‘Goodness gracious me, Mr Down!’ she called out. ‘You had me worried half to death! What have you done to yourself?’
‘No need to worry, Mrs Down,’ Simpson protested, and gingerly lowered himself down from Jess’ back. When his injured leg took his weight, he winced and nearly fell down, but Mrs Down picked him up in a flash.
Samuel dismounted and came to Simpson’s other side, and they helped him hop towards the house.
‘I thought the Molgoms had taken you, for sure,’ Mrs Down went on. Samuel had no idea what a Molgom was, but she went on. ‘Thank you, young man,’ she said to him. ‘I can’t thank you enough for helping poor old Simpson home.’
‘Yes, you can,’ Simpson responded as they edged him through the doorway, ‘by fixing us both some dinner. And he’ll be staying the night.’
Mrs Down took a start at this. ‘But look at the state of this place! We’re in no state to take a guest.’
They dropped Simpson into a chair and Samuel looked around the room. It was very simple, having a stove in one corner and a table and a few chairs in the middle. There was one other door to the side, which presumably led to their bedroom. Everything was tidy, but in desperate need of some maintenance.
‘No need to worry, Mrs Down,’ Samuel told her. ‘I’m quite happy just to sleep on the floor, and then I’ll be off again in the morning.’
‘See, Woman?’ Simpson said. ‘He’s quite happy. No need to make a fuss.’
‘Simpson!’ she retorted and went over to the stove and began throwing some more hunks of wood into it. A large pot was set on top, which was simmering and bubbling and giving off a delicious smell. She then rushed back and bent down by Simpson, pulling up his trouser leg and inspecting the angry red graze on his shin. ‘How did you manage this, Mr Down?’
‘Just mend it, Woman,’ he told her. ‘I’ve got no time to argue with you with about it.’
Mrs Down took some hot water from atop the stove. She dipped a cloth into it, wrung it out and then set to work washing her husband’s leg. Finally, she wrapped the wound in another boiled cloth along with some herbs she had pulled from her tins, while Simpson leaned over and took a pipe from the table and set to work puffing on it. Samuel could see it was quite a deep injury and it would take the old man some time before he could get about on his own once more.
When Mrs Down was happy with her work, and Simpson was happily puffing out smoke, she fetched them both a large bowl of stew from her stove top. Samuel sat at the table and began eating heartily. The stew tasted as good as it smelled, being thick with carrots, potatoes and some other curious vegetables he could not even begin to name.
‘So,’ Mrs Down said, finally sitting herself down to eat, ‘where were you headed when you saved my poor old husband here?’
‘His name is Samuel,’ Simpson interrupted, with stew on his lips and chin. ‘He was headed for Gilgarry and got a mite misdirected.’
Mrs Down nodded. ‘What are you doing in Gilgarry then, Samuel,’ she asked, ‘if you don’t mind me asking? We don’t get many folk from the capital out here.’
Samuel was surprised. ‘How did you know I was from Cintar?’ he asked.
‘It’s written all over you, lad-on your clothes and in your tongue. Even though we don’t get many out here, Imperials are as easy to spot as a wart on your nose-oh, no offence intended, of course.’
Samuel laughed. ‘Yes, I suppose I must seem a little out of place, but I’m not actually Turian. I’m from Marlen, but I’ve been studying in the capital for a while, so I guess I’ve picked up some of their accent. Now I’m bound for Gilgarry to meet a colleague.’
‘Oh, and what’s your business, then?’ she asked.
‘I’m a traveller…ah, a travelling trader,’ Samuel replied awkwardly.
‘Trading what?’ old Simpson asked suspiciously.
‘Trading anything,’ Samuel said. ‘Anything of value at all.’
Mrs Down raised an eyebrow at this, but said no more. After they had eaten, she took their bowls and washed them outside in a trough in the yard. Simpson announced he was tired and limped off through the doorway into the bedroom. Mrs Down then gathered up as many cloths and blankets as she could manage and made a simple bed for Samuel near the stove.
‘I’m terribly sorry,’ she said. ‘We’re just simple folk and we can’t offer you anything more comfortable. I hope it’ll do.’
‘It’s fine, honestly,’ he told her. ‘I’ve slept on roadsides and verges for many a night. This is luxury in comparison. I can’t thank you enough.’
‘Well, it gets awfully cold just before sun-up, so don’t burn yourself on the stove there. And if you need to use the privy, it’s outside and past the pile of wood-mind your step and take care not to fall in. Would you like some hot water to wash up?’
Samuel nodded.
After he had taken care of Jess and washed himself outside, he came back inside. The house was warm and comfortable from the roaring stove and Mrs Down was seated at the table beside a small pile of dyed linen that she was sewing.
‘You make your own clothes?’ Samuel asked, sitting opposite her.
‘Yes. And we sell whatever else I can make. I’m precious little help to Simpson during the day and we need all the money we can get. I do what I can around the farm, but most of the time I think he’d rather run himself half to death than have me puffing after him.’
‘He does everything by himself?’
‘Oh, of course. We’ve no children of our own. It’s been hard times for us lately. The fields are as dry as a dead dog’s tongue, if you’ll excuse me for putting it plainly.’
‘Oh? I hadn’t noticed.’
‘I hope you’re a better merchant than you are a farmer, Samuel. We’ve had scarcely a drop of rain for months now and it’s only getting hotter. I truly don’t know what we’ll do this year.’
Samuel nodded, feeling sorry for the old couple. He could see that life was difficult for them here and would only get harder with each passing year. Without any children to help them, they would struggle to care for themselves without the charity of friends or neighbours. When Samuel grew weary, he lay down on his blankets and fell quickly asleep as Mrs Down continued with her sewing, late into the night.
Samuel awoke to the sound of Mrs Down moving quietly around the room softly humming. Judging from the light shining in through the window, Samuel guessed it was well after dawn and he was surprised he had slept for so long. He slowly roused himself and staggered to the table, where Mrs Down was already placing a hot cup of tea for him.
‘Thank you, good lady,’ he managed to say with a dry throat. ‘Where’s Simpson?’
Mrs Down was tending to her stove. ‘Oh, he’s out on the hill. I told him it’d serve him right if he fell down and ruined himself even more, but he won’t listen to me.’
Samuel nodded and continued sipping his hot tea. When he had finished, he went outside to check on Jess. She was standing happily next to the old donkey and it appeared she had already been given some breakfast as she was munching on a pile of wild grasses and oats. Samuel peered up the hill as he stroked her smooth neck, listening to her crunch and bite her meal. He could see the specks of animals all over the hillside and wondered how Simpson could possibly deal with so many animals by himself.
There was no sign of the old man, but Samuel decided to go check up on him before he continued on his way to Gilgarry. He started up the rocky incline and was quickly panting and short of breath. The air here was thin and certainly did not encourage such exertion. His legs soon burned with each step he took.
Several curious goats began trotting alongside him, bleating and examining him with their black-slitted, yellow eyes, wondering who he was and what treats he had to feed them. Samuel regarded their nimble steps with envy and continued clambering up the ever-growing hill as they followed after him.
He soon found Simpson with smoke curling out of the short pipe between his teeth, sitting high on a boulder, watchin
g all that was laid out below. ‘Good morning, Samuel,’ the old man called out.
‘Morning,’ Samuel called in reply, scaling the boulder. ‘How’s your leg today, Simpson?’ he asked. There was a stick lying beside the old farmer, which he had no doubt used to help him up the hill.
Simpson inhaled and then blew out thin smoke that immediately raced away with a gust of the wind. ‘It’s not so good,’ he replied. ‘I managed to get up here, but there’s not much else I can do but sit on my bones and look around. I managed some of the milking this morning, but it was quite a job.’
Samuel sat down beside the man while he thought about what to do. He dare not risk any spell, for he had seen how superstitious these country folk could be. He had not had much opportunity to practise his healing spells either, so he was not even entirely sure that he could help at all. They sat like that on the rock for a while until the old man spoke up.
‘Can I ask you for a little assistance?’ he asked.
‘Of course,’ Samuel replied. ‘What do you need?’
‘I don’t think I can stand up,’ Simpson stated plainly.
Samuel leapt up and helped the old man climb to his feet.
‘It’s a sorry state,’ Simpson said, shaking his head. ‘Perhaps you can help me back down to the house so that I may I talk with Mrs Down.’
The old man took up his walking stick and slowly, arm in arm, they made their way back down the hill. It took much longer than going up, as they had to choose the path of least gradient, winding back and forth, rather than charging straight down. Simpson and Samuel both were panting when they arrived back at the little flat spot where the house was built.
‘I have an idea,’ Samuel stated, as they rested a moment outside.
‘Aye? What’s that?’ the man said with interest.
‘My business is not really so urgent in Gilgarry. If you like, perhaps I can stay here a few days while you find your legs again. In return, you can provide me with a bed and Mrs Down’s good cooking. I’ve been travelling a long time already and a few days’ rest will do me wonders.’
‘I can’t ask you to do that, lad,’ the old man responded. ‘You have your own business to attend to. We can get by here-we always do.’
‘It’s no trouble at all,’ Samuel stated. ‘You’ll really be doing me a favour. I don’t really have many practical skills and perhaps I could learn a few things around the farm.’
‘I tell you what, lad. It’s obvious that you’re just making excuses now, but if you really want to stay, I really need the help. We have no children of our own to help and the moment I hurt my leg, I was just horrified at the thought of how I would begin to manage the farm. It seems like you came at just the right time, if you’re willing to stay. If you change your mind though, you can be off any time you choose.’
‘I wouldn’t have it any other way,’ Samuel said with content.
They went inside and Samuel had to repeat the argument all over again with Mrs Down and she was almost crying by the end of it, taken by Samuel’s generosity. She gave them both some more to eat, then Samuel and old Simpson stepped back outside to continue the day’s work. Together they slowly made their way up to Simpson’s rock, where the old farmer carefully sat himself down.
‘What do we do first?’ Samuel asked.
‘I’d start by taking off that cloak. There’s no need to go making it any harder for yerself. A light shirt’ll do. As for work, the goats’ll come when I call ’em, but you need to keep an eye out for the odd mongrel and throw some stones at them if they come scrounging around.’
‘Do you have problems with predators?’
‘You mean dogs? Aye. There’s a pack around that I often have to chase off. Once they taste blood, it’s harder to stop ’em, so I have to be quick. We haven’t seen wolves or such for a few years in these parts. I think the sheep in the lowlands are easier to catch and a tad juicier than my bony old goats.’
Samuel sat quietly for a few minutes as Simpson smoked his pipe. The silence soon became uncomfortable. ‘What can I do, then?’ Samuel finally asked.
‘See those sheep climbing up from the valley?’ Simpson said as he pointed and Samuel saw some tiny, fleecy dots further down the hillside. ‘They’re Ned Palmers’ and they like to come up here and eat what little grass I have, so you can start by herding them back down again. I try, but it does me no good. Stubborn as an old woman, they are.’
Samuel stood up and took a deep breath to ready himself. He kept his cloak on for, despite the old man’s words, the air was thin and bitter. Simpson was no doubt used to the highland weather, wearing only his thin, lace-up shirt and well-stained trousers and boots.
Samuel began clambering down the grassy slope and was already sweating, despite the chill wind, when he neared the sheep. Climbing down the hill seemed even harder than going up, if at all possible.
The sheep were munching the short, sparsely-patched grass, oblivious to him. Their black heads and long, white wool looked a strange combination. Samuel raised his arms and tried shooing them away, but they utterly ignored him, chewing the grass as if he did not exist. It was not until he tried actually pushing one that it suddenly reacted and bolted away along the hill. The others waddled after it, finishing further away and even higher up the hill, where they looked down upon him and bleated quizzically.
Samuel looked up to the old farmer, still sitting on his high rock. Even from here, he was sure he could detect an amused smile on the man’s lips.
Samuel adjusted his cloak and circled above the sheep, now once again oblivious to him with heads down to the grass. He waved his arms furiously and yelled out ‘ha!’-leaping high in the air. The sheep took notice and with a jerk, they shied again, trotting from their meals and giving him a wide berth until, once again, they finished just above him on the hillside. Samuel swore and ran after them, muttering curses. He singled one animal from the others and chased it all over the hill while the remainder stood and watched, ever-chewing. His mutterings became much more vocal, until he was yelling abuse of every form at the stubborn animal.
He realised he was getting nowhere when, finally, he had to stop because his legs were burning and his lungs were heaving desperately for air. He could continue no further and cursed the sheep again as he bent over with his hands on his knees, struggling for breath. The sheep bleated as it trotted over to its companions and rejoined them at their munching.
Samuel collapsed atop the grass and tried to think of an intelligent alternative. Any spell he could think of would only panic them further and who knows where they would run-certainly not in any direction he wanted. He contemplated lifting them all up and floating them down into the valley, but that would probably scare them to death and he could only manage one such heavy animal at a time. Finally, he climbed back up to Simpson to gain advice.
‘Won’t do chasing them,’ the old man stated simply, ‘unless there’s a few of you,’ he added with a shrug. ‘They’re dumb animals, but they know how to be stubborn, sure enough. Gotta let them know who’s in charge.’
‘How do I do that?’ Samuel panted.
‘Don’t know. Never done it,’ Simpson explained with a grin, blowing smoke through his lips. ‘The other farmers have a dog or two to help them round up their stock, but I’ve never been fond of dogs. Besides, we couldn’t afford to keep one-they eat too much.’
‘You could let it eat those sheep and solve two problems at once.’
‘Aye,’ the aging man grinned. ‘But that wouldn’t do. My neighbours are my friends, as well, despite our little disagreements. Besides, Mrs Down has an allergy. One dog hair up her nose and she’s sniffing and teary-eyed and can’t do a thing. That wouldn’t do at all.’
Samuel helped Simpson with various tasks throughout the day, running up and down the hill many times, but mostly just to pass messages to Mrs Down. For the bulk of the time, they just seemed to sit and ensure that his little flock of animals did not get themselves into trouble.
‘I could get used to this!’ Samuel stated at one point. ‘It can be quite relaxing to sit here. It’s not quite as hard as I thought.’
‘We haven’t done anything, yet,’ Simpson responded. ‘Tomorrow we’ll have a lot to do. Mrs Down took care of the urgent milking this morning, but we’ll need to manage them all tomorrow. Then, we’ll have to lead all the animals down to the valley and back, as my creek’s almost run dry. Several animals need to be caught and have their hooves clipped, but I suppose that can wait a few days more. Really, we’ve quite a lot of work to do tomorrow. I just thought I would start you off easy today and put off as much as we could.’
‘Oh,’ Samuel said. It actually did sound like quite a lot to do.
They arrived back at the little house just after sunset and Samuel was exhausted. Mrs Down had prepared some soup and roast vegetables, which Samuel swallowed heartily. Somehow, her meals were delicious, despite her almost vacuous pantry.
The next morning, Simpson roused Samuel while it was still dark outside. After he had managed to get his clothes on, Samuel helped the old man outside, and he was surprised to see that most of the goats and cows were gathered around the house in the dim, pre-dawn light.
Simpson set about teaching Samuel how to milk and it took him a while to catch on. He had often seen it done when he was young, but had never tried it before. It took several hours for them to finish milking all the animals and by the time they were done, Samuel could barely move his hands at all, as they were so sore. When the milk was safely poured into the various large barrels beside the house they went inside for their breakfast. Shortly after, they began back up the hill, with Samuel helping old Mr Down slowly limp along until they reached the jutting boulder.
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