登陆注册
25530500000049

第49章 HOW THE KILLER WAS SINGED(1)

No further harm came of the incident; but it served as a healthy object-lesson for the Dalesmen.

A coincidence it may have been, but, as a fact, for the fortnight succeeding Kirby's exploit there was a lull in the crimes. There followed, as though to make amends, the sevcn days still remembered in the Daleland as the Bloody Week.

On the Sunday the Squire lost a Cheviot ewe, killed not a hundred yards from the Manor wall. On the Monday a farm on the Black Water was marked with the red cross. On Tuesday--a black night--Tupper at Swinsthwaite came upon the murderer at his work; he fired into the darkness without effect; and the Killer escaped with a scaring. On the following night Viscount Birdsaye lost a shearling ram, for which he was reported to have paid a fabulous sum. Thursday was the one blank night of the week. On Friday Tupper was again visited and punished heavily, as though in revenge for that shot.

On the Saturday afternoon a big meeting was held at the Manor to discuss measures. The Squire presided; gentlemen and magistrates were there in numbers, and every farmer in the country-side.

To start the proceedings the Special Commissioner read a futile letter from the Board of Agriculture. After him Viscount Birdsaye rose and proposed that a reward more suitable to the seriousness of the case than the paltry ?s of the Police should be offered, and backed his proposal with a 25 pounds cheque. Several others spoke, and, last of all, Parson Leggy rose.

He briefly summarized the history of the crimes; reiterated his belief that a sheep-dog was the criminal; declared that nothing had occurred to shake his conviction; and concluded by offering a remedy for their consideration. Simple it was, so he said, to laughableness; yet, if their surmise was correct, it would serve as an effectual preventive if not cure, and would at least give them time to turn round. He paused.

"My suggestion is: That every man-jack of you who owns a sheep-dog ties him up at night."The farmers were given half an hour to consider the proposal, and clustered in knots talking it over. Many an eye was directed on M'Adam; but that little man appeared all unconscious.

"Weel, Mr. Saunderson," he was saying in, shrill accents, "and shall ye tie Shep?""What d'yo' think?" asked Rob, eying the man at whom the measure was aimed.

"Why, it's this way, I'm thinkin'," the little man replied. "Gin ye haud Shep's the guilty one I wad, by all manner o' means--or shootin'd be ailbins better. If not, why "--he shrugged his shoulders significantly; and having shown his hand and driven the nail well home, the little man left the meeting.

James Moore stayed to see the Parson's resolution negatived, by a large majority, and then he too quitted the hail. He had foreseen the result, and, previous to the meeting, had warned the Parson how it would be.

"Tie up!" he cried almost indignantly, as Owd Bob came galloping up to his whistle; "I think I see myself chainin' yo', owd lad, like ony murderer. Why, it's yo' has kept the Killer off Kenmuir so far, I'll lay."At the lodge-gate was M'Adam, for once without his familiar spirit, playing with the lodge-keeper's child; for the little man loved all children but his own, and was beloved of them. As the Master approached he looked up.

"Wed, Moore," he called, "and are you gaein' to tie yer dog?""I will if you will yours," the Master answered grimly.

"Na," the little man replied, "it's Wullie as frichts the Killer aff the Grange. That's why I've left him there noo.""It's the same wi' me," the Master said. He's not come to Kenmuir yet, nor he'll not so long as Th' Owd Un's loose, I reck'n.""Loose or tied, for the matter o' that," the little man rejoined, "Kenmuir'll escape." He 'made the statement dogmatically, snapping his lips.

The Master frowned.

"Why that?" he asked.

"Ha' ye no heard what they're sayin'?" the little man inquired with raised eyebrows.

"Nay; what?"

"Why, that the mere repitation o' th' best sheep-dog in the North'

should keep him aff. An' I guess they're reet," and he laughed shrilly as he spoke.

The Master passed on, puzzled.

"Which road are ye gaein' hame?" M'Adam called after him.

"Because," with a polite smile, "I'll tak' t'ither.""I'm off by the Windy Brae," the Master answered, striding on.

"Squire asked me to 'leave a note wi' his shepherd t'other side o' the Chair." So he headed away to the left, ****** for home by the route along the Silver Mere.

ft is a long sweep of almost unbroken moorland, the well-called Windy Brae; sloping gently down in mile on mile of heather from the Mere Marches on the top to the fringe of the Silver Mere below. In all that waste of moor the only break is the quaint-shaped Giant's Chair, puzzle of geologists, looking as though plumped down by accident in the heathery wild. The ground rises suddenly from the uniform grade of the Brae; up it goes, ever growing steeper, until at length it runs abruptly into a sheer curtain of rock--the Fall--which rises perpendicular some forty feet, on the top of which rests that tiny grassy bowl--not twenty yards across--they call the Scoop.

The Scoop forms the seat of the Chair and reposes on its collar of rock, cool and green and out of the world, like wine in a metal cup; in front is the forty-foot Fall; behind, rising sheer again, the wall of rock which makes the back of the Chair. Inaccessible from above, the only means of entrance to that little deli are two narrow sheep-tracks, which crawl dangerously up between the sheer wall on the one hand and the sheer Fall on the other, entering it at opposite sides.

It stands out clear-cut from the gradual incline, that peculiar eminence; yet as the Master and Owd Bob debouched on to the Brae it was already invisible in the darkening night.

同类推荐
  • 洪恩灵济真君集福午朝仪

    洪恩灵济真君集福午朝仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 痧胀玉衡

    痧胀玉衡

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • MARIA

    MARIA

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 畦乐诗集

    畦乐诗集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • First Principles

    First Principles

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 你是我的依靠,谁也替代不了

    你是我的依靠,谁也替代不了

    一次意外的邂逅,他们好像记住了彼此,却不知这原来是他们最敬爱的爹联合设计的,姜还是老的辣。“白痴,我是你的依靠,谁也替代不了”!
  • 我的骑士等等我

    我的骑士等等我

    公主与骑士的爱恋,闺蜜与爱情又该如何选择?
  • 犀利皇妃

    犀利皇妃

    前朝风云莫测,后宫你死我活。人之初,性本?初入宫廷,帝王之心难揣测,既有挚爱,又惹群花,奈何只卿一人守孤单。豆蔻年华,已入宫门,半生皆为一人活。时局险恶,人心难测,待到秋风漫天过,谁是独笑者?
  • 昆虫奇闻之谜

    昆虫奇闻之谜

    本套书主要介绍古今中外关于人类诸多未解的社会、自然现象,包括《中国自然遗产之谜》、《星球宇宙之谜》、《巨兽异兽之谜》等20个分册。
  • 学园清羽传说

    学园清羽传说

    当雄鹰丰满了羽翼,就会进入精彩的世界而展翅高飞。一个初入凡世的天才修灵者,“潇洒”走一回的故事。
  • 百年冤录

    百年冤录

    著名学府思归大学要在小城建设第四座分校,打开了一段尘封的往事。女学生简静,晚上开始不断的做噩梦,并在一个夜晚发现同寝室的姚菲梦游,之后发生了一连串恐怖的事。在走投无路时,遇上神秘的流浪少年。在少年和好友蒋冰勤的帮助下,事情渐渐开始浮出水面。
  • 幻魔玉

    幻魔玉

    各地仙迹传说神乎其神,但何处有一真?赵国末年,战火四起,英雄辈出,究竟谁能主宰天下,泰华大帝晚年建造登仙台用意何在?一块幻魔玉,究竟带主角是走向长生,还是那未知深渊?......
  • 网游之懒人养成计划

    网游之懒人养成计划

    一个懒了二十年的人被家人逼进了游戏,即使进了游戏还是那么懒,升级找宝宝打,他边睡觉边等着分经验,有人想抢他东西,没关系,他找人保护,NPC基本是他的亲戚,强人基本是他的朋友,不懂事的敌人硬是打扰了他的偷懒计划,一怒之下风起云涌。“梦游”的江湖从次不再安宁。且看龙家少爷如何将懒人计划进行到底。
  • 上古世纪之英雄之光

    上古世纪之英雄之光

    辰光,一个现实世界的豪门庶子,在机缘巧合之下来到《上古世纪》之中纷乱的大陆,群雄四起,不管是神、英雄、霸主或是平民,他们的愿望只有一个,那便是终结这一切的黑暗,带给这个世界光明在这里,既是游戏,又是异世
  • 末世法尊

    末世法尊

    陨石,从天而降,系统与病毒于石中出现,且看一名小小杀手,如何在末日中,修炼成最强法尊本文纯属虚构,请勿当真