At the Pistols Point

E.W. Hornung
At the Pistol's Point E. W. Hornung
The Strand, 1897

THE church bells were ringing for evensong, croaking across the snow
with short, harsh strokes, as though the frost had eaten into the metal
and made it hoarse. Outside, the scene had all the cheery sparkle, all the
peaceful glamour, of an old-fashioned Christmas card. There was the
snow-covered village, there the church-spire coated all down one side,
the chancel windows standing out like oil-paintings, the silver sickle of
a moon, the ideal thatched cottage with the warm, red light breaking
from the open door, and the peace of Heaven seemingly pervading and
enveloping all. Yet on earth we know that this peace is not; and the
door of the ideal cottage had been opened and was shut by a crushed
woman, whose husband had but now refused her pennies for the plate,
with a curse which followed her into the snow. And the odour
prevailing beneath the thatched roof was one of hot brandy-and-water,
mingled with the fumes of some rank tobacco.
Old Fitch was over sixty years of age, and the woman on her way to
church was his third wife; she had borne him no child, nor had Fitch
son or daughter living who would set foot inside his house. He was a
singular old man, selfish and sly and dissolute, yet not greatly disliked
beyond his own door, and withal a miracle of health and energy for his
years. He drank to his heart's content, but he was never drunk, nor was
Sunday's bottle ever known to lose him the soft side of Monday's
bargain. By trade he was game-dealer, corn-factor, money-lender, and
mortgagee of half the village; in appearance, a man of medium height,
with bow-legs and immense round shoulders, a hard mouth, shrewd
eyes, and wiry hair as white as the snow outside.
The bells ceased, and for a moment there was no sound in the cottage
but the song of the kettle on the hob. Then Fitch reached for the

brandy-bottle, and brewed himself another steaming bumper. As he
watched the sugar dissolve, a few notes from the organ reached his ears,
and. the old man smiled cynically as he sipped and smacked his lips. At
his elbow his tobacco-pipe and the weekly newspaper were ranged with
the brandy-bottle, and he was soon in enjoyment of all three. Over the
paper Fitch had already fallen asleep after a particularly hearty mid-day
meal, but he had not so much as glanced at the most entertaining pages,
and he found them now more entertaining than usual. There was a
scandal in high life running to several columns, and sub-divided into
paragraphs labelled with the most pregnant headlines; the old man's
mouth watered as he determined to leave this item to the last. It was not
the only one of interest; there were several suicides, an admirable
execution, a burglary, and--what? Fitch frowned as his quick eye came
tumbling down a paragraph; then all at once he gasped out an oath and
sat very still. The pipe in his mouth went out, the brandy-and-water was
cooling in his glass; you might have heard them singing the psalms in
the church hard by; but the old man heard nothing, saw nothing,
thought of nothing but the brief paragraph before his eyes.
'ESCAPE FROM PORTLAND.
'ONE CONVICT KILLED, ANOTHER WOUNDED, BUT A THIRD
GETS CLEAN AWAY.
'The greatest excitement was caused at Weymouth yesterday morning
on the report being circulated that several convicts had effected their
escape from the grounds of the Portland convict establishment. There
appears to have been a regularly concerted plan on the part of the
prisoners working in one of the outdoor gangs to attempt to regain their
liberty, as yesterday morning three convicts bolted simultaneously from
their party. They were instantly challenged to stop, but as the order was
not complied with, the warders fired several shots. One of the runaways
fell dead, and another was so badly wounded that he was immediately
recaptured, and is now lying in a precarious condition. The third man,
named Henry Cattermole, continued his course despite a succession of
shots, and was soon beyond range of the rifles. He was pursued for
some distance, but was ultimately lost to view in the thick fog which

prevailed. A hue and cry was raised, and search parties continued to
scour the neighbourhood long after dark, but up to a late hour his
recapture had not been effected. Cattermole will be remembered as the
man who was sentenced to death some years ago for the murder of
Lord Wolborough's game-keeper, near Bury St. Edmund's, but who
afterwards received the benefit of the doubt involved in the production
of a wad which did not fit the convict's gun. In spite of the
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