RUBY HAS A RISE IN LIFE, AND A FALL
James Dove, the blacksmith, had, for
some time past, been watching the advancing of the
beacon-works with some interest, and a good deal of
impatience. He was tired of working so constantly
up to the knees in water, and aspired to a drier and
more elevated workshop.
One morning he was told by the foreman
that orders had been given for him to remove his forge
to the beacon, and this removal, this “flitting”,
as he called it, was the first of the memorable events
referred to in the last chapter.
“Hallo! Ruby, my boy,”
cried the elated son of Vulcan, as he descended the
companion ladder, “we’re goin’ to
flit, lad. We’re about to rise in the world,
so get up your bellows. It’s the last time
we shall have to be bothered with them in the boat,
I hope.”
“That’s well,” said
Ruby, shouldering the unwieldy bellows; “they
have worn my shoulders threadbare, and tried my patience
almost beyond endurance.”
“Well, it’s all over now,
lad,” rejoined the smith. “In future
you shall have to blow up in the beacon yonder; so
come along.”
“Come, Ruby, that ought to comfort
the cockles o’ yer heart,” said O’Connor,
who passed up the ladder as he spoke; “the smith
won’t need to blow you up any more, av you’re
to blow yourself up in the beacon in futur’.
Arrah! there’s the bell again. Sorrow wan
o’ me iver gits to slape, but I’m turned
up immadiately to go an’ poke away at that rock—faix,
it’s well named the Bell Rock, for it makes me
like to bellow me lungs out wid vexation.”
“That pun is below contempt,”
said Joe Dumsby, who came up at the moment.
“That’s yer sort, laddies;
ye’re guid at ringing the changes on that head
onyway,” cried Watt.
“I say, we’re gittin’
a belly-full of it,” observed Forsyth,
with a rueful look “I hope nobody’s goin’
to give us another!”
“It’ll create a rebellion,”
said Bremner, “if ye go on like that”
“It’ll bring my bellows
down on the head o’ the next man that speaks!”
cried Ruby, with indignation.
“Don’t you hear the bell,
there?” cried the foreman down the hatchway.
There was a burst of laughter at this
unconscious continuation of the joke, and the men
sprang up the ladder,—down the side, and
into the boats, which were soon racing towards the
rock.
The day, though not sunny, was calm
and agreeable, nevertheless the landing at the rock
was not easily accomplished, owing to the swell caused
by a recent gale. After one or two narrow escapes
of a ducking, however, the crews landed, and the bellows,
instead of being conveyed to their usual place at
the forge, were laid at the foot of the beacon.
The carriage of these bellows to and
fro almost daily had been a subject of great annoyance
to the men, owing to their being so much in the way,
and so unmanageably bulky, yet so essential to the
progress of the works, that they did not dare to leave
them on the rock, lest they should be washed away,
and they had to handle them tenderly, lest they should
get damaged.
“Now, boys, lend a hand with
the forge,” cried the smith, hurrying towards
his anvil.
Those who were not busy eating dulse
responded to the call, and in a short time the ponderous
matériel of the smithy was conveyed to the
beacon, where, in process of time, it was hoisted by
means of tackle to its place on the platform to which
reference has already been made.
When it was safely set up and the
bellows placed in position, Ruby went to the edge
of the platform, and, looking down on his comrades
below, took off his cap and shouted in the tone of
a Stentor, “Now, lads, three cheers for the
Dovecot!”
This was received with a roar of laughter
and three tremendous cheers.
“Howld on, boys,” cried
O’Connor, stretching out his hand as if to command
silence; “you’ll scare the dove from his
cot altogether av ye roar like that!”
“Surely they’re sendin’
us a fire to warm us,” observed one of the men,
pointing to a boat which had put off from the Smeaton,
and was approaching the rock by way of Macurich’s
Track.
“What can’d be, I wonder?”
said Watt; “I think I can smell somethin’.”
“I halways thought you ’ad
somethink of an old dog in you,” said Dumsby.
“Ay, man!” said the Scot
with a leer, “I ken o’ war beasts than
auld dowgs.”
“Do you? come let’s ’ear
wat they are,” said the Englishman.
“Young puppies,” answered the other.
“Hurrah! dinner, as I’m a Dutchman,”
cried Forsyth.
This was indeed the case. Dinner
had been cooked on board the Smeaton and sent
hot to the men; and this,—the first dinner
ever eaten on the Bell Rock,—was the second
of the memorable events before referred to.
The boat soon ran into the creek and
landed the baskets containing the food on Hope’s
Wharf.
The men at once made a rush at the
viands, and bore them off exultingly to the flattest
part of the rock they could find.
“A regular picnic,” cried
Dumsby in high glee, for unusual events, of even a
trifling kind, had the effect of elating those men
more than one might have expected.
“Here’s the murphies,”
cried O’Connor, staggering over the slippery
weed with a large smoking tin dish.
“Mind you don’t let ’em fall,”
cried one.
“Have a care,” shouted
the smith; “if you drop them I’ll beat
you red-hot, and hammer ye so flat that the biggest
flatterer as ever walked won’t be able to spread
ye out another half-inch.”
“Mutton! oh!” exclaimed
Forsyth, who had been some time trying to wrench the
cover off the basket containing a roast leg, and at
last succeeded.
“Here, spread them all out on
this rock. You han’t forgot the grog, I
hope, steward?”
“No fear of him: he’s
a good feller, is the steward, when he’s asleep
partiklerly. The grog’s here all right.”
“Dinna let Dumsby git baud o’t,
then,” cried Watt. “What! hae ye
begood a’ready? Patience, man, patience.
Is there ony saut?”
“Lots of it, darlin’,
in the say. Sure this shape must have lost his
tail somehow. Och, murther! if there isn’t
Bobby Selkirk gone an’ tumbled into Port Hamilton
wid the cabbage, av it’s not the carrots!”
“There now, don’t talk
so much, boys,” cried Peter Logan. “Let’s
drink success to the Bell Rock Lighthouse.”
It need scarcely be said that this
toast was drunk with enthusiasm, and that it was followed
up with “three times three”.
“Now for a song. Come,
Joe Dumsby, strike up,” cried one of the men.
O’Connor, who was one of the
most reckless of men in regard to duty and propriety,
here shook his head gravely, and took upon himself
to read his comrade a lesson.
“Ye shouldn’t talk o’
sitch things in workin’ hours,” said he.
“Av we wos all foolish, waake-hidded cratures
like you, how d’ye think we’d iver
git the lighthouse sot up! Ate yer dinner, lad,
and howld yer tongue.”
“O Ned, I didn’t think
your jealousy would show out so strong,” retorted
his comrade. “Now, then, Dumsby, fire away,
if it was only to aggravate him.”
Thus pressed, Joe Dumsby took a deep
draught of the small-beer with which the men were
supplied, and began a song of his own composition.
When the song was finished the meal
was also concluded, and the men returned to their
labours on the rock; some to continue their work with
the picks at the hard stone of the foundation-pit,
others to perform miscellaneous jobs about the rock,
such as mixing the mortar and removing debris, while
James Dove and his fast friend Ruby Brand mounted
to their airy “cot” on the beacon, from
which in a short time began to proceed the volumes
of smoke and the clanging sounds that had formerly
arisen from “Smith’s Ledge “.
While they were all thus busily engaged,
Ruby observed a boat advancing towards the rock from
the floating light. He was blowing the bellows
at the time, after a spell at the fore-hammer.
“We seem to be favoured with
unusual events to-day, Jamie,” said he, wiping
his forehead with the corner of his apron with one
hand, while he worked the handle of the bellows with
the other, “yonder comes another boat; what
can it be, think you?”
“Surely it can’t be tea!”
said the smith with a smile, as he turned the end
of a pickaxe in the fire, “it’s too soon
after dinner for that.”
“It looks like the boat of our
friends the fishermen, Big Swankie and Davy Spink,”
said Ruby, shading his eyes with his hand, and gazing
earnestly at the boat as it advanced towards them.
“Friends!” repeated the
smith, “rascally smugglers, both of them; they’re
no friends of mine.”
“Well, I didn’t mean bosom
friends,” replied Ruby, “but after all,
Davy Spink is not such a bad fellow, though I can’t
say that I’m fond of his comrade.”
The two men resumed their hammers
at this point in the conversation, and became silent
as long as the anvil sounded.
The boat had reached the rock when
they ceased, and its occupants were seen to be in
earnest conversation with Peter Logan.
There were only two men in the boat
besides its owners, Swankie and Spink.
“What can they want?”
said Dove, looking down on them as he turned to thrust
the iron on which he was engaged into the fire.
As he spoke the foreman looked up.
“Ho! Ruby Brand,” he shouted, “come
down here; you’re wanted.”
“Hallo! Ruby,” exclaimed
the smith, “more friends o’ yours!
Your acquaintance is extensive, lad, but there’s
no girl in the case this time.”
Ruby made no reply, for an indefinable
feeling of anxiety filled his breast as he threw down
the fore-hammer and prepared to descend.
On reaching the rock he advanced towards
the strangers, both of whom were stout, thickset men,
with grave, stern countenances. One of them stepped
forward and said, “Your name is——”
“Ruby Brand,” said the
youth promptly, at the same time somewhat proudly,
for he knew that he was in the hands of the Philistines.
The man who first spoke hereupon drew
a small instrument from his pocket, and tapping Ruby
on the shoulder, said—
“I arrest you, Ruby Brand, in the name of the
King.”
The other man immediately stepped
forward and produced a pair of handcuffs.
At sight of these Ruby sprang backward,
and the blood rushed violently to his forehead, while
his blue eyes glared with the ferocity of those of
a tiger.
“Come, lad, it’s of no
use, you know,” said the man, pausing; “if
you won’t come quietly we must find ways and
means to compel you.”
“Compel me!” cried Ruby,
drawing himself up with a look of defiance and a laugh
of contempt, that caused the two men to shrink back
in spite of themselves.
“Ruby,” said the foreman,
gently, stepping forward and laying his hand on the
youth’s shoulder, “you had better go quietly,
for there’s no chance of escape from these fellows.
I have no doubt it’s a mistake, and that you’ll
come off with flyin’ colours, but it’s
best to go quietly whatever turns up.”
While Logan was speaking, Ruby dropped
his head on his breast, the officer with the handcuffs
advanced, and the youth held out his hands, while
the flush of anger deepened into the crimson blush
of shame.
It was at this point that Jamie Dove,
wondering at the prolonged absence of his friend and
assistant, looked down from the platform of the beacon,
and beheld what was taking place. The stentorian
roar of amazement and rage that suddenly burst from
him, attracted the attention of all the men on the
rock, who dropped their tools and looked up in consternation,
expecting, no doubt, to behold something terrible.
Their eyes at once followed those
of the smith, and no sooner did they see Ruby being
led in irons to the boat, which lay in Port Hamilton,
close to Sir Ralph the Rover’s Ledge,
than they uttered a yell of execration, and rushed
with one accord to the rescue.
The officers, who were just about
to make their prisoner step into the boat, turned
to face the foe,—one, who seemed to be the
more courageous of the two, a little in advance of
the other.
Ned O’Connor, with that enthusiasm
which seems to be inherent in Irish blood, rushed
with such irresistible force against this man that
he drove him violently back against his comrade, and
sent them both head over heels into Port Hamilton.
Nay, with such momentum was this act performed, that
Ned could not help but follow them, falling on them
both as they came to the surface and sinking them a
second time, amid screams and yells of laughter.
O’Connor was at once pulled
out by his friends. The officers also were quickly
landed.
“I ax yer parding, gintlemen,”
said the former, with an expression of deep regret
on his face, “but the say-weed is so slippy
on them rocks we’re a’most for iver doin’
that sort o’ thing be the merest accident.
But av yer as fond o’ cowld wather as meself
ye won’t objec’ to it, although it do
come raither onexpected.”
The officers made no reply, but, collaring
Ruby, pushed him into the boat.
Again the men made a rush, but Peter
Logan stood between them and the boat.
“Lads,” said he, holding
up his hand, “it’s of no use resistin’
the law. These are King’s officers, and
they are only doin’ their duty. Sure am
I that Ruby Brand is guilty of no crime, so they’ve
only to enquire into it and set him free.”
The men hesitated, but did not seem
quite disposed to submit without another struggle.
“It’s a shame to let them take him,”
cried the smith.
“So it is. I vote for a rescue,”
cried Joe Dumsby.
“Hooray! so does I,” cried
O’Connor, stripping off his waistcoat, and for
once in his life agreeing with Joe.
“Na, na, lads,” cried
John Watt, rolling up his sleeves, and baring his
brawny arms as if about to engage in a fight, “it’ll
raver do to interfere wi’ the law; but what
d’ye say to gie them anither dook?”
Seeing that the men were about to
act upon Watt’s suggestion, Baby started up
in the boat, and turning to his comrades, said:
“Boys, it’s very kind
of you to be so anxious to save me, but you can’t——”
“Fail, but we can, darlin’,” interrupted
O’Connor.
“No, you can’t,”
repeated Ruby firmly, “because I won’t
let yon. I don’t think I need say to you
that I am innocent,” he added, with a look in
which truth evidently shone forth like a sunbeam, “but
now that they have put these irons on me I will not
consent that they shall be taken off except by the
law which put them on.”
While he was speaking the boat had
been pushed off, and in a few seconds it was beyond
the reach of the men.
“Depend upon it, comrades,”
cried Ruby, as they pulled away, “that I shall
be back again to help you to finish the work on the
Bell Rock.”
“So you will, lad, so you will,” cried
the foreman.
“My blessin’ on ye,”
shouted O’Connor. “Ach! ye dirty villains,
ye low-minded spalpeens,” he added, shaking
his fist at the officers of justice.
“Don’t be long away, Ruby,” cried
one.
“Never say die,” shouted another, earnestly.
“Three cheers for Ruby Brand!”
exclaimed Forsyth, “hip! hip! hip!——”
The cheer was given with the most
vociferous energy, and then the men stood in melancholy
silence on Ralph the Saver’s Ledge, watching
the boat that bore their comrade to the shore.