AN ADVENTURE—SECRETS REVEALED, AND A PRIZE
The Giel or Gaylet Pot, down into
which Ruby, with great care and circumspection, led
Minnie, is one of the most curious of Nature’s
freaks among the cliffs of Arbroath.
In some places there is a small scrap
of pebbly beach at the base of those perpendicular
cliffs; in most places there is none—the
cliffs presenting to the sea almost a dead wall, where
neither ship nor boat could find refuge from the storm.
The country, inland, however, does
not partake of the rugged nature of the cliffs.
It slopes gradually towards them—so gradually
that it may be termed flat, and if a stranger were
to walk towards the sea over the fields in a dark
night, the first intimation he would receive of his
dangerous position would be when his foot descended
into the terrible abyss that would receive his shattered
frame a hundred feet below.
In one of the fields there is a hole
about a hundred yards across, and as deep as the cliffs
in that part are high. It is about fifty or eighty
yards from the edge of the cliffs, and resembles an
old quarry; but it is cut so sharply out of the flat
field that it shows no sign of its existence until
the traveller is close upon it. The rocky sides,
too, are so steep, that at first sight it seems as
if no man could descend into it. But the most
peculiar point about this hole is, that at the foot
of it there is the opening of a cavern, through which
the sea rolls into the hole, and breaks in wavelets
on a miniature shore. The sea has forced its
way inland and underground until it has burst into
the bottom of this hole, which is not inaptly compared
to a pot with water boiling at the bottom of it.
When a spectator looks into the cave, standing at
the bottom of the “Pot”, he sees the seaward
opening at the other end—a bright spot of
light in the dark interior.
“You won’t get nervous,
Minnie?” said Ruby, pausing when about halfway
down the steep declivity, where the track, or rather
the place of descent, became still more steep and
difficult; “a slip here would be dangerous.”
“I have no fear, Ruby, as long as you keep by
me.”
In a few minutes they reached the
bottom, and, looking up, the sky appeared above them
like a blue circular ceiling, with the edges of the
Gaylet Pot sharply defined against it.
Proceeding over a mass of fallen rock,
they reached the pebbly strand at the cave’s
inner mouth.
“I can see the interior now,
as my eyes become accustomed to the dim light,”
said Minnie, gazing up wistfully into the vaulted roof,
where the edges of projecting rocks seemed to peer
out of darkness. “Surely this must be a
place for smugglers to come to!”
“They don’t often come
here. The place is not so suitable as many of
the other caves are.”
From the low, subdued tones in which
they both spoke, it was evident that the place inspired
them with feelings of awe.
“Come, Minnie,” said Ruby,
at length, in a more cheerful tone, “let us
go into this cave and explore it.”
“But the water may be deep,”
objected Minnie; “besides, I do not like to
wade, even though it be shallow.”
“Nay, sweet one; do you think
I would ask you to wet your pretty feet? There
is very little wading required. See, I have only
to raise you in my arms and take two steps into the
water, and a third step to the left round that projecting
rock, where I can set you down on another beach inside
the cave. Your eyes will soon get used to the
subdued light, and then you will see things much more
clearly than you would think it possible viewed from
this point.”
Minnie did not require much pressing.
She had perfect confidence in her lover, and was naturally
fearless in disposition, so she was soon placed on
the subterranean beach of the Gaylet Cave, and for
some time wandered about in the dimly-lighted place,
leaning on Ruby’s arm.
Gradually their eyes became accustomed
to the place, and then its mysterious beauty and wildness
began to have full effect on their minds, inducing
them to remain for a long time silent, as they sat
side by side on a piece of fallen rock.
They sat looking in the direction
of the seaward entrance to the cavern, where the light
glowed brightly on the rocks, gradually losing its
brilliancy as it penetrated the cave, until it became
quite dim in the centre. No part of the main cave
was quite dark, but the offshoot, in which the lovers
sat, was almost dark. To anyone viewing it from
the outer cave it would have appeared completely so.
“Is that a sea-gull at the outlet?”
enquired Minnie, after a long pause.
Ruby looked intently for a moment
in the direction indicated.
“Minnie,” he said quickly,
and in a tone of surprise, “that is a large
gull, if it be one at all, and uses oars instead of
wings. Who can it be? Smugglers never come
here that I am aware of, and Lindsay is not a likely
man to waste his time in pulling about when he has
other work to do.”
“Perhaps it may be some fishermen
from Auchmithie,” suggested Minnie, “who
are fond of exploring, like you and me.”
“Mayhap it is, but we shall
soon see, for here they come. We must keep out
of sight, my girl.”
Ruby rose and led Minnie into the
recesses of the cavern, where they were speedily shrouded
in profound darkness, and could not be seen by anyone,
although they themselves could observe all that occurred
in the space in front of them.
The boat, which had entered the cavern
by its seaward mouth, was a small one, manned by two
fishermen, who were silent as they rowed under the
arched roof; but it was evident that their silence
did not proceed from caution, for they made no effort
to prevent or check the noise of the oars.
In a few seconds the keel grated on
the peebles, and one of the men leaped out.
“Noo, Davy,” he said,
in a voice that sounded deep and hollow under that
vaulted roof, “oot wi’ the kegs. Haste
ye, man.”
“Tis Big Swankie,” whispered Ruby.
“There’s nae hurry,”
objected the other fisherman, who, we need scarcely
inform the reader, was our friend, Davy Spink.
“Nae hurry!” repeated
his comrade angrily. “That’s aye yer
cry. Half ’o oor ventures hae failed because
ye object to hurry.”
“Hoot, man! that’s enough
o’t,” said Spink, in the nettled tone of
a man who has been a good deal worried. Indeed,
the tones of both showed that these few sentences
were but the continuation of a quarrel which had begun
elsewhere.
“It’s plain to me that
we must pairt, freen’,” said Swankie in
a dogged manner, as he lifted a keg out of the boat
and placed it on the ground.
“Ay,” exclaimed Spink,
with something of a sneer, “an” d’ye
think I’ll pairt without a diveesion o’
the siller tea-pats and things that ye daurna sell
for fear o’ bein’ fund out?”
“I wonder ye dinna claim half
o’ the jewels and things as weel,” retorted
Swankie; “ye hae mair right to them, seein’
ye had a hand in findin’ them.”
“Me a hand in findin’
them,” exclaimed Spink, with sudden indignation.
“Was it me that fand the deed body o’
the auld man on the Bell Rock? Na, na, freend.
I hae naething to do wi’ deed men’s jewels.”
“Have ye no?” retorted
the other. “It’s strange, then, that
ye should entertain such sma’ objections to
deed men’s siller.” “Weel-a-weel,
Swankie, the less we say on thae matters the better.
Here, tak’ hand o’ the tither keg.”
The conversation ceased at this stage
abruptly. Evidently each had touched on the other’s
weak point, so both tacitly agreed to drop the subject.
Presently Big Swankie took out a flint
and steel, and proceeded to strike a light. It
was some some time before the tinder would catch.
At each stroke of the steel a shower of brilliant sparks
lit up his countenance for an instant, and this momentary
glance showed that its expression was not prepossessing
by any means.
Ruby drew Minnie farther into the
recess which concealed them, and awaited the result
with some anxiety, for he felt that the amount of
knowledge with which he had become possessed thus unintentionally,
small though it was, was sufficient to justify the
smugglers in regarding him as a dangerous enemy.
He had scarcely drawn himself quite
within the shadow of the recess, when Swankie succeeded
in kindling a torch, which filled the cavern with
a lurid light, and revealed its various forms, rendering
it, if possible, more mysterious and unearthly than
ever.
“Here, Spink,” cried Swankie,
who was gradually getting into better humour, “haud
the light, and gie me the spade.”
“Ye better put them behind the
rock, far in,” suggested Spink.
The other seemed to entertain this
idea for a moment, for he raised the torch above his
head, and, advancing into the cave, carefully examined
the rocks at the inner end.
Step by step he drew near to the place
where Ruby and Minnie were concealed, muttering to
himself, as he looked at each spot that might possibly
suit his purpose, “Na, na, the waves wad wash
the kegs oot o’ that if it cam’ on to
blaw.”
He made another step forward, and
the light fell almost on the head of Ruby, who felt
Minnie’s arm tremble. He clenched his hands
with that feeling of resolve that comes over a man
when he has made up his mind to fight.
Just then an exclamation of surprise
escaped from his comrade.
“Losh! man, what have we here?”
he cried, picking up a small object that glittered
in the light.
Minnie’s heart sank, for she
could see that the thing was a small brooch which
she was in the habit of wearing in her neckerchief,
and which must have been detached when Ruby carried
her into the cave.
She felt assured that this would lead
to their discovery; but it had quite the opposite
effect, for it caused Swankie to turn round and examine
the trinket with much curiosity.
A long discussion as to how it could
have come there immediately ensued between the smugglers,
in the midst of which a wavelet washed against Swankie’s
feet, reminding him that the tide was rising, and
that he had no time to lose.
“There’s nae place behint
the rocks,” said he quickly, putting the brooch
in his pocket, “so we’ll just hide the
kegs amang the stanes. Lucky for us that we got
the rest o’ the cargo run ashore at Auchmithie.
This’ll lie snugly here, and we’ll pull
past the leftenant, who thinks we havena seen him,
with oor heeds up and oor tongues in oor cheeks.”
They both chuckled heartily at the
idea of disappointing the preventive officer, and
while one held the torch the other dug a hole in the
beach deep enough to contain the two kegs.
“In ye go, my beauties,”
said Swankie, covering them up. “Mony’s
the time I’ve buried ye.”
“Ay, an’ mony’s
the time ye’ve helped at their resurrection,”
added Spink, with a laugh.
“Noo, we’ll away an’
have a look at the kegs in the Forbidden Cave,”
said Swankie, “see that they’re a’
richt, an’ then have our game wi’ the
land-sharks.”
Next moment the torch was dashed against
the stones and extinguished, and the two men, leaping
into their boat, rowed away. As they passed through
the outer cavern, Ruby heard them arrange to go back
to Auchmithie. Their voices were too indistinct
to enable him to ascertain their object in doing so,
but he knew enough of the smugglers to enable him
to guess that it was for the purpose of warning some
of their friends of the presence of the preventive
boat, which their words proved that they had seen.
“Now, Minnie,” said he,
starting up as soon as the boat had disappeared, “this
is what I call good luck, for not only shall we be
able to return with something to the boat, but we shall
be able to intercept big Swankie and his comrade,
and offer them a glass of their own gin!”
“Yes, and I shall be able to
boast of having had quite a little adventure,”
said Minnie, who, now that her anxiety was over, began
to feel elated.
They did not waste time in conversation,
however, for the digging up of two kegs from a gravelly
beach with fingers instead of a spade was not a quick
or easy thing to do; so Ruby found as he went down
on his knees in that dark place and began the work.
“Can I help you?” asked
his fair companion after a time.
“Help me! What? Chafe
and tear your little hands with work that all but
skins mine? Nay, truly. But here comes one,
and the other will soon follow. Yo, heave, HO!”
With the well-known nautical shout
Ruby put forth an herculean effort, and tore the kegs
out of the earth. After a short pause he carried
Minnie out of the cavern, and led her to the field
above by the same path by which they had descended.
Then he returned for the kegs of gin.
They were very heavy, but not too heavy for the strength
of the young giant, who was soon hastening with rapid
strides towards the bay, where they had left their
friends. He bore a keg under each arm, and Minnie
tripped lightly by his side,—and laughingly,
too, for she enjoyed the thought of the discomfiture
that was in store for the smugglers.