Bog-Myrtle and Peat eBook

Samuel Rutherford Crockett
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 438 pages of information about Bog-Myrtle and Peat.

Bog-Myrtle and Peat eBook

Samuel Rutherford Crockett
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 438 pages of information about Bog-Myrtle and Peat.

“Maybe,” said he, “Roy Campbell may miss something from the ‘Back o’ Beyont’ the morrow’s morn, that a score of casks of Isle of Man brandy will not make up for.”

So saying, he took his way back through the low, overgrown cavity of the runnel.  When he was midway he heard a step coming across the heath, brushing through the “gall"[8] bushes, splashing through the shallow pools.  A foot heavily booted crashed through the half-concealed tunnel, not six inches from where the young man lay, a gun was discharged, evidently by the sudden jerk upon the earth, and the air was rent above him by a perfect tornado of vigorous Gaelic—­a good language, as has been said, for preaching or swearing.

[Footnote 8:  The bog-myrtle is locally called “gall” bushes.  It is the most characteristic and delightful of Galloway scents.]

“That’s Roy himsel’!” said the young man.  “It’s a strange chance when a Kennedy comes near to getting his brains knocked out on his own land by the heel of an outlaw Highlander.”

Once on the hillside again, he kept an even way over the boulders and stones which cumbered it, with less care than hitherto, as though to protest against the previous indignity of his position.  But, Kennedy though he might be, it had been fitter if he had remembered that he was on the No Man’s Land of the Dungeon of Buchan, for here, about this time, was a perfect Adullam cave of all the broken and outlaw men south of the Highland border.  A challenge came from the hill-side—­“Wha’s there?” Kennedy dropped like a stone, and a shot rang out, followed immediately by the “scat” of a bullet against the rock behind which he lay concealed.

A tramp of heavy Galloway brogans was heard, and a half-hearted kicking about among the heather bushes, and at last a voice saying discontentedly—­

“Gin Roy disna keep Kennedy’s liftit beasts in the hollow whaur they should be, he needna blame me gin some o’ them gets a shot intil their hurdies.”

“My beasts!” said Kennedy to himself, silently chuckling, “mine for a groat!” He was in a mood to find things amusing.  So, having won clear of the keen-eyed watcher, the young man made the best of his way with more caution to that northern gateway he had called the Seggy Goats.

There he turned to the right up a little burnside which led into a lirk in the hill, such as would on the border have been called a “hope.”  As he came well within the dusky-walled basin of the hill-side, some one tall and white glided out to meet him; but at this moment the moon discreetly withdrew herself behind a cloud, mindful, it may be, of her own youth and of Endymion’s greeting on the Latmian steep.  So the chronicler, willing though he be, is yet unable to say how these two met.  He only knows that when the pale light flooded back upon the hillside and cast its reflection into the dim depths of the hope, they were evidently well agreed.  “It is true what I told you,” he is saying to her, “that my name is Hugh Kennedy, but I did not tell you that I am Kennedy of Bargany, and yours till death!”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Bog-Myrtle and Peat from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.