Simon Grant, who had handled many skulls in his time, was immediately taken by the shape of the head, the colouring, and the fineness of the features. He got a close view of it as he turned to lift his rucksack off the seat and make room for the man beside him. “Lovely day,” he said, with a friendly smile.
The dark eyes steadied upon him for an incurious moment. “Yes.” Then the man settled himself and the old country bus rattled on.
Grant turned his face away and stared through the glass, disconcerted by that objective look. There had been no feeling in it, no human interest, yet a very little more of it would have scattered his wits. A demobbed officer of his county regiment, he thought . . . descent through Highland landowners . . . definitely archaic, he decided, using a vague word for a start. They had entered on a vast stretch of vacant moorland, backed by mountain ridges of no particular height in the flattening summer heat. The heather was a dead dark brown and, in the clear sunlight, held the tone of the man’s eyes.
Every seat in the bus was occupied, with two young fellows standing near the door, talking to the conductress in low voices and laughing now and then. He had been enjoying their country mannerisms, the Highland drawl, and had particularly observed the way they flattened themselves against glass and woodwork as the man beside him had entered.
Like himself, most of those on board were clearly visitors or tourists and it had been interesting to watch their behaviour, to glance at the shape of their bones, their colouring; to time, as it were, their reactions; for all this required no conscious effort, but on the contrary was once more a familiar amusement for one who had been ill and was restored to the sunlight with a pleasant and possibly exciting gamble ahead. For from the given facts—and Colonel Mackintosh, his chief, was celebrated for his scientific caution as an archaeologist—there was at least a sporting chance of finding a small hoard of skulls, each one of them, except for the possible “intrusion” of a round head, as long as—and now the word came to him—the Neolithic one on the man beside him.
His happy discovery was interrupted by two young women who suddenly saw a distant cow and a solitary cottage in a green depression of the moor where water meandered, and in the hubbub of wonder created by the word “lonely” Simon Grant said, “Excuse me, but I am going on to Kinlochoscar, and I just wondered if you might know Mr Donald Martin of Clachar House.”
The dark eyes considered him. “Yes.”
“Can you tell me if he happens to be at home?”
“Not at the moment, I believe.”
“Ah. Thank you.” Grant moved on his seat, flustered a trifle, and said, as he glanced out of the window. “I have a letter of introduction.”
The laughter over the cow and cottage ceased as amazement at the reality of loneliness held eyes to a long, unwinking stare. He saw one of the two lads in front turn his back, lower his head and whisper something to the conductress. She gave him a short jab with her elbow, which he seemed to enjoy; but presently, as she turned to cast a negligent glance over the bus, her eyes steadied for an instant on the man beside him. Her face was noticeably flushed.
Grant was not upset by his companion’s manifest desire not to engage in conversation. For himself, he never quite understood this silent mood of long-suffering which seemed to afflict so many of his countrymen when travelling, though he had often pondered it. In the present instance, however, it was something more, even quite other, than a taciturnity. The dark eyes had seemed to move over his face in an inscrutable guessing, a detached courtesy, yet set far back in them there had been for a moment something hard and solitary like a standing stone in an arid waste. This was what had flustered him, even if he now realised that he had probably seen no more than his own reflection. Besides, his thought was inclined to run to standing stones!
Slowly, mile by mile, the moor rose to its height, to a loch with pines and a gamekeeper’s house, the entrance to a concealed shooting lodge, and then the road tipped over as it passed between the mountains and began the descent of the gorge. The scenery was magnificent. An hour later they drew up before the hotel at Kinlochoscar.
Simon Grant had not written to the hotel, which was quite a large one, as early June had never been part of the “rush season”; but for the last few miles he had overheard enough talk to worry him. When he got out of the bus, he slung his rucksack over his shoulder and made for the reception office.
“No. I’m afraid I haven’t booked. I didn’t think—” The tall dark-haired manageress smiled and shook her head. “We’re absolutely full up.”
“Not even a corner—anywhere—until I look round?”
“No. We have quite a few sleeping out. “
“You mean—no chance even of private houses?” And now he was visibly concerned.
“Afraid not. But you could ask the postmaster. We have had to refuse many bookings.”
“Really,” said Grant. He scratched his close-cropped pointed ginger beard; his blue eyes quickened and glanced; his short slim body, his arms, moved with a restless energy.
“Since the war . . . people can’t get abroad . . . the same everywhere, I hear . . . unless you book it’s quite hopeless . . .” Recognising something unusual in the middle-aged figure before her, she was doing her best to explain; but now other travellers were pushing up to the desk. Grant suddenly awoke to them, smiled, thanked her, and then from a yard or two called, “The postmaster?”
She smiled to him between the heads of her guests. “You could try.”
The postmaster stopped serving a small girl with groceries and also shook his head, but ultimately told him to try Mrs MacPherson. After Grant had been to four houses, he realised that he was taking part in an old Highland game: no one liked to leave him without hope. It was a haphazard attractive village at the head of a sea-loch. When he got back to the hotel he saw a solitary suitcase on the stretch of gravel where the bus had drawn up. He had quite forgotten that he possessed such a thing. Having wiped his forehead and resettled his hat—an old tweed affair—he picked up the suitcase and struggled with it towards the hotel entrance where a porter was good enough to take it from him. He intercepted the manageress in the hall; she smiled sympathetically and said she half feared all along that his hunt would be hopeless. He wiped his forehead again, dropped his hat, and smiled. They discussed the situation. His only hope, it appeared, seeing, as he said, he did not mind where he slept, was at the small township of Clachar, which, unfortunately, was three miles away. That, Grant assured her, would suit him excellently. “Remember, I’m promising you nothing——” she was beginning to explain, when he responded with a certain eye-flash: “But I could try?” He had a rather high-pitched but pleasant laugh. In the end it was agreed that he could partake of the early afternoon tea provided for guests arriving by the bus, leave his suitcase in the hotel, and then set out on foot for Clachar, seeing he would rather not wait until six o’clock “or maybe a little later”—when an hotel car would be available. She turned back to him, “If you’re absolutely stuck for a bed for the night—I’m promising you nothing, remember, for, to tell the truth, I’m frightened to ask how the maids are sleeping in the attic——” “But I shouldn’t mind an attic—even though—even if——” His momentary earnestness broke as he stumbled, and they both laughed. The touch of colour enhanced her appearance, and as he went to wash he decided that for one so busy the manageress was a charming woman.
Refreshed and with the rucksack firmly settled on his back, Simon Grant apologised to the manageress for troubling her once more but wondered if by any chance she could tell him where he might find Mr Martin of Clachar House.
She gave him a glance. “Why, yes—I saw him about a few minutes ago.” She walked to the hotel door. “There he is,” she said quietly, drawing back a pace. And Grant saw a man coming round the corner of the hotel and setting out alone along the Clachar road. It was the man who had sat beside him in the bus.