A MEETING WITH OLD FRIENDS, AND AN EXCURSION
Next morning the captain and his nephew
“bore down”, as the former expressed it,
on the workyard, and Ruby was readily accepted, his
good qualities having already been well tested at the
Bell Rock.
“Now, boy, we’ll go and
see about the little preventive craft,” said
the captain on quitting the office.
“But first,” said Ruby,
“let me go and tell my old comrade Dove that
I am to be with him again.”
There was no need to enquire the way
to the forge, the sound of the anvil being distinctly
heard above all the other sounds of that busy spot.
The workyard at Arbroath, where the
stones for the lighthouse were collected and hewn
into shape before being sent off to the rock, was
an enclosed piece of ground, extending to about three-quarters
of an acre, conveniently situated on the northern
side of the Lady Lane, or Street, leading from the
western side of the harbour.
Here were built a row of barracks
for the workmen, and several apartments connected
with the engineer’s office, mould-makers’
department, stores, workshops for smiths and joiners,
stables, &c., extending 150 feet along the north side
of the yard. All of these were fully occupied,
there being upwards of forty men employed permanently.
Sheds of timber were also constructed
to protect the workmen in wet weather; and a kiln
was built for burning lime. In the centre of the
yard stood a circular platform of masonry on which
the stones were placed when dressed, so that each
stone was tested and marked, and each “course”
or layer of the lighthouse fitted up and tried, before
being shipped to the rock.
The platform measured 44 feet in diameter.
It was founded with large broad stones at a depth
of about 2 feet 6 inches, and built to within 10 inches
of the surface with rubble work, on which a course
of neatly dressed and well-jointed masonry was laid,
of the red sandstone from the quarries to the eastward
of Arbroath, which brought the platform on a level
with the surface of the ground. Here the dressed
part of the first entire course, or layer, of the
lighthouse was lying, and the platform was so substantially
built as to be capable of supporting any number of
courses which it might be found convenient to lay
upon it in the further progress of the work.
Passing this platform, the captain
and Ruby threaded their way through a mass of workyard
debris until they came to the building from
which the sounds of the anvil proceeded. For a
few minutes they stood looking at our old friend Jamie
Dove, who, with bared arms, was causing the sparks
to fly, and the glowing metal to yield, as vigorously
as of old. Presently he ceased hammering, and
turning to the fire thrust the metal into it.
Then he wiped his brow, and glanced towards the door.
“What! eh! Ruby Brand?” he shouted
in surprise.
“Och! or his ghost!” cried
Ned O’Connor, who had been Appointed to Ruby’s
vacant situation.
“A pretty solid ghost you’ll
find me,” said Ruby with a laugh, as he stepped
forward and seized the smith by the hand.
“Musha! but it’s thrue,”
cried O’Connor, quitting the bellows, and seizing
Ruby’s disengaged hand, which he shook almost
as vehemently as the smith did the other.
“Now, then, don’t dislocate
him altogether,” cried the captain, who was
much delighted with this warm reception; “he’s
goin’ to jine you, boys, so have mercy on his
old timbers.”
“Jine us!” cried the smith.
“Ay, been appointed to the old
berth,” said Ruby, “so I’ll have
to unship you, Ned.”
“The sooner the better; faix,
I niver had much notion o’ this fiery style
o’ life; it’s only fit for sallymanders
and bottle-imps. But when d’ye begin work,
lad?”
“To-morrow, I believe.
At least, I was told to call at the office to-morrow.
To-day I have an engagement.”
“Ay, an’ it’s time
we was under weigh,” said Captain Ogilvy, taking
his nephew by the arm. “Come along, lad,
an’ don’t keep them waiting.”
So saying they bade the smith goodbye,
and, leaving the forge, walked smartly towards that
part of the harbour where the boats lay.
“Ruby,” said the captain,
as they went along, “it’s lucky it’s
such a fine day, for Minnie is going with us.”
Ruby said nothing, but the deep flush
of pleasure that overspread his countenance proved
that he was not indifferent to the news.
“You see she’s bin out
of sorts,” continued the captain, “for
some time back; and no wonder, poor thing, seein’
that your mother has been so anxious about you, and
required more than usual care, so I’ve prevailed
on the leftenant to let her go. She’ll get
good by our afternoon’s sail, and we won’t
be the worse of her company. What say ye to that,
nephy?”
Ruby said that he was glad to hear
it; but he thought a great deal more than he said,
and among other things he thought that the lieutenant
might perhaps be rather in the way; but as his presence
was unavoidable, he made up his mind to try to believe
that he, the lieutenant, would in all probability
be an engaged man already. As to the possibility
of his seeing Minnie and being indifferent to her (in
the event of his being a free man), he felt that such
an idea was preposterous! Suddenly a thought
flashed across him and induced a question—
“Is the lieutenant married, uncle?”
“Not as I know of, lad; why d’ye ask?”
“Because—because—married
men are so much pleasanter than——”
Ruby stopped short, for he just then
remembered that his uncle was a bachelor.
“’Pon my word, youngster!
go on, why d’ye stop in your purlite remark?”
“Because,” said Ruby,
laughing, “I meant to say that young married
men were so much more agreeable than young bachelors.”
“Humph!” ejaculated the
captain, who did not see much force in the observation,
“and how d’ye know the leftenant’s
a young man? I didn’t say he was
young; mayhap he’s old. But here he is,
so you’ll judge for yourself.”
At the moment a tall, deeply-bronzed
man of about thirty years of age walked up and greeted
Captain Ogilvy familiarly as his “buck”,
enquiring, at the same time, how his “old timbers”
were, and where the “bit of baggage” was.
“She’s to be at the end
o’ the pier in five minutes,” said the
captain, drawing out and consulting a watch that was
large enough to have been mistaken for a small eight-day
clock. “This is my nephy, Ruby. Ruby
Brand—Leftenant Lindsay. True blues,
both of ye—
’When shall we three
meet again?
Where the stormy winds do blow, do blow, do
blow,
And the thunder, lightenin’, and the
rain,
Riots up above, and also down below, below,
below.’
Ah! here comes the pretty little craft.”
Minnie appeared as he spoke, and walked
towards them with a modest, yet decided air that was
positively bewitching.
She was dressed in homely garments,
but that served to enhance the beauty of her figure,
and she had on the plainest of little bonnets, but
that only tended to make her face more lovely.
Ruby thought it was perfection. He glanced at
Lieutenant Lindsay, and perceiving that he thought
so too (as how could he think otherwise?) a pang of
jealousy shot into his breast. But it passed away
when the lieutenant, after politely assisting Minnie
into the boat, sat down beside the captain and began
to talk earnestly to him, leaving Minnie entirely
to her lover. We may remark here, that the title
of “leftenant”, bestowed on Lindsay by
the captain was entirely complimentary.
The crew of the boat rowed out of
the harbour, and the lieutenant steered eastward,
towards the cliffs that have been mentioned in an
earlier part of our tale.
The day turned out to be one of those
magnificent and exceptional days which appear to have
been cut out of summer and interpolated into autumn.
It was bright, warm, and calm, so calm that the boat’s
sail was useless, and the crew had to row; but this
was, in Minnie’s estimation, no disadvantage,
for it gave her time to see the caves and picturesque
inlets which abound all along that rocky coast.
It also gave her time to—but no matter.
“O how very much I should like
to have a little boat,” said Minnie, with enthusiasm,
“and spend a long day rowing in and out among
these wild rocks, and exploring the caves! Wouldn’t
it be delightful, Ruby?”
Ruby admitted that it would, and added,
“You shall have such a day, Minnie, if we live
long.”
“Have you ever been in the Forbidden
Cave?” enquired Minnie.
“I’ll warrant you he has,”
cried the captain, who overheard the question; “you
may be sure that wherever Ruby is forbidden to go,
there he’ll be sure to go!”
“Ay, is he so self-willed?”
asked the lieutenant, with a smile, and a glance at
Minnie.
“A mule; a positive mule,” said the captain.
“Come, uncle, you know that
I don’t deserve such a character, and it’s
too bad to give it to me to-day. Did I not agree
to come on this excursion at once, when you asked
me?”
“Ay, but you wouldn’t
if I had ordered you,” returned the captain.
“I rather think he would,”
observed the lieutenant, with another smile, and another
glance at Minnie.
Both smiles and glances were observed
and noted by Ruby, whose heart felt another pang shoot
through it; but this, like the former, subsided when
the lieutenant again addressed the captain, and devoted
himself to him so exclusively, that Ruby began to feel
a touch of indignation at his want of appreciation
of such a girl as Minnie.
“He’s a stupid ass,”
thought Ruby to himself, and then, turning to Minnie,
directed her attention to a curious natural arch on
the cliffs, and sought to forget all the rest of the
world.
In this effort he was successful,
and had gradually worked himself into the firm belief
that the world was paradise, and that he and Minnie
were its sole occupants—a second edition,
as it were, of Adam and Eve—when the lieutenant
rudely dispelled the sweet dream by saying sharply
to the man at the bow-oar—
“Is that the boat, Baker?
You ought to know it pretty well.”
“I think it is, sir,”
answered the man, resting on his oar a moment, and
glancing over his shoulder; “but I can’t
be sure at this distance.”
“Well, pull easy,” said
the lieutenant; “you see, it won’t do to
scare them, Captain Ogilvy, and they’ll think
we’re a pleasure party when they see a woman
in the boat.”
Ruby thought they would not be far
wrong in supposing them a pleasure party. He
objected, mentally, however, to Minnie being styled
a “woman”—not that he would
have had her called a man, but he thought that girl
would have been more suitable—angel, perhaps,
the most appropriate term of all.
“Come, captain, I think I will
join you in a pipe,” said the lieutenant, pulling
out a tin case, in which he kept the blackest of little
cutty pipes. “In days of old our ancestors
loved to fight—now we degenerate souls
love to smoke the pipe of peace.”
“I did not know that your ancestors
were enemies,” said Minnie to the captain.
“Enemies, lass! ay, that they
were. What! have ye never heard tell o’
the great fight between the Ogilvys and Lindsays?”
“Never,” said Minnie.
“Then, my girl, your education
has been neglected, but I’ll do what I can to
remedy that defect.”
Here the captain rekindled his pipe
(which was in the habit of going out, and requiring
to be relighted), and, clearing his throat with the
emphasis of one who is about to communicate something
of importance, held forth as follows.