air of genial ferocity.  "Dashed fine position I call this," said
Sir Archie.  Only Alexis was silent and preoccupied.  "We are still at
their mercy," he said.  "Pray God your police come soon."  He forbade
shooting yet awhile.  "The lady is our strong card," he said. "They
won't use their guns while she is with us, but if it ever comes to
shooting they can wipe us out in a couple of minutes. One of you watch
that window, for Paul Abreskov is no fool."

Their exhilaration was short-lived.  Below in the hall it was black
darkness save for a greyness at the entrance of the verandah passage;
but the defence was soon aware that the place was thick with men.
Presently there came a scuffling from Carfrae's post towards the back
stairs, and a cry as of some one choking.  And at the same moment a
flare was lit below which brought the whole hall from floor to rafters
into blinding light.

It revealed a crowd of figures, some still in the hall and some
half-way up the stairs, and it revealed, too, more figures at the end
of the upper landing where Carfrae had been stationed. The shapes were
motionless like mannequins in a shop window.

"They've got us treed all right," Sir Archie groaned.  "What the devil
are they waiting for?"

"They wait for their leader," said Alexis.

No one of the party will ever forget the ensuing minutes. After the
hubbub of the barricades the ominous silence was like icy water,
chilling and petrifying with an indefinable fear. There was no sound
but the wind, but presently mingled with it came odd wild voices.

"Hear to the whaups," McGuffog whispered.

Sir Archie, who found the tension unbearable, sought relief in
contradiction.  "You're an unscientific brute, McGuffog," he told his
henchman.  "It's a disgrace that a gamekeeper should be such a rotten
naturalist.  What would whaups be doin' on the shore at this time of
year?"

"A' the same, I could swear it's whaups, Sir Erchibald."

Then Dougal broke in and his voice was excited.  It's no' whaups.
That's our patrol signal.  Man, there's hope for us yet.  I believe
it's the polis.'  His words were unheeded, for the figures below drew
apart and a young man came through them.  His beautifully-shaped dark
head was bare, and as he moved he unbuttoned his oilskins and showed
the trim dark-blue garb of the yachtsman.  He walked confidently up the
stairs, an odd elegant figure among his heavy companions.

"Good afternoon, Alexis," he said in English.  "I think we may now
regard this interesting episode as closed.  I take it that you
surrender. Saskia, dear, you are coming with me on a little journey.
Will you tell my men where to find your baggage?"

The reply was in Russian.  Alexis' voice was as cool as the other's,
and it seemed to wake him to anger.  He replied in a rapid torrent of
words, and appealed to the men below, who shouted back. The flare was
dying down, and shadows again hid most of the hall.

Dougal crept up behind Sir Archie.  "Here, I think it's the polis.
They're whistlin' outbye, and I hear folk cryin' to each other--no' the
foreigners."

Again Alexis spoke, and then Saskia joined in.  What she said rang
sharp with contempt, and her fingers played with her little pistol.

Suddenly before the young man could answer Dobson bustled toward him.
The innkeeper was labouring under some strong emotion, for he seemed to
be pleading and pointing urgently towards the door.

"I tell ye it's the polis," whispered Dougal.  "They're nickit."

There was a swaying in the crowd and anxious faces.  Men surged in,
whispered, and went out, and a clamour arose which the leader stilled
with a fierce gesture.

"You there," he cried, looking up, "you English.  We mean you no ill,
but I require you to hand over to me the lady and the Russian who is
with her.  I give you a minute by my watch to decide.  If you refuse,
my men are behind you and around you, and you go with me to be punished
at my leisure."

"I warn you," cried Sir Archie.  "We are armed, and will shoot down any
one who dares to lay a hand on us."

"You fool," came the answer.  "I can send you all to eternity before
you touch a trigger."

Leon was by his side now--Leon and Spidel, imploring him to do
something which he angrily refused.  Outside there was a new clamour,
faces showing at the door and then vanishing, and an anxious hum filled
the hall.... Dobson appeared again and this time he was a figure of
fury.

"Are ye daft, man?" he cried.  "I tell ye the polis are closin' round
us, and there's no' a moment to lose if we would get back to the boats.
If ye'll no' think o' your own neck, I'm thinkin' o' mine. The whole
things a bloody misfire.  Come on, lads, if ye're no besotted on
destruction."

Leon laid a hand on the leader's arm and was roughly shaken off. Spidel
fared no better, and the little group on the upper landing saw the two
shrug their shoulders and make for the door.  The hall was emptying
fast and the watchers had gone from the back stairs. The young man's
voice rose to a scream; he commanded, threatened, cursed; but panic was
in the air and he had lost his mastery.

"Quick," croaked Dougal, "now's the time for the counter-attack."

But the figure on the stairs held them motionless.  They could not see
his face, but by instinct they knew that it was distraught with fury
and defeat.  The flare blazed up again as the flame caught a knot of
fresh powder, and once more the place was bright with the uncanny
light.... The hall was empty save for the pale man who was in the act
of turning.

He looked back.  "If I go now, I will return.  The world is not wide
enough to hide you from me, Saskia."

"You will never get her," said Alexis.

A sudden devil flamed into his eyes, the devil of some ancestral
savagery, which would destroy what is desired but unattainable. He
swung round, his hand went to his pocket, something clacked, and his
arm shot out like a baseball pitcher's.

So intent was the gaze of the others on him, that they did not see a
second figure ascending the stairs.  Just as Alexis flung himself
before the Princess, the new-comer caught the young man's outstretched
arm and wrenched something from his hand. The next second he had hurled
it into a far corner where stood the great fireplace.  There was a
blinding sheet of flame, a dull roar, and then billow upon billow of
acrid smoke.  As it cleared they saw that the fine Italian
chimneypiece, the pride of the builder of the House, was a mass of
splinters, and that a great hole had been blown through the wall into
what had been the dining-room.... A figure was sitting on the bottom
step feeling its bruises. The last enemy had gone.

When Mr. John Heritage raised his eyes he saw the Princess with a very
pale face in the arms of a tall man whom he had never seen before. If
he was surprised at the sight, he did not show it.  "Nasty little bomb
that.  I remember we struck the brand first in July '18."

"Are they rounded up?" Sir Archie asked.

"They've bolted.  Whether they'll get away is another matter. I left
half the mounted police a minute ago at the top of the West Lodge
avenue.  The other lot went to the Garplefoot to cut off the boats."

"Good Lord, man," Sir Archie cried, "the police have been here for the
last ten minutes."

"You're wrong.  They came with me."

"Then what on earth---" began the astonished baronet.  He stopped
short, for he suddenly got his answer.  Into the hall limped a boy.
Never was there seen so ruinous a child.  He was dripping wet, his
shirt was all but torn off his back, his bleeding nose was poorly
staunched by a wisp of handkerchief, his breeches were in ribbons, and
his poor bare legs looked as if they had been comprehensively kicked
and scratched.  Limpingly he entered, yet with a kind of pride, like
some small cock-sparrow who has lost most of his plumage but has
vanquished his adversary.

With a yell Dougal went down the stairs.  The boy saluted him, and they
gravely shook hands.  It was the meeting of Wellington and Blucher.

The Chieftain's voice shrilled in triumph, but there was a break in it.
The glory was almost too great to be borne.

"I kenned it," he cried.  "It was the Gorbals Die-Hards. There stands
the man that done it.... Ye'll no' fickle Thomas Yownie."




CHAPTER XV

THE GORBALS DIE-HARDS GO INTO ACTION


We left Mr. McCunn, full of aches but desperately resolute in spirit,
hobbling by the Auchenlochan road into the village of Dalquharter. His
goal was Mrs. Morran's hen-house, which was Thomas Yownie's POSTE DE
COMMANDEMENT.  The rain had come on again, and, though in other weather
there would have been a slow twilight, already the shadow of night had
the world in its grip.  The sea even from the high ground was
invisible, and all to westward and windward was a ragged screen of dark
cloud.  It was foul weather for foul deeds. Thomas Yownie was not in
the hen-house, but in Mrs. Morran's kitchen, and with him were the
pug-faced boy know as Old Bill, and the sturdy figure of Peter
Paterson.  But the floor was held by the hostess. She still wore her
big boots, her petticoats were still kilted, and round her venerable
head in lieu of a bonnet was drawn a tartan shawl.

"Eh, Dickson, but I'm blithe to see ye.  And puir man, ye've been sair
mishandled.  This is the awfu'est Sabbath day that ever you and me pit
in.  I hope it'll be forgiven us.... Whaur's the young leddy?"

"Dougal was saying she was in the House with Sir Archibald and the men
from the Mains."

"Wae's me!" Mrs. Morran keened.  "And what kind o' place is yon for
her? Thae laddies tell me there's boatfu's o' scoondrels landit at the
Garplefit.  They'll try the auld Tower, but they'll no' wait there when
they find it toom, and they'll be inside the Hoose in a jiffy and awa'
wi' the puir lassie.  Sirs, it maunna be.  Ye're lippenin' to the
polis, but in a' my days I never kenned the polis in time. We maun be
up and daein' oorsels.  Oh, if I could get a haud o' that red-heided
Dougal..."

As she spoke there came on the wind the dull reverberation of an
explosion.

"Keep us, what's that?" she cried.

"It's dinnymite," said Peter Paterson.

"That's the end o' the auld Tower," observed Thomas Yownie in his
quiet, even voice.  "And it's likely the end o' the man Heritage."

"Lord peety us!" the old woman wailed. "And us standin' here like
stookies and no' liftin' a hand.  Awa' wi ye, laddies, and dae
something. Awa' you too, Dickson, or I'll tak' the road mysel'."

"I've got orders," said the Chief of Staff, "no' to move till the
sityation's clear.  Napoleon's up at the Tower and Jaikie's in the
policies.  I maun wait on their reports."

For a moment Mrs. Morran's attention was distracted by Dickson, who
suddenly felt very faint and sat down heavily on a kitchen chair. "Man,
ye're as white as a dish-clout," she exclaimed with compunction. "Ye're
fair wore out, and ye'll have had nae meat sin' your breakfast. See,
and I'll get ye a cup o' tea."

She proved to be in the right, for as soon as Dickson had swallowed
some mouthfuls of her strong scalding brew the colour came back to his
cheeks, and he announced that he felt better.  "Ye'll fortify it wi' a
dram," she told him, and produced a black bottle from her cupboard. "My
father aye said that guid whisky and het tea keepit the doctor's gig
oot o' the close."

The back door opened and Napoleon entered, his thin shanks blue with
cold. He saluted and made his report in a voice shrill with excitement.

"The Tower has fallen.  They've blown in the big door, and the feck o'
them's inside."

"And Mr. Heritage?" was Dickson's anxious inquiry.

"When I last saw him he was up at a windy, shootin'.  I think he's
gotten on to the roof.  I wouldna wonder but the place is on fire."

"Here, this is awful," Dickson groaned.  "We can't let Mr. Heritage be
killed that way.  What strength is the enemy?"

"I counted twenty-seven, and there's stragglers comin' up from the
boats."

"And there's me and you five laddies here, and Dougal and the others
shut up in the House."

He stopped in sheer despair.  It was a fix from which the most
enlightened business mind showed no escape.  Prudence, inventiveness,
were no longer in question; only some desperate course of violence.

"We must create a diversion," he said.  "I'm for the Tower, and you
laddies must come with me.  We'll maybe see a chance.  Oh, but I wish I
had my wee pistol."

"If ye're gaun there, Dickson, I'm comin' wi' ye," Mrs Morran announced.

Her words revealed to Dickson the preposterousness of the whole
situation, and for all his anxiety he laughed.  "Five laddies, a
middle-aged man, and an auld wife," he cried.  "Dod, it's pretty
hopeless.  It's like the thing in the Bible about the weak things of
the world trying to confound the strong."

"The Bible's whiles richt," Mrs. Morran answered drily.  "Come on, for
there's no time to lose."

The door opened again to admit the figure of Wee Jaikie.  There were no
tears in his eyes, and his face was very white.

"They're a' round the Hoose," he croaked.  "I was up a tree forenent
the verandy and seen them.  The lassie ran oot and cried on them from
the top o' the brae, and they a' turned and hunted her back. Gosh, but
it was a near thing.  I seen the Captain sklimmin' the wall, and a
muckle man took the lassie and flung her up the ladder. They got inside
just in time and steekit the door, and now the whole pack is roarin'
round the Hoose seekin' a road in.  They'll no' be long over the job,
neither."

"What about Mr. Heritage?"

"They're no' heedin' about him any more.  The auld Tower's bleezin'."

"Worse and worse," said Dickson.  "If the police don't come in the next
ten minutes, they'll be away with the Princess.  They've beaten all
Dougal's plans, and it's a straight fight with odds of six to one. It's
not possible."

Mrs. Morran for the first time seemed to lose hope.  "Eh, the puir
lassie!" she wailed, and sinking on a chair covered her face with her
shawl.

"Laddies, can you no' think of a plan?" asked Dickson, his voice flat
with despair.

Then Thomas Yownie spoke.  So far he had been silent, but under his
tangled thatch of hair his mind had been busy.  Jaikie's report seemed
to bring him to a decision.

"It's gey dark," he said,  "and it's gettin' darker."

There was that in his voice which promised something, and Dickson
listened.

"The enemy's mostly foreigners, but Dobson's there and I think he's a
kind of guide to them.  Dobson's feared of the polis, and if we can
terrify Dobson he'll terrify the rest."

"Ay, but where are the police?"

"They're no' here yet, but they're comin'.  The fear o' them is aye in
Dobson's mind.  If he thinks the polis has arrived, he'll put the wind
up the lot.... WE maun be the polis."

Dickson could only stare while the Chief of Staff unfolded his scheme.
I do not know to whom the Muse of History will give the credit of the
tactics of "Infiltration," whether to Ludendorff or von Hutier or some
other proud captain of Germany, or to Foch, who revised and perfected
them.  But I know that the same notion was at this moment of crisis
conceived by Thomas Yownie, whom no parents acknowledged, who slept
usually in a coal cellar, and who had picked up his education among
Gorbals closes and along the wharves of Clyde.

"It's gettin' dark," he said, "and the enemy are that busy tryin' to
break into the Hoose that they'll no' be thinkin' o' their rear. The
five o' us Die-Hards is grand at dodgin' and keepin' out of sight, and
what hinders us to get in among them, so that they'll hear us but never
see us.  We're used to the ways o' the polis, and can imitate them
fine.  Forbye we've all got our whistles, which are the same as a
bobbie's birl, and Old Bill and Peter are grand at copyin' a man's
voice.  Since the Captain is shut up in the Hoose, the command falls to
me, and that's my plan."

With a piece of chalk he drew on the kitchen floor a rough sketch of
the environs of Huntingtower.  Peter Paterson was to move from the
shrubberies beyond the verandah, Napoleon from the stables, Old Bill
from the Tower, while Wee Jaikie and Thomas himself were to advance as
if from the Garplefoot, so that the enemy might fear for his
communications.  "As soon as one o' ye gets into position he's to gie
the patrol cry, and when each o' ye has heard five cries, he's to
advance.  Begin birlin' and roarin' afore ye get among them, and keep
it up till ye're at the Hoose wall.  If they've gotten inside, in ye go
after them.  I trust each Die-Hard to use his judgment, and above all
to keep out o' sight and no' let himsel' be grippit."

The plan, like all great tactics, was simple, and no sooner was it
expounded than it was put into action.  The Die-Hards faded out of the
kitchen like fog-wreaths, and Dickson and Mrs. Morran were left looking
at each other.  They did not look long.  The bare feet of Wee Jaikie
had not crossed the threshold fifty seconds, before they were followed
by Mrs. Morran's out-of-doors boots and Dickson's tackets.  Arm in arm
the two hobbled down the back path behind the village which led to the
South Lodge.  The gate was unlocked, for the warder was busy elsewhere,
and they hastened up the avenue. Far off Dickson thought he saw shapes
fleeting across the park, which he took to be the shock-troops of his
own side, and he seemed to hear snatches of song.  Jaikie was giving
tongue, and this was what he sang:

  "Proley Tarians, arise!
  Wave the Red Flag to the skies,
  Heed no more the Fat Man's lees,
  Stap them doun his throat!
  Nocht to lose except our chains----"


But he tripped over a rabbit wire and thereafter conserved his breath.

The wind was so loud that no sound reached them from the House, which,
blank and immense, now loomed before them.  Dickson's ears were alert
for the noise of shots or the dull crash of bombs; hearing nothing, he
feared the worst, and hurried Mrs. Morran at a pace which endangered
her life.  He had no fear for himself, arguing that his foes were
seeking higher game, and judging, too, that the main battle must be
round the verandah at the other end.  The two passed the shrubbery
where the road forked, one path running to the back door and one to the
stables.  They took the latter and presently came out on the downs,
with the ravine of the Garple on their left, the stables in front, and
on the right the hollow of a formal garden running along the west side
of the House.

The gale was so fierce, now that they had no wind-break between them
and the ocean, that Mrs. Morran could wrestle with it no longer, and
found shelter in the lee of a clump of rhododendrons. Darkness had all
but fallen, and the House was a black shadow against the dusky sky,
while a confused greyness marked the sea. The old Tower showed a tooth
of masonry; there was no glow from it, so the fire, which Jaikie had
reported, must have died down. A whaup cried loudly, and very eerily:
then another.

The birds stirred up Mrs. Morran.  "That's the laddies' patrol." she
gasped.  "Count the cries, Dickson."

Another bird wailed, this time very near.  Then there was perhaps three
minutes' silence till a fainter wheeple came from the direction of the
Tower.  "Four," said Dickson, but he waited in vain on the fifth. He
had not the acute hearing of the boys, and could not catch the faint
echo of Peter Paterson's signal beyond the verandah.  The next he heard
was a shrill whistle cutting into the wind, and then others in rapid
succession from different quarters, and something which might have been
the hoarse shouting of angry men.

The Gorbals Die-Hards had gone into action.

Dull prose is no medium to tell of that wild adventure.  The sober
sequence of the military historian is out of place in recording deeds
that knew not sequence or sobriety.  Were I a bard, I would cast this
tale in excited verse, with a lilt which would catch the speed of the
reality.  I would sing of Napoleon, not unworthy of his great namesake,
who penetrated to the very window of the ladies' bedroom, where the
framework had been driven in and men were pouring through; of how there
he made such pandemonium with his whistle that men tumbled back and ran
about blindly seeking for guidance; of how in the long run his
pugnacity mastered him, so that he engaged in combat with an unknown
figure and the two rolled into what had once been a fountain.  I would
hymn Peter Paterson, who across tracts of darkness engaged Old Bill in
a conversation which would have done no discredit to a Gallowgate
policeman.  He pretended to be making reports and seeking orders.
"We've gotten three o' the deevils, sir. What'll we dae wi' them?" he
shouted; and back would come the reply in a slightly more genteel
voice:  "Fall them to the rear. Tamson has charge of the prisoners."
Or it would be: "They've gotten pistols, sir.  What's the orders?" and
the answer would be: "Stick to your batons.  The guns are posted on the
knowe, so we needn't hurry." And over all the din there would be a
perpetual whistling and a yelling of "Hands up!"

I would sing, too, of Wee Jaikie, who was having the red-letter hour of
his life.  His fragile form moved like a lizard in places where no
mortal could be expected, and he varied his duties with impish assaults
upon the persons of such as came in his way. His whistle blew in a
man's ear one second and the next yards away. Sometimes he was moved to
song, and unearthly fragments of "Class-conscious we are" or "Proley
Tarians, arise!" mingled with the din, like the cry of seagulls in a
storm.  He saw a bright light flare up within the House which warned
him not to enter, but he got as far as the garden-room, in whose dark
corners he made havoc.  Indeed he was almost too successful, for he
created panic where he went, and one or two fired blindly at the
quarter where he had last been heard.  These shots were followed by
frenzied prohibitions from Spidel and were not repeated. Presently he
felt that aimless surge of men that is the prelude to flight, and heard
Dobson's great voice roaring in the hall. Convinced that the crisis had
come, he made his way outside, prepared to harrass the rear of any
retirement.  Tears now flowed down his face, and he could not have
spoken for sobs, but he had never been so happy.

But chiefly would I celebrate Thomas Yownie, for it was he who brought
fear into the heart of Dobson.  He had a voice of singular compass, and
from the verandah he made it echo round the House. The efforts of Old
Bill and Peter Paterson had been skilful indeed, but those of Thomas
Yownie were deadly.  To some leader beyond he shouted news: "Robison's
just about finished wi' his lot, and then he'll get the boats."  A
furious charge upset him, and for a moment he thought he had been
discovered.  But it was only Dobson rushing to Leon, who was leading
the men in the doorway.  Thomas fled to the far end of the verandah,
and again lifted up his voice. "All foreigners," he shouted, "except
the man Dobson.  Ay.  Ay. Ye've got Loudon?  Well done!"

It must have been this last performance which broke Dobson's nerve and
convinced him that the one hope lay in a rapid retreat to the
Garplefoot. There was a tumbling of men in the doorway, a muttering of
strange tongues, and the vision of the innkeeper shouting to Leon and
Spidel.  For a second he was seen in the faint reflection that the
light in the hall cast as far as the verandah, a wild figure urging the
retreat with a pistol clapped to the head of those who were too
confused by the hurricane of events to grasp the situation.  Some of
them dropped over the wall, but most huddled like sheep through the
door on the west side, a jumble of struggling, blasphemous mortality.
Thomas Yownie, staggered at the success of his tactics, yet kept his
head and did his utmost to confuse the retreat, and the triumphant
shouts and whistles of the other Die-Hards showed that they were not
unmindful of this final duty....

The verandah was empty, and he was just about to enter the House, when
through the west door came a figure, breathing hard and bent apparently
on the same errand.  Thomas prepared for battle, determined that no
straggler of the enemy should now wrest from him victory, but, as the
figure came into the faint glow at the doorway, he recognized it as
Heritage.  And at the same moment he heard something which made his
tense nerves relax.  Away on the right came sounds, a thud of galloping
horses on grass and the jingle of bridle reins and the voices of men.
It was the real thing at last. It is a sad commentary on his career,
but now for the first time in his brief existence Thomas Yownie felt
charitably disposed towards the police.



The Poet, since we left him blaspheming on the roof of the Tower, had
been having a crowded hour of most inglorious life.  He had started to
descend at a furious pace, and his first misadventure was that he
stumbled and dropped Dickson's pistol over the parapet. He tried to
mark where it might have fallen in the gloom below, and this lost him
precious minutes.  When he slithered through the trap into the attic
room, where he had tried to hold up the attack, he discovered that it
was full of smoke which sought in vain to escape by the narrow window.
Volumes of it were pouring up the stairs, and when he attempted to
descend he found himself choked and blinded. He rushed gasping to the
window, filled his lungs with fresh air, and tried again, but he got no
farther than the first turn, from which he could see through the cloud
red tongues of flame in the ground room. This was solemn indeed, so he
sought another way out.  He got on the roof, for he remembered a
chimney-stack, cloaked with ivy, which was built straight from the
ground, and he thought he might climb down it.

He found the chimney and began the descent confidently, for he had once
borne a good reputation at the Montanvert and Cortina. At first all
went well, for stones stuck out at decent intervals like the rungs of a
ladder, and roots of ivy supplemented their deficiencies. But presently
he came to a place where the masonry had crumbled into a cave, and left
a gap some twenty feet high.  Below it he could dimly see a thick mass
of ivy which would enable him to cover the further forty feet to the
ground, but at that cave he stuck most finally. All around the lime and
stone had lapsed into debris, and he could find no safe foothold.
Worse still, the block on which he relied proved loose, and only by a
dangerous traverse did he avert disaster.

There he hung for a minute or two, with a cold void in his stomach. He
had always distrusted the handiwork of man as a place to scramble on,
and now he was planted in the dark on a decomposing wall, with an
excellent chance of breaking his neck, and with the most urgent need
for haste.  He could see the windows of the House, and, since he was
sheltered from the gale, he could hear the faint sound of blows on
woodwork.  There was clearly the devil to pay there, and yet here he
was helplessly stuck.... Setting his teeth, he started to ascend again.
Better the fire than this cold breakneck emptiness.

It took him the better part of half an hour to get back, and he passed
through many moments of acute fear.  Footholds which had seemed secure
enough in the descent now proved impossible, and more than once he had
his heart in his mouth when a rotten ivy stump or a wedge of stone gave
in his hands, and dropped dully into the pit of night, leaving him
crazily spread-eagled.  When at last he reached the top he rolled on
his back and felt very sick.  Then, as he realized his safety, his
impatience revived.  At all costs he would force his way out though he
should be grilled like a herring.

The smoke was less thick in the attic, and with his handkerchief wet
with the rain and bound across his mouth he made a dash for the ground
room.  It was as hot as a furnace, for everything inflammable in it
seemed to have caught fire, and the lumber glowed in piles of hot
ashes.  But the floor and walls were stone, and only the blazing jambs
of the door stood between him and the outer air. He had burned himself
considerably as he stumbled downwards, and the pain drove him to a wild
leap through the broken arch, where he miscalculated the distance,
charred his shins, and brought down a red-hot fragment of the lintel on
his head.  But the thing was done, and a minute later he was rolling
like a dog in the wet bracken to cool his burns and put out various
smouldering patches on his raiment.

Then he started running for the House, but, confused by the darkness,
he bore too much to the north, and came out in the side avenue from
which he and Dickson had reconnoitred on the first evening. He saw on
the right a glow in the verandah, which, as we know, was the reflection
of the flare in the hall, and he heard a babble of voices.  But he
heard something more, for away on his left was the sound which Thomas
Yownie was soon to hear--the trampling of horses.  It was the police at
last, and his task was to guide them at once to the critical point of
action.... Three minutes later a figure like a scarecrow was
admonishing a bewildered sergeant, while his hands plucked feverishly
at a horse's bridle.



It is time to return to Dickson in his clump of rhododendrons.
Tragically aware of his impotence he listened to the tumult of the
Die-Hards, hopeful when it was loud, despairing when there came a
moment's lull, while Mrs. Morran like a Greek chorus drew loudly upon
her store of proverbial philosophy and her memory of Scripture texts.
Twice he tried to reconnoitre towards the scene of battle, but only
blundered into sunken plots and pits in the Dutch garden.  Finally he
squatted beside Mrs. Morran, lit his pipe, and took a firm hold on his
patience.

It was not tested for long.  Presently he was aware that a change had
come over the scene--that the Die-Hards' whistles and shouts were being
drowned in another sound, the cries of panicky men. Dobson's bellow was
wafted to him.  "Auntie Phemie," he shouted, "the innkeeper's getting
rattled.  Dod, I believe they're running." For at that moment twenty
paces on his left the van of the retreat crashed through the creepers
on the garden's edge and leaped the wall that separated it from the
cliffs of the Garplefoot.

The old woman was on her feet.

"God be thankit, is't the polis?"

"Maybe.  Maybe no'.  But they're running."

Another bunch of men raced past, and he heard Dobson's voice.

"I tell you, they're broke.  Listen, it's horses.  Ay, it's the police,
but it was the Die-Hards that did the job.... Here!  They mustn't
escape. Have the police had the sense to send men to the Garplefoot?"

Mrs. Morran, a figure like an ancient prophetess, with her tartan shawl
lashing in the gale, clutched him by the shoulder.

"Doun to the waterside and stop them.  Ye'll no' be beat by wee
laddies! On wi' ye and I'll follow!  There's gaun to be a juidgment on
evil-doers this night."

Dickson needed no urging.  His heart was hot within him, and the
weariness and stiffness had gone from his limbs.  He, too, tumbled over
the wall, and made for what he thought was the route by which he had
originally ascended from the stream.  As he ran he made ridiculous
efforts to cry like a whaup in the hope of summoning the Die-Hards.
One, indeed, he found--Napoleon, who had suffered a grievous pounding
in the fountain, and had only escaped by an eel-like agility which had
aforetime served him in good stead with the law of his native city.
Lucky for Dickson was the meeting, for he had forgotten the road and
would certainly have broken his neck. Led by the Die-Hard he slid forty
feet over screes and boiler-plates, with the gale plucking at him,
found a path, lost it, and then tumbled down a raw bank of earth to the
flat ground beside the harbour. During all this performance, he has
told me, he had no thought of fear, nor any clear notion what he meant
to do.  He just wanted to be in at the finish of the job.

Through the narrow entrance the gale blew as through a funnel, and the
usually placid waters of the harbour were a froth of angry waves. Two
boats had been launched and were plunging furiously, and on one of them
a lantern dipped and fell.  By its light he could see men holding a
further boat by the shore.  There was no sign of the police; he
reflected that probably they had become entangled in the Garple Dean.
The third boat was waiting for some one.

Dickson--a new Ajax by the ships--divined who this someone must be and
realized his duty.  It was the leader, the arch-enemy, the man whose
escape must at all costs be stopped.  Perhaps he had the Princess with
him, thus snatching victory from apparent defeat. In any case he must
be tackled, and a fierce anxiety gripped his heart.  "Aye finish a
job," he told himself, and peered up into the darkness of the cliffs,
wondering just how he should set about it, for except in the last few
days he had never engaged in combat with a fellow-creature.

"When he comes, you grip his legs," he told Napoleon, "and get him
down. He'll have a pistol, and we're done if he's on his feet."

There was a cry from the boats, a shout of guidance, and the light on
the water was waved madly.  "They must have good eyesight," thought
Dickson, for he could see nothing.  And then suddenly he was aware of
steps in front of him, and a shape like a man rising out of the void at
his left hand.

In the darkness Napoleon missed his tackle, and the full shock came on
Dickson.  He aimed at what he thought was the enemy's throat, found
only an arm, and was shaken off as a mastiff might shake off a toy
terrier.  He made another clutch, fell, and in falling caught his
opponent's leg so that he brought him down.  The man was immensely
agile, for he was up in a second and something hot and bright blew into
Dickson's face.  The pistol bullet had passed through the collar of his
faithful waterproof, slightly singeing his neck.  But it served its
purpose, for Dickson paused, gasping, to consider where he had been
hit, and before he could resume the chase the last boat had pushed off
into deep water.

To be shot at from close quarters is always irritating, and the novelty
of the experience increased Dickson's natural wrath.  He fumed on the
shore like a deerhound when the stag has taken to the sea.  So hot was
his blood that he would have cheerfully assaulted the whole crew had
they been within his reach.  Napoleon, who had been incapacitated for
speed by having his stomach and bare shanks savagely trampled upon,
joined him, and together they watched the bobbing black specks as they
crawled out of the estuary into the grey spindrift which marked the
harbour mouth.

But as he looked the wrath died out of Dickson's soul.  For he saw that
the boats had indeed sailed on a desperate venture, and that a pursuer
was on their track more potent than his breathless middle-age. The tide
was on the ebb, and the gale was driving the Atlantic breakers
shoreward, and in the jaws of the entrance the two waters met in an
unearthly turmoil.  Above the noise of the wind came the roar of the
flooded Garple and the fret of the harbour, and far beyond all the
crashing thunder of the conflict at the harbour mouth.  Even in the
darkness, against the still faintly grey western sky, the spume could
be seen rising like waterspouts.  But it was the ear rather than the
eye which made certain presage of disaster.  No boat could face the
challenge of that loud portal.

As Dickson struggled against the wind and stared, his heart melted and
a great awe fell upon him.  He may have wept; it is certain that he
prayed.  "Poor souls, poor souls!" he repeated. "I doubt the last hour
has been a poor preparation for eternity."


The tide the next day brought the dead ashore.  Among them was a young
man, different in dress and appearance from the rest--a young man with
a noble head and a finely-cut classic face, which was not marred like
the others from pounding among the Garple rocks.  His dark hair was
washed back from his brow, and the mouth, which had been hard in life,
was now relaxed in the strange innocence of death.

Dickson gazed at the body and observed that there was a slight
deformation between the shoulders.

"Poor fellow," he said.  "That explains a lot.... As my father used to
say, cripples have a right to be cankered."




CHAPTER XVI

IN WHICH A PRINCESS LEAVES A DARK TOWER AND A PROVISION MERCHANT
RETURNS TO HIS FAMILY


The three days of storm ended in the night, and with the wild weather
there departed from the Cruives something which had weighed on
Dickson's spirits since he first saw the place.  Monday--only a week
from the morning when he had conceived his plan of holiday--saw the
return of the sun and the bland airs of spring.  Beyond the blue of the
yet restless waters rose dim mountains tipped with snow, like some
Mediterranean seascape.  Nesting birds were busy on the Laver banks and
in the Huntingtower thickets; the village smoked peacefully to the
clear skies; even the House looked cheerful if dishevelled.  The Garple
Dean was a garden of swaying larches, linnets, and wild anemones.
Assuredly, thought Dickson, there had come a mighty change in the
countryside, and he meditated a future discourse to the Literary
Society of the Guthrie Memorial Kirk on "Natural Beauty in Relation to
the Mind of Man."

It remains for the chronicler to gather up the loose ends of his tale.
There was no newspaper story with bold headlines of this the most
recent assault on the shores of Britain.  Alexis Nicholaevitch, once a
Prince of Muscovy and now Mr. Alexander Nicholson of the rising firm of
Sprot and Nicholson of Melbourne, had interest enough to prevent it.
For it was clear that if Saskia was to be saved from persecution, her
enemies must disappear without trace from the world, and no story be
told of the wild venture which was their undoing.  The constabulary of
Carrick and Scotland Yard were indisposed to ask questions, under a
hint from their superiors, the more so as no serious damage had been
done to the persons of His Majesty's lieges, and no lives had been lost
except by the violence of Nature.  The Procurator-Fiscal investigated
the case of the drowned men, and reported that so many foreign sailors,
names and origins unknown, had perished in attempting to return to
their ship at the Garplefoot.  The Danish brig had vanished into the
mist of the northern seas.  But one signal calamity the
Procurator-Fiscal had to record.  The body of Loudon the factor was
found on the Monday morning below the cliffs, his neck broken by a
fall. In the darkness and confusion he must have tried to escape in
that direction, and he had chosen an impracticable road or had slipped
on the edge.  It was returned as "death by misadventure," and the
CARRICK HERALD and the AUCHENLOCHAN ADVERTISER excelled themselves in
eulogy.  Mr. Loudon, they said, had been widely known in the south-west
of Scotland as an able and trusted lawyer, an assiduous public servant,
and not least as a good sportsman.  It was the last trait which had led
to his death, for, in his enthusiasm for wild nature, he had been
studying bird life on the cliffs of the Cruives during the storm, and
had made that fatal slip which had deprived the shire of a wise
counsellor and the best of good fellows.

The tinklers of the Garplefoot took themselves off, and where they may
now be pursuing their devious courses is unknown to the chronicler.
Dobson, too, disappeared, for he was not among the dead from the boats.
He knew the neighbourhood, and probably made his way to some port from
which he took passage to one or other of those foreign lands which had
formerly been honoured by his patronage.  Nor did all the Russians
perish.  Three were found skulking next morning in the woods, starving
and ignorant of any tongue but their own, and five more came ashore
much battered but alive.  Alexis took charge of the eight survivors,
and arranged to pay their passage to one of the British Dominions and
to give them a start in a new life. They were broken creatures, with
the dazed look of lost animals, and four of them had been peasants in
Saskia's estates.  Alexis spoke to them in their own language.  "In my
grandfather's time," he said, "you were serfs.  Then there came a
change, and for some time you were free men.  Now you have slipped back
into being slaves again--the worst of slaveries, for you have been the
serfs of fools and scoundrels and the black passion of your own hearts.
I give you a chance of becoming free men once more.  You have the task
before you of working out your own salvation.  Go, and God be with you."



Before we take leave of these companions of a single week I would
present them to you again as they appeared on a certain sunny afternoon
when the episode of Huntingtower was on the eve of closing. First we
see Saskia and Alexis walking on the thymy sward of the cliff-top,
looking out to the fretted blue of the sea. It is a fitting place for
lovers--above all for lovers who have turned the page on a dark
preface, and have before them still the long bright volume of life.
The girl has her arm linked in the man's, but as they walk she breaks
often away from him, to dart into copses, to gather flowers, or to peer
over the brink where the gulls wheel and oyster-catchers pipe among the
shingle. She is no more the tragic muse of the past week, but a
laughing child again, full of snatches of song, her eyes bright with
expectation. They talk of the new world which lies before them, and her
voice is happy. Then her brows contract, and, as she flings herself
down on a patch of young heather, her air is thoughtful.

"I have been back among fairy tales," she says.  "I do not quite
understand, Alesha.  Those gallant little boys!  They are youth, and
youth is always full of strangeness.  Mr. Heritage!  He is youth, too,
and poetry, perhaps, and a soldier's tradition.  I think I know him....
But what about Dickson?  He is the PETIT BOURGEOIS, the EPICIER, the
class which the world ridicules.  He is unbelievable. The others with
good fortune I might find elsewhere--in Russia perhaps. But not
Dickson."

"No," is the answer.  "You will not find him in Russia.  He is what
they call the middle-class, which we who were foolish used to laugh at.
But he is the stuff which above all others makes a great people. He
will endure when aristocracies crack and proletariats crumble. In our
own land we have never known him, but till we create him our land will
not be a nation."



Half a mile away on the edge of the Laver glen Dickson and Heritage are
together, Dickson placidly smoking on a tree-stump and Heritage walking
excitedly about and cutting with his stick at the bracken. Sundry
bandages and strips of sticking plaster still adorn the Poet, but his
clothes have been tidied up by Mrs. Morran, and he has recovered
something of his old precision of garb.  The eyes of both are fixed on
the two figures on the cliff-top.  Dickson feels acutely uneasy. It is
the first time that he has been alone with Heritage since the arrival
of Alexis shivered the Poet's dream.  He looks to see a tragic grief;
to his amazement he beholds something very like exultation.

"The trouble with you, Dogson," says Heritage, "is that you're a bit of
an anarchist.  All you false romantics are.  You don't see the
extraordinary beauty of the conventions which time has consecrated. You
always want novelty, you know, and the novel is usually the ugly and
rarely the true.  I am for romance, but upon the old, noble classic
line."

Dickson is scarcely listening.  His eyes are on the distant lovers, and
he longs to say something which will gently and graciously express his
sympathy with his friend.

"I'm afraid," he begins hesitatingly, "I'm afraid you've had a bad
blow, Mr. Heritage.  You're taking it awful well, and I honour you for
it."

The Poet flings back his head.  "I am reconciled," he says. "After all
'tis better to have loved and lost, you know. It has been a great
experience and has shown me my own heart. I love her, I shall always
love her, but I realize that she was never meant for me.  Thank God
I've been able to serve her--that is all a moth can ask of a star.  I'm
a better man for it, Dogson. She will be a glorious memory, and Lord!
what poetry I shall write! I give her up joyfully, for she has found
her mate.  'Let us not to the marriage of true minds admit
impediments!'  The thing's too perfect to grieve about.... Look!  There
is romance incarnate."

He points to the figures now silhouetted against the further sea. "How
does it go, Dogson?" he cries.  "'And on her lover's arm she
leant'--what next?  You know the thing."

Dickson assists and Heritage declaims:

  "And on her lover's arm she leant,
    And round her waist she felt it fold,
  And far across the hills they went
    In that new world which is the old:
  Across the hills, and far away
    Beyond their utmost purple rim,
  And deep into the dying day
    The happy princess followed him."


He repeats the last two lines twice and draws a deep breath. "How
right!" he cries.  "How absolutely right!  Lord!  It's astonishing how
that old bird Tennyson got the goods!"



After that Dickson leaves him and wanders among the thickets on the
edge of the Huntingtower policies above the Laver glen. He feels
childishly happy, wonderfully young, and at the same time
supernaturally wise.  Sometimes he thinks the past week has been a
dream, till he touches the sticking-plaster on his brow, and finds that
his left thigh is still a mass of bruises and that his right leg is
woefully stiff.  With that the past becomes very real again, and he
sees the Garple Dean in that stormy afternoon, he wrestles again at
midnight in the dark House, he stands with quaking heart by the boats
to cut off the retreat.  He sees it all, but without terror in the
recollection, rather with gusto and a modest pride.  "I've surely had a
remarkable time," he tells himself, and then Romance, the goddess whom
he has worshipped so long, marries that furious week with the idyllic.
He is supremely content, for he knows that in his humble way he has not
been found wanting. Once more for him the Chavender or Chub, and long
dreams among summer hills.  His mind flies to the days ahead of him,
when he will go wandering with his pack in many green places.  Happy
days they will be, the prospect with which he has always charmed his
mind. Yes, but they will be different from what he had fancied, for he
is another man than the complacent little fellow who set out a week ago
on his travels.  He has now assurance of himself, assurance of his
faith. Romance, he sees, is one and indivisible....

Below him by the edge of the stream he sees the encampment of the
Gorbals Die-Hards.  He calls and waves a hand, and his signal is
answered. It seems to be washing day, for some scanty and tattered
raiment is drying on the sward.  The band is evidently in session, for
it is sitting in a circle, deep in talk.

As he looks at the ancient tents, the humble equipment, the ring of
small shockheads, a great tenderness comes over him.  The Die-Hards are
so tiny, so poor, so pitifully handicapped, and yet so bold in their
meagreness.  Not one of them has had anything that might be called a
chance.  Their few years have been spent in kennels and closes, always
hungry and hunted, with none to care for them; their childish ears have
been habituated to every coarseness, their small minds filled with the
desperate shifts of living.... And yet, what a heavenly spark was in
them!  He had always thought nobly of the soul; now he wants to get on
his knees before the queer greatness of humanity.

A figure disengages itself from the group, and Dougal makes his way up
the hill towards him.  The Chieftain is not more reputable in garb than
when we first saw him, nor is he more cheerful of countenance. He has
one arm in a sling made out of his neckerchief, and his scraggy little
throat rises bare from his voluminous shirt. All that can be said for
him is that he is appreciably cleaner. He comes to a standstill and
salutes with a special formality.

"Dougal," says Dickson, "I've been thinking.  You're the grandest lot
of wee laddies I ever heard tell of, and, forbye, you've saved my life.
Now, I'm getting on in years, though you'll admit that I'm not that
dead old, and I'm not a poor man, and I haven't chick or child to look
after. None of you has ever had a proper chance or been right fed or
educated or taken care of.  I've just the one thing to say to you.
From now on you're my bairns, every one of you.  You're fine laddies,
and I'm going to see that you turn into fine men.  There's the stuff in
you to make Generals and Provosts--ay, and Prime Ministers, and Dod!
it'll not be my blame if it doesn't get out."

Dougal listens gravely and again salutes.

"I've brought ye a message," he says.  "We've just had a meetin' and
I've to report that ye've been unanimously eleckit Chief Die-Hard.
We're a' hopin' ye'll accept."

"I accept," Dickson replies.  "Proudly and gratefully I accept."



The last scene is some days later, in a certain southern suburb of
Glasgow. Ulysses has come back to Ithaca, and is sitting by his
fireside, waiting for the return of Penelope from the Neuk Hydropathic.
There is a chill in the air, so a fire is burning in the grate, but the
laden tea-table is bright with the first blooms of lilac. Dickson, in a
new suit with a flower in his buttonhole, looks none the worse for his
travels, save that there is still sticking-plaster on his deeply
sunburnt brow.  He waits impatiently with his eye on the black marble
timepiece, and he fingers something in his pocket.

Presently the sound of wheels is heard, and the pea-hen voice of Tibby
announces the arrival of Penelope.  Dickson rushes to the door, and at
the threshold welcomes his wife with a resounding kiss. He leads her
into the parlour and settles her in her own chair.

"My! but it's nice to be home again!" she says.  "And everything that
comfortable.  I've had a fine time, but there's no place like your own
fireside.  You're looking awful well, Dickson. But losh!  What have you
been doing to your head?"

"Just a small tumble.  It's very near mended already.  Ay, I've had a
grand walking tour, but the weather was a wee bit thrawn. It's nice to
see you back again, Mamma.  Now that I'm an idle man you and me must
take a lot of jaunts together."

She beams on him as she stays herself with Tibby's scones, and when the
meal is ended, Dickson draws from his pocket a slim case. The jewels
have been restored to Saskia, but this is one of her own which she has
bestowed upon Dickson as a parting memento. He opens the case and
reveals a necklet of emeralds, any one of which is worth half the
street.

"This is a present for you," he says bashfully.

Mrs. McCunn's eyes open wide.  "You're far too kind," she gasps. "It
must have cost an awful lot of money."

"It didn't cost me that much," is the truthful answer.

She fingers the trinket and then clasps it round her neck, where the
green depths of the stones glow against the black satin of her bodice.
Her eyes are moist as she looks at him.  "You've been a kind man to
me," she says, and she kisses him as she has not done since Janet's
death.

She stands up and admires the necklet in the mirror.  Romance once
more, thinks Dickson.  That which has graced the slim throats of
princesses in far-away Courts now adorns an elderly matron in a
semi-detached villa; the jewels of the wild Nausicaa have fallen to the
housewife Penelope.

Mrs. McCunn preens herself before the glass.  "I call it very genteel,"
she says.  "Real stylish.  It might be worn by a queen."

"I wouldn't say but it has," says Dickson.









End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Huntingtower, by John Buchan

*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HUNTINGTOWER ***

***** This file should be named 3782.txt or 3782.zip *****
This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
        http://www.gutenberg.org/3/7/8/3782/

Produced by Edward A. White, Robert F. Jaffe, and Kirsten
Tozer. HTML version by Al Haines.


Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
will be renamed.

Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
permission and without paying copyright royalties.  Special rules,
set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark.  Project
Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission.  If you
do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
rules is very easy.  You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
research.  They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks.  Redistribution is
subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
redistribution.



*** START: FULL LICENSE ***

THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK

To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
http://gutenberg.net/license).


Section 1.  General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic works

1.A.  By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
(trademark/copyright) agreement.  If you do not agree to abide by all
the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.

1.B.  "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark.  It may only be
used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement.  There are a few
things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
even without complying with the full terms of this agreement.  See
paragraph 1.C below.  There are a lot of things you can do with Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works.  See paragraph 1.E below.

1.C.  The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic works.  Nearly all the individual works in the
collection are in the public domain in the United States.  If an
individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
are removed.  Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
the work.  You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.

1.D.  The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
what you can do with this work.  Copyright laws in most countries are in
a constant state of change.  If you are outside the United States, check
the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
Gutenberg-tm work.  The Foundation makes no representations concerning
the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
States.

1.E.  Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:

1.E.1.  The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
copied or distributed:

This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever.  You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net

1.E.2.  If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
or charges.  If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
1.E.9.

1.E.3.  If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
terms imposed by the copyright holder.  Additional terms will be linked
to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.

1.E.4.  Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.

1.E.5.  Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
Gutenberg-tm License.

1.E.6.  You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
word processing or hypertext form.  However, if you provide access to or
distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.net),
you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
form.  Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.

1.E.7.  Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.

1.E.8.  You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
that

- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
     the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
     you already use to calculate your applicable taxes.  The fee is
     owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
     has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
     Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation.  Royalty payments
     must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
     prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
     returns.  Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
     sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
     address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
     the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."

- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
     you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
     does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
     License.  You must require such a user to return or
     destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
     and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
     Project Gutenberg-tm works.

- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
     money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
     electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
     of receipt of the work.

- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
     distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.

1.E.9.  If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark.  Contact the
Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.

1.F.

1.F.1.  Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
collection.  Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
your equipment.

1.F.2.  LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
fees.  YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3.  YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
DAMAGE.

1.F.3.  LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
written explanation to the person you received the work from.  If you
received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
your written explanation.  The person or entity that provided you with
the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
refund.  If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund.  If the second copy
is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
opportunities to fix the problem.

1.F.4.  Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.

1.F.5.  Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
the applicable state law.  The invalidity or unenforceability of any
provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.

1.F.6.  INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.


Section  2.  Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm

Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers.  It exists
because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
people in all walks of life.

Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
remain freely available for generations to come.  In 2001, the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.


Section 3.  Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
Foundation

The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
Revenue Service.  The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
number is 64-6221541.  Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
http://pglaf.org/fundraising.  Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.

The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
throughout numerous locations.  Its business office is located at
809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
business@pglaf.org.  Email contact links and up to date contact
information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
page at http://pglaf.org

For additional contact information:
     Dr. Gregory B. Newby
     Chief Executive and Director
     gbnewby@pglaf.org


Section 4.  Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
Literary Archive Foundation

Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
array of equipment including outdated equipment.  Many small donations
($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
status with the IRS.

The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
States.  Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
with these requirements.  We do not solicit donations in locations
where we have not received written confirmation of compliance.  To
SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
particular state visit http://pglaf.org

While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
approach us with offers to donate.

International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
outside the United States.  U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.

Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
methods and addresses.  Donations are accepted in a number of other
ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
donations.  To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate


Section 5.  General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works.

Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
with anyone.  For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.


Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
unless a copyright notice is included.  Thus, we do not necessarily
keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.


Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:

     http://www.gutenberg.net

This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.