Land Of The Leal. James Barke
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Richard was quick to note his brother’s reaction. He did his best to rally him. To hell: there should be some other way of life than this. He had gone to sea full of the happiest anticipations. And long before he had taken his ticket he had become disillusioned. Now he was sick and tired of it all. He knew he could never come back to the Suie; knew he could never bear to spend a night under his father’s roof again. But David would need to stay there for many a day yet eating the rotten food and sleeping neck and crop with his brothers. It was natural that the boy should have made up his mind to run away. He would have been disappointed had he shown no spirit of revolt. Only he must be saved the disillusionment of the sea – another way of escape must be found.
‘You’d better get some supper, boy. Tell your father I’m waiting for him. And don’t get down-hearted. We’ll find something for you to do – you won’t have to muck around Achgammie all your days. Come on now – and I’ll be seeing you to-morrow.’
David rose wearily. But he must extract some grain of comfort from their first meeting.
‘Will we go down to the shore on Sunday, Richard?’
‘The shore? Sure: I’ll remember that. The shore: it’s a long time since I went down the heughs, Dave – a hell of a long while.’
Bob MacHaffie who owned the Plough Inn was a typical landlord: he was fat and cheery and though he laughed like a woman he could tell more bawdy stories than any ten men in the Rhinns. His inn was a poor place. It had two bedrooms upstairs and a parlour downstairs that served as a general common-room. But when he had visitors the parlour was reserved for them. It was a dimly-lit low-roofed musty room with an enormous mahogany table and sideboard and twelve massive horse-hair dining chairs. Above the mantelshelf hung a large steel engraving which seemed to be a mixture of public bar and slaughter house. In addition to various individuals in different postures in the act of drinking, having drunk or about to drink, there were hounds, shot birds and the carcass of a stag lying on the floor, its head so twisted as to give the best view of its magnificant antlers. The white-washed ceiling above the picture was badly discoloured by the smoke of the oil lamp. The room had a musty smell because the window could not be opened. The only ventilation was by way of the chimney. Warm though the summer night had been the landlord had a fire burning because, as he said, the place looked a damned cold hole without it.
Bob MacHaffie was of an age with Captain Ramsay and he enjoyed his company. He was a man who enjoyed company though he preferred company of his own age – mostly young farmers or the sons of farmers. But to-night he was content to sit and listen to the Captain and old Sam exchanging reminiscences.
As the clock went round and they were well on in drink he took a hand in the conversation.
‘Ah, to hell wi’ they foreign parts – what’s wrong wi’ Stranraer? Market day’s worth a’ your damned Bombays and Calcuttas – what dae you say, Andra?’
‘There’s a lot to be said for hame, Bob.’
‘Damned true there is. You know, Captain, you miss many a tare on Market day. God, the drink that’s swallowed in the Cock and Hen would sail ye half-roads to Australia. You’ll come in wi’ me next Wednesday and I’ll let ye see life. How Tam MacBurnie gets hame is more than I can understand. By God, I’m telling ye, if he loses that mare o’ his he’s finished.’
But Old Sam was not to have the sea disparaged.
‘Ye ken nothing about it, Bob. Not a thing. There’s no life to be seen about Stranraer.’
But Bob stoutly defended his capital town.
‘Aye, heth, but there’s life about Stranraer. And the best o’ lassies – none o’ your damned French hizzies or yellow whores – but just our ain kind. Some of them buxom hizzies up from Stoneykirk or Kirkmaiden would gar ye loup. And plenty o’ Scotch whisky and a feed o’ tatties and one o’ Jimmy Craig’s haggis and ye can have a’ your fushionless foreign trash for me. What d’ye say to that, Captain?’
‘It’s the last thing I can mind, Bob: tatties and haggis. It makes my teeth water to think of it. Damn it man, Sam, you know yourself sailing foreign’s all right for a while but the novelty wears off. East or west: hame’s best.’
‘It takes the drink to get the truth out o’ folk.’
‘Ye’re right enough, Richard. But, still, the sea gets into your blood. I was like you many a time – when I could have grat like a bairn for hame – but I always went back. And you’ll go back, Richard – and be glad to go back.’
‘Maybe: it’s so damned stupid. The sea gets into your blood and you’re finished – neither happy ashore nor afloat. What life have you at sea? You’re a bloody slave from the moment you leave port till you reach another. And what’s the difference when it comes to that between this port and that? You can never drop anchor. Afloat the grub’s lousy: ashore you’re liable to be poisoned—’
‘What do ye do for a woman afloat?’
‘What d’ye do for water in a desert? I tell you, the captains and mates I’ve met are either half mad or half brutes – and in some of those coffin ships they’re both. Half the owners should be hung, drawn and quartered. To hell! I want to forget the sea for a while: I’m sick of it – sick to death of it. Fill up the glasses, MacHaffie, and let’s talk about something pleasant.’
‘Say when: damn ye for a thrawn beggar! There’s some sense in murderers and criminals running away to sea – but a man that goes of his own free will’s a bloody eediot. Have ye heard the one about the auld wife that took her coo to the bull ..?’
Andrew Ramsay took little or no part in the conversation. All the drink he had taken had not dispelled the sense of depression that had settled on him. Going home, he spoke his mind to Sam MacKitteroch.
‘I’m worried about Richard, Sam. There’s a big change come over him.’
‘There is, Andra – a big change. And he’s drinking in a way I’ve seen many a time – drinking in a way that no good comes out of.’
‘Drinking to drown his sorrows?’
‘Aye: or drinking to forget. He’s seen too much for his age, has Richard. There’s none o’ the brute in him and he takes it hard.’
‘He’ll drink himself to death if he goes on the way he’s doing.’ Sam MacKitteroch shook his head sadly and wearily.
‘I’ve seen men drinking like that, Andra – it’s a bad sign. My heart’s wi’ ye, Andra, you ken that fine – he’s your laddie – but I kind of adopted him myself like. I know you’ll no’ misunderstand me. And I fear maist of all, Andra, that the boy’s lost faith in his Maker.’
‘You think so, Sam?’
‘I hope I’m wrong, Andra. I’ll have a quiet word wi’ him before he goes back …’
They were standing at the edge of the road where the path to the Suie led off. The evening was deathly still and the swallows had left the sky which was a drift of dove-grey clouds. Yet already in the east there seemed a faint iridescence and from Achgammie