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Tom
Trowler had had one too many. As he made his way out of the Grouse
Inn in semi-darkness, he missed the step and stumbled forward, almost
falling flat on his face.
"Mind
how you go, Tom," said old George Butterworth, as he followed
Tom out of the pub. "Are you gonna be alreet?"
"Aye,"
replied Tom, regaining has balance and looking over his shoulder
at George. "There"s nowt wrong wi me, lad
G'night."
"Night,
Tom." George was older than Tom by at least 20 years, but he
didn't mind being called lad. He stood for a moment and watched
Tom set off down the road towards Grassington, shaking his head
as Tom lurched first to the right and then to the left, before disappearing
into the night. "These young uns can't take their ale,"
he said, out loud. "It"s a good job tomorrow's a Sunday."
George turned and strode off in the opposite direction.
As
Tom continued along the road, guided by the silhouette of the dry-stone
walls on either side, he gradually sobered enough to keep a reasonably
straight line. And as he heard the sound of running water, he found
the gap-stile in the wall, beside the beck, and squeezed through
it. Suddenly clouds that had obscured the moon parted, and the moon
showed through, illuminating a grassy track: a shortcut that avoided
the mine-workings and led, via a ravine, almost directly to Tom's
cottage in Skyrehome. If he hadn't been so drunk, he might have
felt guilty about coming home to his family so late; though it did
cross his mind that his wife would give him the sharp edge of her
tongue again. But, he'd worked hard at the lead mine all week, earned
his pay, and
well, why shouldn't he have a pint or two?
He
cursed as his right foot caught an exposed tree root, causing him
to stumble off the path and crash into a sapling. Then he almost
jumped out of his skin, as a startled grouse, broke cover and took
to the air, berating him with its noisy distress call. Tom cursed
again, shook his fist towards the receding sound, then continued
downhill, slipping on the dewy grass but managing to stay upright,
and soon nearing the lower end of the ravine where the path began
to level out.
The
moon was still lighting Tom's way, but mist, rising from nearby
marshy ground, began to drift across the path. And as the mist thickened
around him, he heard someone or something ahead. He stopped and
listened. Somewhere in the distance, a sheep bleated, but apart
from the gurgling of the nearby stream, there was no other sound.
He shrugged and walked on a few paces then stopped. There it was
again, but this time closer: a swift four-legged animal, coming
straight towards him. Tom stepped off the path as the sound grew
louder, but his foot found a rabbit hole, and he toppled over into
the bracken as the creature came closer. "It's a wolf,"
Tom thought, as he heard the animal panting, and, frightened, he
raised his arms defensively. But again the sound stopped. Tom couldn't
believe it. He was sure he'd heard a wolf, or perhaps a large dog,
only a few paces away. It was then that he remembered the story
of the gill ghost: a huge grey hound that supposedly roamed the
gill at night.
Tom
strained his eyes and ears, but he could see and hear nothing; just
the mist and the gurgling stream. He scrambled to his feet, dismissing
the idea as an old wives' tale. Perhaps he had had too much ale.
That must be it. There's no such thing as ghosts; two-legged or
four-legged. He laughed at his own foolishness and continued on
along the path, then froze. Somewhere behind him, a beast had begun
to howl. The sound seemed to pierce his very soul. Then again he
heard the panting and the sound of the beast racing towards him.
Tom ran for his life, blundering off the path, forcing his way through
the bracken and stumbling over unseen obstacles, until finally he
stepped into a void and fell, tumbling head over heels and landing
with a splash.
Tom
lay on his back in the stream. "Please, God!" he screamed
out loud. "Please don"t let it kill me!" Then, out
of the mist, loomed the beast. It stood on top of the small embankment
that Tom had just fallen from. It was a huge silvery-grey hound.
As it looked down at Tom, its tongue lolled from its mouth and its
fang-like teeth glinted in the moonlight. Then, as it leaped from
the embankment and fell towards him, Tom tried to move, but his
limbs were made of lead and, as the grey shadow devoured him, he
tried to scream but no sound left his lips. But then, just as suddenly
as the hound had appeared, it was gone, seeming to have dissolve
into the mist.
Tom's
heart was beating so loudly it was the only sound he could hear.
Slowly he rolled over and struggled to his knees and, shivering
with cold and fear, he clambered out of the beck and somehow found
his way back to the footpath. And as he staggered back to the safety
of his cottage, he vowed never to drink or to take that way home
again.
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