CHAPTER THREE The big storm blew itself out on the morning of April 28 leaving a trail of broken branches, a couple of deadfalls here and there, and enough roof—work to keep a team working for a month. Out on the firth the wreck of the Cassandra and her twelve thousand tons of unreiined sugar from Central America settled on to the sandbank, the hulk humping out of the water like a dead behemoth. After such a filthy night, the day was remarkably clear and warm. My iirst breath of salt air felt terrific as I stepped out of the front door, lanced by the dappled green fire that shot through the battlemented chestnut trees that lined the street. The garden was in not too bad shape, maybe a bit overgrown, and I made a mental note to get out the old petrol—driven mower soon, as well as getting up on the roof to inspect the storm damage. I stretched in the sunlight and slung my leather jacket over a shoulder. As I left the house, I almost automatically picked up my grandfather’s stick from the hat—stand by the door, but on second thoughts left it where it was. It had felt good in my hands in the faraway last night, but perhaps I wasn’t ready to be a boulevardier about town yet. In the main street, a few people I remembered nodded hello and I nodded back and smiled and was feeling a whole lot better by the time I got to Holly’s bar. Inside it was dark and warm, already quite busy despite the fact that it was just past lunchtime. Up at the bar, a friendly looking barmaid, with dark hair and brown eyes flashed me a quick smile and went on pulling a pint for somebody else. ‘Be with you in just a minute} she said, and levelled off the dark flow of beer, pushing the tap back to let the brew gain a satisfying head. She took the money and slung it in the cash register, then turned to me. Just then, her name came back to me. Linda. Linda something or other. Linda Milne. She was about twenty three or so, fairly tall and solidly but attractively built. She had lived a few doors along from me when I last lived in Arden. ‘Yes sir, what would you like?’ she asked, still obviously 33 recognising me from somewhere, but not yet sure. ‘Just a coke, Linda. It is Linda, isn’t it?’ ‘Yes, how did you know? Have we met before?’ ‘Plenty of times. I’m Nick Ryan, I used to stay just .... ’ ‘Oh, I thought I recognised you. You look much different in real life,’ she interrupted. ‘We saw you on the television? ‘I hope I look better than that} ‘Yes, but you look taller, and younger as well,’ she said. ‘You’ve just made my day,’ I replied, and she blushed a bit. ‘You certainly look older. You must have been about ten the last time I saw you. How’s your big brother doing?’ ‘Very well. He’s in computers with British Airways. He’s married with two wee boys . . . my nephews. And how about you? Worked here long?’ ‘Oh no. I’m on holiday from university. I just work here part time. I’m doing languages up at Glasgow. I just missed a chance at Cambridge, but really it’s much handier.’ We chatted for a bit and I nursed my coke, promising myself to stay away from vodka for a while. My constitution was definitely not up to the hammering I’d given it last night. The cool drink went down easily and the bubbles scoured me out like steel wool. It felt good. Linda the academic barmaid brought me fairly up to date on who’s who in town. She accepted a drink from me and surprised me by just having a fresh orange juice. After an hour of Arden’s recent history, in which she was as well versed as any woman in a small town, she rang the bell and shouted time. I told her I’d only dropped by to see Holly and she explained that he was still in his bed after being out all night after the wreck. I didn’t explain that I’d been there too. I told Linda I’d see her again, hopefully, and went out into the street, deciding what to do next. There were a couple of people I had planned to visit, but this was not the day for it. I’d also promised to go and see Alan Scott’s dream house in Upper Arden, but that could wait. I stood outside Holly’s, squinting in the sunlight, trying to make up my mind what I had actually planned to do. Nothing sprung to mind, so I just set off strolling down the Main Street, which was actually a section of the Kilcreggan Road which came into town from the east, became Main Street for the whole length of its passage through Arden, and became Kilcreggan Road again on the other side. I stopped off at the newsagent for some cigarettes and chewing gum — the latter a bolster for my attempts to cut down on the former — and carried on east along the street to the break where a couple of smallholdings 34 and paddocks formed a short green belt before the start of Milligs. This had always been a favourite playing area. One of the fields was covered in bare patches where brown earth showed through the short worn grass. Kids had played football in this field since time immemorial. The old pitch looked the same as it had done in my childhood, especially on a day like this, a high spring day with the sun higher and the bees buzzing about the flourish on the hedgerows, the daisies and clover bright asterisks against the green on the touchlines where the grass remained intect. Along the far side there was a farm path, a good solid road that was well maintained by the passage of tractors and cars, hard and dry. On either side it was bordered by strong hawthorn and privet, lined with black knapweed, cow parsley and docken. I turned into the path and strolled in the sunlight. Mr Bennet, who ran the smallholding and never seemed to mind the hordes of kids ruining his field, was in the yard next to his cottage as I passed by. He was tinkering with some sort of cannister, and as I approached he put on an odd-shaped hat with a wide brim that came over his eyes. Just as I stopped, he looked up and raised a hand to ward off the sun. ‘Hello Mr Bennet,’ I said. ‘Huh?’ he grunted, just as smoke started belching from the cannister. ‘Damn thing,’ he muttered and reached to cover the spout with a small plastic cone. ‘Do you need a hand‘?’ I hadn’t a clue what he was doing, but thought I might offer anyway. ‘No, s’alright. Got the bloody thing now.’ He looked me up again, straining against the sunlight to get a look at me. ‘Oh, it’s young Ryan isn’t it?’ ‘Yessir.’ ‘Haven’t seen you in a while,’ he said, easing to his feet, a small, wiry man in dungarees. ‘What’re you up to, then?’ ‘Just going for a walk. Checking out the place. Seemed like a nice day for it.’ Old Mr Bennett lifted a scrawny arm and pushed the hat back on his head. It dawned on me that the thing was a beekeeper’s headgear, for the fine protective gauze was rolled up behind the crown and tied with two neat laces. ‘Want to come and watch?’ he said. I nodded and he opened the . peeling green gate that led on to a path between well-tended, just- 35 budding rose bushes. ‘It’s a bit early for a swarm. Mostly July, but there must have been something wrong with the queen.’ We went round to the back of the cottage and across a patch of ground where vegetables were sprouting in straight lines. Beyond this there was a small field, bordered with ash and sycamore. There in the corner stood a dozen or so hives, white boxes against the green. The old man pointed to a thick bush twenty yards away from the hives. "There’s the swam. Lucky for me I noticed them before they all took off.’ I could hear, even from that distance, the soft hum of the bees. All around the bush there seemed to be a faint, dark cloud that waxed and waned in time with the buzzing. ‘Come on. I’ll see if this thing works. I borrowed it from Bert McFall last summer, but never got round to using it.’ Old Mr Bennett pushed the single strang of wire of the fence down just enough to get his leg over it and held it down until I passed by and we made our way over the swarm. The buzzing got louder as we approached and soon I could make out the individual dots of the bees. They sounded angry, and I said so. ‘On no, that’s just the noise they always make. They hardly ever swarm, so people don’t know what a whole pile of bees sounds like. ‘I’ve seen you doing this before years ago,’ I said. ‘You used a watering can.’ ‘That’s right,’ he nodded. ‘I always have done. But McFall says this is easier. Quietens them down quicker, and it saves me lugging two gallons of water about every time I try to catch ’em.’ He started unrolling the netting and tucked the gauze in around his neck under his chambray shirt. With a motion of his hand he gestured me to stay back. He uncapped the cannister and smoke started billowing out all around him, white clouds that drifted lazily in the calm air. Walking towards the bush he held out the smoke gun and started spraying the fumes into the heart of the swarm. I couldn’t see what was happening, but I’d watched him before, and I coulld picture the seething brown mass, like a huge gobbet of molasses clinging to the forked branch of the bush, thousands of bees snuggled round their new queen. The noise was ascending up into the high register as the outrunners, the scouts sent out to seek out a new hive milled about like tiny lighters. From inside the dense cloud, Mr Bennett coughed as he breathed in the white fumes. I hoped they were harmless. After about five minutes, the buzzing started to diminish and there were less scouts 36 flying out from the swarm. The returning bees flew into the cloud and most of them stayed there. Soon there was hardly a hum from the somnolent swarm. ‘Hey, young Ryan. Hand me over that box,’ his voice called from the dissipating cloud. I bent and picked up the carton which had previously held one of iifty seven varieties in the supermarket and moved in to the thick bush. ‘There they are. This thing does work. Look at them. Sleeping like babies,’ he said. ‘I gave him the box and he opened the flaps at the top and wedged it in under the brown mass. When it was directly under the swarm, he reached out and grabbed the branch, above where the bees were massed, and gave it a firm shake. A large part of the swarm broke off the main body and fell into the box with a thud. He did this a couple of times, and then the whole swarm slid down. A couple of bees dizzily flew out of the carton and banged into leaves and branches and the old man’s legs. He deftly flipped the four top flaps one over the other so that they locked. ‘That’s us. We’ve got most of them. The stragglers should follow on.’ He reached over with the box. ‘Here, you take this and I’ll get the smoker.’ The box was surprisingly heavy. I’d never thought bees would weigh so much. The old man directed me to the far corner where the hives were and told me to put the box down on the one second from the end. ‘That’s been empty since last year,’ he said. ‘I’ve fixed it up so it should take this lot.’ He took the box from me and opened the top and laid it on its side, using his hat to fan fresh air into the mass of insects which were just beginning to come out of their torpor. ‘Watch this. The scouts’ll fly out and some of them will check out the hive. They’ll bring back word to the rest and they’ll bring the queen in if they’re happy. Sometimes they’re not, and I’ve got to try another hive.’ Everything went exactly as he said. The outrunners crawled out of the box and steadied themselves before taking off. Some of them looked as if they were jet lagged, but there were plenty of them and it didn’t take long for them to find the hive entrance. As the old man had said, the scouts started coming back and did their little dance which encouraged more of their sisters to follow until there was a sizable advance party crawling all over the new hive. After about ten minutes, they must have been satisfied with their V new piece of real estate for the whole hive started to crawl up the 37 together down in the Chandler of a night. If anybody knows about Arden it’s old Jimmy.’ ‘Who’s the major?’ I asked. ‘I can’t place him.’ ‘Oh he’s one of the incomers. Used to be in the Argylls before he mustered out. Still gets called the major. He’s fitted in with us old timers. Good hand at the fishing too.’ ‘He’d have to be good to get accepted among you lot down at the . Chandler? ‘Och aye,’ he said, parodying an island accent. ‘He’s from up in Lewis. A teuchter. Good man on a boat and good with the stories an’ all. He’s done about as much in his lifetime as old Allison has.’ ‘That’s saying something. I didn’t think anybody had been about as much as old Jimmy.’ ‘Have you been to see him yet?’ ‘No. I just got in yesterday, so I thought I’d get settled first and then go along and make a night of it. How’s he doing anyway? I haven’t written to him in a month or so. I can’t even remember ifl told him I was coming back.’ ‘He’s doing all right. Bothered with the arthritis a lot over the winter, but he still manages the organ on a Sunday, and if this hot weather keeps up he’ll manage a day out for the mackerel later on. ’ Old Jimmy Allison. Pushing seventy, and maybe the best friend I ever had. Jimmy was the sub-editor on the Kirkland Herald when I was in my teens and faced with the decision of going to university and the unnerving prospect of becoming the teacher my father wanted me to be. Grandad knew this was the last thing on my mind, and Jimmy said he’d get me into newspapers. Grandad worked behind the scenes through my mother and she got to dad and I did the rest when I point—blank refused to go for further education. We had a couple of wild nights and black arguments and I was maybe throwing my whole future away, but Jimmy Allison got me a job as a trainee reporter in the local paper and after a while everything settled down. Jimmy Allison was one of the most knowledgeable men I ever knew. He was big and old and rugged, and even then his hands were beginning to pain him as the arthritis started setting its teeth. He knew newspapers inside out and had worked on them all. I thought he’d been a newspaperman all his life, but I was wrong. He’d done just about everything there is to do. The old man had run away from home at fourteen to work the fishing boats up in the Western Isles, then he’d been in the merchant navy, and he’d done a stint of fighting in somebody’s army. After that he’d gone to 39 He took another bite and another swig, and laughed that short rasp again. ‘Ha. Even McFall was shaking in his boots. We finally got a rope around it. I was all for shooting the bugger, but McFall said no, so we lassoed the thing like cowboys and managed to get its legs together. It took five of us to drag it down the hill to his pen. Then when we got it inside, McFall says to us to stand back and he goes in to cut the rope. He took one slice and that big bugger was on its feet like lightning and McFall almost gelded himself jumping over the fence. That boar took a snap at his boot just as he was going over and he landed right smack on the crossbar. He let out such a squeal it sounded just like the pig, and after that he showed us his boot. There was a rip the length of your hand right down the sole. Looked like it was razor cut, and they were no shop-bought boots neither. McFa1l said he got them up at McKenzie’s at Balloch, who does the farmers’ boots and the soles were nigh—on an inch thick.’ ‘He was lucky,’ I said. ‘Sure he was. That animal could have taken his leg off in one go. And he’s even bigger than Old Grunt. I’m as sure as hell glad I don’t have that to worry about. I’ve still got the goats and the Jersey. Them and the bees and what I grow here’s just enough for me.’ He stopped for a moment, then went on. ‘I reckon you’ve been away quite a while. There’ll be a lot about this place that you’ll have forgotten about and then it’ll jump back up and hit you smack in the face. Good things too, I don’t doubt. I hope you get settled back in quick. What is it you plan to do with yourself?’ ‘I’m giving myself a break from newspapers. I’ve always promised myself I’d write books, so I’m going to give it a try and see if I can. If not I’ll go back into journalism again.’ ‘J im seems to have a lot of faith in you, so I reckon you’ll give it a fair go,’ he said. ‘I’ll have to take that as a compliment.’ ‘You do that, young Nicky. And come back any time.’ ‘That’s a promise. I’ll do that.’ ‘Go and see Jimmy soon as you can.’ ‘OK, that’s another promise,’ I said, needlessly, because I had already decided to go see him the following day. ‘Oh, and don’t forget to come up to the Chandler any night. You’ll like the major.’ A I made a third promise and thanked him for the tea and the sandwich and left the cottage. He came to the door and waved me 41 He took another bite and another swig, and laughed that short rasp again. ‘Ha. Even McFall was shaking in his boots. We finally got a rope around it. I was all for shooting the bugger, but McFall said no, so we lassoed the thing like cowboys and managed to get its legs together. It took five of us to drag it down the hill to his pen. Then when we got it inside, McFall says to us to stand back and he goes in to cut the rope. He took one slice and that big bugger was on its feet like lightning and McFall almost gelded himself jumping over the fence. That boar took a snap at his boot just as he was going over and he landed right smack on the crossbar. He let out such a squeal it sounded just like the pig, and after that he showed us his boot. There was a rip the length of your hand right down the sole. Looked like it was razor cut, and they were no shop-bought boots neither. McFa1l said he got them up at McKenzie’s at Balloch, who does the farmers’ boots and the soles were nigh—on an inch thick.’ ‘He was lucky,’ I said. ‘Sure he was. That animal could have taken his leg off in one go. And he’s even bigger than Old Grunt. I’m as sure as hell glad I don’t have that to worry about. I’ve still got the goats and the Jersey. Them and the bees and what I grow here’s just enough for me.’ He stopped for a moment, then went on. ‘I reckon you’ve been away quite a while. There’ll be a lot about this place that you’ll have forgotten about and then it’ll jump back up and hit you smack in the face. Good things too, I don’t doubt. I hope you get settled back in quick. What is it you plan to do with yourself?’ ‘I’m giving myself a break from newspapers. I’ve always promised myself I’d write books, so I’m going to give it a try and see if I can. If not I’ll go back into journalism again.’ ‘J im seems to have a lot of faith in you, so I reckon you’ll give it a fair go,’ he said. ‘I’ll have to take that as a compliment.’ ‘You do that, young Nicky. And come back any time.’ ‘That’s a promise. I’ll do that.’ ‘Go and see Jimmy soon as you can.’ ‘OK, that’s another promise,’ I said, needlessly, because I had already decided to go see him the following day. ‘Oh, and don’t forget to come up to the Chandler any night. You’ll like the major.’ A I made a third promise and thanked him for the tea and the sandwich and left the cottage. He came to the door and waved me 41 off before turning down the path and round the back of his little house to whichever of the million and one jobs his life as a smallholder required. I walked down the path from Mr Bennett’s and was about to take the right turn to get back on to the main road when on a whim I turned left up the main path where, a few hundred yards along, McFall’s small farm stood. I was curious about that pig. I approached the farm and skirted the yard on the pebble track that took me behind the byre and into the field beyond. There was the pig pen. I could see the pink shapes of the sows moving about and adjacent to that was a thick wooden fence — not just thick, it was made of solid pine logs — which was obviously the boar’s domain. As I neared the pen I could hear the snufiling grunt of the big animal, and the squelching, sucking noise as it pulled each trotter out of the mud. Mr Bennett had been right. This thing was huge. I stood and leaned against the chest—high spar and looked over. The movement must have caught the boar’s eye, for it twisted its head in a snapping gesture of annoyance, then turned and looked at me. Old Grunt had been a big beast. This one was massive. It stood and looked at me from under those big flapping ears in that truculent, heavy—jawed way that pigs have, its little eyes glaring at me while it snufiled air in and out of its upturned snout rapidly like a pair of bellows. A trickle of saliva dripped from the corner of its mouth as it continued chewing whatever it had rooted up, and with every movement of the mandible I could see those glistening white tusks like razors move up and down. ‘Hey mister,’ a high-pitched voice shouted behind me. ‘Hey mister, watch out for the pig.’ I turned and two small boys, who turned out to be the younger members of McFall’s sizable brood came running towards me. ‘It’s all right. I was just having a look. It’s a big pig.’ ‘He’s a big bad pig, my daddy says,’ the smaller of the boys told me. ‘Boot, we call him, ’cos he bit off my daddy’s boot.’ ‘Yes, he’s big all right. I knew his daddy a long time ago, when I was your age.’ ‘Pigs don’t have daddies. They’re just pigs.’ I wasn’t prepared to get into an argument. I nodded and smiled, and turned to go. ‘D’you need any eggs, mister‘?’ one of the boys asked. ‘And we’ve got milk as well.’ ‘Not today, but I’ll come back again another time.’ V ‘All right then, but my dad says nobody is allowed near the pig.’ 42 off before turning down the path and round the back of his little house to whichever of the million and one jobs his life as a smallholder required. I walked down the path from Mr Bennett’s and was about to take the right turn to get back on to the main road when on a whim I turned left up the main path where, a few hundred yards along, McFall’s small farm stood. I was curious about that pig. I approached the farm and skirted the yard on the pebble track that took me behind the byre and into the field beyond. There was the pig pen. I could see the pink shapes of the sows moving about and adjacent to that was a thick wooden fence — not just thick, it was made of solid pine logs — which was obviously the boar’s domain. As I neared the pen I could hear the snufiling grunt of the big animal, and the squelching, sucking noise as it pulled each trotter out of the mud. Mr Bennett had been right. This thing was huge. I stood and leaned against the chest—high spar and looked over. The movement must have caught the boar’s eye, for it twisted its head in a snapping gesture of annoyance, then turned and looked at me. Old Grunt had been a big beast. This one was massive. It stood and looked at me from under those big flapping ears in that truculent, heavy—jawed way that pigs have, its little eyes glaring at me while it snufiled air in and out of its upturned snout rapidly like a pair of bellows. A trickle of saliva dripped from the corner of its mouth as it continued chewing whatever it had rooted up, and with every movement of the mandible I could see those glistening white tusks like razors move up and down. ‘Hey mister,’ a high-pitched voice shouted behind me. ‘Hey mister, watch out for the pig.’ I turned and two small boys, who turned out to be the younger members of McFall’s sizable brood came running towards me. ‘It’s all right. I was just having a look. It’s a big pig.’ ‘He’s a big bad pig, my daddy says,’ the smaller of the boys told me. ‘Boot, we call him, ’cos he bit off my daddy’s boot.’ ‘Yes, he’s big all right. I knew his daddy a long time ago, when I was your age.’ ‘Pigs don’t have daddies. They’re just pigs.’ I wasn’t prepared to get into an argument. I nodded and smiled, and turned to go. ‘D’you need any eggs, mister‘?’ one of the boys asked. ‘And we’ve got milk as well.’ ‘Not today, but I’ll come back again another time.’ V ‘All right then, but my dad says nobody is allowed near the pig.’ 42 ‘Don’t worry, I won’t go near Boot. Honest} ‘OK mlster. That’s all right.’ As I walked away across the field I heard a crunch from behind me. I turned to look and the big boar was up against the pine fence, gnawing at the logs. Great jagged splinters were peeling off the wood under the enormous force of those teeth. Jimmy Allison welcomed me with a huge smile on his broad face when I arrived on his doorstep the next day. I had bought a bottle of Glenlivet ten year old in a presentation box and went to the bank for a new cheque~book and some cash. It only took five minutes to saunter round past the harbour to west Westbay and along Kirkland Avenue with its rows of pollarded lime trees to the two- storey end house where Jimmy Allison had lived since I could remember. ‘Not a phone call, and not a letter,’ he said, his rich, deep voice booming out of the porch. ‘Not even a postcard to tell me you were coming back.’ ‘Nonsense, I told you months ago,’ I countered. ‘Probably you did, but I can’t be expected to read all the letters you write.’ He grinned and held out one of his big hands to take mine. His grip was firm, but I almost winced in sympathy when I felt the distorted knuckles under my thumb. He’d told me in his letters, and the rare telephone conversation, that the arthritis had been getting worse, and he was still undecided about my recom— mendations for him to get the silicone injections. ‘Come in, come in,’ he boomed, clapping his other hand on my shoulder, almost causing me to drop his Glenlivet. ‘Here, I brought you some medicine,’ I said, handing over the package. He knew what it was, of course, but pretended not to as he always did. ‘For me? That’s nice. What is it?’ ‘Sun-tan lotion, for use during the heat wave,’ I said. He winked, and beamed broadly again, his grizzled face creasing into parentheses, and let me inside. ‘You’ll have one, huh?’ he asked, holding the bottle aloft to admire the amber in the light streaming in through his kitchen window. ‘Too early for me,’ I said, ‘but you go ahead.’ ‘Well, just a wee one,’ and he poured himself a tiny measure and sipped from a faceted Edinburgh crystal glass. ‘I suppose I can forgive the lack of correspondence just for that,’ he said, smacking his lips. ‘You’ve not been too hot in that department either,’ I 43 dating from around the granting of the Burgh charter and beyond. ‘Look here,’ he said, ‘just south of the dyke. I noticed these mounds when I saw some pictures taken from a helicopter going up to the base. They are well inside the wall, but they run parallel to it from one side to the other. It’s as if there are two walls.’ ‘Maybe the Picts thought the rock was a good fort too.’ ‘That’s what you would think. But Professor Sannholm has I found old Pictish relics all over the mud flats and in the fields surrounding Ardhmor. But there’s never been anything dis- covered on Ardhmor itself.’ I looked at the map. The mounds were definitely parallel to the more recent fortification which itself was paralleled by the stream of Strowan’s Burn which forked behind the farm and sent its waters east and west into the bays on either side of the peninsula. ‘I remember the first time you told me about Strowan’s Burn,’ I said, looking over the old map which Jimmy had re-drawn a dozen times in the past twenty years. ‘I’d never thought about it until you told me it was Saint Rowan’s Burn.’ ‘Not a lot of people know that still,’ Jimmy said. ‘But I don’t think he was a saint. The name Rowan is really ancient. If there had been a monk or a hermit around here, it would have been somewhere in the records. Most of them were canonised, at least by the local folk, but you’ve got to remember that most of them lived before Christianity arrived in these parts. Maybe they were the equivalent of sorcerers. Mumbo-jumbo men, or even just warriors.’ ‘But there was a legend about St Rowan,’ I said. ‘I remember you told me years ago.’ ‘Yes, I found it in a translated version of a field report of one of Columba’s people from Iona who came down this way to convert the tribes. They had a pretty good organisation, even then. They’d send out their monks to make an impression and dig out the folk culture so they could change it around to suit the Christian message. The St Rowan story is just like Old Moses, you know.’ ‘l remember,’ I said. ‘He was supposed to have struck the rock with his rowan spear to bring the water of life to the people.’ ‘That’s it. And that’s where Strowan’s Burn is supposed to have come from, although why he should have bothered in a place like this I can’t imagine. We’ve got more streams and rivers than we need. ‘Anyway the professor found a wicker fence and a few other odds and ends last year just before the start of winter, but they’re ~ arranging a proper dig in a couple of weeks.’ 45 dating from around the granting of the Burgh charter and beyond. ‘Look here,’ he said, ‘just south of the dyke. I noticed these mounds when I saw some pictures taken from a helicopter going up to the base. They are well inside the wall, but they run parallel to it from one side to the other. It’s as if there are two walls.’ ‘Maybe the Picts thought the rock was a good fort too.’ ‘That’s what you would think. But Professor Sannholm has I found old Pictish relics all over the mud flats and in the fields surrounding Ardhmor. But there’s never been anything dis- covered on Ardhmor itself.’ I looked at the map. The mounds were definitely parallel to the more recent fortification which itself was paralleled by the stream of Strowan’s Burn which forked behind the farm and sent its waters east and west into the bays on either side of the peninsula. ‘I remember the first time you told me about Strowan’s Burn,’ I said, looking over the old map which Jimmy had re-drawn a dozen times in the past twenty years. ‘I’d never thought about it until you told me it was Saint Rowan’s Burn.’ ‘Not a lot of people know that still,’ Jimmy said. ‘But I don’t think he was a saint. The name Rowan is really ancient. If there had been a monk or a hermit around here, it would have been somewhere in the records. Most of them were canonised, at least by the local folk, but you’ve got to remember that most of them lived before Christianity arrived in these parts. Maybe they were the equivalent of sorcerers. Mumbo-jumbo men, or even just warriors.’ ‘But there was a legend about St Rowan,’ I said. ‘I remember you told me years ago.’ ‘Yes, I found it in a translated version of a field report of one of Columba’s people from Iona who came down this way to convert the tribes. They had a pretty good organisation, even then. They’d send out their monks to make an impression and dig out the folk culture so they could change it around to suit the Christian message. The St Rowan story is just like Old Moses, you know.’ ‘l remember,’ I said. ‘He was supposed to have struck the rock with his rowan spear to bring the water of life to the people.’ ‘That’s it. And that’s where Strowan’s Burn is supposed to have come from, although why he should have bothered in a place like this I can’t imagine. We’ve got more streams and rivers than we need. ‘Anyway the professor found a wicker fence and a few other odds and ends last year just before the start of winter, but they’re ~ arranging a proper dig in a couple of weeks.’ 45 ‘Will you be there?’ I asked. ‘Oh, I suppose I’ll go down and potter around, but I don’t get involved in any of the heavy work. I just like to chew the fat with the professor. We see eye to eye on a lot of things.’ ‘And are you planning to get any fishing done. Mr Bennett was telling me the hands are giving you a bad time.’ ‘Yes, he said he’d seen you. Word gets around quick here.’ ‘And you were always the iirst to know. I know that. I got more stories from your contacts here than I’ve had ever since,’ I said. ‘I wouldn’t say that. You’ve been doing quite well. You shouldn’t undersell yourself, but I gather you’ll be working on a book just now.’ ‘Yes, once I settle in, although I’ve hardly had a chance yet. I was down at the shore the first night I got back, looking for the men off that boat.’ ‘Yes, I heard that too. Murdo was saying there wasn’t a sign of the lifeboat} ‘No, we searched around for a couple of hours. It was a terrible night down there, but there was nothing at all. I don’t think they could have come ashore there.’ ‘I don’t know, it’s a strange place.’ ‘How do you mean, strange?’ ‘Oh, nothing,’ Jimmy said, and started rolling up the big map. ‘No, go on,’ I insisted. ‘What’s funny about Ardhmor?’ Jimmy turned to look at me, then looked away, shaking his head. I reached across and grabbed his sleeve. ‘What is it?’ ‘You’ll think I’m rambling,’ he said. ‘And I don’t want you to think the old man’s getting senile.’ ‘That’ll never happen to you. But really, I’m interested in why you say it’s a strange place, because something strange happened to me when we were down looking for that boat.’ Jimmy turned suddenly and looked directly at me. There was something in his eyes, maybe concern, maybe surprise. ‘What happened‘?’ ‘I’m not sure. But just when we got past the old dyke .... ’ ‘The Roman wall,’ he corrected me. ‘Yes, the wall. We had just gone back there when I started getting scared. I mean really shaky scared. As if I was being threatened. But there was no reason for it. I was in a panic the whole time, but none of the others seemed to be bothered. Then, when I was coming back with the others, I was last in line on the track up to the farm and I got caught in the brambles at the edge of 46 the path. But at the time, I was in such a state that I thought the trailers were actually trying to grab me for Christ’s sake. It was weird.’ I looked at him, and laughed. ‘Now you’ll think I’m rambling.’ ‘No,’ he said, and his voice was deadly serious. ‘I don’t think that at all. I’ve had that feeling myself. Once a long time ago, and the other only a week ago. As if I wasn’t wanted there.’ ‘That’s exactly how I felt. But that’s nonsense. How can you feel not wanted in a place} ‘That’s what I’ve been trying to find out for years. It’s a wrong place.’ ‘Mr Bennett said that yesterday. He said Ardhmor’s a wrong place, and he said everybody knew that.’ ‘Well, I think he’s right. But not everybody knows it.’ ‘I remember as a kid, my mother used to threaten me with all sorts of hard times if she ever caught me down there. That was after the accident, remember?’ ‘I remember that night all right, though I’m surprised you do. You were unconscious for a week.’ ‘You remember more than me. I can’t recall a thing about it, only what my dad and grandad told me.’ ‘You’d been missing for a couple of days. You and a couple of your friends. Then old man Swanson found a jacket in the bushes at the edge of his farm and there was a big search all over that rock. That’s where we found the three of you, under a rockfall. You and the girl and that poor boy who’s never been the same since. Nobody knew how you got there or why you were there, but you were in bad shape by the time we got you out.’ ‘Yeah, I gather I was out of it for a long time, but surely it was just an accident. I mean, I was always a bit wild as a kid, always climbing and falling out of trees.’ ‘Oh, sure, that’s what everybody said. But what I’m saying is that in the spring of that year, after they’d done the dig on the Roman wall, I was down in Ardhmor one night looking for something I’d lost, and I got a dose of the scaries. I came out of that place like a bat out of hell, and I was no youngster then, but I swear I would have passed Roger Bannister on the straight.’ ‘I often wonder what had happened then,’ I said. ‘But I suppose we’ll never know.’ ‘No, I suppose not, but that was a bad summer here in Arden, a right bad summer. That was the year Henson down at Kilmalid Farm fell under his plough and got his hands near torn off. Then V there were the bull terriers they were using for the fights down at 47 the sewer pipe tore up that fellow that was breeding them. Forget his name now, but the sergeant, Jack Bruce it was in those days, said it was the worst thing he ever saw. Those beasts ate the man alive. ‘Funny thing was, after all the things that happened that year, they stopped just after the end of summer, just about the time we pulled you out from under the rocks. I remember your grandad at the time. He was worried out of his head, ’cause he was saying you were the latest victims. ‘I remember asking him what he meant, and he just said "This cursed place has taken them." But it happened, although for a while it was touch and go.’ ‘What do you think he meant?’ ‘I don’t think. I know what he meant. There’s some people around here with long memories, and there have been bad years before. Years when some terrible things have happened.’ ‘How do you mean?’ I asked. Jimmy finished off his coffee in one gulp. He put the cup down between the mementoes that crowded the little table beside his chair, then turned to me again. ‘What I mean is that there were fourteen people died that summer,’ he said. ‘And it wasn’t the first time. In 1906 there was another bad year when there were thirty deaths — and I mean killings. It was in the papers at the time. They thought the whole town had gone mad. They thought people had gone crazy in the heat. Apparently it was the hottest summer in living memory then. ‘And before that in 1720 there was the massacre at the priory, where the seminary is now, and they had to send a sheriff down from Glasgow with an armed militia. This goes way back. There’s no rhyme nor reason to it, and I bet if the records were clearer we’d find more bad years going down through the ages.’ ‘But can you say it’s abnormal? I mean every town’s got a history of tragedy,’ I said. ‘That’s true, but Arden’s history is updated every now and again, like a catalogue of disaster. I know, for I’ve been through the records, even the old parish ones that go back for centuries, and a lot of old dusty books besides. I told you about the legend of St Rowan, but there’s other ones too. I’ll dig them out for you some time, but I can assure you that some of the old Gaelic writings show that the old folk believed there was something wrong with this place. With Ardhmor. They called it the Sleeping Rock, and they had an idea it woke up every now and again. ‘Anyway,’ Jimmy said. ‘Enough of this. Come on and I’ll make 48 us a decent coffee this time, and you can tell me all about what you’ve been up to .... And I want to hear about this book you’re planning to write} 49 us a decent coffee this time, and you can tell me all about what you’ve been up to .... And I want to hear about this book you’re planning to write} 49