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Shon Mcgann’s Tobogan Ride
by
“Are you going to pass the liniment, Pretty Pierre?” It was Jo Gordineer said that.
What the Prophet of Israel did say–Israel and Ireland were identical to Shon–was never told.
Shon’s bubbling sarcasm was full-stopped by the beneficent savour that, rising now from the hands of the four, silenced all irrelevant speech. It was a function of importance. It was not simply necessary to say How! or Here’s reformation! or I look towards you! As if by a common instinct, the Honourable, Jo Gordineer, and Pretty Pierre, turned towards Shon and lifted their glasses. Jo Gordineer was going to say: “Here’s a safe foot in the stirrups to you,” but he changed his mind and drank in silence.
Shon’s eye had been blazing with fun, but it took on, all at once, a misty twinkle. None of them had quite bargained for this. The feeling had come like a wave of soft lightning, and had passed through them. Did it come from the Irishman himself? Was it his own nature acting through those who called him “partner”?
Pretty Pierre got up and kicked savagely at the wood in the big fireplace. He ostentatiously and needlessly put another log of Norfolk-pine upon the fire.
The Honourable gaily suggested a song.
“Sing us ‘Avec les Braves Sauvages,’ Pierre,” said Jo Gordineer.
But Pierre waved his fingers towards Shon: “Shon, his song–he did not finish–on the glacier. It is good we hear all. ‘Hein?'”
And so Shon sang:
“Oh it’s down the long side of Farcalladen Rise.”
The sleeper on the pine branches stirred nervously, as if the song were coming through a dream to him. At the third verse he started up, and an eager, sun-burned face peered from the half-darkness at the singer. The Honourable was sitting in the shadow, with his back to the new actor in the scene.
“For it’s rest when the gallop is over, my men I
And it’s here’s to the lads that have ridden their last!
And it’s here’s–“
Shon paused. One of those strange lapses of memory came to him which come at times to most of us concerning familiar things. He could get no further than he did on the mountain side. He passed his hand over his forehead, stupidly:–“Saints forgive me; but it’s gone from me, and sorra the one can I get it; me that had it by heart, and the lad that wrote it far away. Death in the world, but I’ll try it again!
“For it’s rest when the gallop is over, my men!
And it’s here’s to the lads that have ridden their last!
And it’s here’s–“
Again he paused.
But from the half-darkness there came a voice, a clear baritone:
“And here’s to the lasses we leave in the glen,
With a smile for the future, a sigh for the past.”
At the last words the figure strode down into the firelight.
“Shon, old friend, don’t you know me?”
Shon had started to his feet at the first note of the voice, and stood as if spellbound.
There was no shaking of hands. Both men held each other hard by the shoulders, and stood so for a moment looking steadily eye to eye.
Then Shon said: “Duke Lawless, there’s parallels of latitude and parallels of longitude, but who knows the tomb of ould Brian Borhoime?”
Which was his way of saying, “How come you here”? Duke Lawless turned to the others before he replied. His eyes fell on the Honourable. With a start and a step backward, and with a peculiar angry dryness in his voice, he said:
“Just Trafford!”
“Yes,” replied the Honourable, smiling, “I have found you.”
“Found me! And why have you sought me? Me, Duke Lawless? I should have thought–“
The Honourable interrupted: “To tell you that you are Sir Duke Lawless.”
“That? You sought me to tell me that?”
“I did.”
“You are sure? And for naught else?”
“As I live, Duke.”