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GRANNIE AND THE STICK.
This winter, the wind that drops the ripened fruit not plucked
before, blew hard upon old Grannie, who had now passed her
hundredth year. For some time Agnes had not been able to do much
for her, but another great-grandchild, herself a widow and a
mother, was spending the winter with her. On his way to or from
school, Cosmo every day looked in to see or enquire after her; and
when he heard she had had a bad night he would always think how
with her would fail the earthly knowledge of not a little of the
past of his family, and upon one of these occasions resolved that
he would at least find out whether she remembered the bamboo he had
brought from Cairncarque.
Calling when school was over, he heard she was a little better, and
the next morning brought with him the cane. In the afternoon he
learned that she had had a better night, and going in found her in
her chair by the fireside, and took his place by her so that the
light from the window at her back should fall upon the stick.
He had not sat more than a minute, when he saw her eyes fixed upon
the horse.
"What's that ye hae there, Cosmo?" she said.
"This?" returned Cosmo. "It's a cane I pickit up upo' my traivels.
What think ye o' 't?"
He held it out to her, but she did not move her hand towards it.
"Whaur got ye't?" she asked, her eyes growing larger as she looked.
"What gars ye speir, grannie?" he returned, with assumed
indifference.
"I dinna believe there was anither like the ane that's like," she
replied.
"In which case," rejoined Cosmo, "it maun be the same. Ken ye
onything aboot it?"
"Ay; an' sae du ye, or ye hae less sense nor I wad hae mintit o' a
Warlock. That stick's no a stick like ither sticks, an' I wuss I
was nearer hame."
"Ye dinna mean, grannie, there's onything no canny aboot the
stick?" said Cosmo.
"I wadna like to think him near me 'at aucht it." she replied.
"Wha auchit it, grannie?"
"Rive't a' to bits, laddie; there's something by ordnar aboot it.
The auld captain made o' 't as gien it had been his graven image.
That was his stick ye hae i' yer han', whaurever ye got it; an' it
was seldom oot o' his frae mornin' till nicht. Some wad hae't hetuik
it til's bed wi' him. I kenna aboot that; but gien by ony
accident he set it oot frae 'atween his knees, it was never oot o'
the sicht o' his e'en. I hae seen him mysel', missin' 't like, luik
up o' a suddent as gien his sowl hed been requiret o' 'im, an' grip
at it as gien it hed been his proadigal son come hame oonexpeckit."
Cosmo told her where he had found it.
"I tellt ye sae!" she cried. "The murderin' villian cairriet it wi'
him, weel kennin what was intil 't!"
Cosmo showed her the joints and their boxes, telling her he had
searched them all, but had found nothing. She shook her head.
"Ower late! ower late!" she murmured. "The rievin' English lord was
aforehan' wi' the heir!"
She seemed then to fall into a kind of lethargic musing, and as
Cosmo had not yet made up his mind to show her the paper he had
found in the top of the cane, and ask her opinion concerning it,
for the present he bade her good-night--little thinking he was not
to see her again in this world. For that same night she died.
And now when his opportunity was over, and he could learn no more
from her, the mind of Cosmo was exercised afresh concerning the
bamboo. According to Grannie, its owner habitually showed anxiety
for its safety, and had it continually under his eye. It did not
seem likely that the rings had been in it long when it was taken
from him, neither that at any time he would have chosen to carry
like valuables about with him in such a receptacle. It could hardly
therefore be because of those or of similar precious things
concealed in it, that he was always so watchful over it. It was
possible, indeed, that from often using it for temporary
concealment, he had come to regard it with constant anxiety; but
the conjecture did not satisfy Cosmo. And as often as he turned the
thing over in his mind, his speculation invariably settled on the
unintelligible paper. It was true the said paper had seemed not so
much there for its own safety, as by chance employment for the
protection of the jewels round which it was, after all, rather
squeezed than folded; but a man may crumple up his notes and thrust
them in his pocket, yet care more for them than for anything else
in the same place.
Thinking of the thing one night after he was in bed, it occurred to
him suddenly to ask himself what he had done with the paper, for he
could not remember when he had last seen it. He got up, took the
stick, which being Joan's gift he always carried to his room, and
opening the horse, which he could now do without his eyes, found it
empty. This made him uneasy, and he lay down again to think what he
could have done with it. It was dark night, and his anxiety was not
so great but that sleep presented its claim upon him. He resisted
it however, unwilling to yield until he had at least thought of
some probability with regard to the paper. But, like a soundless
tide, sleep kept creeping upon him, and he kept starting from it
with successive spur-pricks of the will which had not yet consented
to the nightly annihilation. Bethinking himself in one of these
revivals that he might have put it in his pocket-book, he stretched
his hand to the chair beside the bed on which lay his clothes. Then
came a gap in his consciousness, and the next thing he knew was the
pocket-book in his hand, with the memory or the dream, he could not
afterwards tell which, of having searched it in vain.
He now felt so anxious that he could rest no longer, but must get
up and look for the paper until he found it. He rose and lighted
his candle, went down the stair to the kitchen, and out of the
house--then began to doubt whether he was awake, but, like one
compelled, went on to the great door, and up to the drawing-room,
when first he became aware that the moon was shining, and all at
once remembered a former dream, and knew it was coming to him
again: there it was!--the old captain, seated in his chair, with
the moon on his face, and a ghastly look! He felt his hair about to
stand on end with terror, but resisted with all his might. The
rugged, scarred countenance gazed fixedly at him, and he did his
best to return the gaze. The appearance rose, and walked from the
room, and Cosmo knew he had to follow it to the room above, which
he had not once entered since his return. There, as before, it went
to the other side of the bed, and disappeared. But this time the
dream went a little farther. Despite his fear, Cosmo followed, and
in the wall, by the head of the bed, saw an open door. He hurried
up to it, but seemed to strike against the wall, and woke. He was
in bed, but his heart was beating a terribly quick march. His
pocket-book was in his hand: he struck a light, and searching in
it, found the missing paper.
The next night, he told his dream to his father and Mr Simon, and
they had a talk about dreams and apparitions; then all three pored
over the paper, but far from arriving at any conclusion, seemed
hardly to get a glimpse of anything that could be called light upon
its meaning.
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