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633 lines
34 KiB
Plaintext
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CHAPTER TWELVE
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The new Fruin road that would soon by—pass Arden was taking
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shape. Along much 0f the fifteen-mile length, rocks had been
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blasted and hardcore laid. It would become a two-lane dual
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carriageway t0 be used by the Ministry of Defence as their main
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transport route to the Trident base 0n the Kilcreggan peninsula.
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On that sunny day, men were preparing to finish work 0n phase
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four, a two-mile stretch that skirted Cardross Hill t0 join up with
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five and three, completing the sections between Levenford and
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Kirkland.
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It had been a long and hard day for Bert Milne, a big, grizzled
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digger driver who had been at the controls of his yellow monster
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since lunch-time when he’d sat with his mates round a brazier that
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they’d made out of a fifty-gallon drum, punctured with a pickaxe
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and loaded with wood chips and any debris left from the land
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clearance. They had made thick tea in their smoke-blackened cans
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that hung over the flames, bubbling and frothing over to sizzle in
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the red heat.
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Bert Milne had sat down on a plank that was raised up on a
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couple of concrete kerb—stones and he had taken off his dirty cap
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and mopped the sweat of his brow.
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He had waited for his tea to infuse — with a little piece of twig
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floating on the surface to draw all the particles of dust and ash — a
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trick that every labourer has known since tea was first brewed — and
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then he had guzzled his big box of sandwiches with a fewour
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known only to those who work in the open air. Cheese and pickle,
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corned beef and pickle , and a great treat — tuna and pickle. The sub
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contractors, earning huge wealth from the defence work, were
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paying handsomely. Bert’s wife could afford tuna.
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Bert sat with his mates, big and bulky in his chequered shirt,
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savouring the tea and the sandwiches, the sun and the heat from
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the fire. He belched loudly and satisfyingly and swapped jokes. He
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had another cup of stewed, sweet tea, lifting his can off the coals
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with a deftness born of experience and thickly calloused working-
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man’s hands which defied the scorching. He enjoyed the tea, and .
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two unfiltered cigarettes, and when he’d finished he and his
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151
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workmates went back to the job. Some to lay pipes for drainage,
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some to manhandle the heavy kerbs into position, and Bert to his
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JCB.
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He sauntered along the dusty road to the end of the built—up
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section, then out on to the hardened mud where all morning he had
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been clearing debris from the base of a rock face that hadjbeen
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blasted out.
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The engine roared into life seconds after he had heaved himself
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into the tiny, dusty and oily cabin and the great shovel clanged
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down into position for the first thrust.
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Bert liked his work, he could handle this big machine. It suited
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him. He was conscientious and drove the JCB forward and
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backwards, pirouetting like a forty-ton ballet-dancer, rumbling
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across the earth, and moving great mounds of earth. His hands
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juggled with the controls as the sunlight streamed through the
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plexiglass window that was smeared with dust. Bert worked and
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sweated all afternoon, feeling the throbbing of the great diesel
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engine underneath him. A slight case of haemorrhoids would start
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to give him gyp, no doubt, later on, a condition caused by sitting in
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his sweaty box all day long, but one which he bore with relatively
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cheerful stoicism.
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Late in the afternoon, Bert’s stomach started playing up. The
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muscles spasmed tightly, causing him to suddenly wince.
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‘Bloody pickles,’ he muttered to himself in between trying to
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belch to ease the gripping pain. This action did not prevent him
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manoeuvring his big machine and lowering the jaw down for
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another foray into the mound of rubble.
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The pain did not go away, and Bert started feeling nauseous. He
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started to sweat, not in the way he had been perspiring all
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afternoon, but coldly, in copious amounts that oozed out all over
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his face and at the back of his neck and on his chest.
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Then suddenly there was what felt like an enormous explosion
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deep inside the big man’s rib cage, a huge pain that caused him to
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lurch forward over the controls. Bert was dead before his face hit
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against the screen as the hole that had suddenly appeared in the big
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artery leading from the top of his heart spilled everything into his
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chest cavity.
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The JCB had a life of its own.
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Unguided, with Bert’s body sprawled over the levers, the
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machine lurched forward, its jaw raised high. Instead of digging
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into the base of the mound, the flat plates of the caterpillar tracks
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carried its immense weight right up the side of the slope without
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faltering. Then as it neared the top, it began to slew sideways. It J
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152
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seemed to pause on the crest, then with a rending screech of metal
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against stone it turned and started to tumble. The jaw slammed
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against the crumbling rock face and a welter of rock broke away,
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big jagged stones that battered against the cab. The machine just
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rolled over in a slow motion action and hit the near edge of the
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face, bringing down an avalanche. Then it and the rocks that had
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dislodged crashed with a huge noise into the little stream below.
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When the dust cleared, the running men who were moving even
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before the digger had started to topple were sliding down the scree
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of the new avalanche slope, and were in the rubble that surrounded
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and half covered the JCB which lay on its side where the clear
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water had flowed. By the time they had prised off the loose rocks
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and hauled Bert Milne’s body out of the wreckage, the water was
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brown with silt and had started backing up in a deepening pool.
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The yard-wide steel and concrete pipe that had carried the water
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from further up the gully that cut into the hillside was blocked with
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stones and shattered rock, mixed with mud and clay.
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By evening, when the ambulance had come and gone, the
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backed-up water spilled over the low edge of the gully and found a
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new way out into a drainage ditch that had been cut and cleared
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along the length of the roadway to carry off the spill water from the
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wide carriageway. The ditch travelled more than half a mile , taking
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the extra load easily until it reached the Kilmalid Burn, the largest
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of the four streams that passed within the boundaries of Arden.
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The silted water soon cleared and the Kilmalid ilowed, taking the
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water of both streams now instead of one, down its steeply etched
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valley past the grey concrete council houses and under the bridge
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on the Kilcreggan Road. It meandered more slowly now as the
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waters gurgled in a serpentine shape alongside the pigeon huts and
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shacks of the shore side of the Milligs, and out into the flat expanse
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of the mudflats, midway between the long rifle barrel of the sewage
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pipe and Ardhmor Rock. Then it drained into the firth and was
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dissipated in the salt water.
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Below the backed-up pool, downstream from where the plugged
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pipe allowed the newly formed pool to grow, the clear waters of
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Strowan’s Well ran more slowly, became a trickle that quickly
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drained away, leaving a punctuation of shallow pools that trapped
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some small trout. Through the good farmland the waters
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diminished and died away, and the silver fork of the stream that cut
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across the Ardhmor peninsula east and west became a patchy ditch
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of still water that started to evaporate as soon as the sun rose in the
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morning. r
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By nightfall on the following day the bed of the stream was just
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153
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muddy and moist. Two days later it was dry.
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Kitty MacBeth would have been the iirst to notice the
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disappearance of the water of Strowan’s Well from her vigil
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watchpost on the point. But on the night that Bert Milne died in the
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cabin of his digger, the old woman took ill with what she thought
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was a summer cold, and went to her bed. Two days later, racked
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with a cough that seared her throat, and running a fever, she could
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hardly move.
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That’s how I found her in her neat little shack, shivering and
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coughing under the pile of blankets. There was no fire under the
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kettle and no air in the cramped space.
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I knocked several times on the hardwood door that had
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obviously in a former life graced a more imposing homestead, but
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there was no reply at all. I assumed the old woman had gone
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beachcombing and was about to leave when I heard a weak,
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rasping cough. I stood on some of the logs that she had collected
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for firewood and had to rub the dust off the glass to peer inside. It
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took a few moments for my eyes to accustom themselves to the
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gloom, and at Hrst I saw nothing, then I noticed the shape under
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the pile of grey blankets. I knocked on the window with a knuckle,
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but there was no further response, not even a cough.
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The big door looked as if it was going to take a lot of shouldering
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to get it open, but it didn’t. I turned the handle and it opened with
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hardly a creak. She hadn’t locked it.
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Inside, the air was foul, reeking of damp and sweat and more
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besides. I crossed over to where Kitty’s pallet was tucked in against
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the wall and pulled a blanket back from her face.
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Ghastly is the only way to tell you how she looked. In the couple
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of days since I’d seen her she had lost a deal of weight, and her blue
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eyes were sunken into sockets that seemed much too large to hold
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them. They had lost their sparkle, and only stared in a dull,
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confused way. Her hair was lank and sweaty, and her neck was like
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a chicken, scrawny and scraggy. A pulse beat in one of the blue
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veins that seemed to stand out against the pallor of her skin. I took
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hold of her right hand that was up close to her neck and she tried to
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grip mine, but there was no strength at all in the grasp. The
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movement ended almost as soon as it began. I could feel the heat
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from her body coming off her like a radiator.
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‘Kitty,’ I said, bending low to speak.
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Her eyes swivelled in their sockets, coming to rest, slowly, on
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mine. For a moment there was nothing, then a brief, tired moment
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of recognition before they glazed over again. She coughed, and the g
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sound seemed to be coming from way down deep inside. ‘Sick,’ she
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154
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murmured. ‘Got sick.’
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‘Yes, I know you’re sick. I’ve got to get a doctor,’ I said quickly.
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‘Doctor. Yes. Please} The words were just a dry whisper, but
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again I felt the pressure of her hand tighten on mine. I pulled away
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gently and tucked the blankets around her as tightly as possible. In
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the few moments that took, the old woman had drifted off to sleep.
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The mile from Kitty’s shack to my house was possibly the
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quickest I’ve run since I was a kid. By the time I got there I was
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panting like a dog, and I had to lean against the lintel to get my
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breath back before I could get my key into the lock. I barged in and
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ran through to the study where the phone was, and picked up the ·
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receiver to dial instead of using the phone book to find the local
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doctor’s number. I just got straight on to emergency services and
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asked them to send an ambulance, then I ran all the way back down
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to Kitty’s place, albeit at a much slower pace, promising myself
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that I must do something to get myself as Ht as I should be.
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The ambulance managed to get within a quarter of a mile of the
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shack, and quite quickly too, before the two men had to get out and
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foot the rest, carrying their stretcher between them. I had told the
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operator that an old woman was dying and needed a stretcher. For
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all I knew she was, but I didn’t want to take any chances. Once
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inside the shack, the men were briskly efficient, checking pulse and
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heart rate almost at the same time as they lifted Kitty out of the bed
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and on to the stretcher.
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‘Dehydrated,’ the older of the two said. ‘She’s pretty weak}
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‘Any idea how long she’s been like this?’ asked the other. I
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shook my head.
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‘We’ll get her on a drip as soon as we get to the van. Do you want
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to ride with us?’
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‘Yes, of course. Thanks}
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I helped spell the older man along the track and through the
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beechwood to where the ambulance was parked. Kitty didn’t stir.
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As soon as we got there and put Kitty inside, one of the men ran
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round and started up immediately, while his partner hauled over
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some sort of intravenous array and affixed it to Kitty’s arm. It
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looked yellow and thin, and the veins were sticking out clearly
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from the surface. I suppose that it made the job of getting the
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needle inserted a lot easier.
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‘What is that stuff?’ I asked.
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‘Just a saline solution with some vitamins. I can’t give her
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anything else until she’s been examined, but the solution won’t do
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any harm, no matter what. r
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‘She’s running a fair old temperature too, but if she’s
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155
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dehydrated, that stuff will help bring it down a bit.’ 4
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The journey to the little cottage hospital on the west of Westbay
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took ten minutes at the most, and within fifteen minutes Kitty was
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. getting checked out by the youngish doctor. His work took less
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than half an hour, and when he came out he called me across from
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where I was sitting in the little waiting room. Through in his tiny
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office, he told me that Kitty had a temperature of a hundred and
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four, was thoroughly dehydrated as the ambulancemen had
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suspected, and had swollen lymph-nodes in various locations on
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her body.
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‘Too early to say at the moment, but possibly some sort of virus,’
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he said. ‘We’ll have to keep her here of course.’
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I nodded.
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‘I’ll need some personal details,’ he said. ·
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‘I don’t know how much I can help you there.’
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‘Oh? I thought she was your .... ’
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‘Friend. No relation. I can tell you how old she is, and where she
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lives, and her name. Not much more than that.’
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‘Well, it’ll do for a start. Do you know if she has any relatives in
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the area?’
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‘No, she has none that I know of. But if there’s anything that’s
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needed, I’ll be available. You can put me down as next of kin for
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practical purposes} `
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‘I thought you said there was no relation,’ he said, looking
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bemusedly over the top of his bi-focals.
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‘Well there isn’t really, but I suppose I’m all she’s got.’
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That seemed to satisfy the bureaucrat in him and he filled in a
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little form as I supplied him with what little information I had.
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Later he let me in to see the old woman. She was cleaner than
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before, but just as pallid against the white linen of the hospital
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sheets. I could see the orbs of her eyes move under the delicate thin
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eyelids. I sat myself down by the bed and was just looking at her
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when the eyes slowly opened.
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She raised a hand that was pinned with the intravenous drip, so I
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leaned forward and held it still, hushing for her to relax in the way
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they do on television. She eased her head round slowly to face me.
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‘Wooden box. Under bed,’ she whispered hoarsely. ‘Take it.
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Use it.’ .
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‘Later. Talk later. Just rest now.’ S
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‘No. Now. Take it. Use it,’ she said, with as much vehemence as
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she could muster. I could see that even that effort drained her.
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‘All right, Kitty. I will,’ I assured her. Her eyes started to close,
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then they snapped open, gleaming brightly for an instant, beaming I
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156
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the full blue straight into mine.
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‘The walls,’ she hissed. ‘You take care of the walls!’
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For the third time that day, I went down to the point. This time I
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walked. feeling depressed and oppressed. I knew inside myself
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that the old woman was seriously ill, and for some reason I found a
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weight of responsibility on my shoulders, although I was unsure
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what I should feel responsible for. I wandered, hands deep in the
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pockets of my bomber—jacket, in the shade of the huge beech trees,
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along the hard—packed path that skirted the shore. I stopped for a
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few minutes beside the big stone dragon’s tooth where the old
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woman had shown me the inscription on the standing stone. The
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small part she had scraped away with the dogfish skin was still
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lighter than the rest, but already the lichen was returning in a thin
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sheen of green. Already the script was invisible. Had it been real?
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Had it?
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Kitty’s shack door was open. I must have forgotten to close it in
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my haste to get her to the ambulance. Inside, the little packed
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room was well aired. The stench of sweat and illness had blown out
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of the door and had been replaced with a fresher air brought in on
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the light sea breeze. To tell you the truth, I felt a bit ghoulish, but I
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had made a promise. I tend to keep them. Kitty had told me to find
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her box. I found it under the bed where she’d said it would be. It
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was small, made of a polished hardwood that had been etched in a
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stunning labyrinth pattern all over its surface. There was a hole for
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a key, but the box was not locked. I lifted the lid a fraction, then
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lowered it again. I didn’t feel like poring through the old woman’s
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possessions inside her home. I decided to take it back to my place
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although, in fact, I would have preferred to leave it where it was
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until the old woman came out of hospital.
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There was a big key hanging on the back of the door, which fitted
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the mortice lock. I turned it twice, hearing the clicks that would
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secure Kitty’s home from any but the determined, and I gathered
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there would not be many of those in Arden. I hefted the solid little
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box under my arm, and was about to head back along the track to
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the stone and up to Westbay again when I heard a shout in the
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distance. Someone was calling my name.
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‘Hold on, Nick,’ the voice came from the shore, carrying clearly I
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from halfway along the curve, close to where the sand gave way to
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the marshes.
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I raised a hand over my eyes to ward off the glare, and saw the
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figure striding towards me. I didn’t recognise him and I remember
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thinking he must have bloody good eyesight if he could make me
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157
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out at that distance. I watched as the man walked steadily across .
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the sand, his feet kicking up little plumes of the line grains. At
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about half the distance, I recognised the major, Donald
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MacDonald, the old soldier, and Gaelic singer, who was a friend of
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Jimmy Allison.
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He waved when he was closer, and there was a smile on his broad
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face.
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‘Housebreaking or socialising‘?’ he asked.
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‘A bit of both ,’ I said. ‘The old woman took ill today. I got her up
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to the hospital.’
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‘Och, that’s sad. She’s a fine old one, that,’ Donald said, ‘despite
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what they say about her}
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|
‘She asked me to come down and collect something for her.’
|
|||
|
Donald nodded, accepting my explanation. He was wearing a
|
|||
|
peaked hunter’s hat that was camouflaged just like his sleeveless
|
|||
|
jacket. Around his neck there were a pair of Zeiss binoculars that
|
|||
|
looked powerful and heavy.
|
|||
|
‘I often drop in to see the old lady when I’m here,’ he said.
|
|||
|
‘Makes me a nice cup of tea and doesn’t complain when I put a wee
|
|||
|
dram in it neither.’
|
|||
|
He hefted the binoculars. They explained how he’d been able to
|
|||
|
recognise me from the far side of the bay. ·
|
|||
|
‘The birds, you know,’ he said by way of explanation.
|
|||
|
‘Oh, I didn’t know you were an ornithologistf
|
|||
|
‘More just an observer. It’s been a passion with me since I was a
|
|||
|
boy on the islands. And here is a wonderful place for the birds.’
|
|||
|
He nodded back in the direction from which he’d come. ‘Do you
|
|||
|
know we have an avocet there?’
|
|||
|
Noting my expression, he went on: ‘No, you wouldn’t. And
|
|||
|
nobody else does, either, except for the old lady. She knows them
|
|||
|
all.’
|
|||
|
The major reached into one of the dozen or so pockets that
|
|||
|
patched his jacket and pulled out a little silver flask. He offered me
|
|||
|
a taste and didn’t mind when I declined. He sat himself down on a
|
|||
|
flat stone a few yards from the shack, where the grass of the point
|
|||
|
gave way to the stone dip that led down to the water’s edge, and
|
|||
|
took a little swallow, smacking his lips with relish.
|
|||
|
He gazed over the water of the bay out into the firth. The hulk of
|
|||
|
the Cassandra was a black curve in the silver blue, a great dead
|
|||
|
reminder of the storm in the spring. Between the shipwreck and
|
|||
|
Ardhmor, the water was calm, with hardly a ripple from the light
|
|||
|
sea breeze. Much further out there were two black buoys that
|
|||
|
marked the north sides of the shipping lanes for the decreasing '
|
|||
|
158
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
number of boats that used the waterway up the iirth to Glasgow.
|
|||
|
Nearer in, about a mile offshore, a small dinghy was moored at
|
|||
|
anchor. I could just make out the yellow jacket of the angler, sitting
|
|||
|
hunched in the little boat, and ifI strained hard I could see the rod
|
|||
|
he held over the side.
|
|||
|
‘That’s the life,’ Donald said. ‘That and sailing and the wildlife.
|
|||
|
Give me them and a dram and some good singing company, and I’ll
|
|||
|
never need anything else.’
|
|||
|
I nodded in agreement. There were a few other things in life that
|
|||
|
I would have thrown in for good measure, like books and women
|
|||
|
and cool beer, but Donald was on the right track anyway.
|
|||
|
‘Oh, by the way,’ he said, ‘I’m planning to go up to the islands in
|
|||
|
a couple of weeks. Do you still want to come with me?’
|
|||
|
‘Yes, I’d love to. I could use the break. When are you planning
|
|||
|
to go?’
|
|||
|
‘Soon. Soon. They’re just putting a new skin of paint on the old
|
|||
|
boat, so I’m planning to be away by the end of the month. Mind
|
|||
|
you, you’ll have to work for your holiday. I need some young
|
|||
|
muscle.’
|
|||
|
‘Well, if you don’t mind showing me the ropes. It’s been a long
|
|||
|
time since I did any serious sailing.’
|
|||
|
‘Och, I’m only joking} he said. In his accent, it came out like
|
|||
|
‘choking’. ‘I don’t believe in all that heave-ho stuff. I’ve got a diesel
|
|||
|
engine in that beauty that would drive a bus to the islands. No, you
|
|||
|
come along for the company. Just as long as you can put up with my
|
|||
|
s1ng1ng.’
|
|||
|
‘I think I’d rather be keel—hauled,’ I told him, and he laughed so
|
|||
|
hard he almost choked on his sip of whisky. When his laughter
|
|||
|
subsided, and he wiped his eyes, Donald was about to say
|
|||
|
something else when out in the bay a movement caught his eye,
|
|||
|
and he raised an arm to point it out to me.
|
|||
|
‘Look, over there,’ he said. ‘The gannets. Just off the rock.’
|
|||
|
Again I had to strain against the glare, looking out to where his
|
|||
|
linger was pointing. At first I saw nothing, then a flash of white
|
|||
|
silver twinkled out over the water. A small flock of gannets were
|
|||
|
wheeling in the air over what must have been a shoal of sprats.
|
|||
|
They spun and turned, then, with their wings folded, they dropped
|
|||
|
like arrows, plunging into the blue waters, sending up tiny
|
|||
|
explosions of gleaming silver water.
|
|||
|
‘Ah, the lovely birds,’ Donald said. He had his binoculars up to
|
|||
|
his eyes and was staring intently across the water, gently turning
|
|||
|
the focusing ring with his linger.
|
|||
|
‘Oh, look at that,’ he muttered. ‘Beautiful.’
|
|||
|
159
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
To me they were just white dots in the distance. He was getting a
|
|||
|
close-up view. He stared rapturously for a few minutes, then
|
|||
|
realised the scene was practically lost on me because of the
|
|||
|
distance.
|
|||
|
‘Here, you have a look,’ he said, unlooping the leather strap
|
|||
|
from around his neck, and handing the glasses over.
|
|||
|
I put them up to my eyes, and the white dots swam into focus as
|
|||
|
great white birds. The binoculars were truly powerful. At that
|
|||
|
distance I could make out the yellow spears of their beaks and the
|
|||
|
black lines across their eyes as they wheeled in the air, catching the
|
|||
|
bright sun on their snow-white feathers. I would concentrate on
|
|||
|
one bird as it hung in the air, then it would turn, fold its wings and
|
|||
|
lance downwards.
|
|||
|
With the glasses, I could easily follow the trajectory as the bird
|
|||
|
shot out its neck and speared the water like a missile, leaving
|
|||
|
nothing but a spray of spume. Perfectly designed bodies and beaks
|
|||
|
hunting through the shoal, the gannets were a beautiful sight.
|
|||
|
‘He won’t be a happy man,’ Donald said.
|
|||
|
‘Who?’ I asked, still taking in the wheeling, plunging scene.
|
|||
|
‘The fisherman,’ he said. ‘He’s in amongst them. They’ll be
|
|||
|
scaring his catch away. He’ll be cursing the birds.’
|
|||
|
I handed Donald back the glasses and he swung them up to his
|
|||
|
eyes. Looking out, I could make out the birds — how small they
|
|||
|
were in the distance without the Zeiss’s powerful magnification —
|
|||
|
now hunting close to the boat. `
|
|||
|
‘Ha, I was right. He’s trying to wave them away,’ Donald
|
|||
|
snorted.
|
|||
|
From out across the bay I could hear a faint noise. The furious
|
|||
|
angler was shouting at the birds that were wrecking his fishing. I
|
|||
|
saw some splashes close to the boat and turned to Donald, hoping
|
|||
|
for another shot of the glasses. The man’s face could probably be
|
|||
|
picked out by the lenses. I wished I could see the expression on his
|
|||
|
face.
|
|||
|
But even as I turned, the expression on Donald’s face suddenly
|
|||
|
changed. His jaw dropped open and he let out a grunt of surprise.
|
|||
|
‘Good God would you. . . ?’ His voice trailed away. ‘Dear God
|
|||
|
. . . it can’t be .... ’
|
|||
|
‘What’s wrong?’ I asked.
|
|||
|
‘The birds. The birds. They’re . . . they’re .... ’
|
|||
|
‘They’re what?’ I asked. I hadn’t a clue.
|
|||
|
‘Look. Oh dear God. I don’t believe it.’
|
|||
|
I snatched the glasses out of his hands. In the split second before
|
|||
|
I raised them to my own eyes, I caught a glimpse of Donald. His I
|
|||
|
160
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
· face was white with shock. His mouth hung open in a slack circle
|
|||
|
and his eyes were wide and staring.
|
|||
|
Again the white birds zoomed into view against the blue of the
|
|||
|
sky. I followed them down again and what I saw made my heart
|
|||
|
lurch so hard I almost dropped the glasses. Out there, nearly a mile
|
|||
|
from where we sat, the birds were spearing down out of the sky,
|
|||
|
but their target was not the shoal of sprats.
|
|||
|
Their wings folded against their sides, they were lancing down
|
|||
|
with those great stabbing beaks and smashing into the fisherman in
|
|||
|
the boat. j
|
|||
|
As I watched, one bird plunged, its neck outstretched, and hit
|
|||
|
the man on the shoulder with a thump that I could feel across the
|
|||
|
distance. The beak drove straight through the coat and into the
|
|||
|
flesh and a gout of blood spattered the yellow of the coat and the
|
|||
|
white of the bird’s feathers. The bird’s wings beat for a second, and
|
|||
|
stopped, it’s beak still jammed inside the man’s body. Through the
|
|||
|
glasses I could see him waving his hand frantically as more birds
|
|||
|
lanced down. One of them hit the boat with a thump that I did
|
|||
|
hear, rolling in across the smooth surface of the water. Another
|
|||
|
shot down and speared the man’s stomach, and there was another
|
|||
|
great gout of blood.
|
|||
|
An anguished scream, faint in the distance, but loud as all hell in
|
|||
|
my ears, came rending across on the wake of the other sound.
|
|||
|
My eyes were jammed up against the glasses, mesmerised with
|
|||
|
the horror that was going on out there on the bay under the heat of
|
|||
|
the sun. Beside me I was dimly aware of Donald muttering curses
|
|||
|
and prayers, all in a jumble.
|
|||
|
A white bird lanced across my field of vision, driving its beak
|
|||
|
into the bottom of the little wooden boat that was now rocking
|
|||
|
violently on the still water. Again came the muffled thump of the
|
|||
|
impact. The man in the boat was jerking about in agony, all red and
|
|||
|
yellow. I couldn’t make out his face, which was turned away from
|
|||
|
me, but I could see his jaw working, stretching his mouth wide in
|
|||
|
what must have been a despairing scream. Just then his head
|
|||
|
turned towards me, splattered with blood, and as it did there was a
|
|||
|
flurry of white as another gannet plunged down. Its spear of a beak
|
|||
|
plunged straight across my line of sight, driving with phenomenal
|
|||
|
accuracy into the circular target that was the man’s open mouth.
|
|||
|
The angler’s head snapped back and more blood splattered. With a
|
|||
|
rising lurch of nausea, I saw the huge beak sticking straight out of
|
|||
|
the back of the man’s neck.
|
|||
|
I dropped the glasses from my eyes, the spell broken. Something
|
|||
|
inside my stomach gave way and my lunch promptly expelled itself,
|
|||
|
161
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
spattering on to the rock where I sat.
|
|||
|
‘Oh, fuck,’ I said, helplessly.
|
|||
|
Donald was still sitting, staring out across the bay. His eyes were
|
|||
|
still wide and he was shaking his head slowly, as if to deny the
|
|||
|
reality of what he had just seen.
|
|||
|
In my throat, the bile was burning.
|
|||
|
‘They can’t do that,’ Donald said in a voice that was just a moan.
|
|||
|
‘Gannets don’t do that.’
|
|||
|
I couldn’t think of anything to say. There were just no words,
|
|||
|
just pictures in my head, instant action replays of what we had just
|
|||
|
seen. My stomach lurched and heaved again, but there was nothing
|
|||
|
there. A
|
|||
|
Out in the bay, the action had stopped. Donald reached over
|
|||
|
and slowly took the glasses from my hands, prising them slowly out
|
|||
|
of my numb fingers, and raised them again, almost fearfully, to his
|
|||
|
eyes.
|
|||
|
‘It’s stopped,’ he said. ‘They’re all dead. And so is he. It’s
|
|||
|
terrible. Just terrible.’
|
|||
|
He stared through the glasses for a long time, then he said: ‘It’s
|
|||
|
sinking. The boat. It’s going down.’
|
|||
|
He handed me the glasses again. I didn’t want to look, but I
|
|||
|
couldn’t stop myself.
|
|||
|
The dreadful scene swam into focus. Only minutes before it had
|
|||
|
been a wonderful picture of nature’s beauty. The wheeling and
|
|||
|
diving of the beautiful white birds, so fitted for their way of life.
|
|||
|
Now there was a little boat, listing to one side, and in it was a red
|
|||
|
and white and yellow mess, tattered feathers and tattered clothing,
|
|||
|
the bodies of the birds and man bent and broken and torn. As I
|
|||
|
watched, the boat sank further in the water, tilting slowly until one
|
|||
|
gunwale was beneath the surface. Then it seemed to heave and in
|
|||
|
seconds it had disappeared, leaving a faint streak of pink in the
|
|||
|
bubbling water.
|
|||
|
The bubbles soon stopped and the surface became calm again.
|
|||
|
There was nothing there, except for a few white and red feathers
|
|||
|
that Hoated on the surface, and soon scattered in the gentle breeze.
|
|||
|
‘Here. Take the glasses. There’s nothing left,’ I said, handing
|
|||
|
them back to Donald. He was still shaking his head numbly.
|
|||
|
‘How could that have happened?’
|
|||
|
‘I don’t know,’ I said. I was lying. There was no coincidence in
|
|||
|
this at all. Right at that moment I almost got a full-focus glimpse of
|
|||
|
the big picture. Almost, but not quite.
|
|||
|
‘We’d better go and tell them about this,’ Donald said.
|
|||
|
‘I don’t think they’ll believe us,’ I told him. s
|
|||
|
162
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
‘But we have to, anyway. We have to.’ Donald’s face was chalk
|
|||
|
white. That terrible scene had robbed him of his appreciation of
|
|||
|
the wonders of nature. It had stolen his picture of the rightness of
|
|||
|
things, the beauty of the natural world.
|
|||
|
It was only adding to my picture of one that was not natural at
|
|||
|
" all.
|
|||
|
Murdo Morrison, the sergeant up at the little police station, took
|
|||
|
our statements, slowly writing down everything we said in his neat,
|
|||
|
painstaking way, occasionally looking up, and glancing from
|
|||
|
Donald to me and back down at his sheet.
|
|||
|
‘And you say the birds attacked him?’ he asked.
|
|||
|
‘That’s right,’ Donald said. The shock had begun to wear off a
|
|||
|
bit. ‘Gannets.’
|
|||
|
‘Gannets actually flew down and, er, hit him? Stabbed him with
|
|||
|
their beaks?’
|
|||
|
‘That’s what happenedf
|
|||
|
‘But seabirds don’t do that.’
|
|||
|
‘Well, they do now,’ Donald said, almost angrily. ‘I’ve been
|
|||
|
watching the birds for forty years and they never did that before,
|
|||
|
not until today. But it happened. ’ Donald’s voice had risen steadily
|
|||
|
during that statement.
|
|||
|
‘All right, don’t get yourself all worked up. I didn’t say I don’t
|
|||
|
believe you,’ Murdo said. He hadn’t said it, but he certainly didn’t
|
|||
|
believe it. I noticed when he was questioning me that he leaned in
|
|||
|
very close, as if to pick out every word. It was only later I realised
|
|||
|
he was trying to smell my breath. He probably caught a sniff of
|
|||
|
Donald’s whisky, but there was nothing on me, and I knew, and it
|
|||
|
should have been apparent, despite the tale both of us were trying
|
|||
|
to tell him, that Donald was more sober than he’d ever been in his
|
|||
|
life.
|
|||
|
Murdo took our statement, then said he’d be in touch. Donald
|
|||
|
asked him what he was going to do, and the policeman said he’d
|
|||
|
send out the inshore lifeboat to have a look round. He was as good
|
|||
|
as his word. Dave King took the boat out and quartered the calm
|
|||
|
bay for hours, and came up with nothing, not a sign. Murdo had
|
|||
|
quite wisely told him only that a boat had been in difficulties. He
|
|||
|
hadn’t mentioned anything about gannets. Donald and I told the
|
|||
|
lifeboat cox exactly where the fishing boat had sunk, and the
|
|||
|
orange inflatable crisscrossed the area in ever widening circles until
|
|||
|
it had checked out the whole of the bay. There was nothing to be
|
|||
|
found.
|
|||
|
Murdo called us back to the station that night and asked us to go
|
|||
|
163
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
through it with him again. We did. He asked us straight if we had
|
|||
|
been drinking, or smoking anything unusual. No, we told him, we
|
|||
|
hadn’t. He looked as bewildered as a big, canny village policeman
|
|||
|
could manage. What we had told him took a lot of believing.
|
|||
|
The next morning we were back in his office at his request. He
|
|||
|
wanted us to describe the boat, which we did in a limited fashion. I
|
|||
|
You don’t remember paint colours when a iiock of birds are
|
|||
|
breaking all the laws of nature and spearing a man to death. We
|
|||
|
could tell him roughly what the boat was like, and what the man
|
|||
|
seemed to be wearing.
|
|||
|
He wrote all this down again on the forms, nodding to himself as
|
|||
|
he did so.
|
|||
|
When he had finished, he looked up and said: ‘It’s a strange tale
|
|||
|
to be coming to me with.’
|
|||
|
‘I know that Murdo. A terrible tale. But it’s the truth,’ Donald
|
|||
|
assured him.
|
|||
|
‘Aye, well maybe it is, and maybe it isn’t. And before you say
|
|||
|
I’m calling you a liar just let me iinish,’ he said, and Donald sat
|
|||
|
back in his chair.
|
|||
|
‘I can’t say you didn’t see something out there, but I’ve got to tell
|
|||
|
you I’m not happy about sending this report to the iiscal. Not yet
|
|||
|
anyway, until there’s something to show from the search. So I’ll
|
|||
|
hold on to it for a day or two, just in case.’
|
|||
|
‘That’s fine with me,’ I said, wearily. ‘I didn’t think anybody
|
|||
|
would believe us.’
|
|||
|
‘Well, that’s another matter. But in the meantime, we’ve got a
|
|||
|
search going on. It seems that one of Davy McGlynn’s boats was
|
|||
|
hired out yesterday and the man hasn’t brought it back. A Glasgow
|
|||
|
fellow down for a day’s fishing. Davy tells me he was wearing a
|
|||
|
yellow oilskin.’
|
|||
|
‘That’ll be the man,’ Donald came in. ‘A yellow coat with a
|
|||
|
hood.’
|
|||
|
‘Aye, that’s what it seems like. We’ll keep looking, but as a
|
|||
|
favour to me I’d like you to keep your story just between the three
|
|||
|
of us, just in case there’s been a mistake.’
|
|||
|
I agreed for the both of us and got Donald out of there before he
|
|||
|
started on the sergeant. The island man was a stolid, placid type,
|
|||
|
stocky and strong, but I could see he was still carrying the vision of
|
|||
|
what had happened out there on the bay, and he didn’t like
|
|||
|
anybody telling him he’d made a mistake.
|
|||
|
The search went on and Davy McGlynn’s little dinghy didn’t
|
|||
|
show up. There was not a trace of it, or the Glasgow man who had
|
|||
|
hired it for his fishing. Nobody was reported missing, and other
|
|||
|
164
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
events left the incident behind.
|
|||
|
It was not until November that the currents threw the boat up on
|
|||
|
the rocks at Kilcreggan, some miles away. And on the same rocks,
|
|||
|
a bunch of children found the remains of the fisherman, and the
|
|||
|
remains of the birds, still tangled and nailed together in death as
|
|||
|
they had been on the day when Donald and I had watched the man
|
|||
|
die in agony and terror. By then, there was no point in telling
|
|||
|
Murdo we had told him so.
|
|||
|
165
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|