WILDFIRE
Page 4
Alastair found a chair for me in a corner, then excused himself and went off to see about weighing and dispatching the salmon he had caught that day. I saw Corrigan get up, without a word to his wife, and follow him from the room. Alma Corrigan sat without looking up, stirring and stirring her coffee.
"Will you have coffee? Black or white?"
I looked up to meet the bright gaze of the younger of the two teachers, who was standing in front of me with a cup in either hand. She had changed into a frock the color of dry sherry, with a cairngorm brooch in the lapel. It was a sophisticated color, and should not have suited her, but somehow it did; it was as if a charming child had dressed up in her elder sister's clothes. She looked younger than ever, and touchingly vulnerable.
I said: "Black, please. Thank you very much. But why should you wait on me?"
She handed me a cup. "Oh, nobody serves the coffee.
They bring it all in on a huge tray, and we each get our own. You've just come, haven't you?"
"Just before dinner." I indicated the chair at my elbow. "Won't you sit down? I've been deserted for a fish."
She hesitated, and I saw her shoot a glance across the room to where her companion was apparently deep in a glossy magazine. Then she sat down, but only on the edge of the chair, remaining poised, as it were, for instant flight.
"The fish certainly have it all their own way," she admitted. "I'm Roberta Symes, by the way."
"And I'm Gianetta Brooke. I take it you don't fish?"
"No. We're walking, Marion and I—that's Marion Bradford, over there. We're together. At least, we're climbing, sort of."
"What d'you mean by sort of?" I asked, amused. The Skye hills had not struck me as being the kind you could sort of climb.
"Well, Marion's a climber, and I'm not. That's really what I mean. So we go scrambling, which is a kind of halfway solution." She looked at me ingenuously. "But I'm dying to learn. I'd like to be as good as Mr. Beagle, and climb on every single Cuillin in turn, including the Inaccessible Pinnacle!"
"A thoroughly unworthy ambition," said a voice above us. Roderick Grant had come across, and was standing over us, coffee cup in hand.
Roberta's eves widened. "Unworthy? That from you). Why, Mr. Grant?"
He turned and, with a sweep of one arm, indicated the prospect from the lounge windows.
"Look at them," he said. "Look at them. Thirty million years ago they thrust their way up from God knows where, to be blasted by wind and ice and storm, and chiseled into the mountain shapes you walk over today. They've been there countless ages, the same rocks, standing over the same ocean, worn by the same winds. And you, who've lived out a puny little twenty or thereabouts, talk of scaling them as if they were—"
"Teeth?" said Roberta, and giggled. "I know what you mean, though. They do make one feel a bit impermanent, don't they? But then it's all the more of a challenge, don't you feel? Mere man, or worse still mere woman, conquering the—the giants of time, climbing up—"
"Everest!" Colonel Cowdray-Simpson's exclamation came so pat that I jumped, and Roberta giggled again. The Colonel peered over it at Nicholas, who was nearest the radio. "Turn on the wireless, will you, Drury? Let's hear how they're getting on."
Nicholas obeyed. The news was nearly over. We had luckily missed the conferences, the strikes, the newest
atomic developments, the latest rumors from the U.S.S.R., and had come in just in time for a fuss about the seating in Westminster Abbey, a description of the arches in the Mall, and a hint of the general excitement in a London seething already towards its Coronation boiling point three days hence. And nothing yet, apparently, about Everest
Nicholas switched off.
"But I think they're going to make it," he said.
"It's too thrilling, isn't it?" said Marcia comfortably.
"It's certainly a magnificent effort," said Colonel Cowdray-Simpson. "They deserve their luck. What d'ye say, Beagle? What are the chances with the weather?"
"Fair enough." Beagle looked faintly uncomfortable at being thus appealed to in public. I remembered, with a quickening of interest, that this unassuming little man had been involved in an earlier attempt on Everest. But he seemed unwilling to pursue the subject. He groped in his jacket pocket and produced his pipe, turning the conversation abruptly. "I'd say they had a chance of better weather there than we have here, at any rate. I don't like the look of the sky. There's rain there."
"All the better for the fishing," said Mrs. Cowdray-Simpson placidly, but Roberta moaned.
"Oh no And I wanted to start really climbing tomorrow."
"Quite determined to conquer the Cuillin, then?" said Roderick Grant. "Quite!"
"Where d'you intend to start?"
"I don't know. I'm leaving that to Marion."
"Garsven's not hard," said someone—I think it was Alma Corrigan. "There's a way up from the Coruisk end—"
Marion Bradford interrupted: "The best first climbs are Bruach na Frithe and Sgurr na Banachdich, but they're too far away. Garsven is within reach, but of course it's just plain dull." Her flat voice and uncompromising manner fell hardly short, 1 considered, of being just plain rude. Alma Corrigan sat back in her chair with a little tightening of the lips. Roberta flushed slightly and leaned forward.
"Oh, but Marion, I'm sure Mrs. Corrigan's right. It doesn't look hard, and there must be a wonderful view—"
"There's a wonderful view from every single one of the Cuillins," said Marion dampingly.
"You've climbed them ail?" asked Roderick gently.
"If you mean do I know what I'm talking about, the answer is yes." said Marion Bradford.
There was a little pause, in which everyone looked faintly uncomfortable, and I wondered what on earth made people behave like that without provocation. Colonel and Mrs. Cowdray-Simpson returned to The Times crossword, and Roderick Grant lit a cigarette, looking all at once impossibly remote and well-bred. Nicholas was looking bored, which meant, I knew, that he was irritated, and Marcia Maling winked across at me and then said something to him which made his mouth twitch. Roberta merely sat silent, fiery red and unhappy. As an exercise in Lifemanship, it had been superb.
Then Hubert Hay spoke for the first time, completely ignoring both Marion Bradford's rudeness and the hiatus in the conversation. I remembered Marcia's definition of him as sorbo, and felt amused.
"If I was you," he said cheerily to Roberta, "I'd try the Bad Step. Wait till high tide, and then you won't break your neck if you fall. You'll only drown. Much less uncomfortable, they say."
He had a curiously light, high little voice, and this, together with his odd appearance, produced a species of comic relief. Roberta laughed. "I can swim."
"In climbing boots and a rucksack?"
"Oh well, perhaps not!"
"What on earth's the Bad Step?" I asked.
Hubert Hay pointed towards the west windows. "You see that hill beyond the river's mouth, between us and the Cuillin?"
"Yes."
"That's Sgurr na Stri. It's a high tongue of land between here and the bay at the foot of Garsven. You can take a short cut across it, if you want a scramble. But if you follow the coast round to Loch Coruisk and the Cuillin, you have to cross the Bad Step."
'That sounds terrible isn’t it sort of Lovers' Leap?"
"Not as much." said Roderick Grant.
"No'' Maybe you re right. Anyway, it hangs over the sea, and you have cross it by a crack in the rock, where your nails can get a good grip.”
"Your nails?"'' said Marcia, horror-stricken. "My God! D'you mean you have to crawl across?"
Nicholas- grinned "No, lady. He's talking about your boots."
"It sounds just my style," announced Roberta buoyantly. "After all, who minds drowning? Let's go around there, Marion, and come back over Sgurr na Stri."
"I've made up my mind where we're going," said Marion, in that flat, hard voice which carried so disastrously. "We're going up Blaven."
There was a sudden
silence. I looked up sharply. I had been right, then, in thinking that some queer reaction took place every time that name was mentioned. This time it was unmistakable. And I was not imagining the note of defiance in Marion Bradford's voice. She knew that her announcement would fall on the room in just that kind of silence.
Ronald Beagle spoke then, diffidently. "Is that quite— er, wise, Miss Bradford? It's not exactly a beginner's scramble, is it?"
"It's easy enough up the ridge from this end," she said shortly.
"Oh, quite. But if the weather's bad—"
"A spot of rain won't hurt us. And if mist threatens we won't go. I've got that much sense."
He said no more, and silence held the room again for a moment. I saw Nicholas move, restlessly, and I wondered if he felt, as I did, a discomfort in the atmosphere sharper than even Marion Bradford's rudeness could warrant.
Apparently Marion herself sensed something of it, for she suddenly stabbed out her cigarette viciously into an ash tray and got up.
"In any case," she said, in that tight, aggressive voice of hers, "it's time someone broke the hoodoo on that blasted mountain, isn't it? Are you coming, Roberta?"
She stalked out of the room. Roberta gave me an uncomfortable little smile, and got up to follow her. For an instant I felt like advising her to stay, then decided that, whatever the crosscurrents of emotion that were wrecking the comfort of the party, I had better not add to them. I merely smiled at her, and she went out after her friend.
There was the inevitable awkward pause, in which everyone madly wanted to discuss Marion Bradford, but, naturally, couldn't. Then Marcia, who, as I was rapidly discovering, had no inhibitions at all, said:
"Well, really! I must say—"
Colonel Cowdray-Simpson cleared his throat rather hastily, and said, across her, to Ronald Beagle: "And where do you propose to go tomorrow, Beagle?"
"Weather permitting, sir, I'm going up Sgurr nan Gillean. But I'm afraid . . ."
I got to my feet. I had had enough of this, and I felt cramped and stale after my journey. And if Murdo and Beagle were right, and it was going to rain in the morning, I might as well go out now for an hour. As I turned to put my coffee cup on the tray, I saw, to my dismay, that Nicholas had risen too, and was coming across the room in my direction. It looked very much as if he was going to speak to me, or follow me out, and I felt, just then, that a tete-a-tete with Nicholas would be the final straw. I turned quickly towards the nearest woman, who happened to be Alma Corrigan.
"I'm going out for a short walk," I said, "and I don't know my way about yet at all. I wonder if you'd care to join me?"
She looked surprised, and, I thought, a little pleased. Then the old resentful look shut down on her face again, and she shook her head.
"I'd have liked to very much." She was politely final. "But, if you'll forgive me, I'm a bit tired. We've been out all day, you know."
Since she had already told me, before dinner, that she had spent the day sitting on a boulder while the men fished the Strath na Creitheach, this was a very efficient rebuff.
"Of course," I said, feeling a fool. "Some other time, perhaps." I turned away to find Roderick Grant at my elbow.
"If I might—?" He was looking diffidently down at me. "There's a very pleasant walk up to the loch, if you'll let me be your guide. But perhaps you prefer to go alone?"
"By no means," I assured him. Nicholas had stopped when Roderick Grant spoke, and I knew that he was frowning. I smiled back at Mr. Grant. "'Thanks very much. I'll be glad of your company."
Nicholas had not moved. I had to pass him on my way to the door. For a second our glances met. His eyes, hard and expressionless, held mine for a full three seconds, then he gave a twisted little smile and deliberately turned back to Marcia Maling.
I went to get my coat.
Chapter 5
AT HALF PAST NINE on a summer's evening in the Hebrides, the twilight has scarcely begun. There is, perhaps, with the slackening of the day's brilliance, a somber note overlying the clear colors of sand and grass and rock, but this is no more than the drawing of the first thin blue veil. Indeed, night itself is nothing but a faint dusting-over of the day, a wash of silver through the still-warm gold of the afternoon.
The evening was very still, and, though the rain-threatening clouds were slowly packing higher behind us in the southwest, the rest of the sky was clear and luminous. Above the ridge of Sgurr na Stri, above and beyond the jagged peaks of the Cuillin, the sun's warmth still lingered in the flushed air. Across this swimming lake of brightness one long bar of cloud lay sullenly, one thin line of purple shadow, struck from below to molten brilliance by the rays of a now invisible sun.
We turned northwards up the valley, and our steps on the short sheep turf made no sound in the stillness. The flat pasture of the estuary stretched up the glen for perhaps half a mile, then the ground rose, steep and broken, to make the lower spurs and hillocks that were Blaven's foothills. One of these, the biggest, lay straight ahead of us, a tough little heather-clad hill which blocked the center of the glen and held the southern shore of the loch. To
the left of it curved the river; on the east a ridge and heather joined it to the skirts of Blaven.
"Isn't there a path along the river?" I asked.
"Oh, yes, but if you want to climb An't Sron-in front—for a view of the loch, we'd better keep to Blaven side of the glen. There's a bog farther on, the river, which isn't too pleasant."
"Dangerous, you mean, or merely wet?"
"Both. I don't know whether it would actually open swallow you up, but the ground shakes in a beastly fashion, and you start to sink if you stand still. The deer avoid it/"
"Then," I said with a shiver, "by all means let us avoid' :^ it too. It seems I ought to be very grateful to you for coming with me!"
He laughed. "It's actually pure selfishness on my part. If one loves a place very much one likes to show it off. I wasn't going to miss a fresh opportunity for taking credit to myself for this scenery. It must be one of the loveliest corners of the world."
"This particular corner, do you mean, or Skye and the Islands in general?"
"This bit of Skye." His hands were thrust deep into his pockets, but his eyes lifted briefly to the distant peaks, and to the great blue heights of Blaven dwarfing the glen where we walked. "Those."
"Is this your home, Mr. Grant?"
He shook his head. "No I was born among mountains, but very different ones. My father was minister of a tiny parish away up in the Cairngorms, a little lost village at the back of the north wind. Auchlechtie, at the foot of Bheinn a' Bhuird. D'you know it?"
"I'm afraid not."
He grinned. "I've never yet met anyone who did.... Well, that's where I learned my mountain worship! Pd no mother; my father was a remote kind of man, who had very little time for me; it was miles to school, so as often as not I just ran wild in the hills."
"You must have been a very lonely little boy."
"Perhaps I was. I don't remember. I don't think I feel lonely." He grinned again. "That is, until an uncle died, and left us a lot of money, and my father made me pot shoes on and go to a public school to learn manners.
"That was bad luck." :f
"I hated it, of course. Particularly the shoes
"And now you spend your time climbing?"
"Pretty well. I travel a bit—but 1 always seem to end up here, at. any rate in May and June. They're the best months in the West, although" -he flung a quick glance over his shoulder—"1 think our friend Beagle was right about the weather. We'll have rain tomorrow, for certain, and once the Cuillin get a good grip on a rainstorm, they're very reluctant to let it go.'"
"Oh dear," I said, "and I was wanting to walk. I begin to see why people take up fishing here. It must be sheer self-defense."
"Very possibly. Watch your step, now. It's tricky going in this light."
We had reached the foot of the little hill called An't Sron, and began to climb the rough heathery
slope. A cock grouse rose with a clap from somewhere near at hand, and planed down towards the river, chakking indignantly. The light had faded perceptibly. Like an enormous storm cloud above the valley Blaven loomed, and behind his massive edge hung, now, the ghost of a white moon past the full.
Roderick Grant paused for a moment in his stride, and looked thoughtfully up at the wicked ridges shouldering the sky.
"I wonder if those two fool women will really go up there tomorrow?" "Is it a bad climb?"
"Not if you know which way to go. Straight up the south ridge it's only a scramble. But there are nasty places even there."
"Miss Bradford said she knew her way about," I said.
A smile touched his mouth. "She did, didn't she? Well, we can't do much about it."
"I suppose not." We were more than halfway up the little hill. The going was getting steeper and rougher. "Mr. Grant," I said, a little breathlessly.
"Yes?"
I hesitated, then said flatly: "What did Miss Bradford mean about a hoodoo on Blaven? What's wrong with it?"
He stopped and glanced down at me. He looked surprised, almost blank. "Wrong with it?" He repeated the phrase half mechanically.
"Yes. Why does everyone shy off it like that? I'm sure they do. I can't be mistaken. And if it comes to that, what's wrong with the people in the hotel? Because there's something, and if you haven't noticed it—" "You don't know?"
"Of course I don't know!" I said, almost irritably. "I've only just arrived. But even to me the setup seems uncomfortably like the opening of a bad problem play."
"You're not far astray at that," said Roderick Grant. "Only we're halfway through the play, and it looks as if the problem isn't going to be solved at ail." He paused, and looked gravely down at me in the gathering dusk. "It's a nasty problem, too," he said. "The nastiest of all, in fact. There's been murder done."
I took a jerky little breath. "Murder?"
He nodded. His blue eyes, in that light, were dark under lowered brows. "Two and a half weeks ago it happened, on the thirteenth of May. It was a local girl, and she was murdered on Blaven."