A NOCTURNAL ADVENTURE
There was a moment’s pause when
the whole party had got out of the hut; and the Highlander
who assumed the command, and who, in Waverley’s
awakened recollection, seemed to be the same tall
figure who had acted as Donald Bean Lean’s lieutenant,
by whispers and signs imposed the strictest silence.
He delivered to Edward a sword and steel pistol, and,
pointing up the track, laid his hand on the hilt of
his own claymore, as if to make him sensible they
might have occasion to use force to make good their
passage. He then placed himself at the head of
the party, who moved up the pathway in single or Indian
file, Waverley being placed nearest to their leader.
He moved with great precaution, as if to avoid giving
any alarm, and halted as soon as he came to the verge
of the ascent. Waverley was soon sensible of
the reason, for he heard at no great distance an English
sentinel call out ‘All’s well.’
The heavy sound sunk on the night-wind down the woody
glen, and was answered by the echoes of its banks.
A second, third, and fourth time the signal was repeated
fainter and fainter, as if at a greater and greater
distance. It was obvious that a party of soldiers
were near, and upon their guard, though not sufficiently
so to detect men skilful in every art of predatory
warfare, like those with whom he now watched their
ineffectual precautions.
When these sounds had died upon the
silence of the night, the Highlanders began their
march swiftly, yet with the most cautious silence.
Waverley had little time, or indeed disposition, for
observation, and could only discern that they passed
at some distance from a large building, in the windows
of which a light or two yet seemed to twinkle.
A little farther on the leading Highlander snuffed
the wind like a setting spaniel, and then made a signal
to his party again to halt. He stooped down upon
all fours, wrapped up in his plaid, so as to be scarce
distinguishable from the heathy ground on which he
moved, and advanced in this posture to reconnoitre.
In a short time he returned, and dismissed his attendants
excepting one; and, intimating to Waverley that he
must imitate his cautious mode of proceeding, all three
crept forward on hands and knees.
After proceeding a greater way in
this inconvenient manner than was at all comfortable
to his knees and shins, Waverley perceived the smell
of smoke, which probably had been much sooner distinguished
by the more acute nasal organs of his guide. It
proceeded from the corner of a low and ruinous sheep-fold,
the walls of which were made of loose stones, as is
usual in Scotland. Close by this low wall the
Highlander guided Waverley, and, in order probably
to make him sensible of his danger, or perhaps to
obtain the full credit of his own dexterity, he intimated
to him, by sign and example, that he might raise his
head so as to peep into the sheep-fold. Waverley
did so, and beheld an outpost of four or five soldiers
lying by their watch-fire. They were all asleep
except the sentinel, who paced backwards and forwards
with his firelock on his shoulder, which glanced red
in the light of the fire as he crossed and re-crossed
before it in his short walk, casting his eye frequently
to that part of the heavens from which the moon, hitherto
obscured by mist, seemed now about to make her appearance.
In the course of a minute or two,
by one of those sudden changes of atmosphere incident
to a mountainous country, a breeze arose and swept
before it the clouds which had covered the horizon,
and the night planet poured her full effulgence upon
a wide and blighted heath, skirted indeed with copse-wood
and stunted trees in the quarter from which they had
come, but open and bare to the observation of the
sentinel in that to which their course tended.
The wall of the sheep-fold indeed concealed them as
they lay, but any advance beyond its shelter seemed
impossible without certain discovery.
The Highlander eyed the blue vault,
but far from blessing the useful light with Homer’s,
or rather Pope’s benighted peasant, he muttered
a Gaelic curse upon the unseasonable splendour of Mac-Farlane’s
buat (i.e. lantern) [Footnote: See Note 1].
He looked anxiously around for a few minutes, and
then apparently took his resolution. Leaving
his attendant with Waverley, after motioning to Edward
to remain quiet, and giving his comrade directions
in a brief whisper, he retreated, favoured by the
irregularity of the ground, in the same direction
and in the same manner as they had advanced.
Edward, turning his head after him, could perceive
him crawling on all fours with the dexterity of an
Indian, availing himself of every bush and inequality
to escape observation, and never passing over the
more exposed parts of his track until the sentinel’s
back was turned from him. At length he reached
the thickets and underwood which partly covered the
moor in that direction, and probably extended to the
verge of the glen where Waverley had been so long
an inhabitant. The Highlander disappeared, but
it was only for a few minutes, for he suddenly issued
forth from a different part of the thicket, and, advancing
boldly upon the open heath as if to invite discovery,
he levelled his piece and fired at the sentinel.
A wound in the arm proved a disagreeable interruption
to the poor fellow’s meteorological observations,
as well as to the tune of ‘Nancy Dawson,’
which he was whistling. He returned the fire
ineffectually, and his comrades, starting up at the
alarm, advanced alertly towards the spot from which
the first shot had issued. The Highlander, after
giving them a full view of his person, dived among
the thickets, for his ruse de guerre had now perfectly
succeeded.
While the soldiers pursued the cause
of their disturbance in one direction, Waverley, adopting
the hint of his remaining attendant, made the best
of his speed in that which his guide originally intended
to pursue, and which now (the attention of the soldiers
being drawn to a different quarter) was unobserved
and unguarded. When they had run about a quarter
of a mile, the brow of a rising ground which they
had surmounted concealed them from further risk of
observation. They still heard, however, at a distance
the shouts of the soldiers as they hallooed to each
other upon the heath, and they could also hear the
distant roll of a drum beating to arms in the same
direction. But these hostile sounds were now
far in their rear, and died away upon the breeze as
they rapidly proceeded.
When they had walked about half an
hour, still along open and waste ground of the same
description, they came to the stump of an ancient
oak, which, from its relics, appeared to have been
at one time a tree of very large size. In an
adjacent hollow they found several Highlanders, with
a horse or two. They had not joined them above
a few minutes, which Waverley’s attendant employed,
in all probability, in communicating the cause of
their delay (for the words ‘Duncan Duroch’
were often repeated), when Duncan himself appeared,
out of breath indeed, and with all the symptoms of
having run for his life, but laughing, and in high
spirits at the success of the stratagem by which he
had baffled his pursuers. This indeed Waverley
could easily conceive might be a matter of no great
difficulty to the active mountaineer, who was perfectly
acquainted with the ground, and traced his course with
a firmness and confidence to which his pursuers must
have been strangers. The alarm which he excited
seemed still to continue, for a dropping shot or two
were heard at a great distance, which seemed to serve
as an addition to the mirth of Duncan and his comrades.
The mountaineer now resumed the arms
with which he had entrusted our hero, giving him to
understand that the dangers of the journey were happily
surmounted. Waverley was then mounted upon one
of the horses, a change which the fatigue of the night
and his recent illness rendered exceedingly acceptable.
His portmanteau was placed on another pony, Duncan
mounted a third, and they set forward at a round pace,
accompanied by their escort. No other incident
marked the course of that night’s journey, and
at the dawn of morning they attained the banks of
a rapid river. The country around was at once
fertile and romantic. Steep banks of wood were
broken by corn-fields, which this year presented an
abundant harvest, already in a great measure cut down.
On the opposite bank of the river,
and partly surrounded by a winding of its stream,
stood a large and massive castle, the half-ruined
turrets of which were already glittering in the first
rays of the sun. [Footnote: See Note 2.] It was
in form an oblong square, of size sufficient to contain
a large court in the centre. The towers at each
angle of the square rose higher than the walls of
the building, and were in their turn surmounted by
turrets, differing in height and irregular in shape.
Upon one of these a sentinel watched, whose bonnet
and plaid, streaming in the wind, declared him to
be a Highlander, as a broad white ensign, which floated
from another tower, announced that the garrison was
held by the insurgent adherents of the House of Stuart.
Passing hastily through a small and
mean town, where their appearance excited neither
surprise nor curiosity in the few peasants whom the
labours of the harvest began to summon from their
repose, the party crossed an ancient and narrow bridge
of several arches, and, turning to the left up an
avenue of huge old sycamores, Waverley found himself
in front of the gloomy yet picturesque structure which
he had admired at a distance. A huge iron-grated
door, which formed the exterior defence of the gateway,
was already thrown back to receive them; and a second,
heavily constructed of oak and studded thickly with
iron nails, being next opened, admitted them into
the interior court-yard. A gentleman, dressed
in the Highland garb and having a white cockade in
his bonnet, assisted Waverley to dismount from his
horse, and with much courtesy bid him welcome to the
castle.
The governor, for so we must term
him, having conducted Waverley to a half-ruinous apartment,
where, however, there was a small camp-bed, and having
offered him any refreshment which he desired, was
then about to leave him.
‘Will you not add to your civilities,’
said Waverley, after having made the usual acknowledgment,
’by having the kindness to inform me where I
am, and whether or not I am to consider myself as a
prisoner?’
’I am not at liberty to be so
explicit upon this subject as I could wish. Briefly,
however, you are in the Castle of Doune, in the district
of Menteith, and in no danger whatever.’
‘And how am I assured of that?’
’By the honour of Donald Stewart,
governor of the garrison, and lieutenant-colonel in
the service of his Royal Highness Prince Charles Edward.’
So saying, he hastily left the apartment, as if to
avoid further discussion.
Exhausted by the fatigues of the night,
our hero now threw himself upon the bed, and was in
a few minutes fast asleep.