The Cloch Lighthouse, Gourock, Scotland (my home town) was built by Robert Louis Stevenson's grandfather.
My name is Robert G Stevenson and I have a father called Thomas and so it was with Robert Louis Stevenson.
“The body is a house of many windows: there we all sit, showing ourselves and crying on the passers-by to come and love us.” Robert Louis Stevenson
In  his diaries the Reverend Aston was a meticulous recorder of  Coldharbour’s weather and in the winter of 1869 he made a note in a  margin intimating that it had been the very worst of conditions within  living memory. 
‘It  had started thus with a snow blizzard that lasted for more than seven  days, followed on its heels by several more inches of the miserable  stuff. At times like these one has to question why we live in this  particular place, which at it rawest feels like the very edge of the  world.’
Now  the Reverend could never be described as a despondent soul, on the  contrary it always seemed as if the Holy Spirit was forever bouncing  around inside the man. So when the cold weather started to penetrate the  religious shores of our good Reverend, one could only guess as to the  impact of the weather on the other less sturdy residents of the town. 
It  should be remembered dear reader that these were the days before the  rail passed within a few miles of the town. Oban, for instance, would be  a good day’s ride by cart and would not be attempted lightly. Many  folks found work in Fort William, Tyndrum and Inveraray and to lessen  the cost would stay in those locations for most of the week. It didn’t  take much to consider making the move permanent and so month by month  the once healthy population of Coldharbour began to drift and diminish. 
The  loss was nothing new, the valleys and slopes of the West Highlands were  awash with ghost towns. A few caused by the Clearances but many more  were for more basic economic reasons - the young could not find  employment and the severe weather only made matters worse. 
Every  night the Reverend Aston prayed for an answer to his problem. With his  flock evaporating there would soon be no need for his services and  although his faith was never in doubt, he did write a letter to his  brother in Glasgow to enquire after churches that were on the lookout  for a minister. Perhaps God wanted him to be of service in another way. 
All  mortal souls cower in the blackness of night and imagine the darkest of  thoughts and, if lucky, the lightest of dreams – ideas that are washed  and bleached by the morning light and very rarely crossed again until  the next sleepless night. But sometimes in those sad and wistful  thoughts solutions are forged. It is as if the universe has been  listening and delivers hope in a routine that was not envisaged. One of  those answers came in the shape of two men who arrived by coach on a  summer’s evening. 
They  took rooms at the Covenanters Inn, an old coaching house on the Glasgow  to Oban route. It was probably kindness itself to say that this  establishment had seen better days. As the town’s population fell so  young Stuart McAndrew, the Inn’s owner, was already making plans to move  to North Carolina to join his elder brother Alex who had made a tidy  sum growing tobacco. 
Of  the two men who stepped from the coach that evening, the younger was a  gangly youth of perhaps eighteen years of age. He answered to the name  of Robert and the elder gentleman was his father Thomas. 
Thomas Stevenson was one of the Lighthouse Stevensons, his own father having successfully built several lauded examples around the country. Thomas was carrying on the tradition which he hoped to pass on to his own son.
Robert  was in the middle of studying engineering at Edinburgh University and  in the summer months would accompany his father on his tours where they  would inspect possible sites for more lighthouses. Their halt at  Coldharbour had been unavoidable as the road to the open sea was blocked  by a large rock fall – a common occurrence in these parts. They planned  to continue by ferry on to the Isle of Mull when the opportunity  dictated. 
Word  had got back to the Reverend Aston about the latest arrivals and he,  being a man who believed that God moved in mysterious ways, sent a note  to invite them to dinner the following evening. 
Thomas,  the father, did most of the talking that evening but the Reverend  Aston's eye was always drawn to the boy who appeared to be noting many  points of their conversations.
“Are you committing my utterances to paper young man?“
There was no reaction to this question from the scribbler. 
“Robert,  the Reverend has asked you a question, please be so good as to offer a  reply. Goodness knows there are times when you try even my patience.”
“It is of no consequence” said the kindly Reverend “it is merely a light hearted exchange.” 
“My  son is studying to be an engineer but he is forever writing stories of  one nature or another. You have no need to be alarmed, the words are not  accountable to you.I can assure you."
In  some ways the Reverend looked disappointed not to be considered worthy  enough to be noted in the book. After a fine meal and several whiskies  the discussion got around to the business of Thomas and Robert.
“Lighthouses, you say. So you are the famous Thomas Stevenson.”
Thomas  was genuinely pleased at this description, after all what they were  involved in was dangerous work, yet it saved so many lives and he  thanked the Almighty that he was able to serve in such a manner. 
When  the evening was complete, the Stevensons trudged their way back to The  Covenanters and as they did so, the spark of an idea flickered just  behind the eyes of  Reverend Aston, one that was to gestate and present  itself in all its glory the next day.
“Eureka!” was exclaimed in a full rounded Glasgow accent and woke the startled Mistress Aston the following morning. 
“Have you lost your senses husband?” 
“On the contrary, I may have just found them.” 
And  so the Reverend Aston explained to his ever patient wife about the need  for a lighthouse at Old Man’s Corner. Apparently there had been several  ships which had headed for Davy Jones’ locker off that particularly  dangerous headland.
“And  to what ends? There have been ships sinking all over the West dear  husband which have never had you this excited" stated his wife with even  more patience than normal. 
“Why  woman, to bring people back to Coldharbour, labourers will be needed,  as will bricklayers and cooks and carpenters and...well you can see my  point.”
And she could. 
She  could see it very well and for the first time, in a long time, she  looked at her husband with new eyes and liked what she saw.
So  with all haste the Reverend rushed around to The Covenanters Inn and  placed his proposal in front of the gentleman and his boy.Money  for the build would have to be begged, borrowed and raised but when  they sat around the table and the finances were considered, it seemed  that it was indeed possible. Plans would be drawn up over the winter and  if all was well, building could start in late May when the tides would  be beneficial and the weather would be more kindly.
Fund  raising began almost straight away with dances being held in the  village hall and in one of the larger rooms of The Covenanters. This  brought in folks from surrounding farms and villages and caused Stuart   McAndrew to delay his departure for New World. 
It  was agreed the following spring that Robert and his uncle David would  oversee the build as Thomas was already committed to the building of a  new lighthouse in the far reaches of the Orkney Isles. Robert agreed to  this without hesitation, his uncle was the more lenient of the brothers  and this would allow time for Robert to write the stories which had  begun to occupy more of his time. 
By  the May of the following year everything was underway. Money had been  raised and although the final payment from Edinburgh was still  outstanding, the Reverend saw no need to panic. He had prayed long and  hard about the problem and felt assured that his prayers would not be  ignored by the Almighty. 
The  Covenanters Inn was so full that three or more men were sharing each of  the fourteen rooms. The only exception was Robert and his uncle who  were given a room to themselves. However they decided to sleep in one  room and use the second bedroom as offices.
Within  three weeks the foundation of the lighthouse had been laid and the  weather had indeed been kind. On the nights that Robert walked by  himself back from the headland he would always see a forlorn face  staring from the upper windows of The Covenanters which he assumed was  Stuart. This type of behaviour intrigued Robert and each night it would  be written into some story or another. 
The  Reverend’s dream of a re-populated  Coldharbour was beginning to take  form. The workers at the hotel were missing their families that they had  left in the outlying areas and so small shacks were built to  accommodate the wives and children. This meant more money being spent in  the village shop and more pews filled in the local churches. 
During  the long daylight hours that were available in such northern latitudes,  the men would work the sixteen hours from sun up to sun set. Every  second evening, and although working hard himself, Robert would set up a  room in the village hall for the children and read them one of his  latest stories. One such popular story was The Mutiny of The Hispaniola.  For much of his childhood Robert had been confined to his bed with  sicknesses and illnesses which were far from the norm. This led to a  lonely existence whereupon he wrote little stories to entertain himself  while the children of Edinburgh were running and screaming in the  streets below. He was still unhappy with the title of the story but he  knew that there should be the word Treasure in it. 
His  uncle David, although a kindly and considerate man, was forever  chastising his nephew over the time that was wasted on such trivial  nonsense – this did not stop Robert however, indeed he felt compelled in  not only continuing but increasing his activities in the business of  story writing and telling. 
Needless  to say reports were getting back to his father that Robert was a less  than enthusiastic engineer and this would have prompted a visit from  Thomas at some point in the summer had circumstances not dictated  otherwise. 
On the morning of the 7th  of June a body was found half concealed on the far side of Old Man’s  Corner. It was the corpse of a twenty four year old labourer from Dublin  by the name of Patrick – no one used a surname in these parts as they  were very rarely given with any honesty. Those who toiled in such  environments were more than likely to be on the run from one authority  or another.  
Reverend  Aston had sent a messenger to the nearest garrison at Fort William  describing the death of the young man. He did so with some reluctance as  this type of news would discourage the movement of families to the  area.A  note was sent back to Coldharbour that due to the imminent visit of   Queen Victoria most of the military were engaged elsewhere but that a  most competent fellow would be sent when available.
In  the absence of any authority Robert took it upon himself to investigate  the death with a mind to passing on the findings to whoever was  assigned to the case at a later date. 
Patrick  had shared a room with three other Irishmen who all professed innocence  of knowing anything about anything and Robert felt that the situation  was not likely to improve any time soon.The  local doctor reported back that the man's head wound was probably  caused by a blunt instrument, although a fall on the rocks could have  had the same effect. The suspicious element was the way the body was  found, as if someone or something had attempted to hide their handy  work.
Robert  had to agree with the doctor, that even if he had slipped it was very  unlikely that with such a grave injury to the head that the man would  have crawled into the grass. It was suggested that he may he been trying  to keep warm but the doctor felt that the body had been carried to that  spot. So it was murder and Robert felt the hairs stand on the back of  his neck. Half of him was shocked at the violence and the other half  hoping that he could find a good story in it all. 
Patrick, if that was his name, seemed to have been a well liked fellow with no obvious enemies. After sending the majority of his earnings home to his family, he was known to share what little he had left  with his room mates.
Robert  was ashamed of his poor detective skills which were under ever  increasing pressure from David who wanted him to get his mind back on  more practical matters – like building a lighthouse.  
There  had to be something he was missing, or rather someone, surely the  culprit would have gone on the run after attempting to hide the body. If  it was one of the labourers who were so used to covering their tracks,  then the game was up. Robert Louis decided he would talk to the one man  who knew what went on in The Covenanters Inn.
Stuart  was nowhere to be seen. Apparently he had gone to Inverness to attend  some business meeting or other and was unsure when he would return. A  thought went through Robert’s head that he dared not speak. 
So  either Robert could  wait for Stuart’s return or make a trip himself to  Inverness - assuming that was where Stuart was, and for a second he  wanted to say, hiding. 
Robert  rode to Fort William by horse and on to Inverness by the midday coach.  By dusk he had arrived in the town just as the centre market was packing  up for the night. On the off chance Robert asked the coachman if he had  transported or had known of anyone fitting Stuart’s description and by  luck he had. 
“Strange fellows” 
“Fellows?” 
“Aye, there were two of them and one kept his face covered.”
“Do you know where they were headed?”
“I heard one of them say they would try the hotel on Castle Street.”
So Robert set off with all haste for the hotel. 
The  receptionist had no one of the name of Stuart McAndrew. The only  fellows that she had roomed in the past five days were a young doctor  and his patient.For whatever reason Robert asked for their room number and the receptionist, for whatever reason, gave it to him.
Robert  knocked the door of room 12. Inside he could hear people moving around  very quickly and a door being slammed. He knocked again. 
The door opened an inch and an eye looked out. 
“Yes?” It was Stuart. 
“It’s me, Robert Stevenson I've come to talk to you. There has been a dreadful occurrence at the Inn.”
“It’s me, Robert Stevenson I've come to talk to you. There has been a dreadful occurrence at the Inn.”
“Please go away. Please for your own sake.”
Suddenly a door inside the room was kicked open by a person who moved in the shadows. 
“Looked what you’ve done, don’t say I didn’t warn you.” 
Robert rushed in and helped Stuart wrestle the man to the ground, a man who had the strength of four men. 
“Don’t hurt him, he’s my brother.”
And  sure enough when they had finally got the frightened creature under  control, Robert could see just that – the man was Stuart’s identical  twin. 
“He’s  ill you see, my brother Ian. Always has been. He killed the young  Irishman for no other reason than he could. All I ask you is that you  give us some time to leave and we will never be in your lives again.  There is a ship leaving Greenock for New York two days from now and we  intend to be on it. Alex our elder brother will take care of us in the  Carolinas.”
As  Robert descended the stairs he felt troubled, the poor Irishman had not  deserved his fate and who was to say that Ian would not do the same in  the New World. 
He  asked the receptionist for a pen and paper and decided to write a note  to the local magistrate explaining Ian and Stuart’s circumstances and  that they intended to leave via Greenock. It would be up to the  authorities to deal with the consequences. 
As he folded the paper he caught sight of the false names that the twins had used; Doctor Jekyll and Mister Hyde.

Hey Bobby
ReplyDeleteGreat blogs. By the way I am a 30 year old Masters of Political Science(57%) from Kolkata, India. My hobbies are quizzing, playing chess and creative writing. I have written for TIG Blogs and also for the NGO CRY. Nice to see some one in the similar job. Great,way to go.
Hiya, thank you very much for taking the time to read the story and I hope you enjoyed it. Many thanks for the feedback.
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