"There's eneugh," a Burgh policeman said when the money was counted.He meant much the same thing Auld Jock himself had meant.There was enough to save him from the last indignity a life of useful labor can thrust upon the honest poor--pauper burial.But when inquiries were made for the name and the friends of this old man there appeared to be only "Auld Jock" to enter into the record, and a little dog to follow the body to the grave.It was a Bible reader who chanced to come in from the Medical Mission in the Cowgate who thought to look in the fly-leaf of Auld Jock's Bible.
"His name is John Gray."
He laid the worn little book on Auld Jock's breast and crossed the work-scarred hands upon it."It's something by the ordinar'
to find a gude auld country body in such a foul place." He stooped and patted Bobby, and noted the bun, untouched, upon the floor.Turning to a wild elf of a barefooted child in the crowd he spoke to her."Would you share your gude brose with the bit dog, lassie?"She darted down the stairs, and presently returned with her own scanty bowl of breakfast porridge.Bobby refused the food, but he looked at her so mournfully that the first tears of pity her unchildlike eyes had ever shed welled up.She put out her hand timidly and stroked him.
It was just before the report of the time-gun that two policemen cleared the stairs, shrouded Auld Jock in his own greatcoat and plaid, and carried him down to the court.There they laid him in a plain box of white deal that stood on the pavement, closed it, and went away down the wynd on a necessary errand.The Bible-reader sat on an empty beer keg to guard the box, and Bobby climbed on the top and stretched himself above his master.The court was a well, more than a hundred feet deep What sky might have been visible above it was hidden by tier above tier of dingy, tattered washings.The stairway filled again, and throngs of outcasts of every sort went about their squalid businesses, with only a curious glance or so at the pathetic group.
Presently the policemen returned from the Cowgate with a motley assortment of pallbearers.There was a good-tempered Irish laborer from a near-by brewery; a decayed gentleman, unsteady of gait and blear-eyed, in greasy frock-coat and broken hat; a flashily dressed bartender who found the task distasteful; a stout, bent-backed fagot-carrier; a drunken fisherman from New Haven, suddenly sobered by this uncanny duty, and a furtive, gaol-bleached thief who feared a trap and tried to escape.
Tailed by scuffling gamins, the strange little procession moved quickly down the wynd and turned into the roaring Cowgate.The policemen went before to force a passage through the press.
The Bible-reader followed the box, and Bobby, head and tail down, trotted unnoticed, beneath it.The humble funeral train passed under a bridge arch into the empty Grassmarket, and went up Candlemakers Row to the kirkyard gate.Such as Auld Jock, now, by unnumbered thousands, were coming to lie among the grand and great, laird and leddy, poet and prophet, persecutor and martyr, in the piled-up, historic burying-ground of old Greyfriars.
By a gesture the caretaker directed the bearers to the right, past the church, and on down the crowded slope to the north, that was circled about by the backs of the tenements in the Grassmarket and Candlemakers Row.The box was lowered at once, and the pall-bearers hastily departed to delayed dinners.The policemen had urgent duties elsewhere.Only the Bible reader remained to see the grave partly filled in, and to try to persuade Bobby to go away with him.But the little dog resisted with such piteous struggles that the man put him down again.The grave digger leaned on his spade for a bit of professional talk.
"Many a dog gangs daft an' greets like a human body when his maister dees.They're aye put oot, a time or twa, an' they gang to folic that ken them, an' syne they tak' to ithers.Dinna fash yersel' aboot 'im.He wullna greet lang."Since Bobby would not go, there was nothing to do but leave him there; but it was with many a backward look and disturbing doubt that the good man turned away.The grave-digger finished his task cheerfully, shouldered his tools, and left the kirkyard.The early dark was coming on when the caretaker, in ****** his last rounds, found the little terrier flattened out on the new-made mound.
"Gang awa' oot!" he ordered.Bobby looked up pleadingly and trembled, but he made no motion to obey.James Brown was not an unfeeling man, and he was but doing his duty.From an impulse of pity for this bonny wee bit of loyalty and grief he picked Bobby up, carried him all the way to the gate and set him over the wicket on the pavement.
"Gang awa' hame, noo, " he said, kindly."A kirkya'rd isna a place for a bit dog to be leevin'."Bobby lay where he had been dropped until the caretaker was out of sight.Then, finding the aperture under the gate too small for him to squeeze through, he tried, in his ancestral way, to enlarge it by digging.He scratched and scratched at the unyielding stone until his little claws were broken and his toes bleeding, before he stopped and lay down with his nose under the wicket.
Just before the closing hour a carriage stopped at the kirkyard gate.A black-robed lady, carrying flowers, hurried through the wicket.Bobby slipped in behind her and disappeared.
After nightfall, when the lamps were lighted on the bridge, when Mr.Traill had come out to stand idly in his doorway, looking for some one to talk to, and James Brown had locked the kirkyard yard gate for the night and gone into his little stone lodge to supper, Bobby came out of hiding and stretched himself prone across Auld Jock's grave.