CHAPTER ONE
Morag
had walked the short way down the lane to visit her mother. Douglas had just
eaten breakfast and was having coffee when Drummond entered. “Sir, there is a
call for you from Brown and Peters solicitors. There is a Mr Brown speaking.”
“Thank
you, Drummond, I will take it in here.” He picked up the receiver and said,
“Lord Stuart speaking”
“If
it is convenient, my Lord, Peter Sanders and Mrs. Rogers will meet us at mid
day at Stuart house regarding the forests. However if your diary is full I can
schedule another day and time.”
“No
mid day will be fine, Mr. Brown.”
“Then
we will be leaving now so that we are ready for when they arrive.”
“There is movement in the Clan Douglas,
Ahearn, but it is not by those you would expect. There are those poisoned with
hate that is hell bent on revenge for their lost battles. There are only
ripples in still waters, but your enemies are seeking help from foreign powers
to build up a storm.”
“So,
Marie, what you are saying is the Douglas’s are getting help from other
families.”
“No,
I don’t think I said that, Ahearn. I was telling you to be on your guard
against -people trying to make a mountain from a molehill. Not all your enemies
have the name Douglas.”
“Why
are you so confusing and hard to understand, Marie?”
“I
am not hard to understand, it is because you always try and put faces to my
warnings. All that I sense is the
vibrations of their marching feet.”
****
Andrew
had received a call from Lady Lindsay and was told to meet her near the croft
where Douglas was having the forest removed. He pulled his vehicle to a halt
just before she arrived. Her motor pulled up beside his and he left his and
after walking around her motor he sat in her passenger seat. “Is there a
problem, my Lady?”
“I
would like you to take a look at this crofter’s cottage, Andrew. This one like
the one on Steeple Crag has been made too well to be just an ordinary cottage.”
This
was the first time Andrew had seen this crofter’s house because of the shooting
and all of the trouble that he had up on Steeple Crag. Willie had pulled all
the roots out and levelled the ground a little, but it was the wrong end of the
year for the grass to grow. Willie was now working up near the boundary and on
seeing them he walked over and spoke.
“Good
day, my Lady.” He looked at Andrews badge and said, “You must be Andrew that
was with Lord Stuart that fatal day. “ He put out his hand and they shook. “I
have no idea how long you will be here but we have two explosions scheduled
today. There is mostly bed rock under these trees some way down. But the tap
roots find a crack and follow it. I will let you know when they are taking
place so that you can get clear.”
“So
that you don’t have to walk through the mud I have left a small walkway over on
the other side. If you are going to need more people there at any time I have
some rolls of aluminium roadway I can put down for you, my Lady. I can send one
of the crew back to get one if needed. As you are the trust there will be no
charge, to be honest it will be the first time I have used it.”
“Thank
you, Mr. MacNab; it would be helpful if you could.” They walked along the side
of where the forest had once been standing and stopped where there was a semi
grass and needle track just wide enough to walk along.
There
was a heavy oak door still hanging in a frame but the hinges were seized. There
was a lock on the inside but no key, because a key was too much to expect after
all the amount of years. There were three rooms in the small building. There
was one long one in the front with a fire in the centre. On the right hand side
of the fire there was a doorway into a smaller room. There was another small
room on the left that also had its own doorway.
Andrew
looked at the roof and it was built with the same giant thin slabs of stone
sitting on oak beams. He was shining his torch onto the ceiling in the back
room no different than he did in the other small room. He knelt on one knee and
removed the needles that had been blown in and the stone floor was there once
more.
Andrew stepped back into the main room and
looked about and Lady Lindsay just watched as he concentrated on all he saw.
There was a window on the north wall that was no more than a spy hole, but the
one on the south wall was a foot square. In the stone top and bottom of the
slit window on the north side there were grooves, and Andrew went down on his
knee. He removed some of the needles and found a chip of wood that had seen
better days. He carefully put the chip back down on top of the needles and
spoke his first words. “That is very clever.”
He
looked at the fire place that was an exact replica of the one on Steeple Crag.
This one also had its own stone chimney in the rear wall between the two rooms.
Willie came over and said, “I think you will be okay here because we are
one-hundred and fifty paces away, but it might be safer if you step outside
while the explosion takes place.”
They
both walked out and walked about the building until they were the other side,
or at the back to be more precise. “Without measuring the building, my Lady, I
would say there is a bit missing. I think there is another room between the two
smaller rooms. I have a theory about the two buildings, but until I have done a
little more research I would rather not say too much.”
“It
might be a good idea to put a high wire fence about it for security from large
animals. I don’t think any of the two legged type will venture this way, and
whatever is in that centre room will be safe until we need to explore it. I
need a small sieve the same as Jean had on that first building and a vacuum
cleaner. Those needles will have to be checked much the same as the other
cottage. I also need the oldest map of Scotland the trust has.”
“I
am sorry, my Lady, but I was presuming you wanted me to look into this for you,
and this might be your project.”
“They
are our projects, Andrew, and the senior people in the trust are impressed with
your work and knowledge. I have been told to inform you that confirmation of
your appointment will be made in a few weeks making you permanent staff with
more money. You have to realise that I will now be taking a back seat on these
projects as I am being promoted to the board of directors soon. I will still
head the investigation department but less work.”
“I
offer my congratulations, my Lady.”
“I
am still on the end of the phone if you need me, as I have a lot of contacts I
can call on. I will get Kevin out here with a hut and the tools that you need.
He can put the wire security fence up while he is here.”
“Because
of the work I am doing for Lord Stuart he has allowed me a room at the back of
the house to use as an office. I think it was an office of some sort at one
time because of the desk and the book case. As soon as Peter gets the hang of
everything I will go and live with my mother. Although Lord. Stuart has told me
there is no rush for me to do so. I just feel that I am imposing on his
generosity but I do appreciate what you have both done for me, my Lady.”
“You
have earned your place working with me, Andrew, and we have done nothing except
find you work suitable for your qualifications.”
Douglas
was talking to Mr. Brown when Drummond announced the arrival of Peter Sanders
and Mrs Rogers. Drummond held the door open while they walked through.
Douglas
and Mr. Brown stood up and they all shook hands and introduced each other.
“Would you please sit down,” He pointed to the sofa before he said, “Would you
ask Victoria to bring a pot of tea and china for four, Drummond.” Miss. Rogers
was older than Douglas imagined and looked the same age as his adopted mother.
It
was after they had finished their tea when Sanders opened his mouth. “Before we
start, my Lord, I would like to say that if you have ideas of cutting those
trees down as your own you have misunderstood our reason for meeting you. Just
because they have been planted on your land by mistake does not make them your
property, if that is what is on your mind then we might as well leave.”
“Who
are you representing, Mr.Sanders? Is it Miss, Rogers, or the people that are
leaning on Sir William while he is in custody?”
“I
am not sure what you are talking about, My Lord.”
“Oh
I think you do, Mr Sanders, because you are a criminal lawyer and only work
with the criminal fraternity. I will give you a little bit of advice that might
clear your uninformed mind. Sitting next to me is Mr. Brown, and he has worked
with litigation cases many times. If I was in Miss. Rogers position I would
listen very carefully to what I have to say. You as a representative of Douglas
Forestry have no legal claim to the land or the trees. However I have a way
that is I think the only way to solve Sir William’s money shortfall.”
“If
you interrupt me before I have finished then I will send you out of this
meeting. I don’t think Miss. Rogers cares any more about those trees on my land
than I do. She is making the transition of the money that you receive look like
a legal transaction. However, your real clients would like some return for the
money they invested even if it is only fifty percent.”
Miss
Rogers was smiling at his remarks and the way he had placed Sanders on the back
foot. “What do you propose, my Lord?” She asked.
“You
and I would like those trees not to be there, but you do not have the finance
to get them cut. If you had the Finance Willie MacNab would not do the job
because of all the bad blood between Douglas Forestry. I on the other hand have
the finances and the services of Willie MacNab.”
“I
have heard enough our meeting is at an end and we are leaving, you are not
touching those trees Stuart.”
“I
told you once before Mr Sanders to respect my title or stay out of my house. I
do not really care if you want to leave or not, but if it comes to a court case
the judge would be asking Miss Rogers what firm of idiots was instructing her.
Now shut up because the only person leaving here will be the person that should
be staying. So unless you would like those same people leaning on you that are
leaning on Sir William, then stay seated and listen.”
“If
you listen to your legal brief Miss Rogers then you will be in court for a
great many years. I will cut the trees down....”
“I
told you Lord Stuart, you will do that over my dead body. I am going and taking
with me my client.” He stood up to make his point.
As
he was doing so Douglas had pressed a bell, and moments later Drummond walked
through the door. “Drummond my guests are leaving, would you please show them
out.”
“Come,
Miss. Rogers we will go.”
“I
am not going anywhere, Mr. Sanders. I never came here to walk out before I hear
what proposal Lord. Stuart is suggesting.”
“I
said we are going, Miss Rogers now come with me.”
She
stood up in a flash and slapped him across the face, “Who the hell do you think
you are talking to? Get out to your damn motor and wait for me there and Vlad
will be hearing of your conduct. I was told to deal with this problem, and you
are only here to assist. You will be assisting me by getting out of my sight.
Start finding a way to minimise William’s sentence.”
The
welt across his face with shock, and fear at the name Vlad was unmistakable. He
scurried away out of the room, and Douglas waited for her to be seated once
more and hear the front door close.
She
laughed and said, “That was very un-lady like, my Lord. I would like to hear
what you propose, and it will be me that will say yes or no. I am a qualified
barrister and know all about litigation. I am bad with money management but not
with the law.”
“I
know that you are pre-empting my actions which was a very shrewd move, my Lord,
which tells me you are no fool not that I ever thought you was.”
“Miss
Rogers, you need those trees cut and out of the way, and so do I. I believe
that the real partners of Sir William are seeking financial retribution for all
the plants that were destroyed. There is eight hundred hectors of your trees on
my land and I want them gone A.S.P. they have been on my land for over twenty
years, but I will say twenty years for arguments sake.”
“I
have ten tenants that have lost a lot of money over the last twenty years
because of those forests. So I am going to charge you ten pounds per hector for
the last twenty years. The money will be split between my tenants in
compensation. I will have Willie MacNab cut the forests and put the land back
into grazing. After the forest has been cut down you will receive the money for
the timber. However, that will be after Willie MacNab’s wages are paid along
with the rent for that forest.”
“There
is a very good chance that if you go into litigation you will lose, but you
will be fighting for the same thing as I have just offered you.”
“That
is a very good offer, Lord Stuart, and I would be a fool not to take it. I just
want to see the back of the forests and start living my life again. The other
forests are mine and are on my land, when I bought this place thirty-five years
ago those trees on my land were only a foot high.”
She
saw the expression on his face and said, “Yes, Lord. Stuart, the house and all
the land with it are mine. William married me for my money and land, but even
though he was a bad man at times to others he always looked after me. Your
mother was shrewd and very fierce. You might not believe it, but I was here the
morning she took William by the throat and shook him like a rag doll.”
She
started to laugh and said, “I shouldn’t laugh really, but I keep thinking of
the look of shock on his face. The men that came with him jumped in their car
and left him to fight her.”
“What
were you doing here, Miss Rogers?”
“That
really is the best part because I rode down to warn her that William was not
pleased and would be down mid morning. We were in the lounge having coffee when
he arrived.”
“Did
you go home with him afterwards?”
“Good
heavens no, Rowena
and I was half way through a conversation and I had not finished my coffee.
During the time she was shaking William about by the neck, I was at the top of
the steps laughing. That night William went into a huff and wouldn’t talk to me
except call me a Jezebel every time he looked at me.” She was laughing as she
was talking.
“He could be
so childish at times. He is not bad but easily led, and when he met Vlad his
silent partner he went submissive to all Vlad said. Vlad really is bad and I
think he is Russian mafia, but I would not say that to his face.”
“Are you not
worried that Vlad might not come after you, Miss Rogers?”
“That will
never happen and he is leaning on William so that he does not lose face,
because at the end of the day Vlad and William were very good friends. He will
look after him while he does his time and he will see him okay on his release.
Vlad told me on the phone this morning that if he gets twenty-five pence in the
pound it will be good.”
“The man is
filthy rich and if I opened my arms he would be in them, but I will stick by
good old faithful William. Someone has to look after him in his old age. He
wouldn’t let them grow that shit in my forests on my land, but I promise you,
my Lord, I had no idea at all about the plants.”
“The good
thing about all of William’s troubles was he was only the chairman, and the
book keeper was the dealer and director in charge of the company. William is
looking at five to ten years, and he might return to me as a better person. I
will not hold my breath though.”
“If you
phone me when you have drawn up some papers I will ride down and sign them.”
****
Andrew had
waited for Kevin to arrive with the things he had asked for. On arrival he
said, “After Lady Lindsay told me where you where and what you were going to do
I put the generator and lighting from Steeple Crag on the trailer. Dave has the
truck and is taking down the hut and he should be here soon and we will get
this fenced off.”
“Well done,
Kevin, you are a very important part of my team now that Lady Lindsay has been
promoted. How are you getting on with my mother and your English lessons?
“I have done
the test and passed, but your mother told me not to get cocky as there was a
long way to go before I was at GCSE standard whatever that is. She said it will
take a few months of nights and weekends before I will be ready to pass. I am
enjoying doing the work she sets me. I get a little ribbing from Dave and the
crew, but it is not nasty and what do they know?”
“Good for
you, Kevin, I am glad you are seeing the benefit of education. Once you have
set the lights and generator up I will go in and take a proper look. At the
moment I would rather everyone stay outside until Mr. MacNab lays the aluminium
matting on the ground. I don’t want a lot of new mud mixed with the pine
needles.”
“As soon as
Dave gets here with the other two crew members we will get the fence posts in.
The wire fence is on the truck as well. The cottage at Steeple Crag has a
twelve foot wire security fence about it at the moment. Scottish electric laid
a ground cable and there are now soft security lights on top of the fence. I
don’t think anyone would go there this time of year, because it is a very cold
place. Lady Lindsay said you asked for a map, and I picked that up at the depot
when I went there, it is on the front seat along with the sieve.”
It was
during the time Andrew was in the front of Kevin’s motor when Willie arrived
with a truck with a big roll of aluminium arrived. A JCB arrived with it and
unloaded it onto the ground. Willie went to the crofter’s house and stepped out
fifty long paces that brought him to the end of the soil. He showed the driver
where to drop the roll before he got three of his men and Kevin to push the
roll forward. It stopped rolling two foot from the wall he turned to face
Andrew and put his thumb up.
Andrew
stepped from the vehicle and walked over, “Thank you, Mr MacNab. That will save
me a lot of mess to clean up.”
“I will
leave it there over the winter, Kevin, as I have more than enough rolls left in
the yard.”
He walked
off and Andrew walked to where the crew was setting up the generator and
lighting. Half an hour later Kevin switched on the generator and put his thumb
up. Andrew looked about the room and started on the pine needles putting them through
the sieve onto a sheet. He like Jean had done had started at the door and
worked his way inside.
He had
cleaned half of the room across to the north window where the chip of wood was
still on the floor. He had found nothing but it was as he stood up off his
knees when he spotted an abnormality. The inside of the walls were flat even
though they were made of small stones with some not a lot bigger than a house
brick and some a lot smaller.
The walls
although made up with odd size stones were flush and flat but there was one
stone near the slit window that stuck out like a sore thumb. Andrew touched it
and felt the movement and pulled as he wiggled it about, and it slipped out of
the wall. He looked at the stone and could see that it had been snapped in half
at the rear.
He had to go
and get his brief case that he had foolishly left in the motor and pushed the
stone back into place. It was a short time before he returned to the cottage
where he picked up the sieve once more and started on the floor the other side
of the door. Like the first half of the room he cleaned it down to the stone
floor. When he was standing looking about the room he felt pleased with only
the two back rooms to clean, and they were nowhere near so heavy in needles.
He had not
found anything, but he had not expected there to be anything to find. The men
that had been looking after the marijuana plants had been using it to eat in.
He had put his brief case on the small fire place and now he opened it and took
out his pencil beam torch. He spent twenty minutes looking about the outside
edge of the floor but the wall was tight to the floor.
He then
remembered the stone in the wall and because he had put it back in place correctly
it took him a while to find it again. On pulling it out he took it close to the
light and looked at it better. There were markings at the edge where it had
been struck by something hard on one side. It was no accident why the stone was
broken and Andrew walked it back to the hole it was removed from.
Out of
curiosity he shone the torch into the recess expecting to see the other half of
the stone. It was not there, instead there was a tiny leather purse but as he
went to remove it he stopped and placed the stone back in its hole but left it
sticking out like he had first found it. Grabbing his camera he took pictures
of the stone from all angles, then after taking it out of the hole he took more
pictures of the stone and the marks about the broken edge.
He placed
the stone in a plastic bag before putting it in his brief case. After returning
to look at the hole left by the stone he took more pictures before slipping his
fingers in and gently lifting the purse out. For its age the leather was in
very good condition but it was also dry and looked very delicate. He decided he
would take it and show Jean when he had returned to the house and put it in a
plastic sample bag as well.
Andrew
stepped out of the cottage for some fresh air and looked to the west of the
building. There was a pile of stones in between the tree stumps near the house
that because they were so close Willie had declined to move. He walked over to
where Willie was standing near a machine that was being repaired. “Mr. MacNab,
what is that pile of stones over there near the cottage?”
“The pile
was there long before we started cutting the trees, and as the pile appeared to
be shaped we avoided them when felling the trees. We just cut the trees and
lifted them out of the way leaving the stones untouched. I am not an expert but
it looks like it was a building at some time, but by looking at the way the
earth has covered most it was not in the last hundred years”
“Thank you,
Mr. MacNab, I will go and take a look.” As he walked over he could see that
Kevin had most of the fence posts up, and he walked over to him.
“Kevin, do
you think there is a chance that you could leave what you are doing. I believe
the weather is supposed change again this week for rain followed by snow. While
the trees were there the cottage was protected from the harsh weather, but now
I think things might change. We don’t need anything as big as the cover on
Steeple Crag, but a type of scaffold porch erected in front of the door and a
wooden post either side of the south window with a board nailed to them to stop
animals and snow getting inside. I think to be on the safe side sheets could
cover the roof but the roof I think is no different than the one at Steeple
Crag. If you need to check with Lady
Lindsay then do so.”
“There is no
need, Andrew. She told me that you had the same authority as her and to help
you as if I was helping her. Should I really be calling you Andrew if that is
the case?”
“Kevin, you
are my senior foreman and stop being daft. Don’t you ever wonder about these
buildings we are working on?”
“Well its
funny you asked that because your mother asked the same thing and when I said I
knew a lot about the history of Scotland she started asking me a lot of
questions. I must have been correct on a few because she never told me
different, instead she started to teach me history while reading and writing.
The books I read now are history books, and if I get stuck on a word she tells
me what it means.”
“Now that is
interesting, Kevin. How soon can you do all I ask?”
“I will
leave Dave in charge and go to the yard and pick up the things we need on the
truck, I think we could have everything done by tomorrow night.”
At the same
time Kevin left for the yard, Andrew walked over to the piles of stones. He
walked about them for several minutes before he took out his note book and
started writing. The camera was still about his neck and he took pictures from
all angles and directions before he returned to inside the cottage and removed
the pine needles in the other two rooms.
Once he had
finished he stepped back to look about the floors and felt satisfied with what
he had done. It was late afternoon and the nights were drawing in, and when
Kevin returned it was almost dark. “Just unload the Scaffold, Kevin and call it
a day. I have to go and see my mother before I go back to the house and I will
see you in the morning when you and I will talk more.”
He walked
into his mother’s house and sat down at the table. “You look tired, Andrew, you
are not working too hard are you?”
“No, Mother,
I was just on my way home, but Kevin told me that you are teaching him Scottish
history as well as English.”
“Well that
is not exactly true, but I am letting him read Scottish history because as you
know reading helps you to learn how to write and spell. Kevin is a lot like you
in the way he learns fast and is hungry to learn more. As for his history, well
I think working with Lady Lindsay has taught him a great deal.”
“He also
learned a lot of history from his parents but only in conversation. I am
expanding his knowledge and I would like to see where it takes me, because I
see a great potential in him. I am writing a paper on teaching the illiterate
and my experiences, but at no time will I mention his name or who my subject
is. It will not be published for a great many years and by then Kevin will be
well educated. He has told me more about Steeple Crag than you have, and he
even gave me a theory as to why it was there. To my surprise it had nothing to
do with the weapons that you found, it was far more practical.”
“Why are you
asking me these questions about Kevin, has he done something wrong?”
“No, Mother.
I will not ask what his theory is, but I will let him tell you tomorrow what I
have decided. I must go because I need to change and eat.” He gave her a kiss
on the cheek and went out to his vehicle.
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