Roger Noons
A Pint of Seventy Shillings
‘You’re
late tonight?’ the Landlord said, as the door banged shut behind David
McLean.
‘Had a bit of excitement Sandy, that’s for
sure.’
There was silence as Macdonald filled the
pint tankard; Davy licking his lips in anticipation.
‘Well?’ he said placing the glass on the
counter, but he had to wait until the ploughman had swallowed half the
contents.
‘Ah, that’s better!’
‘So what happened, sow get out again?’
‘Plane come down in a field at the
Farm.’
‘Floors Farm?’
He nodded, took another drink, and
appreciated he had the attention of all the assembled patrons.
‘German, Messerschmitt, it was.’
‘What’s a Gerry plane doing up
here?’
Davy shrugged. ‘Helped the pilot out of his
parachute, hurt his leg when he landed.’ He swallowed the rest of his pale ale
and offered the glass to the Landlord.
‘You sure, you’ve not been at Elspeth’s
parsnip wine?’
He shook his head. ‘That was the first
today, so I’m ready for another.’
Sandy made no move to refill the tankard.
‘Where is he then, this German pilot?’
‘Home Guard took him off to
Busby.’
Shaking his head, the Landlord said,
‘You’ll have half o’ light and then you’re finished for
tonight.’
There was murmuring and the half dozen
drinkers resumed their games of crib.
‘It’s true, honest,’ Davy
appealed.
Macdonald placed the half pint glass on the
bar. ‘Drink that and then you’re away home.’
‘The pilot was asking to see the Duke of
Hamilton.’
The Landlord’s expression darkened and he
retrieved the glass. ‘Get off home, Davy, now.’
A plane
carrying Rudolph Hess landed in a field 10 miles south of Glasgow on 10 May
1941.
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