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THE GAMEKEEPER
The second winter came, and with the first frost Gibbie resumed his
sheepskin coat and the brogues and leggings which he had made for
himself of deer-hide tanned with the hair. It pleased the two old
people to see him so warmly clad. It pleased them also that, thus
dressed, he always reminded them of some sacred personage
undetermined -- Jacob, or John the Baptist, or the man who went to
meet the lion and be killed by him -- in Robert's big Bible, that is,
in one or other of the woodcuts of the same. Very soon the stories
about him were all stirred up afresh, and new rumours added. This
one and that of the children declared they had caught sight of the
beast-loon, running about the rocks like a goat; and one day a boy
of Angus's own, who had been a good way up the mountain, came home
nearly dead with terror, saying the beast-loon had chased him a long
way. He did not add that he had been throwing stones at the sheep,
not perceiving any one in charge of them. So, one fine morning in
December, having nothing particular to attend to, Angus shouldered
his double-barrelled gun, and set out for a walk over Glashgar, in
the hope of coming upon the savage that terrified the children. He
must be off. That was settled. Where Angus was in authority, the
outlandish was not to be suffered. The sun shone bright, and a keen
wind was blowing.
About noon he came in sight of a few sheep, in a sheltered spot,
where were little patches of coarse grass among the heather. On a
stone, a few yards above them, sat Gibbie, not reading, as he would
be half the time now, but busied with a Pan's-pipes -- which, under
Donal's direction, he had made for himself -- drawing from them
experimental sounds, and feeling after the possibility of a melody.
He was so much occupied that he did not see Angus approach, who now
stood for a moment or two regarding him. He was hirsute as Esau,
his head crowned with its own plentiful crop -- even in winter he wore
no cap -- his body covered with the wool of the sheep, and his legs
and feet with the hide of the deer -- the hair, as in nature, outward.
The deer-skin Angus knew for what it was from afar, and concluding
it the spoil of the only crime of which he recognized the enormity,
whereas it was in truth part of a skin he had himself sold to a
saddler in the next village, to make sporrans of, boiled over with
wrath, and strode nearer, grinding his teeth. Gibbie looked up,
knew him, and starting to his feet, turned to the hill. Angus,
levelling his gun, shouted to him to stop, but Gibbie only ran the
harder, nor once looked round. Idiotic with rage, Angus fired. One
of his barrels was loaded with shot, the other with ball: meaning to
use the shot barrel, he pulled the wrong trigger, and liberated the
bullet. It went through the calf of Gibbie's right leg, and he
fell. It had, however, passed between two muscles without injuring
either greatly, and had severed no artery. The next moment he was
on his feet again and running, nor did he yet feel pain. Happily he
was not very far from home, and he made for it as fast as he
could -- preceded by Oscar, who, having once by accident been shot
himself, had a mortal terror of guns. Maimed as Gibbie was, he
could yet run a good deal faster up hill than the rascal who
followed him. But long before he reached the cottage, the pain had
arrived, and the nearer he got to it the worse it grew. In spite of
the anguish, however, he held on with determination; to be seized by
Angus and dragged down to Glashruach, would be far worse.
Robert Grant was at home that day, suffering from rheumatism. He
was seated in the ingle-neuk, with his pipe in his mouth, and Janet
was just taking the potatoes for their dinner off the fire, when the
door flew open, and in stumbled Gibbie, and fell on the floor. The
old man threw his pipe from him, and rose trembling, but Janet was
before him. She dropt down on her knees beside the boy, and put her
arm under his head. He was white and motionless.
"Eh, Robert Grant!" she cried, "he's bleedin'."
The same moment they heard quick yet heavy steps approaching. At
once Robert divined the truth, and a great wrath banished rheumatism
and age together. Like a boy he sprang to the crap o' the wa',
whence his yet powerful hand came back armed with a huge rusty old
broad-sword that had seen service in its day. Two or three fierce
tugs at the hilt proving the blade immovable in the sheath, and the
steps being now almost at the door, he clubbed the weapon, grasping
it by the sheathed blade, and holding it with the edge downward, so
that the blow he meant to deal should fall from the round of the
basket hilt. As he heaved it aloft, the gray old shepherd seemed
inspired by the god of battles; the rage of a hundred ancestors was
welling up in his peaceful breast. His red eye flashed, and the few
hairs that were left him stood erect on his head like the mane of a
roused lion. Ere Angus had his second foot over the threshold, down
came the helmet-like hilt with a dull crash on his head, and he
staggered against the wall.
"Tak ye that, Angus Mac Pholp!" panted Robert through his clenched
teeth, following the blow with another from his fist, that
prostrated the enemy. Again he heaved his weapon, and standing over
him where he lay, more than half-stunned, said in a hoarse voice,
"By the great God my maker, Angus Mac Pholp, gien ye seek to rise,
I'll come doon on ye again as ye lie! -- Here, Oscar! -- He's no ane to
haud ony fair play wi', mair nor a brute beast. -- Watch him, Oscar,
and tak him by the thro't gien he muv a finger."
The gun had dropped from Angus's hand, and Robert, keeping his eye
on him, secured it.
"She's lodd," muttered Angus.
"Lie still than," returned Robert, pointing the weapon at his head.
"It'll be murder," said Angus, and made a movement to lay hold of
the barrel.
"Haud him doon, Oscar," cried Robert. The dog's paws were instantly
on his chest, and his teeth grinning within an inch of his face.
Angus vowed in his heart he would kill the beast on the first
chance. "It wad be but blude for blude, Angus Mac Pholp," he went
on. "Yer hoor's come, my man. That bairn's is no the first blude o'
man ye hae shed, an' it's time the Scripture was fulfillt, an' the
han' o' man shed yours."
"Ye're no gauin to kill me, Rob Grant?" growled the fellow in
growing fright.
"I'm gauin to see whether the shirra winna be perswaudit to hang
ye," answered the shepherd. "This maun be putten a stap
till. -- Quaiet! or I'll brain ye, an' save him the trouble. -- Here,
Janet, fess yer pot o' pitawtas. I'm gauin to toom the man's gun.
Gien he daur to muv, jist gie him the haill bilin', bree an a', i'
the ill face o' 'm; gien ye lat him up he'll kill's a'; only tak
care an' haud aff o' the dog, puir fallow! -- I wad lay the stock o'
yer murderin' gun i' the fire gien 'twarna 'at I reckon it's the
laird's an' no yours. Ye're no fit to be trustit wi' a gun. Ye're
waur nor a weyver."
So saying he carried the weapon to the door, and, in terror lest he
might, through wrath or the pressure of dire necessity, use it
against his foe, emptied its second barrel into the earth, and
leaned it up against the wall outside.
Janet obeyed her husband so far as to stand over Angus with the
potato-pot: how far she would have carried her obedience had he
attempted to rise may remain a question. Doubtless a brave man
doing his duty would have scorned to yield himself thus; but right
and wrong had met face to face, and the wrong had a righteous
traitor in his citadel.
When Robert returned and relieved her guard, Janet went back to
Gibbie, whom she had drawn towards the fire. He lay almost
insensible, but in vain Janet attempted to get a teaspoonful of
whisky between his lips. For as he grew older, his horror of it
increased; and now, even when he was faint and but half conscious,
his physical nature seemed to recoil from contact with it. It was
with signs of disgust, rubbing his mouth with the back of each hand
alternately, that he first showed returning vitality. In a minute
or two more he was able to crawl to his bed in the corner, and then
Janet proceeded to examine his wound.
By this time his leg was much swollen, but the wound had almost
stopped bleeding, and it was plain there was no bullet in it, for
there were the two orifices. She washed it carefully and bound it
up. Then Gibbie raised his head and looked somewhat anxiously round
the room.
"Ye're luikin' efter Angus?" said Janet; "he's yon'er upo' the
flure, a twa yairds frae ye. Dinna be fleyt; yer father an' Oscar
has him safe eneuch, I s' warran'."
"Here, Janet!" cried her husband; "gien ye be throu' wi' the bairn,
I maun be gauin'."
"Hoot, Robert! ye're no surely gauin' to lea' me an' puir Gibbie,
'at maunna stir, i' the hoose oor lanes wi' the murderin' man!"
returned Janet.
"'Deed am I, lass! Jist rin and fess the bit tow 'at ye hing yer
duds upo' at the washin', an' we'll bin' the feet an' the han's o'
'im."
Janet obeyed and went. Angus, who had been quiet enough for the
last ten minutes, meditating and watching, began to swear furiously,
but Robert paid no more heed than if he had not heard him -- stood
calm and grim at his head, with the clubbed sword heaved over his
shoulder. When she came back, by her husband's directions, she
passed the rope repeatedly round the keeper's ankles, then several
times between them, drawing the bouts tightly together, so that,
instead of the two sharing one ring, each ankle had now, as it were,
a close-fitting one for itself. Again and again, as she tied it,
did Angus meditate a sudden spring, but the determined look of
Robert, and his feeling memory of the blows he had so unsparingly
delivered upon him, as well as the weakening effect of that he had
received on his head, caused him to hesitate until it was altogether
too late. When they began to bind his hands, however, he turned
desperate, and struck at both, cursing and raging.
"Gien ye binna quaiet, ye s' taste the dog's teeth," said
Robert. -- Angus reflected that he would have a better chance when he
was left alone with Janet, and yielded. -- "Troth!" Robert went on,
as he continued his task, "I hae no pity left for ye, Angus Mac
Pholp; an' gien ye tyauve ony mair, I'll lat at ye. I wad care no
more to caw oot yer harns nor I wad to kill a tod (fox). To be
hangt for't, I wad be but prood. It's a fine thing to be hangt for
a guid cause, but ye'll be hangt for an ill ane. -- Noo, Janet, fess a
bun'le o' brackens frae the byre, an' lay aneth's heid. We maunna
be sairer upo' him, nor the needcessity laid upo' hiz. I s' jist
trail him aff o' the door, an' a bit on to the fire, for he'll be
cauld whan he's quaitet doon, an' syne I'll awa' an' get word o' the
shirra'. Scotlan's come till a pretty pass, whan they shot men wi'
guns, as gien they war wull craturs to be peelt an' aiten. Care
what set him! He may weel be a keeper o' ghem, for he's as ill a
keeper o' 's brither as auld Cain himsel'. But," he concluded,
tying the last knot hard, "we'll e'en dee what we can to keep the
keeper."
It was seldom Robert spoke at such length, but the provocation, the
wrath, the conflict, and the victory, had sent the blood rushing
through his brain, and loosed his tongue like strong drink.
"Ye'll tak yer denner afore ye gang, Robert," said his wife.
"Na, I can ait naething; I'll tak a bannock i' my pooch. Ye can gie
my denner to Angus: he'll want hertenin' for the wuddie (gallows)."
So saying he put the bannock in his pocket, flung his broad blue
bonnet upon his head, took his stick, and ordering Oscar to remain
at home and watch the prisoner, set out for a walk of five miles, as
if he had never known such a thing as rheumatism. He must find
another magistrate than the laird; he would not trust him where his
own gamekeeper, Angus Mac Pholp, was concerned.
"Keep yer ee upon him, Janet," he said, turning in the doorway.
"Dinna lowse sicht o' him afore I come back wi' the constable.
Dinna lippen. I s' be back in three hoors like."
With these words he turned finally, and disappeared.
The mortification of Angus as he lay thus trapped in the den of the
beast-loon, at being taken and bound by an old man, a woman, and a
collie dog, was extreme. He went over the whole affair again and
again in his mind, ever with a fresh burst of fury. It was in vain
he excused himself on the ground that the attack had been so sudden
and treacherous, and the precautions taken so complete. He had
proved himself an ass, and the whole country would ring with mockery
of him! He had sense enough, too, to know that he was in a serious
as well as ludicrous predicament: he had scarcely courage enough to
contemplate the possible result. If he could but get his hands
free, it would be easy to kill Oscar and disable Janet. For the
idiot, he counted him nothing. He had better wait, however, until
there should be no boiling liquid ready to her hand.
Janet set out the dinner, peeled some potatoes, and approaching
Angus, would have fed him. In place of accepting her ministration,
he fell to abusing her with the worst language he could find. She
withdrew without a word, and sat down to her own dinner; but,
finding the torrent of vituperation kept flowing, rose again, and
going to the door, fetched a great jug of cold water from the pail
that always stood there, and coming behind her prisoner, emptied it
over his face. He gave a horrid yell taking the douche for a
boiling one.
"Ye needna cry oot like that at guid cauld watter," said Janet. "But
ye'll jist absteen frae ony mair sic words i' my hearin', or ye s'
get the like ilka time ye brak oot." As she spoke, she knelt, and
wiped his face and head with her apron.
A fresh oath rushed to Angus's lips, but the fear of a second jugful
made him suppress it, and Janet sat down again to her dinner. She
could scarcely eat a mouthful, however, for pity of the rascal
beside her, at whom she kept looking wistfully without daring again
to offer him anything.
While she sat thus, she caught a swift investigating look he cast on
the cords that bound his hands, and then at the fire. She perceived
at once what was passing in his mind. Rising, she went quickly to
the byre, and returned immediately with a chain they used for
tethering the cow. The end of it she slipt deftly round his neck,
and made it fast, putting the little bar through a link.
"Ir ye gauin' to hang me, ye she-deevil?" he cried, making a futile
attempt to grasp the chain with his bound hands.
"Ye'll be wantin' a drappy mair cauld watter, I'm thinkin'," said
Janet.
She stretched the chain to its length, and with a great stone drove
the sharp iron stake at the other end of it, into the clay-floor.
Fearing next that, bound as his hands were, he might get a hold of
the chain and drag out the stake, or might even contrive to remove
the rope from his feet with them, or that he might indeed with his
teeth undo the knot that confined his hands themselves -- she got a
piece of rope, and made a loop at the end of it, then watching her
opportunity passed the loop between his hands, noosed the other end
through it, and drew the noose tight. The free end of the rope she
put through the staple that received the bolt of the cottage-door,
and gradually, as he grew weary in pulling against her, tightened
the rope until she had his arms at their stretch beyond his head.
Not quite satisfied yet, she lastly contrived, in part by setting
Oscar to occupy his attention, to do the same with his feet,
securing them to a heavy chest in the corner opposite the door, upon
which chest she heaped a pile of stones. If it pleased the Lord to
deliver them from this man, she would have her honest part in the
salvation! And now at last she believed she had him safe.
Gibbie had fallen asleep, but he now woke and she gave him his
dinner; then redd up, and took her Bible. Gibbie had lain down
again, and she thought he was asleep.
Angus grew more and more uncomfortable, both in body and in mind.
He knew he was hated throughout the country, and had hitherto
rather enjoyed the knowledge; but now he judged that the popular
feeling, by no means a mere prejudice, would tell against him
committed for trial. He knew also that the magistrate to whom
Robert had betaken himself, was not over friendly with his master,
and certainly would not listen to any intercession from him. At
length, what with pain, hunger, and fear, his pride began to yield,
and, after an hour had passed in utter silence, he condescended to
parley.
"Janet Grant," he said, "lat me gang, an' I'll trouble you or yours
no more."
"Wadna ye think me some fule to hearken till ye?" suggested Janet.
"I'll sweir ony lawfu' aith 'at ye like to lay upo' me," protested
Angus, "'at I'll dee whatever ye please to require o' me."
"I dinna doobt ye wad sweir; but what neist?" said Janet.
"What neist but ye'll lowse my han's?" rejoined Angus.
"It's no mainner o' use mentionin' 't," replied Janet; "for, as ye
ken, I'm un'er authority, an' yersel' h'ard my man tell me to tak
unco percaution no to lat ye gang; for verily, Angus, ye hae
conduckit yersel' this day more like ane possessed wi' a legion,
than the douce faimily man 'at ye're supposit by the laird, yer
maister, to be."
"Was ever man," protested Angus "made sic a fule o', an' sae
misguidit, by a pair o' auld cottars like you an' Robert Grant!"
"Wi' the help o' the Lord, by means o' the dog," supplemented Janet.
"I wuss frae my hert I hed the great reid draigon i' yer place, an'
I wad watch him bonny, I can tell ye, Angus Mac Pholp. I wadna be
clear aboot giein him his denner, Angus."
"Let me gang, wuman, wi' yer reid draigons! I'll hairm naebody.
The puir idiot's no muckle the waur, an' I'll tak mair tent whan I
fire anither time."
"Wiser fowk nor me maun see to that," answered Janet.
"Hoots, wuman! it was naething but an accident."
"I kenna; but it'll be seen what Gibbie says."
"Awva! his word's guid for naething."
"For a penny, or a thoosan' poun'."
"My wife 'll be oot o' her wuts," pleaded Angus.
"Wad ye like a drink o' milk?" asked Janet, rising.
"I wad that," he answered.
She filled her little teapot with milk, and he drank it from the
spout, hoping she was on the point of giving way.
"Noo," she said, when he had finished his draught, "ye maun jist mak
the best o' it, Angus. Ony gait, it's a guid lesson in patience to
ye, an' that ye haena had ower aften, I'm thinkin' -- Robert'll be
here er lang."
With these words she set down the teapot, and went out: it was time
to milk her cow.
In a little while Gibbie rose, tried to walk, but failed, and
getting down on his hands and knees, crawled out after her. Angus
caught a glimpse of his face as he crept past him, and then first
recognized the boy he had lashed. Not compunction, but an
occasional pang of dread lest he should have been the cause of his
death, and might come upon his body in one of his walks, had served
so to fix his face in his memory, that, now he had a near view of
him, pale with suffering and loss of blood and therefore more like
his former self, he knew him beyond a doubt. With a great shoot of
terror he concluded that the idiot had been lying there silently
gloating over his revenge, waiting only till Janet should be out of
sight, and was now gone after some instrument wherewith to take it.
He pulled and tugged at his bonds, but only to find escape
absolutely hopeless. In gathering horror, he lay moveless at last,
but strained his hearing towards every sound.
Not only did Janet often pray with Gibbie, but sometimes as she
read, her heart would grow so full, her soul be so pervaded with the
conviction, perhaps the consciousness, of the presence of the man
who had said he would be always with his friends, that, sitting
there on her stool, she would begin talking to him out of the very
depth of her life, just as if she saw him in Robert's chair in the
ingle-neuk, at home in her cottage as in the house where Mary sat at
his feet and heard his word. Then would Gibbie listen indeed, awed
by very gladness. He never doubted that Jesus was there, or that
Janet saw him all the time although he could not.
This custom of praying aloud, she had grown into so long before
Gibbie came to her, and he was so much and such a child, that his
presence was no check upon the habit. It came in part from the
intense reality of her belief, and was in part a willed fostering of
its intensity. She never imagined that words were necessary; she
believed that God knew her every thought, and that the moment she
lifted up her heart, it entered into communion with him; but the
very sound of the words she spoke seemed to make her feel nearer to
the man who, being the eternal Son of the Father, yet had ears to
hear and lips to speak, like herself. To talk to him aloud, also
kept her thoughts together, helped her to feel the fact of the
things she contemplated, as well as the reality of his presence.
Now the byre was just on the other side of the turf wall against
which was the head of Gibbie's bed, and through the wall Gibbie had
heard her voice, with that something in the tone of it which let him
understand she was not talking to Crummie, but to Crummie's maker;
and it was therefore he had got up and gone after her. For there
was no reason, so far as he knew or imagined, why he should not
hear, as so many times before, what she was saying to the Master.
He supposed that as she could not well speak to him in the presence
of a man like Angus, she had gone out to the byre to have her talk
with him there. He crawled to the end of the cottage so silently
that she heard no sound of his approach. He would not go into the
byre, for that might disturb her, for she would have to look up to
know that it was only Gibbie; he would listen at the door. He found
it wide open, and peeping in, saw Crummie chewing away, and Janet on
her knees with her forehead leaning against the cow and her hands
thrown up over her shoulder. She spoke in such a voice of troubled
entreaty as he had never heard from her before, but which yet woke a
strange vibration of memory in his deepest heart. -- Yes, it was his
father's voice it reminded him of! So had he cried in prayer the
last time he ever heard him speak. What she said was nearly this:
"O Lord, gin ye wad but say what ye wad hae deen! Whan a body disna
ken yer wull, she's jist driven to distraction. Thoo knows, my
Maister, as weel's I can tell ye, 'at gien ye said till me, 'That
man's gauin' to cut yer thro't: tak the tows frae him, an' lat him
up,' I wad rin to dee't. It's no revenge, Lord; it's jist 'at I
dinna ken. The man's dune me no ill, 'cep' as he's sair hurtit yer
bonnie Gibbie. It's Gibbie 'at has to forgie 'im an' syne me. But
my man tellt me no to lat him up, an' hoo am I to be a wife sic as
ye wad hae, O Lord, gien I dinna dee as my man tellt me! It wad ill
befit me to lat my auld Robert gang sae far wantin' his denner, a'
for naething. What wad he think whan he cam hame! Of coorse, Lord,
gien ye tellt me, that wad mak a' the differ, for ye're Robert's
maister as weel's mine, an' your wull wad saitisfee him jist as
weel's me. I wad fain lat him gang, puir chiel! but I daurna.
Lord, convert him to the trowth. Lord, lat him ken what hate
is. -- But eh, Lord! I wuss ye wad tell me what to du. Thy wull's
the beginnin' an' mids an' en' o' a' thing to me. I'm wullin'
eneuch to lat him gang, but he's Robert's pris'ner an' Gibbie's
enemy; he's no my pris'ner an' no my enemy, an' I dinna think I hae
the richt. An' wha kens but he micht gang shottin' mair fowk yet,
'cause I loot him gang! -- But he canna shot a hare wantin' thy wull,
O Jesus, the Saviour o' man an' beast; an' ill wad I like to hae a
han' i' the hangin' o' 'm. He may deserve 't, Lord, I dinna ken;
but I'm thinkin' ye made him no sae weel tempered -- as my Robert, for
enstance."
Here her voice ceased, and she fell a moaning.
Her trouble was echoed in dim pain from Gibbie's soul. That the
prophetess who knew everything, the priestess who was at home in the
very treasure-house of the great king, should be thus abandoned to
dire perplexity, was a dreadful, a bewildering fact. But now first
he understood the real state of the affair in the purport of the old
man's absence; also how he was himself potently concerned in the
business: if the offence had been committed against Gibbie, then
with Gibbie lay the power, therefore the duty of forgiveness. But
verily Gibbie's merit and his grace were in inverse ratio. Few
things were easier to him than to love his enemies, and his merit in
obeying the commandment was small indeed. No enemy had as yet done
him, in his immediate person, the wrong he could even imagine it
hard to forgive. No sooner had Janet ceased than he was on his way
back to the cottage: on its floor lay one who had to be waited upon
with forgiveness.
Wearied with futile struggles, Angus found himself compelled to
abide his fate, and was lying quite still when Gibbie re-entered.
The boy thought he was asleep, but on the contrary he was watching
his every motion, full of dread. Gibbie went hopping upon one foot
to the hole in the wall where Janet kept the only knife she had. It
was not there. He glanced round, but could not see it. There was
no time to lose. Robert's returning steps might be heard any
moment, and poor Angus might be hanged -- only for shooting Gibbie!
He hopped up to him and examined the knots that tied his hands:
they were drawn so tight -- in great measure by his own struggles -- and
so difficult to reach from their position, that he saw it would take
him a long time to undo them. Angus thought, with fresh horror, he
was examining them to make sure they would hold, and was so absorbed
in watching his movements that he even forgot to curse, which was
the only thing left him. Gibbie looked round again for a moment, as
if in doubt, then darted upon the tongs -- there was no poker -- and
thrust them into the fire, caught up the asthmatic old bellows, and
began to blow the peats. Angus saw the first action, heard the
second, and a hideous dismay clutched his very heart: the savage
fool was about to take his revenge in pinches with the red hot
tongs! He looked for no mercy -- perhaps felt that he deserved none.
Manhood held him silent until he saw him take the implement of
torture from the fire, glowing, not red but white hot, when he
uttered such a terrific yell, that Gibbie dropped the tongs -- happily
not the hot ends -- on his own bare foot, but caught them up again
instantly, and made a great hop to Angus: if Janet had heard that
yell and came in, all would be spoilt. But the faithless keeper
began to struggle so fiercely, writhing with every contortion, and
kicking with every inch, left possible to him, that Gibbie hardly
dared attempt anything for dread of burning him, while he sent yell
after yell "as fast as mill-wheels strike." With a sudden thought
Gibbie sprang to the door and locked it, so that Janet should not
get in, and Angus, hearing the bolt, was the more convinced that his
purpose was cruel, and struggled and yelled, with his eyes fixed on
the glowing tongs, now fast cooling in Gibbie's hand. If instead of
glowering at the tongs, he had but lent one steadfast regard to the
face of the boy whom he took for a demoniacal idiot, he would have
seen his supposed devil smile the sweetest of human, troubled,
pitiful smiles. Even then, I suspect, however, his eye being evil,
he would have beheld in the smile only the joy of malice in the near
prospect of a glut of revenge.
In the mean time Janet, in her perplexity, had, quite forgetful of
the poor cow's necessities, abandoned Crummie, and wandered down the
path as far as the shoulder her husband must cross ascending from
the other side: thither, a great rock intervening, so little of
Angus's cries reached, that she heard nothing through the deafness
of her absorbing appeal for direction to her shepherd, the master of
men.
Gibbie thrust the tongs again into the fire, and while blowing it,
bethought him that it might give Angus confidence if he removed the
chain from his neck. He laid down the bellows, and did so. But to
Angus the action seemed only preparatory to taking him by the throat
with the horrible implement. In his agony and wild endeavour to
frustrate the supposed intent, he struggled harder than ever. But
now Gibbie was undoing the rope fastened round the chest. This
Angus did not perceive, and when it came suddenly loose in the midst
of one of his fierce straining contortions, the result was that he
threw his body right over his head, and lay on his face for a moment
confused. Gibbie saw his advantage. He snatched his clumsy tool
out of the fire, seated himself on the corresponding part of Angus's
person, and seizing with the tongs the rope between his feet, held
on to both, in spite of his heaves and kicks. In the few moments
that passed while Gibbie burned through a round of the rope, Angus
imagined a considerable number of pangs; but when Gibbie rose and
hopped away, he discovered that his feet were at liberty, and
scrambled up, his head dizzy, and his body reeling. But such was
then the sunshine of delight in Gibbie's countenance that even Angus
stared at him for a moment -- only, however, with a vague reflection
on the inconsequentiality of idiots, to which succeeded the impulse
to take vengeance upon him for his sufferings. But Gibbie still had
the tongs, and Angus's hands were still tied. He held them out to
him. Gibbie pounced upon the knots with hands and teeth. They
occupied him some little time, during which Angus was almost
compelled to take better cognizance of the face of the savage; and
dull as he was to the good things of human nature, he was yet in a
measure subdued by what he there looked upon rather than perceive;
while he could scarcely mistake the hearty ministration of his teeth
and nails! The moment his hands were free, Gibbie looked up at him
with a smile, and Angus did not even box his ears. Holding by the
wall, Gibbie limped to the door and opened it. With a nod meant for
thanks, the gamekeeper stepped out, took up his gun from where it
leaned against the wall, and hurried away down the hill. A moment
sooner and he would have met Janet; but she had just entered the
byre again to milk poor Crummie.
When she came into the cottage, she stared with astonishment to see
no Angus on the floor. Gibbie, who had lain down again in much
pain, made signs that he had let him go: whereupon such a look of
relief came over her countenance that he was filled with fresh
gladness, and was if possible more satisfied still with what he had
done.
It was late before Robert returned -- alone, weary, and disappointed.
The magistrate was from home; he had waited for him as long as he
dared; but at length, both because of his wife's unpleasant
position, and the danger to himself if he longer delayed his journey
across the mountain, seeing it threatened a storm, and there was no
moon, he set out. That he too was relieved to find no Angus there,
he did not attempt to conceal. The next day he went to see him, and
told him that, to please Gibbie, he had consented to say nothing
more about the affair. Angus could not help being sullen, but he
judged it wise to behave as well as he could, kept his temper
therefore, and said he was sorry he had been so hasty, but that
Robert had punished him pretty well, for it would be weeks before he
recovered the blow on the head he had given him. So they parted on
tolerable terms, and there was no further persecution of Gibbie from
that quarter.
It was some time before he was able to be out again, but no hour
spent with Janet was lost.
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