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919 lines
49 KiB
Plaintext
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
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Barbara called me on the morning of the harvest festival and I was
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enormously cheered up to hear the sound of her voice. Kitty’s
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death had hung over me like a pall of heavy cloud and the last
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couple of nights had been less than good. I had woken up from
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those dreams again. Writing had gone right out of the window.
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‘Hi Barbara,’ I said, trying to stiiie a yawn, and still feeling
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muggy and shaky from lack of proper sleep. ‘What time is it?’
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‘Oh, I hope I didn’t wake you up. It’s past ten o’clock.’
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‘No. Yes, well you did. But I should be up by now anyway,’ I told
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her.
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‘I just thought you’d want to come to the festival with us today.
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It’s been years since I’ve been to one and I thought Paddy would
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love it.’
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‘So would I. I was going to ask the two of you anyway,’ I said.
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‘She’ll stuff her face and be sick all over the place, but every kid has
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to go through it every summer anyway}
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‘You better believe it,’ Barbara said. I could hear the start of a
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laugh in her voice. What a nice way to be woken up from bad
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dreams.
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‘Right, I’ll come up and collect you, if you like, and we can stroll
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down. About three?’
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‘Why not make it for lunch?’
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‘Sounds even better. I haven’t tasted woman’s cooking for
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months.’
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‘Well mine isn’t that great, but I can rustle up a salad.’
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‘Cheat.’
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‘Suit yourself, greedy guts. Come up at one.’
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I told her I’d be there. The day took on a slightly brighter aspect,
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and for once I managed to slip out from under that cloud.
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This was one harvest festival I was going to really enjoy.
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On the way up to Upper Arden, I dropped in at Jimmy Allison’s
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place and found him looking better than he had the other day in the
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cemetery. He was planning, he said, to drop in at the Chandler
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with Donald and old Duncan Bennett for a few light refreshments
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before the festivities.
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186
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‘Just to get in the mood,’ he said, with a smile. ‘It’s become a
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tradition, don’t you know?’
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‘Yes, every night, I reckon,’ I said.
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‘Well, when you get to our age, you take what fun you can get
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whenever you can. Anyway, it’s good to be up and about again.
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That was a bugger of a bug.’
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Jimmy paused for a bit, lost in thought, then he seemed to jerk
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back to the present. ‘Anyway, did you read that stuff I put in the
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box?’
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‘I did.’
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He looked at me, checking to see ifl was bull-shitting him. ‘I did,
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honest. From start to finish,’ I said, and he nodded conceding that I
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might have. ‘It’s a remarkable history. Tell me, Jimmy. Have you
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ever heard of a Cu Saeng?’
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‘Cu Saeng? The Old Dog?’
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‘Yes, that’s the one‘?’
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‘Of course. It’s an old legend that one.’
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‘Where does it come from?’
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‘Who can say, but it’s common to both the Irish and the Scots
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sagas, which show they go back to the same origin sometime in the
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past.’
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‘Do you know what it is?’ I asked.
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‘Sure. It’s the spirit of madness. It lives under the ground, or the
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underworld, take your pick. Probably the god of darkness symbol.
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Anyway, it’s supposed to drive anybody who sees it as mad as a
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hatter, or turn them into stone. Like the Gorgon, I imagine. Why
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do you ask?’
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‘I’ll tell you in a minute. Go on,’ I urged. ‘What else do you
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know?’
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‘Well, it’s supposed to be the spirit that haunts lonely places,
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waiting for the unwary. Pops out from under the roots and scares
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the hell out of them.’ He stopped to light his pipe, sucking in the
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Hame that dipped down towards the bowl with every pull, and
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blowing out a plume of blue. ‘Now tell me why you’re asking}
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‘Kitty MacBeth told me it was a Cu Saeng that caused the Bad
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Summers.’
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Jimmy Allis0n’s eyes ilicked up from where they had zeroed in
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on the glowing bowl of his pipe, and iixed me with a hard stare. He
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stared so long and hard that the match he was holding burned right
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up to his fingers, and it was only the quick burn as the iiame
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scorched his thumb that made him jerk away, dropping the
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blackened match on to the iloor. He jammed his thumb into his
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mouth alongside the stem of his pipe and sucked on both.
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187
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‘She told you what?’ he asked, his face serious.
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‘She said that the Cu Saeng awoke to ravage the place,’ I said,
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and I must confess I felt a little bit foolish, no matter how much I
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had thought about the situation over the past week or so, and what
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conclusions I had reluctantly arrived at.
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‘And how would that happen?’ Jimmy asked.
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‘She said that sometime in the past, the people here had brought
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something to life — into the earth, she said — to help them stave off
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some sort of invasion. But once it had done the job they couldn’t
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send it back again, so they trapped it in the rock and put up walls
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around it. It’s all written on that stone down at Kitty’s shack.’
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‘What rock?’
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‘Ardhmor.’
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‘And the walls? What were they?’
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‘Water and stone, and wood. That’s the hawthorn hedge. She
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said she had to keep re-planting it whenever one of the hawthorns
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died or got broken. Oh, and there was another wall of bone where
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they buried the invaders with their heads cut off, just like .... ’
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‘J ust like the ones Arthur found,’ Jimmy said, softly. There was
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a strange, half-puzzled, half-knowing look on his face.
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‘Well, what do you think of that?’ I said.
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‘I don’t know what to think. Seems a bit far-fetched to me, but ‘
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I’ll tell you, I can’t gainsay it. I’ve seen too many far-fetched things
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in my time to say yea or nay. I know that the Bad Summer happens
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every once in a while, and some of them are worse than others. I’ve
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never heard of any explanation of them before, except to call it a
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curse or a bane. Like recurrent bad luck. Real bad luck.’ He
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stopped off and took another pull on the pipe and watched the
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smoke billow, a frown of concentration pulling his eyebrows, grey
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and grizzled, down over his eyes.
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‘Could such a thing be true?’ I asked.
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‘Who can say? It’s a new one on me. I mean I’ve gone over all the
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old records, probably more than anybody has. But I’ve never
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heard or read of anybody saying why these things happen. Only
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that they do, and they pray to God that they don’t ever happen
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again. What about you? What do you think?’
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‘Well, I’ve got to confess that I’m beginning to believe that it
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must be. Kitty shocked me with some of the things she knew about
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me. She knew she was dying and there was something else. She
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said that I had something to do with stopping it.’
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‘Stopping what?’
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‘The Bad Summers. She said that I almost stopped it before, and
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that this time I would have to finish the job. The only thing is that I
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188
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haven’t a clue after that. I wouldn’t know where to begin.’
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Jimmy looked very thoughtful as I left. He hadn’t said one way
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or another what he thought of the things I’d told him except to say
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that it might not matter what had caused the bad times in the past.
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‘I think she was right about it coming again,’ he said. ‘And so
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soon. It’s been only twenty years, near as dammit, since the last
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string of troubles, but I can feel it in my bones again. Who knows,
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maybe she was right. Maybe it would be better if she was.
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Anything that can be conjured up should be conjured right back
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again. That’s a lot better than waiting for the curse to strike again
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and not being able to do a damned thing about it.’
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I told Jimmy I’d better get a move on to Barbara’s place, and he
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told me to go on up, dropping the opinion, with a sly grin, that he
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thought she was a fine looking woman and just my type. It was as
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close to a nudge-nudge, wink-wink as he’d ever get, but I got the
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message that he would give his blessing to any advances I might
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make on that front. He saw me to the garden gate, still pulling hard
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on the big briar pipe, and told me he’d see me in the beer tent later
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on in the afternoon. Just as I was leaving, he thanked me for
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reading his stuff and I thanked him for writing it.
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‘Do your think there’s a book in it?’ he asked. ‘Can you use it?’
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‘Yes and no. There is a book in it. But it’s your book. You’ve -
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done all the work on it yourself and it reads right. There’s no need
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for me to write y0ur book, you lazy old bugger.’
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‘Less of your cheek, young toe-rag,’ Jimmy said, all the time
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beaming with pride that his protege, the one he’d encouraged all
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the time to get out there and write, had been the one to praise his
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own work.
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‘Anyway, I won’t have the time. I don’t have the gift.’
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‘Prove me wrong, then. I’ll give all the stuff back to you, and you
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can send it off to a publisher. I’ll bet a case of Strathisla they snap it
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up.’ He said he’d think about it and I told him to do more than that.
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Just as I was leaving, he said it would make a better tale if there
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. really was such a thing as Cu Saeng.
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‘I didn’t think you’d believe it,’ I said.
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‘Oh, I don’t say that. You’ve sort of sprung it on me. I’ll toss it
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around a bit and think it over. What I think doesn’t really matter
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anyway,’ he said. ‘There’s not a damn thing I could do about it.’
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As it transpired, there wasn’t. But there was something I was
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supposed to do about it, so I’d been told, except I didn’t have the
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foggiest idea of what, or how, or where, or when. Or even why.
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I had decided, even before my talk with Jimmy, that I would just
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wait, and watch and see what happened.
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189
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One thing was certain, if it turned out to be a whole load of
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hogwash, nobody was going to be more delighted than me. Then I
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could get out from under the raincloud and get on with my life, get
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on with my work and sleep well at nights.
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Both Barbara and Paddy met me on the steps at their front door
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as I climbed down from the jeep, both of them sparkling with
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excitement. It showed more on Paddy, who had got to the jumping
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up and down stage.
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‘She’s been driving me crazy since she woke up this morning,’
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Barbara said. ‘It’s as if she was high on something.’
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‘And you can’t remember being just the same? Shame on you.
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The mother hen’s got a convenient memory, hasn’t she?’
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‘Oh, go on with you,’ she said, giving me a light punch on the
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shoulder. ‘I was never as bad as that.’
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‘Worse, if my memory’s right. But don’t worry about it. We
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were all like that.’
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‘Well, I must say, I’ve been looking forward to some light relief ,’
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Barbara said. By this time we were at the top of the steps and ‘
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Paddy was running around my ankles like a frisky pup. Barbara
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planted one on my proffered cheek and then I had to bend down
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for the same treatment from her daughter. When she gave me the
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required peck, I didn’t let her spin away, but instead grabbed her .
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by the waist and swung her up to sit on my hip. I grabbed her free
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hand and spun her round.
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‘Can I have the pleasure of this dance, miss?’
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‘Yessir!’ she cried, right in my ear, her laughter almost
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deafening me.
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‘And you’re next,’ I called to Barbara, looking past her
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daughter’s bouncing pony bob. Barbara did what would have been
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an elegant curtsey except for the fact that she was wearing a pair of
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slimline Levis and a halter top under which things were moving in
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that kind of way that takes your mind of dancing altogether. She
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caught my eye and I would have blushed but for the wink she
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flashed at me, and that overcast feeling went slip—slidin’ away.
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She shooed both of us into the kitchen where she’d made a big
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tossed salad with pepper and celery in a wooden bowl, along with
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boiled eggs in mayonnaise and a ham cut so thinly you could see
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through it. I ate more than I should have, but I suddenly found I
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had an appetite and Barbara didn’t seem too displeased to see me
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demolishing it. In between stuffing her mouth with eggs and ham
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Paddy kept up the usual excited barrage of questions about what
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would happen at the festival. Her idea was the American dream.
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Would Mickey and Donald be there? Did they have majorettes?
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190
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Would there be pop—corn and candy? I said there would be
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something like that, but different. Better, I said. Yes, there would
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be a band, and a parade and lots of things to do. Paddy still couldn’t
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picture exactly what was going to happen at the festival. I think in
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her mind it was a cross between a rodeo and a fairground, but in
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any case she knew it was going to be fun and she was getting herself
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right into the mood for having plenty of it.
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After lunch Barbara sent Paddy out to play in the garden while
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we sat in the living room watching from the mullioned window over
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the expanse of lawn that rolled away towards the vegetable garden
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and the big trees beyond. We were drinking coffee in the big
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comfortable room where the sunlight streamed in and lit up big
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oblong patches on the old parquet fioor. _
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‘She plays in our tree,’ Barbara said, emphasising the our
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meaningfully. ‘She told me only yesterday she’d found people’s
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names carved on the bark, and wanted to know whose they were.’
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‘What did you say?’
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‘I told her that they were ours. Yours and mine and Colin’s, and
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she said "Golly, they’re ancient",’ she said, laughing with
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exaggerated rue.
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‘They are ancient. From another age.
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‘Do you remember . . . ?’ I said, just at the same time as Barbara
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said the same thing. I broke off and she laughed and insisted that I
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go on first.
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‘All right,’ I said. ‘Do you remember the day we had the picnic?
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Down by the stream?’
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Barbara frowned a little , obviously trying to picture it, failed and
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shook her head.
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‘It was the day the three of us found the .... ’
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‘Mushrooms! Yes. I do remember. And we smoked some
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concoction that Colin made up. Yes I remember}
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‘I had this dream about a man with a spear, and he stuck it into
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the ground.’
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‘Oh yes,’ Barbara said. ‘You were so convinced it was for real
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that you started to dig and Colin got really pissed off.’
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‘Yes he was a bit, but it was true, don’t you remember'? I dug and
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Colin helped and .... ’
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‘And you found something. I can’t remember what it was. A
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stone or something?’
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‘Yes. A stone spear—head, just like the one I saw in the dream}
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‘That’s it. I remember now. And the lady in the dream gave me
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gold flowers for round my neck. Oh, I remember I was so
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disappointed when I found they were gone. It was like gold, so
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191
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beautiful.
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‘Colin dreamed of a black knight with a sword,’ I said.
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‘Did he?’ Barbara asked in a small voice, she was still miles away
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in her memory. Years away, remembering the woman who had
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given her Howers in her dream on the bank of Strowan’s Water.
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‘I found the stone.’
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‘What stone?’
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‘The one I dug up.’
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‘Really? The same one?’
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‘I think so.’
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‘Our treasure! Do you remember? That’s what we called it. The
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buried treasure. You said it was a magic stone that gave us special
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power, didn’t you?’
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‘No that was Colin’s idea. He was always the imaginative one.’
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‘Poor soul,’ she said with simple compassion. ‘He was, wasn’t
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he?’
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I remembered something else just as Barbara said that, and I
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reached into the inside pocket of the light nylon jacket I had put
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on, a Himsy, almost wet-looking thing that was ideal for the hot
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weather because it could crumple up into a fist-sized bundle and fit
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into a pocket.
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‘Look at this,’ I said, and pulled out the slender golden torc that .
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Kitty MacBeth had unofficially bequeathed to me, along with the
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rest of the contents of her beautiful carved box.
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‘Ooh,’ Barbara said, evoking yet another memory. ‘It’s
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beautiful.’
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I reached out to give it to her and she took it. Our lingers
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brushed lightly, and I felt that delicious little sparkle, the vibes I
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would have called it in my teen years.
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‘Is it gold?’
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‘I don’t know, but I’d bet any amount that it is.’
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‘Oh, it’s the loveliest thing.’
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‘You like it?’
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‘Like it? It’s exquisite,’ she said, holding up the torc to the light
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so that the sun sparkled off the golden orbs that finished off the
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arcs.
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‘I’d like you to have it,’ I said, surprising myself. I hadn’t put the
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torc in my pocket for any reason that I could figure out, and I
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hadn’t intended to come here and give it to Barbara, but all of a —
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sudden, I just did it as if I’d been pushed from behind.
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‘No, I couldn’t Nick,’ Barbara said, shaking her head, with her
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eyes still fixed on the gilded glint. ‘It’s far too expensive}
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‘Well, actually, it’s probably never been valued. It was given to
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192
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me by somebody who doesn’t need it any more, so I don’t think
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she’d mind if you had it. No, I don’t think she’d mind at all.’
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What was it Kitty had said? ‘The one and onlies?’ and she
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laughed. ‘That was more true than you could have known.’
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No, with a brief Hash of certainty, I knew that Kitty MacBeth
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would not mind at all.
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‘I don’t know what to say Nick. It’s so gorgeous, I really
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shouldn’t take it.’
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Just then Paddy came into the room and leaned over her
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mother’s knee. Her eyes had caught the ilashing light from the
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torc.
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She stared at it, with wide, unblinking eyes, as if the reflections
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had snagged her hypnotically.
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‘That’s pretty,’ she said, in a very soft voice. ‘Is this a present
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from Nick? Can I see it?’ She reached out a small hand and clasped
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the circlet and Barbara just let it go. I thought Paddy was going to
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put it on her head, but she just stared at it, entranced, almost
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hypnotised. Then, in one easy movement, she put it up to her neck,
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pulled apart the two golden balls and slipped it on. It sat there,
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gleaming bright.
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‘Can I have it, Nick?’ The question was more like a command.
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Not like a little girl’s appeal for a plaything. The torc sat perfectly »
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on her neck.
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‘Paddy, that’s not very nice,’ Barbara said.
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‘Can I have it, Nick. It’s for me, isn’t it?’ Paddy said, as if she
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hadn’t heard her mother speak. The sunlight caught off the gold on
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her neck, beaming it back into my eyes, and for the briefest instant.
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I saw rings of golden light, spiralling outwards on water. For a
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slender moment of time I heard the buzzing of summer insects and
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the clattering of hooves on rock. I smelt the pungent sap of pine.
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Then my mind switched to the more recent past, and the words
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in Kitty MacBeth’s letter. Take the torc. It protects.
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And for some reason, it just seemed right that Paddy should
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have it. I don’t know now, and didn’t know then, what made me
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think that, but I just nodded my head.
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‘Yes. It is yours. If your mother says so.’
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Barbara scolded me gently for falling for Paddy’s plea, but she
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didn’t object.
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Later she said: ‘It’s strange. When Paddy put it around her neck,
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I suddenly thought of golden ilowers.’
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||
The festival was just winding up to full swing when we got down to
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the field at Duncan Bennett’s smallholding. The whole town was
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193
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||
there, Upper Arden folk rubbing shoulders with the people of the
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Milligs, and the Westbay crowd rubbing shoulders with
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everybody.
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Barbara had changed Paddy into a summer frock, which
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probably wasn’t practical and caused a mother-and—daughter feud
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that died down as quickly as it Hared, and the little girl bore the
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indignity with relatively good grace. I parked the jeep in the only
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||
free slot in the supermarket car-park, and we strolled along the
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||
main street towards the sound of the brass band that was belting
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||
out an enthusiastic but tuneless marching jazz number. Barbara
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||
was stunning in a white cotton dress and sling-back sandals, and
|
||
she’d put her hair up in a neat French roll that showed off the clean
|
||
arch of her neck and did amazing things for my hormones. She
|
||
cleaked her arm through mine and Paddy grabbed my hand,
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||
swinging it to and fro to match her bouncing step.
|
||
The marquee was blue and white, jammed in a corner against the
|
||
hedge and in the opposing corner, furthest from the main road, the
|
||
beer tent was a square box of green canvas that seemed to be
|
||
bulging at the sides. I knew that in there it would be hot and smoky
|
||
and jostling with bodies and swimming with beer. Ideal for the
|
||
Arden men on festival day. I thought a beer would go down just
|
||
{ine on a warm afternoon. Along the edge of the hedgerow, there
|
||
were stalls with cakes and sweets, home-made jams and buttered
|
||
shortcake. There were little cuddly toys in profusion, baskets and
|
||
pottery, all for sale at giveaway prices that would help swell the
|
||
coffers of whichever charities the day had been dedicated to. When
|
||
we arrived, the grass was already trampled Hat under Arden’s feet.
|
||
Paddy saw the slide and swings that some of the townsmen had
|
||
put up under the trees the night before, hauled out from whichever
|
||
hall they’d been gathering dust in for the past year. She slipped her
|
||
hand out of mine and was off like a rabbit, with a quick wave of her
|
||
hand and a Hash of white tail.
|
||
‘She was probably right about wearing her jeans,’ I said.
|
||
‘Don’t you start.’ Barbara said. ‘I had a bad enough time with
|
||
her.’
|
||
I held my hand up in surrender. We strolled around the
|
||
periphery and Barbara ooh—ed and aah-ed at the handicrafts. She
|
||
picked up a piece of local pottery that had been fashioned into a
|
||
deep red stem vase with a narrow neck, and was turning it around
|
||
in her hands when there was a loud report from the trees nearby.
|
||
Barbara jerked and the delicate piece slipped from her fingers and
|
||
thumped to the ground. It bounced, but it didn’t break.
|
||
‘It’s all right. Just the clay pigeons getting warmed up,’ I said.
|
||
194
|
||
|
||
Barbara was relieved that the piece hadn’t broken. She bought it
|
||
on the spot.
|
||
The next stall offered a selection of arty candles in all shapes and
|
||
sizes and some grotesque colours. The two men in the stall ran a
|
||
little shop next to the Chandler that specialised in arts and crafts,
|
||
picture framing and candle making and other such gaucheries.
|
||
‘Mrs Hartford,’ the tall, slender one gushed. He had a long face
|
||
and a nose to match. One hand was cocked on his hip, and he
|
||
sported a big silver belt buckle. ‘How nice to see you.’ His smile
|
||
showed a row of milk bottles a yard wide.
|
||
‘Isn’t it, Brian?’ he said, turning to his chubbier companion who
|
||
was graced with a shock of silvery hair that was carefully coiffed,
|
||
and had the faintest tinge of blue. He waddled from the back of the
|
||
stall where he’d been arranging a set of thick candles with dark
|
||
colours that ran into each other and reminded me of rotting
|
||
toadstools.
|
||
‘Oh, hell-0 there,’ Brian effused, wiping his hand on a natty little
|
||
apron that only emphasised his paunch. ‘W0n-derful day, don’t
|
||
you think?’
|
||
Barbara agreed that it was, and politely had a look around the
|
||
wares. I’d met the two gentlemen in the Chandler one night, where
|
||
they’d been described to me as ‘raving berties,’ a description that
|
||
seemed redundantly obvious. They seemed civil enough to me,
|
||
although I found their mincing just a little bit exaggerated. But
|
||
having worked in TV studios, their effeminate mannerisms were
|
||
less out of the ordinary to me than they must have been to some of
|
||
the plain folk from Arden.
|
||
Barbara and I strolled into the marquee that was bustling with
|
||
the women of the WRI and the Round Table and what have you.
|
||
The trestle tables were creaking under the weight of the home
|
||
baking and garden produce, elderiiower wines and sugared fruits.
|
||
Contest was in full swing and, when Barbara met one or two
|
||
matrons who insisted that she get a guided tour, there was nothing
|
||
for it but a quick dodge through the flap. With almost one bound I
|
||
was free of all that. I headed for the beer tent by way of the
|
||
playground, where Paddy was in a crowd of squealing and laughing
|
||
youngsters who zoomed down the slide or soared on the swings or
|
||
jumped and climbed on the jungle-gym. There was a big muddy
|
||
mark on the back of her dress, I noted with some small satisfaction.
|
||
Most of the other kids were in jeans.
|
||
In the beer tent it took my eyes a moment or two to adjust to the
|
||
gloom and the fumes. It was sweating in the green half-light that
|
||
filtered through the canvas, and there was that convivial hubbub of
|
||
195
|
||
|
||
male voices, shouted orders and raucous laughter. This was man’s
|
||
country.
|
||
Jimmy Allison and the major with Duncan Bennett and a few of
|
||
the older guys were sitting in a circle on upturned aluminium beer
|
||
kegs. I beat my way through the fug and crowded bodies to join
|
||
them and somebody poured me a lager that was so cold it froze my
|
||
throat deliciously at the first swallow.
|
||
‘You’ll be wanting a half of whisky, I fancy,’ Donald said,
|
||
producing his trusty hip-flask from the pocket of his tweed jacket
|
||
that must have been killing him with the heat.
|
||
‘No, beer’s fine for the moment,’ I demurred, smacking my lips
|
||
contentedly.
|
||
Jimmy didn’t pass up the opportunity and Donald poured him a
|
||
fair measure before charging his own glass.
|
||
‘Slainte,’ the highlander said, raising his whisky, and we all said
|
||
cheers and good health. Jimmy’s hands were not so twisted and
|
||
gnarled with the arthritis, I noticed, and I thought the summer
|
||
warmth must be doing him good. I made a mental promise to bully
|
||
him into seeing a specialist before the winter set in and made them
|
||
useless. He was in a mellow mood, as indeed we all were. Some
|
||
more mellow, I’ll grant you, than the others who hadn’t been
|
||
drinking since the beer tent flaps opened at noon, but that’s the .
|
||
way of it at the festival. Outside, the band screeched enthusiasti-
|
||
cally and nobody minded nor cared whether it was off-key or out of
|
||
step.
|
||
Behind our group, World War Three, as they were affection-
|
||
ately known in the Chandler, Brigadier Watson and two of his
|
||
forces friends who apparently joined him every summer for a
|
||
yachting holiday were arguing in loud, plummy tones, adding their
|
||
military wah—wah—wah to the conversation. They were drinking
|
||
pints of dark beer and smoking cigars and having a jolly good time,
|
||
their old war-horse faces getting redder and redder as they went.
|
||
Most of the farmers from the surrounding area were in the tent,
|
||
with their greasy caps shoved back on their heads and sticks with
|
||
worn, knobby handles tucked under their armpits. Along the side
|
||
of the tent, in the shadow where the pegs held the canvas down to
|
||
the grass in taut little arcs, their border collies waited with infinite
|
||
patience, panting, sides heaving.
|
||
At one of the tables, a crowd of young lads were taking turns at
|
||
arm wrestling, rocking the little trestle back and forth with their
|
||
effort. Beer cans hissed open, and big John Hollinger, who had run
|
||
the bar every year as far as I can remember, roared out with robust
|
||
good humour to all and sundry, the sweat beading his brow and his
|
||
196
|
||
|
||
customary bar cloth slung round his neck.
|
||
‘Right, who’s next?’ he would bellow. ‘No, not you Bert, you’re
|
||
third. Willie? Three pints, right. No, no whisky. You bring your
|
||
own,’ and so it went on.
|
||
Somebody choked on his beer in mid laugh and somebody else
|
||
slapped his back. Somebody stumbled and stood on one of the
|
||
dog’s feet and jumped back when it yelped with a high-pitched
|
||
squeal of pain and surprise, and the owner cautioned him to watch
|
||
the bloody dog. One of the arm wrestlers fell down when his elbow
|
||
slipped in a slick of ale and the whole tent laughed. Everybody was
|
||
getting juiced up for a real good time.
|
||
I stayed for another beer, sitting in that mixed company, just
|
||
taking in the conversations that were going on all around. Donald
|
||
challenged me to a clay pigeon shoot and one of the farmers laid a
|
||
bet with another over the result of the quoits match. Another of
|
||
the barrel-sitters professed that if his wife didn’t win a prize in the
|
||
home—baking section then it wasn’t worth his while going home
|
||
tonight. A crony said it would be nothing short of a miracle if he
|
||
was sober enough to get home tonight, and again everybody
|
||
laughed. _
|
||
Outside I was garrotted by the sunlight, jerking back as I
|
||
emerged from the gloom into the bright. The field was a riot of
|
||
noise and colour. From outside, along the main street, I could hear
|
||
the honking of horns that heralded the arrival of the parade, and as
|
||
I walked toward the marquee, the big trailer did a wide swing to
|
||
negotiate the gate and scraped through. On the back, the harvest
|
||
queen was done up like a dish of fish, with a bright yellow cloak and
|
||
a long dress to match. She had the corn-crown, woven by one of the
|
||
townswomen from stalks and ears into a delicate, dainty
|
||
headpiece, and behind her, slightly to the right, dressed in a jacket
|
||
and a hat made of cornstalks, was the reaper-king, a tall, fair-
|
||
haired lad, with his shiny, curved scythe. All the corn maidens
|
||
were pretty as a picture in their colourful dresses, and the whole
|
||
pageant was finished off with dollies and animals, roosters and
|
||
intricate shapes made of straw. Everybody cheered as the leading
|
||
trailer made a circuit of the Held and then came to a stop in the
|
||
centre. Following the leader came a horse-drawn ilatloader pulled
|
||
by two immense Clydesdales, great plodding beasts that were
|
||
tricked up to a glossy shine, their burnished harnesses gleaming
|
||
and jangling. Their heads bobbed up and down majestically with
|
||
every step, showing off their pleated manes. The ilatloader was
|
||
piled high with the harvest gifts, stalks of corn and barley, tied
|
||
together in the traditional hour—glass shape.
|
||
197
|
||
|
||
There were barrels of apples and early pears, mounds of
|
||
potatoes that were so white they must have been dug up that
|
||
morning. There was a forest of rhubarb from the smallholdings and
|
||
pots of honey from Duncan Bennett’s apiary and the other hives
|
||
around Arden. There were round, soft cheeses and gallons of
|
||
buttermilk, but most of all there was the bread. Big humped loaves
|
||
with golden—brown cracked crusts, square loaves and crescents,
|
||
cottage loaves salted with flour. You could smell them in the
|
||
eddying breeze, warm and sweet and mouth watering. The
|
||
produce float pulled up behind the pageant and everybody cheered
|
||
again. In the front trailer, the harvest queen and her escort and
|
||
their crowd of pretty little backers stepped down for their royal
|
||
parade around the field, waving and smiling at the applauding
|
||
crowd, who cheered enthusiastically.
|
||
By this time, I had found Barbara, and Paddy had come running
|
||
with all the other kids as soon as the horns of the pageant had
|
||
beckoned. We had a good position at the centre of the field where
|
||
the queen would give out the bounty of the harvest. I’d been there
|
||
once when the poor girl had been bowled back in the rush of eager
|
||
children and had ended up with her backside stuck in a soft cottage
|
||
cheese.
|
||
Paddy couldn’t see what was going on, so I lifted her on to my
|
||
shoulders and held her steady with a grip on her ankle. Barbara
|
||
watched with a smile of approval, and then gave my arm a brief hug
|
||
that said thanks, and I got another of those little warm glows you
|
||
get at such times.
|
||
Just when the queen and her retinue had arrived back at the
|
||
middle of the field, there was another wave of horn-honking, and
|
||
the deep growl of an engine, rough and powerful. The crowds
|
||
parted and up the line came Father Gerry on his Honda,
|
||
resplendent in his shiny hard—top and black gear. He zoomed past
|
||
the cheering crowd and hit the ramp at the back of the pageant
|
||
trailer at such a rate that, when he got up to the loader level, the
|
||
bike actually leapt into the air, its front wheel spinning powerfully.
|
||
He stopped dead centre, and the wheel thumped down on to the
|
||
boards and with a flick of a thumb he killed the engine dead, and he
|
||
jumped the bike back on to its stand and whirled to face the crowd
|
||
with one fluid motion. Great entrance, I thought, watching him
|
||
standing there, black and magnihcent, his arms raised high, willing
|
||
the crowd to silence.
|
||
It obeyed him. A hush swept over the farmers and their wives
|
||
and all the kids.
|
||
And in the silence, Paddy, from her vantage point somewhere
|
||
198
|
||
|
||
above the top of my head pealed out: ‘Look mummy, it’s Darth
|
||
Vader!’
|
||
Everybody heard it, even Gerry, who was unlacing his helmet,
|
||
and a wave of laughter swept through the crowd. It made a mess of
|
||
Gerry’s entrance, but nobody cared. Beside me, Barbara was
|
||
having a quiet lit of hysterics, and I could feel Paddy jostle up and
|
||
down on my shoulders which were heaving with barely suppressed
|
||
laughter.
|
||
Gerry got the lid off and beamed a big smile down at her.
|
||
‘Don’t I wish, young lady,’ he told her, and everybody clapped.
|
||
He was still smiling widely when he lifted his hands up again for
|
||
silence.
|
||
‘I’m not going to try that again, ladies and gentlemen, boys and
|
||
girls. I don’t want to risk my neck.’
|
||
Somebody at the back shouted: ‘Oh, don’t be a spoilsport,
|
||
reverend,’ and there was more laughter.
|
||
Gerry shook his head good-naturedly and the laughter fell away
|
||
slowly.
|
||
‘Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, everybody,’ he called.
|
||
‘Once again, it is our own harvest festival and we’re all here to have
|
||
a good time.’
|
||
He paused and looked around.
|
||
‘But first, let’s remember why we’re here. To say thanks for the
|
||
summer, and to say thanks for everything that’s grown so well to let
|
||
us have a festival today.
|
||
‘So, boys and girls,’ he said in his strong, clear voice, ‘let’s join
|
||
hands and say thank you.’
|
||
Above me, I could hear Paddy clap her hands together,
|
||
following Gerry’s exaggerated gesture of encouragement. Beside
|
||
me, I noticed a few other children doing the same.
|
||
‘Dear God, we thank you for making things grow, for making all
|
||
the nice things we like to eat. We thank you for making the sun
|
||
shine on our harvest festival and for giving us this wonderful day.
|
||
Amen.’
|
||
‘Amen!’ piped up shrill voices and adult tones all around.
|
||
‘Now let’s all have some fun!’ Gerry yelled, and everybody
|
||
cheered.
|
||
‘Who is that‘?’ Barbara asked.
|
||
‘My friend, the hot—shot priest,’ I told her. ‘Father Gerry
|
||
O’Connor.’
|
||
‘He’s delicious,’ she said. ‘What a waste}
|
||
I felt a small twinge of jealousy, but I had to admit that the good-
|
||
looking young priest did have more than the normal helping of
|
||
199
|
||
|
||
|
||
good looks and charisma. I just said a thankful prayer that he
|
||
actually was a priest, and a conscientious one at that.
|
||
‘Sorry kid, he’s spoken for,’ I said, gesturing skywards with my
|
||
eyes.
|
||
‘Oh, don’t be silly,’ she said, and hugged my arm again, leaning
|
||
in towards me so that I could feel the softness and warmth of her
|
||
body. The little pang of jealousy evaporated in the heat of that
|
||
moment.
|
||
Paddy asked to be let down off my shoulders and I caught her
|
||
under the armpits and swung her, topsy turvy, over my head,
|
||
spinning her so she landed on her feet.
|
||
‘Can I go and play, now?’ she asked, squinting up against the
|
||
sun. Barbara told her to run along and be careful. As Paddy
|
||
turned, her mother noticed the muddy patch on her skirt and was
|
||
about to say something but Paddy slipped through the crowds like
|
||
a iish and was gone.
|
||
‘Oh, I forgot to tell you,’ she said, still holding on to my arm,
|
||
‘I’ve got an interview at the Western Iniirmary on Monday}
|
||
I told her I was delighted, and asked if she wanted me to drive
|
||
her up to Glasgow.
|
||
‘No, I’ve borrowed my father’s car. He doesn’t really use it any
|
||
more. I’ve got used to the fact that the wheel’s on the wrong side,
|
||
and I’m just grateful that he’s got an automatic. I’m afraid a stick
|
||
shift would just be beyond me.’
|
||
‘Best of luck, Babs,’ I said. ‘I hope you get the job.’
|
||
‘Thanks, me too. I need to be working at something now that
|
||
Paddy’s going to school. I don’t want to be cooped up in the house
|
||
all day long.’
|
||
I said something phoney and masculine like they’d be crazy not
|
||
to hire her, but she just smiled and took it as a compliment.
|
||
‘I wonder if you could do me a favour, though,’ she said. ‘My
|
||
father had arranged to go down to London to meet some friends
|
||
this weekend, so .... ’
|
||
‘So you want me to babysit?’
|
||
‘Well, yes. If you don’t mind.’
|
||
‘Not at all. It’ll be a pleasure. I’ll come up and pick her up and
|
||
take her out somewhere, if you like.’
|
||
‘That would be nice. Really. Thanks}
|
||
‘No problem. She’s a great kid. More fun than most people I
|
||
know, so I’ll be having a good time,’ I said sincerely. Paddy was
|
||
one of those kids you just took to, although I suppose her strong
|
||
resemblance to her mother was more than just an added bonus.
|
||
‘I’ll take her along Strowan’s Well, and see if the gang hut is still
|
||
200
|
||
|
||
there,’ I said, on impulse.
|
||
‘She’d love that. But don’t you tell her about the things we used
|
||
to do. I want her to grow up to be a lady.’
|
||
‘Didn’t seem to do you any harm,’ I said appraisingly.
|
||
Back in the centre of the field, the harvest queen was handing
|
||
out goodies to the children who surrounded her in a yelling horde,
|
||
helped by all her maids, some of whom were almost floored in the
|
||
rush. Everybody got their little round loaf, and a piece of cake and
|
||
some fruit. There was an abundance of fudge and drinks of fresh
|
||
and sour milk, and every child’s face and hands were sticky with
|
||
something in a matter of minutes. Close to the beer tent, the
|
||
barbecue was warming up nicely. The trench had been filled with
|
||
coals and over the red heat there was a whole pig turning on a spit
|
||
that was spun by a brawny young fellow with a painful-looking
|
||
sunburn. Beside it slowly rolled what looked close to a full side of
|
||
beef, and there were about two dozen capons going crisp red-
|
||
brown and sizzling over a long hot trench that had been dug
|
||
parallel to the main fire.
|
||
I left Barbara in mid—afternoon to have another vital pint of lager
|
||
in the tent where I found everybody at that mellow stage of good
|
||
fellowship and bonhomie. A pint was thrust into my hands and this
|
||
' one was a heaven-sent stream that slaked the back of my throat like
|
||
a blessing. I took a huge mouthful and belched explosively and
|
||
unstoppably to a round of raucous laughter.
|
||
‘Terrific,’ I said vehemently when I got my breath back. ‘Bloody
|
||
wonderful?
|
||
‘You’ll be wanting a wee half of whisky now,’ Donald said, and
|
||
brought out his little hip-flask again. It was full to the brim, and I
|
||
wondered if he had a magic flask, or a hidden bottle. I declined
|
||
again and he shrugged and poured him and Jimmy another fine
|
||
measure of heroic proportions. Another two candidates for the
|
||
flatloader express, I thought. Every year, the horse-drawn buggy
|
||
was the main form of transport home for everyone who found it
|
||
difficult to walk. It could take twenty people, and normally made
|
||
five or six trips. That’s how much Arden liked its harvest day.
|
||
Donald MacDonald and I had a contest at the pigeon shoot
|
||
where he outclassed me embarrassingly. We’d had a side bet on the
|
||
outcome, but he refused to take the pound. He’d scored ten out of
|
||
ten, despite the fact that he’d drunk enough to floor me twice over.
|
||
When we walked down through the trees back to the festival field,
|
||
he was as solid as a rock.
|
||
We left the tent and came down the path where Father Gerry
|
||
was surrounded by a group of_ sticky faced kids who were jostling
|
||
201
|
||
|
||
about him and hanging on to his sleeves. He’d changed out of the
|
||
biker’s gear into a light shirt and slacks. The monsignor was with
|
||
him and everybody was laughing. The tall priest with the basset—
|
||
hound’s face had a deep booming laugh that rumbled up within,
|
||
giving out a resonance of good feeling.
|
||
‘Hello Nick. And Donald too,’ he said, shaking both our hands
|
||
firmly. Gerry called out a hello over the heads of the children.
|
||
I made my excuses to both of them, for I’d seen Barbara out
|
||
there in the crowd, beyond the beer tent, and waded through
|
||
Gerry’s congregation of children. I was passing the big square tent
|
||
when something caught my eye in the narrow space between it and
|
||
the bright canvas of an adjacent hoopla stall. There was a crowd of
|
||
men fooling about in the shade there, drinking out of bottles. I was
|
||
about to pass on by when a flash of white on black drew my
|
||
attention, and I did a double-take. There was Badger, in amongst
|
||
the crowd, which immediately struck me as being strange, and just
|
||
as I lookedl saw that he was being pushed about roughly by a circle
|
||
of men.
|
||
I started up the narrow canvas alley, between the tents, ducking
|
||
to avoid twanging the guy—ropes with my head.
|
||
When I got to the end of the passageway, I saw that Colin was
|
||
drunk as a lord. He could hardly stand on his feet, and the circle of
|
||
guys were shoving him about, from one to the other. The poor guy
|
||
looked sick and drunk and terrified, and he didn’t seem to know
|
||
where he was.
|
||
‘Look at him,’ one of the men said raspingly. ‘He’s as drunk as a
|
||
skunk.’
|
||
‘Here, Badger,’ another one said, and Colin was shoved across
|
||
the circle. The man shoved at him and Colin staggered backwards
|
||
and fell in a heap. Everybody laughed cruelly.
|
||
Colin tried to get up and one of them stuck out the toe of his boot
|
||
and sent him sprawling into the leaves. I could hear him sobbing
|
||
with fear and bewilderment, and then, just as he had got to a
|
||
kneeling position, on all fours, he was suddenly sick, and a gout of
|
||
vomit splashed out and spattered over one of the men’s shoes.
|
||
‘Fuck sake,’ the young tough said, jumping back. ‘He’s been sick
|
||
all over my boots.’
|
||
Somebody laughed and the man told him to shut the fuck up.
|
||
‘Stupid bastard,’ he grunted and swung one of his soiled boots
|
||
forward and got Colin right under the ribs. He let out a whoosh of
|
||
air that was mingled with a sharp yelp of pain and rolled sideways.
|
||
‘You can have it back again, fucking idiot,’ the man said. It was
|
||
one of the toughs who’d ganged up on Colin before, that night I’d
|
||
202
|
||
|
||
been floored with a half-brick. Billy Ruine, the mean little gang
|
||
leader, was there too, smirking on the other side of the circle.
|
||
I couldn’t hold back any longer.
|
||
‘What do you think you’re doing, you bastards?’ I shouted out
|
||
and came out from between the tents. All the heads turned.
|
||
‘Oho, here comes the fuckin’ hero,’ Billy Ruine sneered.
|
||
‘You get the hell out of here before you get it too,’ he spat.
|
||
I was almost speechless with rage and disgust.
|
||
‘You cretins. Look at you. Bloody animals. Picking on some-
|
||
body who can’t even defend himself} They’d obviously got Colin
|
||
tanked up on their cheap booze.
|
||
‘Who the fuck do you think you’re talking to, big mouth?’ Billy
|
||
Ruine said. ‘What you want to do, take the whole lot of us on? Eh,
|
||
that what you want?’
|
||
He stuck his chin out and made a come-on gesture with both of
|
||
his hands. His team of hoods spread out beside him, their faces
|
||
flushed with drink, dark with violence. Behind him I could hear
|
||
Colin snufiling his misery.
|
||
‘Come on then, wise guy, let’s be havin’ you.’
|
||
I could feel my hands shaking with that burst of adrenalin you
|
||
get with confrontation. There was no way I was going to come out
|
||
of this well at all.
|
||
I braced my feet on the ground and prepared to hit out at the iirst
|
||
one that moved. There was no way I could run away from this one,
|
||
so I decided I might as well take a few bloody noses with me as they
|
||
carted me off in the ambulance. This was looking very hairy
|
||
indeed.
|
||
Billy Ruine took a step forward, with that sly, arrogant look on
|
||
his face.
|
||
‘Well, well now,’ Donald said, loudly. ‘This is a fine wee party
|
||
we have going on here, do we not?’
|
||
I was never so glad to hear a human voice in my life. Billy Ruine
|
||
turned and saw Donald standing off to the side.
|
||
‘Now, is it a private party, I’m wondering,’ Donald said in his
|
||
mild, slow way, ‘or is it that anybody can join in?’
|
||
‘Fuck off, old timer,’ Billy said, and one of his troops giggled.
|
||
‘This is nothing to do with you.’
|
||
‘Well, if you put one hand on him, then I’ll have to make it
|
||
something to do with me, now,’ Donald said mildly. There was no
|
||
hint of anger or menace in his voice.
|
||
Billy turned away from him. ‘Ignore that old fool,’ he said and
|
||
ran towards me, swinging his boot up to catch me in the groin. I
|
||
jumped back and Billy’s foot missed me by an inch. I grabbed it and
|
||
203
|
||
|
||
pulled and he went down, but he twisted and came back up again
|
||
like a cat and swung a roundhouse that clipped me on the side of
|
||
the ear and made my head ring.
|
||
That was the last hit he got in. An arm lashed out and caught him
|
||
right smack on the chin. I turned, surprised, and saw that it was not
|
||
Donald who had thrown the blow. Monsignor Cronin was standing
|
||
off to the right. There was a bellow of pain and I saw Donald leap »
|
||
into the crowd. He spun and his foot came right up clear of the
|
||
ground and connected with one of the group’s head. He went down
|
||
like a sack. Donald continued the movement and turned like a
|
||
ballet dancer and his hands moved like pistons. Smack, smack
|
||
right and left, and two of the young hoods doubled over. The
|
||
monsignor swept past me like a black shadow and stepped over
|
||
Billy Ruine who was lying still on the fallen leaves. He caught one
|
||
of the guys and spun him around on his heels with a blow to the
|
||
solar plexus, and grabbed another and head-butted him straight on
|
||
the nose, like a bar-room brawler. But there was nothing of the
|
||
streetiighter in the fluid grace with which the two men cut a swathe
|
||
through the line—up. My ears were still ringing from that clip, but
|
||
the pain had gone away. It was over in seconds. The two remaining
|
||
young men turned and ran. The rest of them writhed and moaned
|
||
on the ground under the trees.
|
||
Monsignor Cronin shot his cuffs out, and rubbed his hands
|
||
together. He was breathing lightly, and his solemn face looked as
|
||
placid as he could ever manage.
|
||
‘Silly boys,’ he said, shaking his head. He turned to me and
|
||
raised his finger to his lips: ‘Shhh. Not a word to a soul. Bad for the
|
||
reputation, don’t you think‘?’ I was too surprised to do anything but
|
||
nod.
|
||
Donald helped Colin to his feet and dusted him down. His nose
|
||
was running and the tears had streaked his face. He looked very
|
||
unsteady.
|
||
‘Bloody animals,’ Donald said. ‘That’s what they are. Come on,
|
||
laddie, let’s get you away from here.’
|
||
We helped Colin into the beer tent and sat him on the grass
|
||
beside the barrels where he snufiled a bit before falling asleep,
|
||
lying sprawled and ungainly beside the patient dogs.
|
||
‘He’ll be all right once he sleeps it off,’ Jimmy Allison said after
|
||
I’d told him what happened, or some of it.
|
||
‘It’s a damned shame, picking on that poor soul. You would
|
||
think they had better things to do with their time.’
|
||
‘Och, they’re no better than pigs,’ Donald said loudly and
|
||
vehemently. ‘Animals is what they are, and no mistake. It does
|
||
204
|
||
|
||
them good to get a taste of their own medicine. I’m thinking we
|
||
were a bit soft on them.’ ·
|
||
Donald was still in a fury over what Billy Ruine and his boys had
|
||
done to Colin. I must say I was enraged as well, but I was still very
|
||
grateful to Donald — and to the monsignor — for getting me out of
|
||
that with nothing worse than a thick ear. Grateful and, frankly,
|
||
amazed. Those two men, well past their prime, had made
|
||
mincemeat of those young toughs with such ease that if I hadn’t
|
||
seen it I wouldn’t have believed it. If it hadn’t been for them I
|
||
would probably be lying round there in a pool of blood, or worse.
|
||
The cheap wine that band of thugs had been drinking from their
|
||
bottles had obviously tired them up to a frenzy. They might not
|
||
have stopped at a mere beating.
|
||
My nerves had calmed down by the time they started carving up the
|
||
crisp brown meat of the barbecue. The sweating helpers hauled the
|
||
beef and port on to wooden planks set on sturdy workhorses and
|
||
the carving knives were whipped up to ringing sharpness as
|
||
Tommy Muir, the local butcher, and his son, both big and beefy
|
||
men, set about carving everything up with a marvellous deftness
|
||
into steaks and slabs of hot meat. The chickens were halved and
|
||
quartered and everybody lined up for a share. The beer tent
|
||
emptied, giving John Hollinger a break, and I saw him strolling off
|
||
with a plate of beef and pork and potatoes that would have done a
|
||
bear proud. He was a bear of a man anyway, so it made little
|
||
difference. Barbara and Paddy joined Jimmy and Donald and a
|
||
few others with myself who sat in the shade of a weeping ash, and
|
||
we had our own banquet, washed down with some white wine and
|
||
more beer. The guys kept the jokes clean in deference to the two
|
||
ladies and we all set to.
|
||
As to be expected, from memories of childhood, everything was
|
||
delicious, as freshly cooked food in the open air never fails to be.
|
||
Paddy made a pig of herself and within minutes of settling down
|
||
her face was covered in grease.
|
||
I was on my fourth can of beer of the day — and that was just
|
||
enough for me — washing down the gargantuan meal, when
|
||
Duncan Bennett remembered he hadn’t got his free harvest loaf. I
|
||
couldn’t have eaten another morsel, but Duncan wandered off to
|
||
get his fair share, saying he hadn’t missed his loaf in all the years
|
||
and that, he said, was a whole lot of bread. Barbara told Paddy if
|
||
she ate another thing she’d be sick, and that’s just the way I felt too.
|
||
Babs and I sat back against the tree, enjoying the lethargy of a big
|
||
meal on a hot day. All around the iield, under the trees and in the
|
||
205
|
||
|
||
shade of the tents and stalls, families and couples and groups of
|
||
friends were doing the same thing. It was the festival’s equivalent
|
||
of half time. Paddy fell asleep, and I almost dozed off too, while
|
||
the murmur of conversation and laughter washed over me.
|
||
After dinner time, there were games for the children, egg and
|
||
spoon races, and contests. The men threw weights over the bar and
|
||
put their bets on quoits, and they drank more beer.
|
||
Later on, when it was beginning to get dark, they lit the huge
|
||
bonfire with the straw man as a guy lashed to the centre pole. The
|
||
last job of the harvest queen was to put her crown on the straw
|
||
man’s head, then they lit the {ire and he was gone in minutes — his
|
||
and her hour of glory gone in one glorious burst of flame.
|
||
Everybody cheered for the umpteenth time that day and applaud-
|
||
ed. Father Gerry had got in a spectacular array of fireworks that lit
|
||
up the night and we watched as Donald passed round his
|
||
miraculous flask. Barbara took a sip and he beamed with pleasure
|
||
when she declared it top class. He got up and sang one of his Gaelic
|
||
songs with all the verses that sounded the same, and nobody
|
||
minded. The monsignor, his fellow combatant of earlier, got up
|
||
and sang a funny one that had the kids laughing.
|
||
Paddy fell asleep, and I took her and Barbara home. Jimmy and
|
||
Donald and Duncan, and a whole squad of others, left for the
|
||
flatloader.
|
||
P 206
|
||
|
||
|