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Trouble in the Glen
Trouble in the Glen
Trouble in the Glen
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Trouble in the Glen

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Veteran Gawaine Mickelthwait is home from the war in the East, but can he heal the breach between the people of Glen Ardaneigh and the estate's new laird who is of Spanish as well as Scottish blood?
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 1, 2019
ISBN9788834149096
Trouble in the Glen

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    Trouble in the Glen - Maurice Walsh

    Trouble in the Glen 

    by Maurice Walsh

    First published in 1950

    This edition published by Reading Essentials

    Victoria, BC Canada with branch offices in the Czech Republic and Germany

    For.ullstein@gmail.com

    All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage or retrieval system, except in the case of excerpts by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review.

    Trouble  In  The  Glen

     by 

     Maurice Walsh

    Chapter I

    KNIGHT-AT-ARMS AND HIS QUEEN

    I

    The tall, lean veteran of twenty-nine—but he looked older—leant on the red garden gate, and looked through a screen of young fruit trees at the white, flat-fronted, slate-roofed cottage forty yards away at the end of a concrete path. Red and yellow tulips flamed along both sides of the path.

    "One, two, four—yes—seven—no eight—apple trees, and two cherries, murmured the veteran. They’ve grown some. Let me see! Three Bramley Seedlings gone a bit to wood, a Lane, a James Grieve, that spire is a Charles Ross, and two too-delicate Orange Pippins; and the cherries are Morello, I think—’cos the blackbirds leave ’em alone, sometimes. You got a hell of a fine memory, Gawain!"

    The Bramleys were gorgeously pink-and-white in full bloom, the dessert trees just burgeoning, but the cherry trees had already cast their blossom. The lengthening lace shadows of afternoon slept on the grass, and the grass had a brown sole to show that it recently had had its first after-winter cut. Bees were planing busily amongst the blossoms, and making lazy sounds.

    A lank, long-jointed individual, probably male, was using an edging-shears along the margin of a tulip bed, but without enthusiasm, and as he snip-snipped he was murmuring grumblingly to himself:

    "Dom’ the grass whatever! It is tougher nor a pig’s ear—"

    No toiler of the soil, yon! Why don’t he take his jacket off? said the man at the gate who had called himself Gawain.

    The lank man straightened nine or ten kinks in his backbone, and turned slowly. His long-jawed face was of that sallow pallor that refuses to tan; his eyes were the mildest blue; and a wisp of sandy moustache drooped listlessly over a melancholy mouth. But he had a long, interrogative nose, and one sandy eyebrow quirked antically.

    I’m no’ dreamin’—or am I? he said mildly. It was a voice I kent long ago.

    The visitor pointed a stern finger.

    If that grass got a last cut in October, someone would not be cursing the order o’ nature this fine Spring day.

    Ay so, indeed! But how was a man to know that Spring would come again?

    A man couldn’t, of course—not these times, agreed the other. Would this be Blinkbonny Cottage by any chance?

    The lank man dropped his edging tool carelessly, stepped sheer-legged over the tulip bed, and came down the path, slow-striding and loose-kneed.

    Blinkbonny it is, he said, and I mind seeing your face somewhere—a nightmare I had. Wait you! Don’t tell me. By Hector! It isn’t—it is: Sir Gawain Micklethwaite, Bart., Wing-Commander-be-chance from foreign parts. Man-oh-man!

    Mr Luke Carnoch, I presume? said the other. War-lord in Glen Easan, aren’t you?

    That’s the Major’s fun. Give us your hand.

    These two had known each other for twenty years, and had not met for four. The two hands, big and bony, clasped and held over the garden gate, and the two tall, angular men looked at each other unsmilingly. But they were not gloomy men. Luke Carnoch cloaked a lively mind behind a melancholic exterior, and Gawain Micklethwaite had come out from under the shadow of three terrible years.

    How are you all—how’s good-wife Kate? the visitor enquired.

    I’m bearin’ wi’ her—just about!

    And Davy Keegan?

    The Major! Fine—fine! But his new leg’s no dom’ use to him.

    Gawain Micklethwaite hesitated, and then spoke slowly. And our little majesty?

    Luke Carnoch did not smile, nor did his eyes light up. He said evenly:

    She is no worse, I will say that.

    You have said enough, said Gawain gravely.

    Ay! but summer is coming. Luke gestured a hand. She’ll be in her sunroom day after to-morrow—if this weather holds.

    The hand-gesture directed attention to a green-painted, wheelless omnibus set close against the gable-end of the cottage, its many windows curtained brightly in flowered chintz.

    Manalive! said Luke suddenly. I’m no’ holding you outside the gate. Come away up! They’re lookin’ for you.

    Wait! There’s Kate. Gawain’s hands came down firmly on the top bar of the gate, and gripped.

    A youngish, tall woman—they were all tall in this place—had come through an open white door at the head of three sandstone steps. She was wearing a long white linen coat over a man’s flannel trousers, and franciscan sandals on slender stockingless feet. She stood a moment, head-high at gaze, threw a hand up, leaped the three steps, and came swinging down the path: a fine figure of a woman, with a near-ugly face and red hair: an adequate, wise woman, and acquainted with life. Before her marriage to Luke Carnoch she had been District Nurse.

    Her husband sidled out of her way, and her rich Glasgow brogue caressed Gawain.

    Gawain my darlin’! is it your ain self?

    Is it the same self? wondered Gawain.

    Her freckle-backed hands came down on his on the gate; and her strong-boned face stilled as she looked into his eyes. So they stood and looked at each other, and everything was still about them. The blossoming trees made no stir, the laced shadows on the grass were asleep, and the pine trees, down the slope behind the house, paused in their sighing. Then a white cloudlet, high up, moved across the sun, and a sadness—not a gloom—came on the day. And the woman spoke almost in a whisper.

    It was bad while it lasted, Gawain?

    Bad enough, said Gawain quietly. He could not hide from this experienced woman the malaise of mind that had weighed on him after that terrible campaign in the Jungle, the malaise that had kept him away from Scotland until the cloud lifted.

    But you are all right now, my dear—almost? she said softly.

    He moved his hands, caught hers firmly, and gave them back to her.

    No almost about it, and keep your hands to yourself, you red-headed devil!

    That’s the way to talk to her, commended her husband.

    Gawain moved a hand to unlatch the gate but she stopped him.

    Wait! I was afraid one time a woman had nobbled you in a reduced condition. No?

    No. She married an Australian that one.

    Fine! There was a woman in my mind for you, but I’m not sure any longer.

    Tell her shut her big mouth, advised Luke, moving off towards his edging tool.

    Kate Carnoch’s hand moved towards the latch, but Gawain stopped her in turn.

    Wait you! Our little Alsuin, she’s none better, I hear?

    She’s none the worse either, she told him in a quiet voice. You’ll see for yourself.

    And her father?

    Davy was quiet for a long time, but once he gets used to his leg and puts a fly on the water he’ll be all right. She moved a hand and her eyes watched him. But where is he going to fish?

    Fish in them thaar waters, ma’am, Gawain said.

    Another man’s fish now—or don’t you know?

    Fish belong nowhere—

    There’s a new laird in the glen, my lad—and he knows not Joseph.

    Our own Scots glen—never! His arm swept wide. Never!

    Behind Blinkbonny half-a-dozen little fields—two of them sown—sloped down to a belt of larch in new green, backed by a bulk of deciduous trees just burgeoning. A strong wall, topped by barbed wire, ran away right and left on the near margin of the larch belt. To the left of the cottage the wooded slope broke down into a wide notch, and through that notch, not half-a-mile below, the green sea-water of narrow Loch Easan sparkled under the westering sun; and beyond the loch, a steep ridge, red-gold in the bloom of the whin, rose into the sheer craggy uplift of Stob Glas grey and green against the fragile Spring sky. Blinkbonny! Luke Carnoch’s house was well named.

    The evening thrushes were not yet singing, the rooks were far afield, and, through the afternoon stillness, from far away, came the pulsing sigh of running water. That was where the Aanglas River came cascading down from the upper glen. It was, indeed, fishing country.

    II

    The three sandstone steps were hollowed in the middle, in proof of the many footsteps that had mounted them through many generations. At the head of them the open white door led directly into the living-room. It was a long, low room, brightly curtained, and with geraniums in the open windows; and it was cool and shadowed because the afternoon sun had circled away from it. Kate Carnoch leant a shoulder on the jamb, and spoke softly.

    A soger-man hame from the wars, your honour.

    Let me have a look-and-a-half at the black devil! said a voice of many inflections.

    Gawain Micklethwaite brushed by Kate’s shoulder, and a big, loosely-built man was on his feet out of an armed windsor chair. His right leg made half a stride, his left trailed and came forward with an automatic jerk; and the big man balanced himself with his hands as if on a narrow plank.

    Oh hell! he said disgustedly.

    He was Norse-Gaelic, with a round, unlined, youthful face, grey eyes, and an uptoss of fair hair. His face lacked colour, but he was not a sick man. Gawain strode at him, caught him at the lapels, and thrust him forcefully but carefully back into the windsor chair.

    I can handle you at last, said Gawain.

    His big brown hand ruffled the toss of light hair, and David Keegan caught and held it. The two men looked steadily at each other, and Gawain’s eyes did not flicker once.

     ’S’all right, Davy! he said. It is me myself, all of me.

    Thank the Lord! said his friend. Where do we begin?

    In the wee sma’ hours, Gawain said. At the moment I have an important audience. He lifted his voice. Where does the queen hold her court?

    A low, happy tinkle of laughter answered him through a half-open door at the back of the room.

    God is good! said Gawain deeply. His black eyes lit under his black brows, and he ran his big hands down his hollowed checks in a cleansing motion.

    The floor was cork-matted, and he moved silently across, tapped with one finger, and softly pressed open the door into a room full of light.

    Blinkbonny was a bigger house than it looked from the front, for it was of generous double-width. This sunny room opening from the day-room had a door in the left wall leading to a bedroom, and in the gable-end a french window giving to the bus sun-parlour. The light came through a low, wide window in the back wall. The casement was open, and delicately-blue curtains moved leisurely in a soft draw of air. Through that wide window one could look down at green Loch Easan wimpling in the sun, and across at the gold-and-grey bulk of towering Stob Glas etched sharply in light and shade.

    The whole tone of the room was blue-and-cream, and there was very little white anywhere, for white is strangely depressing within-doors. In the middle of the floor, away from all walls, a wide, plain, brass bedstead winked in the sun. And in that acre of bed, under a blue silken spread, lay little Alsuin Keegan, queen to this knight-at-arms, Gawain. She was eleven years of age, and her back had been in a plaster cast for six months.

    She was a brown little lass, as had been her mother who was with God, and she did not look to be at all ill. Her brown hair had a lustre, and so had her brown eyes, and there was a freckle or two across the bridge of her child’s nose, and delicate colour on the childish curve of her cheeks. But the general impression she gave was of a great and equable gravity: the gravity that only a child can have—or a queen—or one already within the Shadow.

    Her arms, in open cream sleeves, were outside the coverlet, and her hands, delicately-shaped and not emaciated, were full of a strange vitality as she moved a reading-board aside over a scatter of books.

    She made a little controlled gesture of welcome. Sir Gawain, she said, and her voice was softer and deeper than silver.

    He pushed the door to behind him, stood up straight and tall, and his right hand made a slow gesture that shaped itself into a saltire cross.

    At your service, ma’am!

    As he stood there he did look like a knight-at-arms out of his mail: tall and supple, cool-eyed and bronzed, and his black hair, like a close-fitting casque, cut straight across above a black bar of brow; and, surely, those broad hands were for the swinging of a two-handed sword. Those hands had never swung any sword, but they had flung a fighting plane like a falchion.

    Little Alsuin drew in her breath with a soft sigh of contentment, and the look of eager welcome in her eyes moved this man who had hoped that nothing would ever move him again; for he had been mentally sick in an unclean and deadly world, and was afraid of emotion.

    He went forward now, took one small hand in his brown paw and bent to it. Her other hand came over his, and she smoothed a cool palm over his hard knuckles. Yes, her hands were cool, but, as he held them, a small thread of temperature came to the surface.

    His heart hollowed and filled again. Was this girl-child that he loved on her own lonely road? Was some hellish evil, deep down, gnawing away at the life force? Was their little kingdom of make-believe going the way of all kingdoms?

    In her very earliest years they had set up their own little kingdom of make-believe, in which she was Queen without a King, and he her faithful Knight-at-arms. It was a lively kingdom, too, and mixed in its origins, for she had been brought up in the Celtic mythology of King Arthur and the Gaelic one of Cuchulain and Finn. To her that kingdom was as real as the day, and she was wont to send out her own champion amongst the Knights of the Round Table or the Knights of the Red Branch, to return victoriously with the very flavour of Romance about him. That flavour was about him now, and he must hide the aridity that life had become.

    He wondered if the little one felt his thoughts through her sense of touch. She was smoothing the back of his hand, and her big serious brown eyes were intent on him. Her voice was softly sober.

    It is all right, Gawain! It is all right, my dear!

    He tried to keep the hurt out of his voice.

    Yes, ma’am! It’s all right, of course. It’s all right.

    The pith had gone out of his knees, and he sat down on the bedside chair, and abandoned his hand to her. And she had not forgotten her old habit of patting with her palm, and softly pulling at his fingers as she talked. And all the time that hellish, thin thread of temperature came through. She gestured aside with her chin.

    It was lovely to get your fine letters, she said. I have them all there.

    On the undershelf of her bedside table was a neat packet of letters tied in blue ribbon. Gawain had written them over two years, very carefully and painstakingly, translating ugly war into presentable knightly adventure.

    You had great—great—adventures, Gawain, and sometimes in your letters I could feel the heat, and—yes—much fierceness, and the yellow magician with the queer name frightened me one time. Wasn’t that silly?

    No, ma’am! I was frightened too, Gawain told her.

    And no woman at all. She opened her eyes wide at him. In all your stories there was no princess—no princess at all, Gawain dear?

    Not where I was looking, your Majesty.

    She tugged playfully at a finger. But, indeed, you are not good at looking. It is myself must find a princess for you.

    And I’ll chop her head clean off, he warned her. A queen is good enough for me.

    But no! You will not know until the right time. She paused and became serious now, pressing his hand between hers. Listen, Gawain! I am needing you badly. For three months now I am needing you.

    If you do not need me I am no use any more, he said gravely.

    I do need you. There is a trouble on the glen, and this house is not happy. Look! She gave her chin-gesture towards the window. You can see the road—my road.

    The road he had come by from the bus-stop at Ardaneigh curved round the house and went on into the gap leading to the sea. He could see a hundred yards of it down a short slope of grass, and then it disappeared between bushy banks. It was an oiled, well-made road, a brown streak across the green, but ragged grass and yellow dandelions had encroached on the margin of it.

    Alsuin spoke sadly, and her eyes darkened with the pain of childhood meeting sorrow.

    That was my road, Gawain—and all the people.

    "As they rode down to Camelot," he murmured.

    But I could look and see—and make stories to myself. It was a lovely road, Gawain—and now it is dead-and-empty. Did you know?

    A little, but you will tell me. David Keegan had mentioned in a letter that there was some trouble in the glen, but he had not told how it had hurt this little sick maid. Her voice hurried now.

    I used to see all the little lambs, and hear them ba-a—and the sheep-mothers—and the wise sheepdogs running—and the cattle black and dun—and the people of the crofts, and the men going down to the harbour for the fishing—and I knowing every one of them. And at the turn, just there by the bush, they would be looking up and waving a hand to me—not once did they forget—and I used to wave back to them. But oh me! there’s no one to do it now. She paused and went on sadly. And there was the bus—the red bus—twice a day, and it saying toot-toot to me. And now, there is nothing, for three months nothing—only a big—big car hurrying by like a long hound, and saying nothing. Isn’t that all wrong, Gawain dear—isn’t it now?

    Wrong, indeed, my little one, he said heavily. Wrong as hell, my lassie! but what can I do about it?

    Look now, Gawain! went on the eager, sad little voice. Isn’t it wrong for people to come into the glen and be no part of the glen?

    Cut off?

    No, not that—

    Beleaguered?

    She chuckled then. That was one of our long words. But no!—not beleaguered either! A man turning his back—shutting the South Gate, and making everyone go the long-long way round to the sea.

    A tyrant has come into our glen? Gawain said.

    She shook his big hand. A tyrant! I am not sure. At the beginning he was nice—everyone said.

    That is how tyrants begin—

    But it was Lukey that began it. Something he said that was not taken back in time. And then all Ardaneigh got angry, and my dad got angry, and everyone got angry—everyone but Lukey, who was so sorry, but has his pride too. I do not like anger, Gawain—it hurts inside me.

    It is not a good thing, anger, said Gawain, who knew.

    She put his hand carefully away, folded her own delicate hands below her round chin, and was queenly and wise.

    Anger is bad always. It eats in and in, if it is let—and then one is all lonesome. Look! The Big House behind the gate is lonesome all the time. I know, for sometimes I hear a lady singing to herself in the woods.

    Hell and it hot! A lady singing to herself might not be lonesome? Gawain said.

    Her songs are proud and lonesome.

    Gawain thought this was his cue. I see! She is held—a captive, you would say?

    But no! for she drives out alone in her big car. Dark she is—dark and red—and she never waves to me—

    The devil melt her! said Gawain warmly.

    That is my dad’s voice. You talk too much, sir! Listen! Trouble in the glen I will not have, and I am putting a Task on you—

    I am on my holiday, ma’am, protested Gawain, meekly enough.

    She gave him an imperious brown eye. You are, but I am not asking much of you—not for a beginning. You will make yourself invisible like you did in that place—Burma—and go looking round and round, and finding out things for me. I don’t want much at all, darling Gawain! she said persuasively. The road open again, and friendliness, and peace. Peace, Gawain dear!

    Peace! You are wanting too much, my darling. Peace! There is this peace and that peace, but desolation is the only lasting one. He bent over Alsuin’s hand. Have your way, ma’am! I will put on my invisible cloak, and sally out for to behold—

    The inner door was pushed open, and Kate Carnoch came in trundling a dumb-waiter laden with tea-things. Gawain rose to his feet. The evening ritual of Tea was about to begin. Though he had no least inkling of it, he had lightly undertaken a Task that was to lead him far.

    Chapter II

    THE TROUBLE IN GLEN EASAN

    I

    Kate Carnoch hung a full kettle high on the kitchen crook, and built the peats up under it.

    The Bart. will be tired, Lukey, she said. Send him to bed early! But why am I wasting breath?

    A habit we have! Lukey told her. Would there be a bit of a lemon anywhere?

    I saw you looking, and you’re no’ blind. There’s three, and I’ll be needing one the morn. Good night to ye!

    The three men sat in the kitchen at the back of the house, so that their voices might not disturb Alsuin, two rooms away. The kitchen was a low, wide cavern of a place, lit by a peat fire that had not gone out day or night for fifty years. The only light came from that fire of peats and bog-pine; and the warm wavering glow gave a sense of intimate cosiness that was old and self-satisfied.

    The window was curtainless, and the black-out blinds had been removed, so that the four panes of glass stood out against the iridescent, pale-blue light of the gloaming. Beyond that ghostly glow, far below, the faint phosphorescent gleam of Loch Easan could be seen in the notch of the black woods.

    Gawain sat back in a home-made armchair, and could feel the hardness of a springless seat through a flock cushion. This was like old times—not so old, but at the other side of terrible years—with his slippered feet on the warm bricks, and the hunched shadow of himself and his chair alive on the ceiling and against the dresser of old delf on the back wall. On his right, David Keegan reclined in a long chair that creaked as he moved, a pipe between his teeth, and his artificial leg no longer alive with a discomfort that had toes all its own. Lukey Carnoch was busy at a table below an open cupboard, where glasses clinked and a bottle gluck-glucked. He spoke carefully.

    We could be for the first one cold, I’m thinkin’. It is a quart the Major coaxed off Dinny Sullavan up-by at the pub. We told him you were on the home road.

    Every day for a week we told him, the Major put in.

    Try that, Bart.! Lukey invited. Small for its age—half-and-half, and plenty o’ water.

    Gawain felt carefully for the glass. He knew the ritual. They would have

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