FOREWORD
This short story is an homage to one of the greatest wordsmiths who ever lived. Some of you will get it and others may not. Don't worry if you don't understand to which famous scribe I am referring. Just search for "famous Scottish Halloween poem" and hopefully you'll find what you're looking for.
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As a regional sales rep, driving thousands of miles a year in his boring company car, Thomas Hunter usually found himself staying in boring hotels in boring towns that all looked alike. Very rarely he found somewhere slightly off the beaten track that was not another clone of every other place and could offer him something different and more interesting. Sometimes he was lucky, going those extra miles to somewhere no sales rep had gone before. On one occasion he stayed in a Vietnamese family guest house, enjoying some of the best food he had ever eaten, and another time he found a ranch house with log cabins and an excellent barbecue grill restaurant.
This time he was sure he would find an interesting place to stay the night. Tom didn't have to hurry home to Cathy. Cathy Sark had been his childhood sweetheart and they lived together for a couple of years before getting married last summer, so she was used to him being on the road most weeks. Nevertheless, when he called home earlier that week she had been annoyed to hear he had to visit a client late on Friday afternoon and wouldn't be back home in time for the annual neighbourhood Halloween party.
Tom thought about changing his plans, but when Cathy called him back the next day he set aside any concern that she might nurse her wrath and keep it warm. She was in a good mood, having arranged to visit a friend on Friday evening and stay overnight. With no reason to hurry home, Tom decided to take a detour on some country roads after his Friday afternoon appointment, find somewhere off the beaten track to stay the night and then drive home slowly on Saturday, taking his time to enjoy the scenery and avoid the motorways, or "moronways" as he was wont to call them.
The "peepers" who flocked to this neck of the woods to admire nature's annual silvan extravaganza were long gone. The narrow roads were lined with pale yellow mounds and only the very last of the golden and russet leaves of autumn were still clinging to the trees.
As Tom drove into the old market town there was a minor diversion due to road repairs on a hump backed bridge next to an old church and graveyard. Once he got his bearings, Tom quickly found the small family-run hotel he had booked. He was pleased his hunch was correct and he enjoyed an excellent dinner, with home-made venison pie and a couple of glasses of very good red wine.
After dinner he set off to find the Brewer's Droop, a local pub recommended by the hotel waiter, which was situated on the other side of the narrow stream that ran through the town. Tom called Cathy on her mobile a couple of times that evening, but she didn't answer, so he gave up and decided to settle back and enjoy the company of the regulars in the old pub. Everyone was extremely friendly and welcoming, but he drank a bit more than he had intended. That was largely due to the warm welcome and the encouragement of the other drinkers.
In the cosy confines of the pub, the boozy locals recounted tales of notable characters from previous generations who had supped ale with the best of them. In the good old days, the town blacksmith had allegedly drunk a beer for every horse's hoof he shod. A couple of farm labourers, Billy Chapman and Johnny Souter, generally regarded as rambling, blustering, drunken boasters, had spent every market day in the pub until they couldn't stand and had to be carried home.
Tom insisted on paying for a round of drinks and was rewarded by his newfound friends plying him with more stories, beers and whisky. Time flew by as tales of comedy, tragedy, love, betrayal and the supernatural followed one after the other. Drink was a recurring theme and even the women of the town were far from sober it seemed. A young widow, Jean Kirkton, was said to have grieved for her lost love by drowning her sorrows in the pub every Friday night for a year before she eventually stumbled or threw herself into the river one night and was found in the morning, well and truly drowned. Legend had it that her soul was saved, because her body had washed up on a small sandbank in the middle of the river and the devil and his acolytes could not cross running water to reach her.