<h2>CHAPTER III<br/> <span class="f8">AN ANCIENT RUNE</span></h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="upper">On</span> the next day I rode on my bicycle to Peterhead,
and walked on the pier. It was a bright clear
day, and a fresh northern breeze was blowing.
The fishing boats were ready to start at the turn of the
tide; and as I came up the first of them began to pass
out through the harbour mouth. Their movement was
beautiful to see; at first slowly, and then getting faster
as the sails were hoisted, till at last they swept through
the narrow entrance, scuppers under, righting themselves
as they swung before the wind in the open sea. Now
and again a belated smacksman came hurrying along to
catch his boat before she should leave the pier.</p>
<p>The eastern pier of Peterhead is guarded by a massive
wall of granite, built in several steps or tiers, which
breaks the fury of the gale. When a northern storm is
on, it is a wild spot; the waves dash over it in walls of
solid green topped with mountainous masses of foam and
spray. But at present, with the July sun beating down,
it was a vantage post from which to see the whole harbour
and the sea without. I climbed up and sat on the
top, looking on admiringly, and lazily smoked in quiet
enjoyment. Presently I noticed some one very like Gormala
come hurrying along the pier, and now and again
crouching behind one of the mooring posts. I said nothing
but kept an eye on her, for I supposed that she was
at her usual game of watching some one.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Soon a tall man strode leisurely along, and from every
movement of the woman I could see that he was the subject
of her watching. He came near where I sat, and stood
there with that calm unconcerned patience which is a
characteristic of the fisherman.</p>
<p>He was a fine-looking fellow, well over six feet high,
with a tangled mass of thick red-yellow hair and curly,
bushy beard. He had lustrous, far-seeing golden-brown
eyes, and massive, finely-cut features. His pilot-cloth
trousers spangled all over with silver herring scales, were
tucked into great, bucket-boots. He wore a heavy blue
jersey and a cap of weazel skin. I had been thinking of
the decline of the herring from the action of the trawlers
in certain waters, and fancied this would be a good
opportunity to get a local opinion. Before long I strolled
over and joined this son of the Vikings. He gave it,
and it was a decided one, uncompromisingly against
the trawlers and the laws which allowed them to do their
nefarious work. He spoke in a sort of old-fashioned,
biblical language which was moderate and devoid of
epithets, but full of apposite illustration. When he had
pointed out that certain fishing grounds, formerly most
prolific of result to the fishers, were now absolutely worthless
he ended his argument:</p>
<p>“And, sure, good master, it stands to rayson. Suppose
you be a farmer, and when you have prepared your
land and manured it, you sow your seed and plough
the ridges and make it all safe from wind and devastatin’
storm. If, when the green corn be shootin’ frae the airth,
you take your harrow and drag it ath’art the springin’
seed, where be then the promise of your golden grain?”</p>
<p>For a moment or two the beauty of his voice, the deep,
resonant, earnestness of his tone and the magnificent,
simple purity of the man took me away from the scene.
He seemed as though I had looked him through and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</SPAN></span>
through, and had found him to be throughout of golden
worth. Possibly it was the imagery of his own speech
and the colour which his eyes and hair and cap suggested,
but he seemed to me for an instant as a small figure projected
against a background of rolling upland clothed
in ripe grain. Round his feet were massed the folds of
a great white sheet whose edges faded into air. In a
moment the image passed, and he stood before me in his
full stature.</p>
<p>I almost gasped, for just behind him, where she had
silently come, stood Gormala, gazing not at the fisherman
but at me, with eyes that positively blazed with a sort of
baleful eagerness. She was looking straight into my
eyes; I knew it when I caught the look of hers.</p>
<p>The fisherman went on talking. I did not, however,
hear what he was saying, for again some mysterious
change had come over our surroundings. The blue sea
had over it the mystery of the darkness of the night;
the high noon sun had lost its fiery vigour and shone
with the pale yellow splendour of a full moon. All around
me, before and on either hand, was a waste of waters;
the very air and earth seemed filmed with moving water,
and the sound of falling waters was in my ears. Again,
the golden fisherman was before me for an instant,
not as a moving speck but in full size now he lay prone;
limp and lifeless, with waxen cold cheeks, in the eloquent
inaction of death. The white sheet—I could see now that
it was a shroud—was around him up to his heart. I
seemed to feel Gormala’s eyes burning into my brain as
I looked. All at once everything seemed to resume its
proper proportion, and I was listening calmly to the
holding forth of the Viking.</p>
<p>I turned instinctively and looked at Gormala. For an
instant her eyes seemed to blaze triumphantly; then she
pulled the little shawl which she wore closer round her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</SPAN></span>
shoulders and, with a gesture full of modesty and deference
turned away. She climbed up the ridges of the
harbour wall and sat looking across as at the sea beyond,
now studded with a myriad of brown sails.</p>
<p>A little later the stolid indifference as to time slipped
all at once from the fisherman. He was instinct with life
and action, and with a touch of his cap and a “Farewell
good Master!” stood poised on the very edge of the
pier ready to spring on a trim, weather-beaten smack
which came rushing along almost grazing the rough stone
work. It made our hearts jump as he sprang on board
and taking the tiller from the hand of the steersman
turned the boat’s head to the open sea. As she rushed out
through the harbour mouth we heard behind us the voice
of an old fisherman who had hobbled up to us:</p>
<p>“He’ll do that once too often! Lauchlane Macleod
is like all these men from Uist and the rest of the Out
Islanders. They don’t care ‘naught about naught.’”</p>
<p>Lauchlane Macleod! The very man of whom Gormala
had prophesied! The very mention of his name seemed
to turn me cold.</p>
<p>After lunch at the hotel I played golf on the links
till evening drew near. Then I got on my bicycle
to return home. I had laboured slowly up the long
hill to the Stirling quarry when I saw Gormala sitting
on the roadside on a great boulder of red granite.
She was evidently looking out for me, for when I came
near she rose up and deliberately stood in the roadway in
my path. I jumped off my wheel and asked her point
blank what she wanted with me so much that she stopped
me on the road.</p>
<p>Gormala was naturally an impressive figure, but at
present she looked weird and almost unearthly. Her
tall, gaunt form lit by the afterglow in a soft mysterious
light was projected against the grey of the darkening<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</SPAN></span>
sea, whose sombreness was emphasised by the brilliant
emerald green of the sward which fell from where we
stood to the jagged cliff-line.</p>
<p>The loneliness of the spot was profound. From where
we stood not a house was to be seen, and the darkening
sea was desert of sails. It seemed as if we two were
the only living things in nature’s vast expanse. To me
it was a little awesome. Gormala’s first mysterious
greeting when I had seen the mourning for the child,
and her persistent following of me ever since, had begun
to get on my nerves. She had become a sort of enforced
condition to me, and whether she was present in the
flesh or not, the expectation or the apprehension of her
coming—I hardly knew which it was—kept my thoughts
perpetually interested in her. Now, her weird, statuesque
attitude and the scene around us finished my intellectual
subjugation. The weather had changed to an almost inconceivable
degree. The bright clear sky of the morning
had become darkly mysterious, and the wind had died
away to an ominous calm. Nature seemed altogether
sentient, and willing to speak directly to a man in my
own receptive mood. The Seer-woman evidently knew
this, for she gave fully a minute of silence for the natural
charm to work before she spoke. Then in a solemn warning
voice she said:</p>
<p>“Time is flying by us; Lammas-tide is nigh.” The
words impressed me, why I know not; for though I
had heard of Lammas-tide I had not the smallest idea of
what was meant by it. Gormala was certainly quick with
her eyes—she had that gypsy quality in remarkable
degree—and she seemed to read my face like an open
book. There was a suppressed impatience in her manner,
as of one who must stop in the midst of some important
matter to explain to a child whose aid is immediately
necessary:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Ye no ken why? Is it that ye dinna heed o’ Lammas-tide,
or that ye no ken o’ the prophecy of the Mystery
of the Sea and the treasures that lie hid therein.” I felt
more than ever abashed, and that I should have known
long ago those things of which the gaunt woman spoke,
towering above me as I leaned on my wheel. She went
on:</p>
<p>“An’ ye no ken, then listen and learn!” and she spoke
the following rune in a strange, staccato cadence which
seemed to suit our surroundings and to sink into my
heart and memory so deep that to forget would be
impossible:</p>
<div class="centered"><div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">“To win the Mystery o’ the Sea,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">“An’ learn the secrets that there be,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">“Gather in one these weirds three:<br/></span></div>
<div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">“A gowden moon on a flowin’ tide,<br/></span>
<span class="i0">“And Lammas floods for the spell to bide;<br/></span>
<span class="i0">“And a gowden mon wi’ death for his bride.”<br/></span></div>
</div></div>
<p>There was a long pause of silence between us, and I
felt very strangely. The sea before me took odd, indefinite
shape. It seemed as though it was of crystal
clearness, and that from where I gazed I could see all
its mysteries. That is, I could see so as to know there were
mysteries, though what they were individually I could
not even dream. The past and the present and the future
seemed to be mingled in one wild, chaotic, whirling
dream, from the mass of which thoughts and ideas
seemed now and again to fly out unexpectedly on all
sides as do sparks from hot iron under the hammer.
Within my heart grew vague indefinite yearnings, aspirations,
possibilities. There came a sense of power so
paramount that instinctively I drew myself up to my full
height and became conscious of the physical vigour within<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</SPAN></span>
me. As I did so I looked around and seemed to wake
from a dream.</p>
<p>Naught around me but the drifting clouds, the silent
darkening land and the brooding sea. Gormala was
nowhere to be seen.</p>
<hr class="l1" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</SPAN></span></p>
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