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The Last Anderson of Deeside
by
“Walter Anderson turned his heid to the wa’. ‘Oh, my mither! my ain mither!’ he said, but I could hardly hear him sayin’ it. Then more fiercely than he had yet spoken he turned on me an’ said, ‘Wha sent ye here to torment me before my time?’
* * * * *
“I saw young Walter juist yince mair in life. I stepped doon to see him the next mornin’ when the end was near. He was catchin’ and twitchin’ at the coverlet, liftin’ up his hand an’ lookin’ at it as though it was somebody else’s. It was a black fog outside, an’ even in the garret it took him in his throat till he couldna get breath.
“He motioned for me to sit doon beside him. There was nae chair, so I e’en gat doon on my knees. The lass stood white an’ quaite at the far side o’ the bed. He turned his een on me, blue an’ bonnie as a bairn’s; but wi’ a licht in them that telled he had eaten o’ the tree o’ knowledge, and that no’ seldom.
“‘O Sandy,’ he whispered, ‘what a mess I’ve made o’t, haven’t I? You’ll see my mither when ye gang back to Deeside. Tell her it’s no’ been so bad as it has whiles lookit. Tell her I’ve aye loved her, even at the warst–an’–an’ my faither too!’ he said, with a kind o’ grip in his words.
“‘Walter,’ says I, ‘I’ll pit up a prayer, as I’m on my knees onyway.’ I’m no’ giftit like some, I ken; but, Robert, I prayed for that laddie gaun afore his Maker as I never prayed afore or since. And when I spak’ aboot the forgiein’ o’ sin, the laddie juist steekit his een an’ said ‘Amen!’
“That nicht as the clock was chappin’ twal’ the lassie cam’ to my door (an’ the landlady wasna that weel pleased at bein’ raised, eyther), an’ she askit me to come an’ see Walter, for there was naebody else that had kenned him in his guid days. So I took my stave an’ my plaid an’ gaed my ways wi’ her intil the nicht–a’ lichtit up wi’ lang raws o’ gas-lamps, an’ awa’ doon by the water-side whaur the tide sweels black aneath the brigs. Man, a big lichtit toun at nicht is far mair lanesome than the Dullarg muir when it’s black as pit-mirk. When we got to the puir bit hoosie, we fand that the doctor was there afore us. I had gotten him brocht to Walter the nicht afore. But the lassie was nae sooner within the door than she gied an unco-like cry, an’ flang hersel’ distrackit on the bed. An’ there I saw, atween her white airms and her tangled yellow hair, the face o’ Walter Anderson, the son o’ the manse o’ Deeside, lyin’ on the pillow wi’ the chin tied up in a napkin!
“Never a sermon like that, Robert Adair!” said Saunders M’Quhirr solemnly, after he had paused a moment.
Saunders and Robert were now turning off the wind-swept muir-road into the sheltered little avenue which led up to the kirk above the white and icebound Dee Water. The aged gravedigger, bent nearly double, met them where the roads parted. A little farther up the newly elected minister of the parish kirk stood at the manse door, in which Walter Anderson had turned the key forty years ago for conscience’ sake.
Very black and sombre looked the silent company of mourners who now drew together about the open grave–a fearsome gash on the white spread of the new-fallen snow. There was no religious service at the minister’s grave save that of the deepest silence. Ranked round the coffin, which lay on black bars over the grave-mouth, stood the elders, but no one of them ventured to take the posts of honour at the head and the foot. The minister had left not one of his blood with a right to these positions. He was the last Anderson of Deeside.