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 Hrs. 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."