The Little Minister. J. M. Barrie

The Little Minister - J. M. Barrie


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than Dunwoodie. His religious views were those of Cruickshanks, but he went regularly to church "on the off-chance of there being a God after all; so I'm safe, whatever side may be wrong."

      "This is the man," explained a policeman, "who brought the alarm. He admits himself having been in Tilliedrum just before we started."

      "Your name, my man?" the sheriff demanded.

      "It micht be John Dunwoodie," the tinsmith answered cautiously.

      "But is it?"

      "I dinna say it's no."

      "You were in Tilliedrum this evening?"

      "I micht hae been."

      "Were you?"

      "I'll swear to nothing."

      "Why not?"

      "Because I'm a canny man."

      "Into the cell with him," Halliwell cried, losing patience.

      "Leave him to me," said the sheriff. "I understand the sort of man. Now, Dunwoodie, what were you doing in Tilliedrum?"

      "I was taking my laddie down to be prenticed to a writer there," answered Dunwoodie, falling into the sheriff's net.

      "What are you yourself?"

      "I micht be a tinsmith to trade."

      "And you, a mere tinsmith, dare to tell me that a lawyer was willing to take your son into his office? Be cautious, Dunwoodie."

      "Weel, then, the laddie's highly edicated and I hae siller, and that's how the writer was to take him and make a gentleman o' him."

      "I learn from the neighbours," the policeman explained, "that this is partly true, but what makes us suspect him is this. He left the laddie at Tilliedrum, and yet when he came home the first person he sees at the fireside is the laddie himself. The laddie had run home, and the reason plainly was that he had heard of our preparations and wanted to alarm the town."

      "There seems something in this, Dunwoodie," the sheriff said, "and if you cannot explain it I must keep you in custody."

      "I'll make a clean breast o't," Dunwoodie replied, seeing that in this matter truth was best. "The laddie was terrible against being made a gentleman, and when he saw the kind o' life he would hae to lead, clean hands, clean dickies, and no gutters on his breeks, his heart took mair scunner at genteelity than ever, and he ran hame. Ay, I was mad when I saw him at the fireside, but he says to me, 'How would you like to be a gentleman yoursel', father?' he says, and that so affected me 'at I'm to gie him his ain way."

      Another prisoner, Dave Langlands, was confronted with Dunwoodie.

      "John Dunwoodie's as innocent as I am mysel," Dave said, "and I'm most michty innocent. It wasna John but the Egyptian that gave the alarm. I tell you what, sheriff, if it'll make me innocenter-like I'll picture the Egyptian to you just as I saw her, and syne you'll be able to catch her easier."

      "You are an honest fellow," said the sheriff.

      "I only wish I had the whipping of him," growled Halliwell, who was of a generous nature.

      "For what business had she," continued Dave righteously, "to meddle in other folks' business? She's no a Thrums lassie, and so I say, 'Let the law take its course on her.'"

      "Will you listen to such a cur, Riach?" asked Halliwell.

      "Certainly. Speak out, Langlands."

      "Weel, then, I was in the windmill the nicht."

      "You were a watcher?"

      "I happened to be in the windmill wi' another man," Dave went on, avoiding the officer's question.

      "What was his name?" demanded Halliwell.

      "It was the Egyptian I was to tell you about," Dave said, looking to the sheriff.

      "Ah, yes, you only tell tales about women," said Halliwell.

      "Strange women," corrected Dave. "Weel, we was there, and it would maybe be twal o'clock, and we was speaking (but about lawful things) when we heard some ane running yont the road. I keeked through a hole in the door, and I saw it was an Egyptian lassie 'at I had never clapped een on afore. She saw the licht in the window, and she cried, 'Hie, you billies in the windmill, the sojers is coming!' I fell in a fricht, but the other man opened the door, and again she cries, 'The sojers is coming; quick, or you'll be ta'en.' At that the other man up wi' his bonnet and ran, but I didna make off so smart."

      "You had to pick yourself up first," suggested the officer.

      "Sal, it was the lassie picked me up; ay, and she picked up a horn at the same time."

      "'Blaw on that,' she cried, 'and alarm the town.' But, sheriff, I didna do't. Na, I had ower muckle respect for the law."

      "In other words," said Halliwell, "you also bolted, and left the gypsy to blow the horn herself."

      "I dinna deny but what I made my feet my friend, but it wasna her that blew the horn. I ken that, for I looked back and saw her trying to do't, but she couldna, she didna ken the way."

      "Then who did blow it?"

      "The first man she met, I suppose. We a' kent that the horn was to be the signal except Wearywarld. He's police, so we kept it frae him."

      "That is all you saw of the woman?"

      "Ay, for I ran straucht to my garret, and there your men took me.

       Can I gae hame now, sheriff?"

      "No. you cannot. Describe the woman's appearance."

      "She had a heap o' rowan berries stuck in her hair, and, I think, she had on a green wrapper and a red shawl. She had a most extraordinary face. I canna exact describe it, for she would be lauchin' one second and syne solemn the next. I tell you her face changed as quick as you could turn the pages o' a book. Ay, here comes Wearywarld to speak up for me."

      Wearyworld entered cheerfully.

      "This is the local policeman," a Tilliedrum officer said; "we have been searching for him everywhere, and only found him now."

      "Where have you been?" asked the sheriff, wrathfully.

      "Whaur maist honest men is at this hour," replied Wearyworld; "in my bed."

      "How dared yon ignore your duty at such a time?"

      "It's a long story," the policeman answered, pleasantly, in anticipation of a talk at last.

      "Answer me in a word."

      "In a word!" cried the policeman, quite crestfallen. "It canna be done. You'll need to cross-examine me, too. It's my lawful richt."

      "I'll take you to the Tilliedrum gaol for your share in this night's work if you do not speak to the purpose. Why did you not hasten to our assistance?"

      "As sure as death I never kent you was here. I was up the Roods on my rounds when I heard an awfu' din down in the square, and thinks I, there's rough characters about, and the place for honest folk is their bed. So to my bed I gaed, and I was in't when your men gripped me." "We must see into this before we leave. In the meantime you will act as a guide to my searchers. Stop! Do you know anything of this Egyptian?"

      "What Egyptian? Is't a lassie wi' rowans in her hair?"

      "The same. Have you seen her?"

      "That I have. There's nothing agin her, is there? Whatever it is, I'll uphaud she didna do't, for a simpler, franker-spoken crittur couldna be."

      "Never mind what I want her for. When did you see her?"

      "It would be about twal o'clock," began Wearyworld unctuously, "when I was in the Roods, ay, no lang afore I heard the disturbance in the square. I was standing in the middle o' the road, wondering how the door o' the windmill was swinging open, when she came up to me.

      "'A


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