I know him weel.He came to my place to be fed, near dead of hunger, then led me here.If his master lies in this kirkyard, I'll tak' the bit dog awa' with me."Mr.Traill's astonishing fluency always carried all walls of resistance before it with men of slower wit and speech.Only a superior man could brush time-honored rules aside so curtly and stand on his human rights so surely.James Brown pulled his bonnet off deferentially, scratched his shock head and shifted his pipe.Finally he admitted:
"Weel, there was a bit tyke i' the kirkyaird twa days syne.I put 'im oot, an' haena seen 'im aboot ony main" He offered, however, to show the new-made mound on which he had found the dog.Leading the way past the church, he went on down the terraced slope, prolonging the walk with conversation, for the guardianship of an old churchyard offers very little such lively company as John Traill's.
"I mind, noo, it was some puir body frae the Coogate, wi' no' ony mourners but the sma' terrier aneath the coffin.I let 'im pass, no' to mak' a disturbance at a buryin'.The deal box was fetched up by the police, an' carried by sic a crew o' gaol-birds as wad mak' ye turn ower in yer ain God's hole.But he paid for his buryin' wi' his ain siller, an' noo lies as canny as the nobeelity.Nae boot here's the place, Maister Traill; an' ye can see for yer ainsel' there's no' any dog.""Ay, that would be Auld Jock and Bobby would no' be leaving him,"insisted the landlord, stubbornly.He stood looking down at the rough mound of frozen clods heaped in a little space of trampled snow.
"Jeemes Brown," Mr.Trail said, at last, "the man wha lies here was a decent, pious auld country body, and I drove him to his meeserable death in the Cowgate.""Man, ye dinna ken what ye're sayin'!" was the shocked response.
"Do I no'? I'm canny, by the ordinar', but my fule tongue will get me into trouble with the magistrates one of these days.It aye wags at both ends, and is no' tied in the middle."Then, stanch Calvinist that he was, and never dreaming that he was indulging in the sinful pleasure of confession, Mr.Traill poured out the story of Auld Jock's plight and of his own.
shortcomings.It was a bitter, upbraiding thing that he, an uncommonly capable man, had meant so well by a humble old body, and done so ill.And he had failed again when he tried to undo the mischief.The very next morning he had gone down into the perilous Cowgate, and inquired in every place where it might be possible for such a timid old shepherd to be known.But there! As well look for a burr thistle in a bin of oats, as look for a human atom in the Cowgate and the wynds "juist aff.""Weel, noo, ye couldna hae dune aething wi' the auld body, ava, gin he wouldna gang to the infairmary." The caretaker was trying to console the self-accusing man.
"Could I no'? Ye dinna ken me as weel as ye micht." The disgusted landlord tumbled into broad Scotch."Gie me to do it ance mair, an' I'd chairge Auld Jock wi' thievin' ma siller, wi' a wink o'
the ee at the police to mak' them ken I was leein'; an' syne they'd hae hustled 'im aff, willy-nilly, to a snug bed."The energetic little man looked so entirely capable of any daring deed that he fired the caretaker into enthusiastic search for Bobby.It was not entirely dark, for the sky was studded with stars, snow lay in broad patches on the slope, and all about the lower end of the kirkyard supper candles burned at every rear window of the tall tenements.
The two men searched among the near-by slabs and table-tombs and scattered thorn bushes.They circled the monument to all the martyrs who had died heroically, in the Grassmarket and elsewhere, for their faith.They hunted in the deep shadows of the buttresses along the side of the auld kirk and among the pillars of the octagonal portico to the new.At the rear of the long, low building, that was clumsily partitioned across for two pulpits, stood the ornate tomb of "Bluidy" McKenzie.But Bobby had not committed himself to the mercy of the hanging judge, nor yet to the care of the doughty minister, who, from the pulpit of Greyfriars auld kirk, had flung the blood and tear stained Covenant in the teeth of persecution.
The search was continued past the modest Scott family burial plot and on to the west wall.There was a broad outlook over Heriot's Hospital grounds, a smooth and shining expanse of unsullied snow about the early Elizabethan pile of buildings.Returning, they skirted the lowest wall below the tenements, for in the circling line of courtyarded vaults, where the "nobeelity" of Scotland lay haughtily apart under timestained marbles, were many shadowy nooks in which so small a dog could stow himself away.Skulking cats were flushed there, and sent flying over aristocratic bones, but there was no trace of Bobby.
The second tier of windows of the tenements was level with the kirkyard wall, and several times Mr.Traill called up to a lighted casement where a family sat at a scant supper"Have you seen a bit dog, man?"There was much cordial interest in his quest, windows opening and faces staring into the dusk; but not until near the top of the Row was a clue gained.Then, at the query, an unkempt, illclad lassie slipped from her stool and leaned out over the pediment of a tomb.She had seen a "wee, wee doggie jinkin' amang the stanes." It was on the Sabbath evening, when the well-dressed folk had gone home from the afternoon services.She was eating her porridge at the window, "by her lane," when he "keeked up at her so knowing, and begged so bonny," that she balanced her bit bowl on a lath, and pushed it over on the kirkyard wall.As she finished the story the big, blue eyes of the little maid, who doubtless had herself known what it was to be hungry, filled with tears.
"The wee tyke couldna loup up to it, an' a deil o' a pussy got it a'.He was so bonny, like a leddy's pet, an' syne he fell ower on the snaw an' creepit awa'.He didna cry oot, but he was a' but deid wi' hunger." At the memory of it soft-hearted Ailie Lindsey sobbed on her mother's shoulder.