The old lady took Ben's hand. 'Help me upstairs and I'll show you your room. I'll have dinner ready for you

both at seven. Come on, Ned, good boy!'

The Labrador looked questioningly at Ben. 'I don't mind the nap, but a bath's out of the question. It's not half an

hour since I had a good scratch and lick!'

Ben tugged at the black Lab's tail as they went upstairs. 'Miz Winn means me, not you!'

It was a comfortable room with a soft, old-fashioned bed. Ben picked up a framed sepia photograph from the

bedside table. A young man and woman with two small boys stood on a palm-fronded verandah. The boy studied it.

'Hmm, looks like India or Ceylon, some sort of plantation.'

Mrs. Winn was mildly surprised at her strange guest's knowledge, yet looking at his wise blue eyes, it seemed

right somehow that he should know about the photograph. 'Your second guess was correct, Ben. It's Ceylon. That's

my son Jim with his family—he manages a tea plantation for a British company out there. I've not yet seen his wife

Lilian, or the children. That photograph is all I have of them. Maybe someday they'll come over for a visit....'

Mrs. Winn suddenly looked very sad, and she sighed. 'Still, maybe it would be better for me if they stayed in

Ceylon.'

Ben became curious. 'Why do you say that, Winnie?'

She shuffled slowly out of the room as she replied. 'I'll tell you at dinner. Stay where you are, lad, I can manage

going downstairs on my own quite well.'

After a good hot bath, Ben dressed in a clean change of clothing from his canvas bag and lay on the bed,

watching a shaft of late day sunlight on the floral wallpaper. Birdsong from the garden and the distant rumble of a

train sounded pleasant and comforting. He drifted off into a slumber, happy that Ned and he had found somewhere to

stay.

The dream stole unbidden into his sleep. Gale-force winds sweeping over a heaving deck, tattered sails framed

against a storm-ripped sky, great grey-green waves rushing across the raging main. He was clinging to the dog as they

were washed overboard through the shattered midship rails.

Water, water, the earth was awash in wild seawater, pounding in his ears, filling his nostrils, that odd faraway

sound of muffled breath escaping beneath the ocean's surface. Then spray churning white as he and the dog surfaced

in the vessel's wake. He tried to swim with one hand, whilst clinging to the dog's collar with the other, when he was

struck by a spar and his dream became cascades of colored lights, exploding from the darkness. A velvety calm

enveloped Ben as he floated off someplace in time and space. A gentle golden radiance filled his spirit when the

angel's voice called, soft as noon breeze in summer meadows.

'Rest here, stay awhile, help those in need of your gifts. Even in a place such as Chapelvale there are petty

tyrants and those whose hearts are ruled by greed. You and your dog must come to the aid of the good folk here. But,

hearken, at the sound of a single toll from a church bell, you must leave!' '

The message of the bell—a church bell this time—remained clear in Ben's mind, even as his dreams raced on,

over centuries, across seas, over mountains, through distant lands, wherever he and Ned had been sent to assist the op-

pressed in their struggle against villainy. He saw faces from the past, friends and enemies alike, felt the apprehension

of arrival, the joy of being part of so many communities and the sorrow of having to depart and leave them behind.

Always onward to fresh adventures, with his faithful, unchanging friend Ned. The last thing that trailed through his

dream was a vision of the Flying Dutchman, with Vanderdecken wild-eyed at the ship's wheel. Away, away across the

dark waters it fled, until it, too, was lost to sight. Ben's slumber drifted with him off in the opposite direction, to calm,

untroubled sleep.

Mrs. Winn's cottage pie was as mouthwatering as the dessert of jam roly-poly pudding and custard. She

certainly knew how to cook for a hungry lad and his dog.

Ben brought up Mrs. Winn's remark from the afternoon. 'Winnie, I hope you don't mind me asking, but why did

you say that it would be better if your son and his family stayed in Ceylon? Don't you want them to visit you?' As if

she had been waiting for a sympathetic ear, the old lady poured forth her tale of woe.

'A man from up north has come to live just outside of Chapelvale. His name is Obadiah Smithers, and he is in

the business of industrial speculation. Do you know what that means? Small villages and hamlets right across Britain

are being destroyed by men like Smithers. They build their mills and factories with chimneys belching black smoke,

sink mines with slag heaps defacing the countryside, hack out quarries, scarring the fields and destroying the

woodlands— all in the name of progress, which they say nothing can stop! Yet all they bring, the Smitherses of this

world, is misery, for money. Temporary hovels for their workers, low wages, and folk working right 'round the clock

to make vast profits for their masters.'

Ben could see by Mrs. Winn's clenched fists and quivering voice that she was defiant, yet frightened. He spoke

soothingly. 'So, what is it that Smithers wants with Chapelvale? It's just a little village.'

With an effort she steadied her voice. 'He wants limestone, would you believe. It appears Chapelvale is sitting

on top of huge limestone deposits! As you know, limestone is the basis of cement, and what with all the building

going on all over England, cement is in great demand. Progress means more buildings: more buildings, more cement!

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