Read Complete New Tales of Para Handy Online
Authors: Stuart Donald
The puffer slipped down-river in the gloaming with Dougie at the wheel: Para Handy passed the article about the Piltdown Man to Sunny Jim as the two of them sat on the stern gunwale.
“Dan to the life,” he said in a deliberately loud voice: “but when I showed it to the man himsel' an hoor ago, he wass not at aal amused. You wud think he wud be prood tae be taken for onythin' ass important ass a âMissing Link', but no. He chust ran awa' from the suggestion: he iss like the Gabardine Swine in the Scruptures, that had the pearls o' wusdom thrown tae them, but chust went dashin' awa' into the wilderness!”
A furious clang of metal from the engine-room at their feet indicated that the unfortunate engineer was reduced to taking out his feelings on a pile of coals.
“We wull put in to Bowling for the night,” Para Handy added pointedly, “and mebbe Dan wull obleege the company by givin' us aal a Piltdoon performance at the Inns!” But, despite their cajoling, Macphail huffily refused to join the rest of the crew when they went ashore after a herring supper to quench the thirst it had given them.
When they returned on board, though, he was in his bunk and fast asleep â with a somehow satisï¬ed-looking grin on his face which made Para Handy bristle with suspicion. “He's been up to something: wait you and we wull see!”
The
Vital Spark
continued down the Firth after an early start the following morning and mid-day found her just off the south end of Bute.
Sunny Jim went below to make a start on preparing dinner for the crew. With the potatos peeled and set on the stove to boil in a pan of sea water, he went up on deck, opened the door of the meat safe and reached for the link sausages.
They were not there.
Cursing the delivery boy for his perï¬dy, Jim made the best of a meal he could from the black and mealie puddings.
“Ah'm sorry, boys,” he said: “but yon wee duvvle has pinched the sausages on us, and there's nae mair I can do by way o' a meat dinner.”
Para Handy and the Mate accepted the situation, grudgingly, but Macphail refused to eat any of the fare on offer and retired in high dudgeon to his stokehold.
“To bleezes!” said the Captain: “The man's still in an upset over the ribbin' we gave him yestreen: well, aal I can say iss that he'll be hungry afore we are,” and he tucked into a forkful of mealie pudding with apparent relish.
In fact, Macphail refused to join them for any meal over the next two days, surfacing only to butter a few slices of bread and make himself a cup of tea at regular intervals, as they rounded the Mull, beached just off the farm to which the ï¬itting was consigned, and unloaded the strangely mixed cargo into the new tenant's waiting horse and dray.
Then, on the morning they were due to sail for home, Sunny Jim squeezed his way into Macphail's domain, anxious to make peace with the engineer for the air of gloom and doom which hung over the little ship went quite contrary to Jim's nature.
And he found Macphail frying a pound or thereby of ï¬nest pork sausages on the back of a shovel held over the glowing ashes in his ï¬re-pan!
His yell of outrage brought Para Handy and the Mate dashing to the engine-room.
“You're a duvvle, Dan!” Para Handy protested. “Can you no' tak' a bit o' a joke wi'oot complainin', or at least wi'oot losing the heid and stealin' from your shupmates!”
“Ah'm no' complainin' noo,” said the engineer: “that's been the best grub Ah've ever had on this decrepit auld hooker. Two solid days o' meat meals and I'll say wan thing fur ye, Jum, ye ken a good sausage when you see it.
“Ah'm fair vexed that's the last o' them â or Ah'd offer you all a taste.
“Mebbe that'll teach you a lesson. Never mind aboot the Missin' Link: it's the missin'
links
that you should all be a lot mair concerned aboot!”
And with a satisï¬ed laugh to himself, he swallowed the last morsel of sausage with evident, if exaggerated, relish.
A few minutes later, the farmer appeared with his cheque-book to pay for the ï¬itting and as he perched on the seat of his cart to sign it, he had his ï¬rst sight of Macphail (who had been seated unseen in the engine-room throughout the unloading process of the previous hours) as that worthy came on deck to get a breath of air.
The farmer stared at him, transï¬xed, and was so put off his stride that he smudged the signature badly and had to start all over again and write a fresh cheque.
“My heavens, Captain,” he conï¬ded to Para Handy in an awed whisper, “it's none o' my business, but that's some man you have as your engineer! You ken, he's the very double o' that âMissing Link' that had his likeness in the Gleska Herald a day or two back.
“I hope I'm no' offending you saying that⦔
F
ACTNOTE
The discovery of Piltdown Man was one of the great news stories of 1912, and one of the supreme academic hoaxes in history. For sheer audacity and conï¬dent theatricality it ranks with such classics of the genre as America's Cardiff Giant or the Berners Street prank in London, Scotland's 18th-century âOssian' literary imposture: or the hoax that went so infamously wrong when what had been intended as a slightly scarey leg-pull turned to near-tragedy when Orson Welles' radio play, based on the H. G. Wells novel
War of the Worlds
, was believed by many of the listening American audience to be an accurate news broadcast, with whole families panicking and ï¬eeing their homes.
Charles Dawson was an amateur antiquarian and archaeologist who announced to a startled academic world in 1912 the discovery of the âMissing Link', the hominid which spanned the physical and intellectual gap between ape and man. For about two generations thereafter the skull and jawbone which he had âexcavated' to prove that theory held an honoured place in the pantheon of the British Museum and the site of his âdiscovery' â a chalk pit in the Sussex Downs â became a place of pilgrimage for earnest and enthusiastic antiquarians both professional and amateur in the quest of further, momentous âï¬nds'.
All of which doesn't just help prove the truth of the old adage that âThere's a sucker born every minute'. It also demonstrates quite gratifyingly â at least to the layman â that as often as not the âsucker' is a loudly self-proclaimed âexpert'.
Only in 1953 was the hoax ï¬nally exposed as what it was though even then (and, who knows, perhaps still today) there were voices raised in defence and protest against the destruction of a myth so dearly-held. The skull of the âMissing Link' was proved, by dating techniques, to be that of a 20th-century man and the jawbone that of a 20th-century orang-outang, both cunningly stained to simulate great age.
I think the only individual involved in the whole scam who came out of it with honour intact was the orang-outang!
Scottish pork butchers, on the other hand, inherit a long and honourable tradition. Glasgow ï¬rms like McKeans, established in the 1870s, built up a worldwide reputation, winning awards and medals at food exhibitions (of which the Victorians were so fond) as far aï¬eld as Canada, and still trade today, changed beyond recognition by the demands of an evolving market.
Lorne sausage, for the uninitiated, is a coarse-chopped, sliced sausage-meat in block form. The origin of the name is unknown (the ï¬rst maker perhaps?) but, when it is well made and spiced to perfection, it is tastily addictive.
18
The Cadger
M
acphail and Sunny Jim watched the Mate come disconsolately towards them along the quayside at Lamlash, his head down, and his hands deep in his pockets.
“Ah doot it's no' good news,” said the Engineer. “We'll be here a week at the least afore the man's weel enough mended tae come back. A week in Lamlash! It shouldnae happen tae a dug!”
The accident had happened the previous afternoon, as they were unloading fencing-stobs for the Duke of Hamilton's estates. As a bundle of the posts was being swung upwards and outwards from the hold the knot on the rope binding them together had slipped and the stobs had come tumbling onto the deck. One caught Para Handy a hefty blow across the head, sending him ï¬ying across the hatch-coaming and into the depths of the hold.
The doctor, when he eventually arrived in a pony-and-trap from Brodick, was less concerned with the broken wrist which the Captain sustained in the fall than with the large area of contusion on the side of his head.
“I can strap the wrist no problem,” he pronounced, “but I can give no guarantees about your the effects of that blow to your head, Captain MacFarlane. I'm not happy about it at all.”
Macphail restrained himself with considerable difficulty from offering his own opinion on that matter, but the upshot was that Para Handy was removed within the hour by horse-drawn ambulance and taken the three miles over the hill to the Cottage Hospital at Brodick âfor observation'. Dougie went with him, partly to keep him company and see him safely installed, partly in order to telegraph the owner in Glasgow to advise him of developments.
“Whit's the news then?” asked Macphail as the Mate scrambled aboard. “Is he deleerious?”
“No, nor hileerious: but he's ass carnaptious ass a wagon-load o' pensioners for they're sayin' they want to keep him in for a week, and there's a nurse yonder built like a dread-nought wha's in cherge o' the ward and he's feart for her already, chust feart. No' that I blame him: if they'd had her at the Crimea it wud have been in the front line trenches and no' Florence's hospital they'd have pit her.”
“So we're tae lie here for a week!” exploded Macphail. “A week in Lamlash in October! Nae wonder ye're lookin' as miserable as an innkeeper at a Rechabites meeting. We'll be oot o' wir minds wi' boredom, and here's me wi' naethin' Ah hivnae read, an' nae mair chance o' buyin' onything mair here than I hae o' gettin' a transfer tae the
Columba.
”
“No,” said Dougie, “it's worse nor that. I telegraphed Gleska and they said there iss a cargo o' scrap iron waitin' for us at Ardrishaig that's urchently needed up at Pointhoose so the shup hass to go and load it. Peter iss to choin us at Pointhoose ass soon ass they let him oot.”
“Thank the Lord,” said Macphail emphatically. “At least we get oot o' here. So whit are ye lookin' so miserable aboot then Dougie? I thocht ye always wanted a chance tae skipper the boat yersel'?”
“Indeed I did, Dan,” replied the disconsolate Mate: “but the Gleska office will not let me do it! They say that for the insurance we have to have an experienced Captain and they're sending wan down to Brodick on board the
King Edward
tomorrow morning.”
“Well, Ah'm vexed for ye,” said the Engineer generously, “but at least we'll no hae to drum wir heels in Lamlash for a week. So why are ye lookin' like a wet December funeral?”
“For the same reason ass you will be in a meenit,” responded the Mate dolefully. “Wance I tell you who the relief skipper iss goin' to be. They're sendin' doon Cadger Campbell.”