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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #61360 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/61360)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Witch of the Glens, by Sally Watson,
-Illustrated by Barbara Werner
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Witch of the Glens
-
-
-Author: Sally Watson
-
-
-
-Release Date: February 9, 2020 [eBook #61360]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WITCH OF THE GLENS***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Tim Lindell and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images digitized by the Google Books
-Library Project (https://books.google.com) and generously made available
-by HathiTrust Digital Library (https://www.hathitrust.org/)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 61360-h.htm or 61360-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/61360/61360-h/61360-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/61360/61360-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- HathiTrust Digital Library. See
- https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015005597078
-
-
-
-
-
-WITCH OF THE GLENS
-
-by
-
-SALLY WATSON
-
-Drawings by Barbara Werner
-
-
-
-
-
-
-The Viking Press
-New York
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-Copyright © 1962 by Sally Watson
-All rights reserved
-First published in 1962 by The Viking Press, Inc.
-625 Madison Avenue, New York 22, N. Y.
-Published simultaneously in Canada
-by The Macmillan Company of Canada Limited
-
-Library of Congress catalog card number: 62-17071
-
-Printed in the U.S.A. by the Vail-Ballou Press, Inc.
-
-
-
-
-To my favorite witch and _uruisg_ Jean and Don and their two small
-kelpies Kathy and Mark
-
-
-
-
-Contents
-
-
- 1. The Gypsies 15
-
- 2. The Waif 26
-
- 3. Glenfern 36
-
- 4. The Daft Folk 48
-
- 5. Bewitchery 60
-
- 6. The Picture in the Loch 73
-
- 7. The Return of Mina and Bogle 88
-
- 8. A Task for Kelpie 102
-
- 9. Inverary Castle 115
-
- 10. A Bit of Hair 124
-
- 11. Argyll’s Dungeon 135
-
- 12. Meeting at Pitlochry 146
-
- 13. The Hexing of Alex 159
-
- 14. The Battle of Tippermuir 170
-
- 15. Witch Hunt 182
-
- 16. Morag Mhor 195
-
- 17. The Road to Inverary 206
-
- 18. The Black Sail 223
-
- 19. Footprints in the Snow 229
-
- 20. The Campbell Lass 240
-
- 21. Vengeance 250
-
- 22. The Last Word 261
-
-
-
-
-Gaelic Terms
-
-
- _Amadain_ (masculine, _amadan_). Fool.
-
- _Briosag._ Witch, sorceress.
-
- _Chlanna nan con, thigibh a sh’s gheibh sibh feoil._ “Sons of
- the dogs, come hither, and you shall have flesh” (Cameron war
- cry).
-
- _Dhia dhuit._ A greeting (“good day,” literally, “God today”).
-
- _Droch-inntinneach._ Evil-minded.
-
- _Dubh_ (also _dhu_). Black.
-
- _Each uisghe._ Water horse (mythical sea-monster, probably with
- some connection to the Loch Ness Monster, which has been seen
- frequently for at least 1500 years and to which Saint Columba
- of Iona gave a good scolding in 565, as recorded by the Abbot
- of Iona).
-
- _Filleadh mór._ The great-plaid, kilt and plaid in one piece.
- (The plaid, or plaidie, was worn around the shoulders and
- sometimes over the head.)
-
- _Ghillie._ An attendant or follower of a clan chief or
- chieftain.
-
- _Kelpie._ A water witch.
-
- _Mallaichte._ Wicked.
-
- _M’eudain._ An endearment.
-
- _Mise-an-dhuit._ An exclamation (literally, “Me today!”).
-
- _Mo chridhe._ An endearment (literally, “My heart”).
-
- _Mo thruigh._ An exclamation (literally, “My sorrow!”).
-
- _Mor_ (or _mhor_). Great, large.
-
- _Nathrach._ Serpent.
-
- _Seach._ Interjection: “Yes?” “Well—” “Truly!” “Really?”
-
- _Sgian dhu._ Black knife: a small dagger usually worn in the
- top of the right stocking by men, just below the knee on the
- outside, where it is most convenient to reach.
-
- _Slaoightire._ Scoundrel.
-
- _Uruisg_ (plural, _uruisgean_). A hobgoblin; sometimes thought
- to be half human, half hobgoblin. A most disagreeable fellow,
- in any case.
-
-
-
-
-Pronouncing Gaelic
-
-
-Gaelic pronunciation is in some ways totally different from English.
-For instance, _s_ in front of _i_ or _e_ sounds like _sh_; _th_, _bh_,
-_dh_, and _gh_ are sometimes (but not always) silent; _mh_ is usually
-pronounced _v_; and _ch_ has a sound not found in English at all, and
-made by trying to say _kh_ as far back in the throat as possible.
-
-_Following are the pronunciations for some of the names and words found
-in this book_:
-
- dubh—doo
-
- each uisghe—ekh oosh-ga (“oo” as in “look”)
-
- Eithne—Ay-na
-
- Ewen—Yew-en
-
- ghillie—gilly
-
- Hamish—Hay-mish
-
- Ian—Ee-an
-
- Lachlan—Lakh-lan
-
- Loch Leven—Lokh Leeven
-
- Mairi—Mah-ri
-
- mhor—vore
-
- mo chridhe—mo cree
-
- Seumas—Shay-mas (James)
-
- sgian dhu—skean doo
-
- uruisg—oorishk
-
-
-
-
-Historical Note
-
-
-To avoid confusion I have in this book described clan tartans more or
-less as they exist today. This is not strictly accurate. To begin with,
-in 1644 clans had not yet adopted specific tartans to be worn by all
-their members, and probably none of the tartans were the same, in either
-pattern or color, as they are today. In fact, it is very difficult to
-know just what they did look like, for all kinds of vegetable dyes were
-used, and the remnants of old tartans that we find today are so faded and
-changed in color that they seem mostly gray or gray-brown, and it is hard
-to tell what colors they once were.
-
-
-
-
-Witch of the Glens
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: THE PART OF _SCOTLAND_ WHERE KELPIE’S ADVENTURE TOOK
-PLACE]
-
-
-
-
-1. The Gypsies
-
-
-The people of Inverness were deeply annoyed. A number of them stood
-in the square and scowled with great hostility at the three tattered
-wanderers in their midst—but their anger held a wary quality.
-
-“Tinklers! Gypsies!” they cried accusingly, and the soft, sibilant sound
-of the Gaelic was less soft but more sibilant than usual. “_Briosag!_”
-(“Witch!”) muttered some with conviction but caution. “Thieves!” they
-added, getting to the real heart of the annoyance. And with this fresh
-reminder of their grievances they began picking up stones as they
-advanced toward the man, woman, and girl.
-
-Anyone who expected to see clan loyalty in this gypsy family would have
-been terribly disappointed. The massive bent shoulders and stringy legs
-of the man somehow evaporated between two houses, and the final glance
-from his pasty dark face was one of hooded derision.
-
-Old Mina Faw didn’t seem at all put out by her man’s desertion. One
-might have thought she had expected it. Her scrawny figure seemed to grow
-taller as she turned a once-handsome hag face toward the crowd, and her
-sunken pale eyes flashed. The crowd hesitated. Everyone knew Old Mina was
-a witch, with the most devastating Evil Eye in all Scotland.
-
-But surprisingly Mina chose to pacify them. After all, there weren’t many
-towns in the Highlands in this year of 1644, and it was well not to be
-alienating those few too deeply. “Och, now!” She wheedled the crowd in
-her thin but powerful voice. “Ye wouldn’t be wishing to harm a poor old
-woman, now, would ye?”
-
-It wasn’t at all that they weren’t wishing to harm her. But no one wanted
-to risk having his hands fall off or his cattle die. They regarded her
-dubiously, making up their minds. “Witch!” repeated someone from the
-safety of the back. “Thief!” cried several more with fresh indignation,
-and they began to move forward again.
-
-“Thief?” echoed Mina indignantly. “Not I! I would only be reading your
-palms and telling good fortune for ye. If anyone has been lifting
-your belongings, it must be my wicked wee Kelpie, whom I am beating
-every night for her sins.” And she pointed accusingly at an undersized
-goblin-lass who might have been perhaps fifteen or seventeen years old,
-dressed in an outrageous assortment of faded scraps. Long black elf-locks
-flapped about her thin face and down her back. Eyes that were not quite
-canny peered out like those of an alarmed wee beast—or a witch.
-
-The “wicked wee Kelpie” didn’t stay to dispute the issue. With one
-bright, mutinous glance at Mina, she dived through the startled fringe of
-the crowd like a young stoat and ran away into the narrow steep lanes of
-the town.
-
-The Inverness crowd promptly forgot Mina and took after the lass.
-“Thief!” they yelled with new enthusiasm. And whatever was convenient to
-pick up, they threw.
-
-It was fortunate that Kelpie was experienced in this sort of thing, for
-it was a nasty chase, and she knew all too well what might happen if they
-caught her. With cunning amounting to sheer genius she ran and dodged,
-doubled back and forth between houses, wriggled over and under and around
-obstacles. Now and then her intense small face broke into a pointed
-grin of appreciation at her own cleverness—for there was something
-exhilarating in outwitting an entire town—but very real fear lurked
-behind those uncanny blue eyes. To tell the truth, it was the tide of ill
-will surging behind her which oppressed her even more than the stones.
-But Kelpie did not realize this, for she was so used to ill will that she
-could not remember anything else.
-
-As for Mina’s deplorable behavior, Kelpie was annoyed but not in the
-least astonished. Mina had merely followed the law of self-preservation,
-the only law Kelpie knew. She herself would do the same thing, given the
-chance. It was the only way to stay alive.
-
-“_Briosag!_ Witch!”
-
-Kelpie swerved round a corner and wished that she _were_ a witch. If so,
-she wouldn’t be running now but putting a braw spell on them all, causing
-their legs to buckle under them and stay that way for three days too, so
-that the whole town would be crawling about on hands and knees, just—She
-laughed at the picture and took another corner at full speed. Just wait
-until she _was_ a witch! Och, no one would chase her then, or beat her,
-either....
-
-A red petticoat spread on a gorse bush vanished magically as she flew
-past. Why not? If she got away, she was a petticoat richer. If not, what
-would it be mattering, a petticoat more, since she already had two stolen
-purses, a kerchief, and a fine _sgian dhu_ on her anyhow?
-
-Up hill and down and around, and finally away out of the town, and
-presently the stones ceased to bite at her ankles and back, and the yells
-were lost behind. Her breath seared her lungs now, and she hurtled down
-the hill toward the river which led from Loch Ness to Moray Firth. At
-last she threw herself into a cold, wet, but safely thick bank of broom,
-bracken, and juniper, where she lay panting and gasping painfully. Mina
-and Bogle would be safely away by now and waiting for her down along
-the path that was the only road along Loch Ness. Let them wait. She had
-earned a rest. She was sore bruised and aching from the stones, and her
-bare feet, tough as they were, hurt from the cobbled streets of the town.
-
-Och, she thought pleasantly, if only they would some day be catching and
-hanging Mina, and Bogle too—but only, of course, after Kelpie had learned
-all the witchcraft that Mina knew, and perhaps more. Oh, to be a more
-powerful witch than Mina, and to be putting all kinds of curses on her
-until all scores were settled!
-
-Curled up in her nest of bracken, head resting on the scarlet petticoat,
-Kelpie drifted into her favorite daydream. _Dhé_, how Mina would plead
-for mercy! Her arms and legs would shrivel up, just, and her few
-remaining teeth fall out. Kelpie smiled, looking like a starry-eyed
-lass dreaming of romance. Then her short upper lip curled and lifted,
-revealing a row of small, sharp white teeth, so that she looked more like
-a wolf cub dreaming of dinner.
-
-The long northern twilight was beginning to creep into the Great Glen,
-for sunlight vanished early in the valley between those high, steep,
-massive hills, even in March. She must go on now, or she would be beaten
-for delaying. And presently, still sore, she was loping silently down the
-path by the loch, where new gorse and bracken grew between patches of old
-snow. Two or three miles down she met Bogle and Mina sitting on their
-bundles and waiting.
-
-“You have taken your time about getting here,” said Bogle. “And how many
-purses were you taking?”
-
-Twilight had deepened into the toneless half-light of gloaming. Light
-had slowly drained from the Glen, leaving a world of eerie gray on the
-hill above Loch Ness. The loch itself was liquid iron, from which might
-easily arise the three black humps and snaky neck of the _each uisghe_,
-the water horse who lived there. A meager supper was over, and the only
-color left in the world was the small salmon-pink pennant of cloud flying
-over the black shoulder of Meall Fuarvounie and reflected in the shining
-crystal ball in Mina’s hand.
-
-She spread a shabby bit of stolen black velvet on the springy turf and
-set the crystal sphere lovingly in the exact center. “And now you will be
-reading the glass with me,” she said.
-
-It was a nightly ritual. Ordinarily Kelpie found it interesting,
-exciting, but tonight she was sore and aching and rebellion was in her.
-It was foolish, of course, to express such feelings. It was to risk not
-only a beating—which, being used to, she did not fear—but an evil spell,
-which she did. But she expressed them now and then, all the same.
-
-“May the _uruisg_ be away with you!” she said sweetly and ducked. Mina’s
-fist merely caught the top of Kelpie’s tangled head, but her snarl was
-more effective.
-
-“Mind me so!” Her voice rasped. “And how do you think to be learning
-witchcraft else?”
-
-“I am reading the crystal with you every night,” muttered Kelpie. “But
-you’ll never let me be trying alone, and you’ve taught me never so much
-as a single wee spell.”
-
-“And listen to her now!” The hateful voice was a croak of derision,
-echoed by a snort from the bulky gray shadow that was Bogle. “She cannot
-crawl yet and she is wanting to run!” And this time the blow fell on
-Kelpie’s high, thin cheekbone before she could think to duck. “Look into
-the crystal, _amadain_!”
-
-Kelpie considered further defiance and then decided against it. She
-didn’t really feel up to another beating tonight, and she did want to
-learn witchcraft. So she permitted Mina’s long gnarled hand to clutch her
-own so that Kelpie would be able to see what Mina did. For a seer could
-share his sight with another by touching him, and Kelpie, said Mina, was
-not yet ready to see alone. Night after night, for as long as she could
-remember, Kelpie had looked into the ball with Mina, describing what she
-saw, while the old woman questioned and corrected her.
-
-“Now,” said Mina, and Kelpie stared into the luminous ball. First it
-clouded, then the center began to glow dully, and then a vague picture
-developed. Kelpie’s dark head bent forward on its long neck, and her eyes
-grew wide and fixed....
-
-Two young men were riding along a loch-side on fine horses, with a blond
-giant behind them on a shaggy Highland pony. Bright tartan _filleadh
-mór_—the bulky great-kilts—beat heavily against their thighs and swung
-over their shoulders, and their heads were high with the proud confidence
-of the well-born.
-
-Kelpie recognized one of them. Young Glenfern, it was, whose father was
-a minor chieftain of Clan Cameron, and who had once given her a farthing
-and a sudden compassionate smile that lit his grave dark-eyed face like
-sunshine. The smile had roused in Kelpie a strange sensation of joy and
-resentment combined, and the feeling came back now as she stared. There
-was gladness behind the composure of his face as he rode, and his dark
-shoulder-length hair lifted in the breeze. And Kelpie, ignorant of the
-eternal attraction of lad for lass, frowned at the pleasant pain of her
-own feelings. She spared no more than a glance for the other young man in
-MacDonald tartan, whose narrow face seemed composed of straight lines,
-whose freckles matched the blaze of his red hair, whose expression seemed
-to laugh at all the world.
-
-“Who is that?” muttered Mina, peering. “What will they be to us? Do you
-know them?”
-
-“No,” lied Kelpie, whose policy was to deceive Mina and Bogle whenever
-possible, just on principle.
-
-“I would be seeing something of the King, or the war, or Mac Cailein
-Mor,” said Mina fretfully.
-
-Kelpie spared her a narrow, speculative glance. Why was Mina so
-interested of late in politics? Of what benefit to her was the blaze
-of civil war sweeping through the remote world of England and even
-the less remote world of the Lowlands? As far as Kelpie could see, it
-affected them not at all—except, of course, that Mac Cailein Mor, Marquis
-of Argyll, Chief of Clan Campbell, was head of the Covenant army of
-the Lowlands and therefore a merciless hunter of witches. But then Mac
-Cailein Mor came into these Western Highlands only now and then, and
-merely to wipe out here and there a few of the clans whom he had always
-hated. A terrible fierce enemy he was, no doubt, and one deserving the
-Evil Eye—but what was he to Mina, at all?
-
-“Is it still the lads riding, then?” Mina persisted. “And who will they
-be, whatever?”
-
-Always and always Kelpie must describe every detail, just as if Mina
-couldn’t see for herself. Kelpie was irritated. “How should I be
-knowing?” she snapped, and a blow on the ear set her head ringing.
-
-“Don’t know! _Amadain!_ What tartan will they be wearing?”
-
-It was too much. Kelpie jerked away, too angry to care about the
-consequences. “_Nathrach!_” She spat. “Look for yourself!”
-
-The motionless gray bulk in the shadows now stirred and gave a low,
-spiteful chuckle. “She cannot,” Bogle said, wheezing with satisfaction.
-“It is sure I am now; her Sight will be going from her. It was for that,
-these long years ago, that she must be stealing a wee bairn with the
-ringed eyes of the Second Sight, and holding her hand so that she can see
-through other eyes what she cannot see for herself—”
-
-There was a scream of fury from old Mina, and a battered saucepan hurtled
-through the dusk, hit Bogle’s ragged shoulder, and fell into the heather.
-Bogle chuckled with malicious triumph. It wasn’t that he hated Mina
-in particular. He was quite impartial, was Bogle; he simply hated all
-mankind and greatly enjoyed seeing anyone unhappy. Now he ducked his
-head slightly and shook with laughter as the saucepan was followed by an
-assortment of sticks, stolen objects, and curses.
-
-Kelpie sat perfectly still. A universe of startling possibilities was
-opening to her mind—because, with Mina’s hand no longer touching hers,
-the tiny picture in the crystal glowed more sharply, brightly clear than
-she had ever seen it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Wrapped in her tattered plaidie in a nest of last year’s dry bracken, she
-lay awake after the long gloaming had deepened to black and stars peeped
-out to grow dim again as the unearthly white radiance of the northern
-lights—the Dancers—shimmered and pulsed over the western hills. The
-wonder of the lights, as Kelpie watched, seemed to match the wonder in
-her heart.
-
-Had Bogle told the truth? Mina’s behavior made Kelpie think he had. And
-it was certain that the crystal was even clearer for her without Mina’s
-touch.
-
-So then, was it also true that she had been stolen? From where? Kelpie
-reached back into her memory but could find nothing but the vagrant life
-of gypsies—tramping, begging, stealing, telling fortunes and selling
-spells and charms in the Highlands, running from witch-hunters in the
-Lowlands, sleeping under the sky.
-
-Och, how could she ever be finding out? Only, perhaps, by becoming a
-greater witch than Mina and putting the power upon her. And indeed, it
-was a great advantage if Mina no longer had the Sight! _Dhé_, but she had
-other powers, had Mina, terrible powers of cursing and spells! She was
-clever, too, and for all her age she used a stick with great strength.
-Kelpie must be canny, she must so. The cold streams of the northern
-lights faded, and when they were gone, Kelpie was asleep.
-
-
-
-
-2. The Waif
-
-
-It was one of those days that couldn’t decide between winter and spring.
-A cold, gusty wind whistled thinly through dark pine and barren birch and
-chased fat clouds over the sky one by one, causing flurries of hard rain
-to alternate with pale and hesitant sunshine.
-
-They had traveled the thirty miles of Loch Ness, stopping at the village
-near Urquhart Castle, and again at Kilcummin, where they had nearly been
-caught picking the purse of one of the MacDonald chieftains. And now they
-were moving south beside the silver ripples of Loch Lochy.
-
-Kelpie was far ahead of Mina and Bogle, moving along high on the hillside
-with a prancing motion caused partly by high spirits and partly by the
-masses of tough-stemmed heather that covered the slope. She was still
-sore from her latest beating, and also hungry. Her life consisted
-largely of pain and hunger and cold, and was peopled by enemies to be
-feared and hated or fools to be tricked, but Kelpie had discovered
-all that long ago and was quite used to the fact and found life very
-enjoyable anyway. Certainly it was never dull, and she had a zest for
-adventure.
-
-And in spite of everything, the world was beautiful. Kelpie could forgive
-it a lot for that. In any case, her day was coming! She had deliberately
-described the details in last night’s crystal quite wrongly, and Mina
-hadn’t known.
-
-Or had she?
-
-This appalling thought caused Kelpie to miss her usually sure footing and
-to step right in the middle of a gorse bush. Neither the travel-hardened
-toughness of the bare brown foot nor the deceptive beauty of the silvery
-leaves saved her from a good pricking, and Kelpie swore with an ardent
-fluency that would have pleased Bogle greatly. Still hopping and cursing,
-she saw the movement and color of the three horsemen down the loch much
-later than she should have. They were coming along toward her in the path
-below and doubtless had well-filled purses which might well be lightened.
-She was halfway down the steep slope when suddenly the sun shone brightly
-from behind the latest cloud, and Kelpie recognized the scene from the
-crystal: young Glenfern and his red-haired companion and the giant blond
-_ghillie_ riding behind.
-
-But there was no time to wonder about it. Timing her movements
-carefully, Kelpie threw herself headlong down the last steep bank and
-sprawled full length in the path, almost under the horses’ feet.
-
-“_Dhé!_” exclaimed Ian Cameron as he and Alex reined the horses so
-sharply that they reared for a moment on their hind legs. All he could
-see on the ground was a pitifully small and tattered figure, clearly in
-great danger of being trampled to death.
-
-Alex MacDonald, from his better position behind, saw something a little
-more. As Ian’s horse stepped alarmingly close to Kelpie, one “thin and
-helpless” arm moved, neatly and efficiently, the precise six inches
-required for safety. Alex’s red eyebrows arched, and an appreciative grin
-danced on his face. He relaxed and prepared to enjoy the comedy that was
-sure to follow.
-
-The crisis was over in a moment. “Is it all right you are?” demanded Ian
-of the wee figure, and the wee figure nodded biting its lip in a fine
-imitation of silent courage as it raised itself painfully to an elbow.
-For Kelpie had discovered that this sort of act was much more touching
-than loud wails and tears. She decided to have a hurt back, this being
-hard to disprove, as well as more impressive than other hurts. So she
-winced to indicate great pain and looked up with a brave and pathetic
-smile.
-
-The lads looked back at her. A scrawny waif it was, tattered and
-unbelievably dirty. The tangled dark hair, apparently never touched by
-water or comb, fell over the thin face in a way that reminded Ian of
-shaggy Highland cattle—except that these eyes were unlike those of any
-cattle that ever lived. They were long and black-fringed, set at a slant
-in the narrow face, and strangely ringed. Around each black pupil was
-a wide circle of smoky blue, then a narrow one of lightish gray, and a
-third of deep and vivid blue. Astonishing eyes, almost alarming! Where
-had he seen them before?
-
-While Ian stared in wonder and pity, Alex made a few further observations
-of his own. He noted the high cheekbones and the pointed chin and the
-wicked slant of black brows and the short upper lip—giving rather the
-effect, thought Alex, of a wicked elfin creature, or perhaps a witch.
-Amused but wary, he sat back and let his foster brother make up his mind.
-Ian wouldn’t have been noticing, of course, that the wee _briosag_ threw
-herself into the path on purpose. Ian had the way of always believing the
-best of everyone.
-
-Ian was aware of the cynical smile behind him. A nasty suspicious mind
-Alex had! It was a pity. What else could he be expecting of a poor wild
-waif like this? What sort of life must she have had? Then Ian remembered
-where he had seen her before: with that wicked old witch Mina. Och, the
-poor creature!
-
-“’Tis hurt you are,” he said worriedly, to Kelpie’s relief. She had
-feared for a moment that she’d been too subtle altogether.
-
-“Och, only a little,” she whispered, putting on a braw show of dreadful
-pain heroically borne.
-
-“Now, do not be overdoing it,” drawled Alex.
-
-Kelpie shot him a look which, had she been a properly qualified witch,
-would surely have caused him to break out with every loathsome disease
-known to mankind. Unfortunately the only effect of her venomous glare was
-that Alex’s smile broadened to an insulting chuckle. Och, what a beast
-he was, then, with the bony, freckled, jeering face of him, and the two
-jaunty tufts of red hair jutting upward just where horns ought to sprout!
-She was about to tell him so, and in great detail, but just in time she
-remembered her role and Ian, who was still showing his pity and dismay.
-
-What a misfortune, he thought, that this should happen now, just when he
-and Alex were nearly home again after those long months away in Oxford,
-where he had been savagely homesick. They were about to get home early,
-and with very important news, and now this had to happen, not five miles
-from Glenfern.
-
-“What shall we be doing with you at all?” he said. “We cannot just be
-leaving her here!” he added fiercely, turning on Lachlan, the blond
-_ghillie_, who, looking larger than usual on his short shaggy pony, had
-muttered something from behind.
-
-“Give her a copper,” Alex said, laughing, “and see how quickly she’ll
-mend!”
-
-Copper indeed! thought Kelpie. It was silver she was wanting. But she
-didn’t hide the gleam in her eyes quickly enough.
-
-“I’ll show you,” said Alex. Slowly, tantalizingly, he drew a coin from
-his sporran and held it up. It gleamed silver, and Kelpie stared at it
-greedily. “See?” Alex chuckled and spun it toward her.
-
-Quick as the flash of bright metal in the air, her brown hand shot out
-to catch it in flight—then dropped, and the coin fell noiselessly on the
-path. Kelpie sat staring first at it and then at her own shoulder with
-dismay that was, for a change, perfectly genuine.
-
-“I—I _am_ hurt!” she said with astonishment and then hastily snatched up
-the coin with her good left hand before they should change their minds.
-
-“Not too hurt to be picking up the silver,” observed Alex, but the
-gibe lacked his earlier light tone. Ian had already dismounted and
-was touching rather gingerly the filthy rags covering the shoulder in
-question. The lass frankly stank.
-
-This time Kelpie’s face showed an honest flicker of pain. “I think it
-will be sprained, or perhaps out of place,” Ian decided and looked at
-Alex.
-
-Alex looked back at him. “Well, so. And where does she live, then? Where
-are her people? Perhaps Lachlan could be taking her home.”
-
-Ian shrugged. “I think I’ve seen her with Old Mina and Black Bogle. Is
-that so?” he asked Kelpie, who nodded.
-
-Alex raised his eyebrows, not in the least surprised. It was logical that
-she should belong to the nastiest witch in Scotland.
-
-“Will they be coming along, then?” Ian inquired, and again Kelpie nodded,
-so bewildered by her unexpected hurt and the pain that was now shooting
-sharply through her shoulder that she couldn’t really think clearly at
-all.
-
-A glum silence settled on them, broken only by furtive and disapproving
-mutters from Lachlan. His duty was to be protecting his young masters,
-and now here they were consorting with witches, and he not able to
-prevent them at all, at all. He crossed himself.
-
-Ian sighed with relief when the bent figures of Mina and Bogle appeared
-up the loch-side. They would take care of their lass, and he and Alex
-could be away home.
-
-But it wasn’t that easy. Mina, after taking in the situation at a
-glance, burst into lamentations and curses that caused the ruddy Lachlan
-to go pale. “And is it our poor lass you have harmed, wicked beasts
-that you are?” she wailed, while Bogle stood like a massive old tree
-in disconcerting silence. “Ocho, ocho, whatever shall we be doing now?
-May the Evil Eye fall on all your cattle, and the pox upon yourselves,
-_uruisgean_ that you are!”
-
-Ian himself recoiled, not from the curses, but from the evil that was in
-this horrible old woman. What a dreadful thing that a young lass should
-belong to such as these! It was wicked! And yet, what could he do? What
-could anyone do? Unhappily he stood and stroked his horse’s nose while
-Alex handled the matter.
-
-Alex did handle it beautifully, with just the right mixture of
-indulgence, severity, and money. “’Twas no fault of ours that she fell,
-but altogether her own,” he told them. “Still, we are kind-hearted and
-willing to give you a bit of silver.” And when Mina would have demanded
-more, he fixed her with a stern hazel stare that caused her own pale,
-muddy eyes to waver and fall. It was all settled then, and Ian, feeling
-depressed, turned to mount his horse.
-
-And then Black Bogle, perhaps feeling that they had been worsted in the
-bargaining, reached down and jerked Kelpie roughly to her feet by the
-injured arm.
-
-The bit of brutality wrenched a choked cry of anguish from the girl. Ian
-whirled around, and Alex was off his horse in a flying leap and seized
-Bogle’s arm in a grip that had no gentleness whatever.
-
-“Let go of her, you vile bully!” Alex snarled, red with fury, while Ian
-removed the sagging Kelpie from Bogle’s grasp. Lachlan, brandishing a
-steel dirk a foot long, loomed ominously behind....
-
-When Kelpie was again able to take an active interest in events, she
-heard several voices: a cold, contemptuous one and a dangerously quiet
-one, Bogle’s growl and Mina’s whine, with dour grumblings in the
-background. More money changed hands, and then Mina bent over Kelpie, a
-cunning, complacent look on her face.
-
-“The fine gentlemen will be taking you home with them to fix your hurt,
-and we will come to fetch you in the morning,” she said. “You will
-be properly grateful—and behave as I’d be wishing you to,” she added
-meaningly, and Kelpie nodded. She knew quite well what Mina meant—steal
-whatever she could lay hands on.
-
-Then Ian’s concerned face was close to hers as he removed the grimy
-once-red sash from about her waist and gently bound the injured arm to
-her side. “And who’s knowing what further damage the brute will have
-done?” he muttered.
-
-After that she found herself lifted to the fearful height of Alex’s
-horse and felt his hard young arm firmly around her. And at a slow walk
-they set along toward the fork in the path that led through the hills to
-Glenfern.
-
-By the time they reached the top of the pass, Kelpie was feeling much
-better. She began to relish the adventure, and she stared with interest
-at the scene before her as they paused. Ian’s face was alight with joy,
-and Lachlan actually had tears in his eyes. A strange thing that was, she
-thought wonderingly, ignorant as she was of the love of the Highlander
-for his own hills. Kelpie knew no home but the ground she walked on.
-
-The glen ran westward ahead of them, a long little valley cradled in
-hills that were just turning jewel-green with new bracken and showing
-dark with juniper and white here and there with birch trunks and unmelted
-snow. On the northern slope stood a weathered gray house which seemed
-large and grand indeed to Kelpie, and scattered along the glen were
-little rye-thatched shieling huts of unmortared stone, nestled into the
-hillside as if they had grown there. Farther down the glen was a wee
-loch of silver and blue, ringed with white birches and dotted with green
-islets.
-
-“Loch nan Eilean—Lake of the Islands,” murmured Ian with his heart in his
-voice, and they rode on down the hill and along to the stables.
-
-Alex lifted Kelpie down from the horse, looked at her oddly, and then
-with a grin forced open her left hand.
-
-“You little devil!” He laughed. “You’ve picked my pocket!”
-
-
-
-
-3. Glenfern
-
-
-Kelpie perched gingerly on a fine brocaded chair near the door of the
-drawing room and gazed curiously at the scene before her. For house and
-glen had, on their arrival, erupted into a perfect frenzy of excitement,
-questions, tears, laughter, shouting, teasing, and hugging.
-
-_Dhé!_ And was this the way most families were behaving toward one
-another? Kelpie found it baffling and achingly strange, and vaguely
-annoying; and on the whole she was glad enough to have been forgotten for
-the moment while she recovered her usual cool head.
-
-Talk rose and surged in a mixture of Gaelic and English. Cameron of
-Glenfern paced back and forth, the rusty-red and green of his kilt
-swinging about strong knees. Lady Glenfern, smiling and anxious at once,
-sat in a carved oak chair, her harebell-blue skirts billowing about her
-feet. Two small kilted lads pranced with excitement, a bittie lass
-clamored to be away up in Ian’s arms, and a bonnie lass in green, perhaps
-near Kelpie’s age, clung affectionately to both Ian and Alex at once.
-
-Through the open window Kelpie could see Lachlan standing in a ring of
-laughing and chattering clansmen, and it began to dawn on her that this
-was no ordinary homecoming. The lads had been away to school in a far-off
-place in England and had returned quite unexpectedly with important news.
-
-“We knew that King Charles had fled London and set up his court at
-Oxford,” said Glenfern. “And you wrote that Montrose was there, awaiting
-permission to come and raise an army in Scotland for the King. Now you
-say he’s coming?”
-
-“Aye so,” said Alex cynically, “but a bit late, now that Argyll has got
-all the Lowlands and some of the Highlands well under the thumb of the
-cursed Covenant! Were you knowing that the Covenant army has crossed the
-border into England and will be fighting along with the Parliament army
-against the King?”
-
-“_Dhé!_” exclaimed Glenfern in dismay. “Is it too late, then? Why was the
-King waiting so long?”
-
-Alex shrugged. “Och, King Charles has a grand talent for not seeing what
-he doesn’t like, and for doing the wrong thing altogether or the right
-thing too late.”
-
-Ian, whose loyalty was a simple and wholehearted thing, frowned at his
-foster brother. “He’s our king and a Stewart,” he reminded him and then
-turned to his father. “At any rate, we were thinking we’d best come home
-while we still could—and perhaps join Montrose when he arrives.”
-
-None of this meant a great deal to Kelpie, so she began looking around
-with greedy wonder at the drawing room. Och, the glowing fine old silver
-on the sideboard, the great portraits on the tapestry-hung walls, the
-grand, massive carved furniture worn smooth as silk by time and polish,
-and the damask draperies at real glass windows! It wasn’t fair that some
-people should have so much! They should be sharing it, they should, and
-it was up to Kelpie, she felt, to see to the sharing.
-
-A small silver snuff box was lying on a table near her; an instant later,
-it wasn’t. Kelpie’s long slanted eyes flickered with satisfaction, but
-before she could so much as thrust her loot under her rags, a redheaded
-figure bent over her and a sinewy long hand grasped her wrist gently but
-with great strength.
-
-“Really, Ian,” observed Alex lazily, “you must be paying more attention
-to your guest.”
-
-“Ssssss!” said Kelpie, again wishing she could cast the Evil Eye on him.
-But instead the eyes of the entire family were now on her.
-
-“My sorrow!” said Ian ruefully. “I was forgetting!”
-
-“A shame to all of us, and she injured!” declared his mother, standing
-up. “’Tis only for the night, you were saying, Ian? Well, so, we will
-see to the shoulder—but not in the house, I think,” she added, looking at
-Kelpie’s filthy clothes.
-
-“No,” agreed her husband. “Come away out to the wee room in the stable,
-which will do nicely, I think.”
-
-And Kelpie, who had expected to be beaten and turned out for her theft,
-stared. They were daft, all of them! But presently she forgot their
-daftness because of the surprisingly painful business of having her
-shoulder tended. She gritted her teeth and cursed vigorously, and after
-it was over she was glad enough to lie down on the small cot in the
-stable-room and be left alone to sleep.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Kelpie awoke with an oppressive sense of being trapped. Blindly hostile
-walls and ceiling surrounded her, shutting out sky and wind. In sudden
-panic she would have leaped up and fled to the safety of outside, but
-the first movement brought the sharp, forgotten pain of her shoulder.
-She gasped slightly, blinked, and noticed a pair of dark eyes regarding
-her from a flower face. It was the wee bit of a lassie she had seen in
-the big house, who stood watching Kelpie with grave sympathy. She was a
-tiny thing, her body slight as it rose from the primrose bulk of her long
-skirts, but Kelpie was disconcerted. The gaze seemed to understand too
-much.
-
-“Poor lady!” said the mite, shaking her honey-brown head sorrowfully. “Is
-it a sore bad hurt, then?”
-
-Kelpie said nothing.
-
-Light danced into the dark eyes. “Wee Mairi will kiss it and make it
-well.” Quite undeterred by thoughts of cleanliness, the child leaned
-over the cot and dropped a soft kiss on the bandages covering Kelpie’s
-shoulder, and then another on her cheek. “Now it will stop hurting, just,
-and you can be happy,” she announced. Crooking a small finger in the old
-gesture of calling down a blessing from heaven, she turned and trotted
-out, leaving a shaken Kelpie behind her.
-
-Nothing like this had ever happened to her before! Children had always
-clung to their mothers, frightened of the witch’s lass. No one at all had
-ever kissed her and Kelpie, to her dismay, found that her eyes had filled
-with tears. Och, this would never do at all! She must be hard and strong,
-or else how would she ever survive in the world she knew? She closed her
-treacherous eyes and concentrated on subduing the weakness.
-
-The weakness was just about subdued when she became aware of more company
-in the room. This time it was a pair of seven or eight-year-old lads with
-penetrating blue eyes set in identical tanned faces which were alight
-with passionate curiosity.
-
-Kelpie, still shaken and very much on the defensive from her encounter
-with Wee Mairi, glared at them with frank hostility. They went on staring
-at her with unwavering interest. _Dhé!_ They were nearly as disconcerting
-as Wee Mairi—and there were two of them. Kelpie decided to take the
-offensive.
-
-“Ssssss!” she hissed, baring her teeth and beetling her thick eyebrows
-menacingly. The bright eyes rounded slightly, but with increased
-curiosity rather than alarm.
-
-“Were you crying?” asked one boy candidly.
-
-“Are you a witch?” demanded the other.
-
-Kelpie considered. It wasn’t in the least safe to be thought a witch.
-It could lead to all sorts of uncomfortable and fatal things. On the
-other hand, she had never known real safety in any case, and it would be
-pleasant to impress, or even frighten, these complacent lads.
-
-“I am so,” she said with an intimidating scowl. “I can put curses on ye,
-or the Evil Eye whatever.”
-
-They were unintimidated. “Show us!” suggested one hopefully.
-
-“Alex was saying you cannot,” challenged the other.
-
-“Och, just you wait!” said Kelpie darkly. “I will be fixing that Alex as
-ever was!”
-
-“What will you do to him?” persisted the skeptic with morbid curiosity.
-
-“What is your name?” asked his twin.
-
-“Kelpie!” said she in triumph, and at last she had impressed them. For
-every Highland child knew that a Kelpie was a kind of fairy person, a
-water witch who wails at night by lochs and rivers for a victim, or cries
-for admittance at shuttered windows.
-
-“I don’t believe it,” said the skeptical twin, but he said it
-halfheartedly.
-
-“Ronald! Donald!” The green-frocked lass who was Kelpie’s age stood in
-the doorway, with a big-boned young woman behind her carrying a tray.
-“Och, naughty lads! Ye shouldn’t be bothering in here, and well ye know
-it!”
-
-“She’s a witch, and a kelpie too,” reported one of them, unabashed.
-
-“At least she says so, but we haven’t seen her put a spell yet,” added
-the other. “When will you be showing us one?”
-
-The young woman nearly dropped her tray as she hastily tried to make the
-sign of the cross. Her young mistress looked faintly alarmed but stood
-her ground. “Be away, now,” she told the twins. “I’ll take that, Fiona.”
-She took the tray from the quaking Fiona and set it on a stool beside
-Kelpie’s cot.
-
-“We thought you’d be waking up hungry,” she said and then looked at
-Kelpie apologetically, as if ashamed of her own good fortune and pretty
-clothes. “My name is Eithne,” she added, pronouncing it “Ay-na,” with
-the Highland lilt in her voice. “And the twins must not be saying such
-things—about your being a witch, I mean. Are you?” she asked, overcome by
-curiosity.
-
-Kelpie already had hand and mouth full of cold venison pie and new-baked
-bannocks and had no intention of risking the rest of the food. She shook
-her head firmly and put on her most innocent and helpless expression.
-
-“Och, no!” she mumbled truthfully around her bannock. “Not I!”
-
-At this moment a gaunt black cat sidled through the open door, spat at
-Fiona, and with a joyful yowl leaped right on top of Kelpie. This was
-unfortunate, since black cats were known to have a fondness for witches.
-
-Fiona backed up to the door, crossing herself furiously, and Eithne
-looked awed. “_Dhé!_” she whispered. “Dubh has never done that before for
-anyone!”
-
-Kelpie looked at Dubh with a mixture of pleasure and irritation. She
-liked cats, but this one had timed his appearance poorly.
-
-Dubh looked back at her, great topaz eyes glowing into hers steadily and
-inscrutably, and his purring filled the room.
-
-“He is wanting some food,” suggested Kelpie lamely. But Dubh didn’t
-show the slightest interest in her meal. Instead, he arranged himself
-comfortably on top of her legs.
-
-“Animals are always liking me,” Kelpie went on with better success.
-Eithne’s face brightened and cleared. Of course! And if animals liked a
-person, it was a sure sign that the person was to be trusted. Eithne,
-like her brother, wanted to think the best of everyone, especially
-of those whom life seemed to have treated unfairly. Besides, Kelpie
-interested her.
-
-Presently she was seated on the edge of the cot, listening to the lurid
-tale of Kelpie’s life and even being shown some of the scars and bruises
-on the thin shoulders and back. Eithne was hot and shaking with shocked
-indignation. It was perfectly dreadful, appalling!
-
-And Kelpie, rising to great tragic heights, played up to the most
-sympathetic audience she had ever had. The long ringed eyes fixed on
-Eithne’s brown ones were soft and luminous and oh, so innocent.
-
-But the “innocent” eyes reminded Alex of Dubh’s, as he entered the room
-and got a good view of both pairs. He hadn’t been easy in his mind about
-Eithne’s being in here so long. Ringed eyes like that weren’t canny. The
-lass might well be a witch, at that, though likely too young to be very
-dangerous. All the same, his foster sister must be protected.
-
-“Come away from her and out of here!” he ordered Eithne brusquely.
-
-He should have known better. She whirled on him, round chin jutting
-out indignantly. “And will you be judging her unfairly, like all the
-villagers and all?” Eithne demanded. “Don’t deny it, Alex MacDonald!
-You’re thinking hard, suspicious things about her this very minute!”
-
-Alex’s sunburned face looked disconcerted at this sudden attack, but
-only for an instant. “Oh, aye,” he agreed cheerfully. “I am that. And why
-wouldn’t I be, with the many reasons she’s given me already? Has she put
-a spell on you, _m’eudail_? Best be away to the house and see if Catriona
-can break it.”
-
-Eithne stamped her foot, but it wasn’t easy to find a retort. “You—you
-talk like a Covenanter!” she finally flung at him scathingly and flounced
-out in a swirl of petticoats, Fiona behind her.
-
-Alex scratched his red head, more confounded by her passion than by her
-rather shaky logic. He grinned wryly at Kelpie, who looked back at him in
-triumph.
-
-“Poor innocent waif!” he jeered, putting one foot up on the edge of the
-cot, where Dubh spat at it. He rested an elbow on his kilted knee and
-stared at Kelpie with interest. She stared back through slitted eyes.
-
-“Before you’re up and away again,” he said, casually, “I’ve a wee word
-to be saying to you, and it is this. Unlike Ian and Eithne, I’ve a nasty
-suspicious mind, I have.” He wagged his head sadly. “And I’ve a picture
-in my head of you away off tomorrow bearing every movable thing in the
-glen hid in your rags, and we sitting here without so much as a stick of
-furniture left to us.”
-
-“Indeed, and I would never be doing such a thing!” cried Kelpie
-indignantly. “How could I be carrying it all?”
-
-Alex laughed outright. Kelpie scowled. She had been cursed and beaten
-often enough, but she had never before been laughed at, and she didn’t
-like it.
-
-Alex stopped laughing and grinned at her. “Well, so, and I’ve a
-soft heart in me, so I’ll be doing nothing about such matters as
-pocket-picking or a certain snuff box, nor will anyone else, I think.
-But”—and he leaned forward a little—“should anything else just happen
-to be missing when you leave, then you’ll be finding the hand of every
-Cameron and MacDonald, all through the Great Glen and Lochaber from Loch
-Leven to Loch Ness, turned against you.”
-
-Kelpie showed sharp white teeth in a defiant laugh. “Are you thinking
-I’ve never heard threats before?”
-
-“Aye, I’m sure you have, and most unpleasant ones,” retorted Alex. “But
-have you ever had one like this carried out, and two entire clans arrayed
-against you, and every _ghillie_ on the watch?”
-
-Kelpie narrowed her eyes. He had her, just! And to have the Great Glen
-and Lochaber closed against them would be a sore handicap indeed.
-
-“Sssss!” said Kelpie with deep sincerity.
-
-Alex grinned again. “I’m not done,” he said briskly. “It seems that my
-foster sister has given you her friendship. You’re not deserving it, of
-course, but for Eithne that’s good enough reason for giving it. Now, I am
-fond of Eithne, and if you should be taking advantage of her or hurting
-her in any way, I shall see to it that you are punished—even if I must
-denounce you as a witch. Do you understand?”
-
-It was a fearful threat, and Kelpie, used to bluster and invective, was
-unnerved by his very calm.
-
-“_Nathrach!_” She spat “Remember, witches can curse! Shall I be putting
-the Evil Eye on you?” And she widened her slanted eyes until the dark and
-light rings were smoldering circles.
-
-Alex laughed again, infuriatingly. “And if you haven’t already put the
-Evil Eye on me at least three times today, it must be that you have not
-got it at all. For you’ve wanted to, haven’t you? No, I’ll wager you
-cannot do it.”
-
-“Mina can,” muttered Kelpie sulkily.
-
-“Now that I’ll believe,” he agreed readily. “But even the Evil Eye
-wouldn’t save the two of you from being burned as witches, would it?”
-
-Och, and he was so sure of himself! Kelpie saw suddenly that great
-cunning and apparent submission were her best weapons. “And if I am
-keeping the bargain?” she hinted, looking at his pocket.
-
-“We’ve no bargain.” Alex corrected her mildly. “I’m no such fool. It’s
-just that I’ve been telling you in a friendly way what will happen if
-you should be stealing anything or hurting Eithne, that’s all.” And he
-sauntered out, his kilt swinging jauntily about his brown knees.
-
-
-
-
-4. The Daft Folk
-
-
-Kelpie slept heavily for the first part of the night and then awoke to
-stare restlessly into the stifling, closed-in darkness. How could a body
-tell the hour, shut in like this? She must be out into the free air and
-waiting when Mina and Bogle came for her.
-
-She got up and groped her way out into the warm, horse-scented main part
-of the stable. Dubh, a blacker shape in the dark, came and wove himself
-around her ankles as she felt for the door with her good left hand; her
-right shoulder was still too sore to move.
-
-And then she was outside in the cold sweet air of pre-dawn. The hills to
-the southeast stood black against a thin ghost of gray in the sky, and
-the glen was filled with a toneless purple except for the ropes of pearly
-mist strung down the clefts of the hills and over the loch. A tiny burn
-and waterfall danced in a white thread at the far end of the glen, and
-the wind smelled of the sea.
-
-Kelpie drew in her breath deeply, and the beauty of it made a sore ache
-inside her and a daft desire to cry. It was something deep within her,
-just, that had these strange feelings now and then, and she must be
-careful never to let them out.
-
-It was these daft folk at Glenfern who were making her feel peculiar. She
-must be away from them, away from the trapping walls and alien people,
-to the freedom of the hills and sky. She slipped like a wraith around to
-the back of the stable, where the ground sloped upward, wrapping her bare
-ankles in the wetness of rank grass and heather and stinging nettles,
-which she had long ago stopped noticing. And at the upper corner a long
-skinny arm reached out with the swiftness of a snake, seized Kelpie’s
-wrist (fortunately, the uninjured one), and shook her.
-
-“We’ve been waiting for you this long while!” Mina began pulling her up
-the hill.
-
-Kelpie came willingly enough. She was almost glad to see Mina’s evil
-old face. She knew where she was with Mina. She could hate and be hated
-single-mindedly, and always know how Mina would behave. The people at
-Glenfern were unpredictable and confusing.
-
-Black Bogle was waiting in a clump of snowy-trunked birches halfway up
-the hill. He said nothing, just grinned without warmth or welcome.
-
-“Well, and what have you got?” demanded Mina, turning upon Kelpie with
-greedy fingers held out.
-
-“Nothing at all,” muttered Kelpie defensively. “The red-haired _uruisg_
-took back the silver and the snuff box and said if I was taking anything
-else he would be setting all the Camerons and MacDonalds against us.”
-
-Mina cursed Alex and Kelpie both, but with her mind so clearly upon other
-matters that Kelpie didn’t feel the curses would be very effective.
-“Well, so!” concluded the old woman suddenly. “And just as well, perhaps.
-For we are wanting you to bide here for a time.”
-
-Kelpie stared, her mouth drooping open. _Dhé!_ Now Mina was being as
-unpredictable as anyone in the glen below! “And whatever for, if I cannot
-be stealing anything?” she demanded. “And why would they be letting me
-stay?”
-
-Mina struck at her. Kelpie ducked automatically, and Bogle chuckled. He
-would also have chuckled had the blow landed.
-
-“You’ll be persuading them, just,” commanded Mina. “Play upon their
-sympathy. Let them be making you a maidservant if they will—and mind
-that you be a good one. ’Tis a spy you’ll be, to watch and listen, for
-the lads are fresh from England and knowing about affairs. Be learning
-how they feel about the King and Mac Cailein Mor and the Lord Graham of
-Montrose. And keep them feeling kindly toward you, for we may use them
-one day.”
-
-Kelpie hooded her eyes thoughtfully. She had already learned a good
-bit—but why tell Mina now? Better to wait and see where her own
-advantage lay and learn what Mina was up to.
-
-“And where will ye be going?” she ventured to ask.
-
-“Never you mind!” snapped Mina. “We will be returning for you when we are
-ready, and then it may be that you can learn some of the witchcraft you
-are wanting so badly.” Beneath their wrinkled lids her faded old eyes
-gleamed at Kelpie watchfully.
-
-Kelpie kept her own eyes veiled. She knew how much Mina’s promise was
-worth, but here was hope that Mina might really be going to teach her at
-last, for her own profit. Kelpie must be very docile, then, and never let
-Mina suspect what was in her mind.
-
-“Very well so,” she agreed indifferently, it being best to show neither
-reluctance nor enthusiasm.
-
-“Once more with the crystal, then,” ordered Mina, producing it; and
-Kelpie obediently sat down in the dew-heavy clumps of long grass. Her
-face was lowered meekly, to conceal the knowledge that Mina depended on
-her to see the picture. The gray light was now growing rosy over the bare
-top of Meall Dubh. The rosiness was reflected in the shining ball and
-then moved and scattered.
-
-“A battle!” whispered Kelpie, her eyes large and fixed on the scene. But
-it wasn’t like the other battles she had seen in the crystal—no cavalry
-charge of armored men on green slopes, but a charge of Highlanders on the
-steeper, wilder hills of Scotland. She could clearly make out the bright
-tartans, and the double-handed claymores flashing, and she could almost
-hear the wailing skirl of the pipes. There was a red-bearded giant in the
-thick of it, and a slight brown-haired man on a horse, wearing a blue
-bonnet, and it was he who seemed to be the power behind the charge—though
-Kelpie couldn’t say how she knew. And now the others were fleeing in the
-fury of the attack, and it seemed to Kelpie that she saw the blue and
-green Campbell tartan among the defeated.
-
-Her voice muted and hurried, Kelpie described the scene to Mina, leaving
-out the name of the tartan and any other details that she guessed Mina
-might not be able to make out for herself.
-
-And now there was a different scene, and there was the brown-haired
-man, dressed quite unfittingly as a groom, clasping the hand of the
-red-bearded one, who was looking altogether astonished and overjoyed, and
-behind them, on the hillside, was a cheering crowd of Highlanders.
-
-“Well?” demanded Mina.
-
-Kelpie shook her head. “A hillside and a crowd of people,” she murmured,
-“but ’tis all cloudy.” And then she held her breath.
-
-But Mina didn’t seem to know that Kelpie was deceiving her. “I wanted
-news of Argyll,” she grumbled and put the crystal away. Then, after a
-parting cuff, she strode up the hill with Bogle—and not so much as a
-parting glance from either of them. Och, they had some pressing purpose,
-the two of them, and whatever could it be?
-
-The eastern sky was apricot now. The sun would be up in a few minutes,
-and already golden light was pouring across the very tops of the hills
-on the far side of the glen, but a fitful wind was coming from the west,
-promising to bring rain clouds over those same bright hills....
-
-What if, after all, Glenfern refused to let her stay? Feeling excited and
-forlorn at once, Kelpie turned her back on the sunrise and walked slowly
-down the hill.
-
- * * * * *
-
-She approached the house on lagging feet, suddenly nervous. Ian’s father
-was outside the door, talking to Lachlan and an old man. Lachlan already
-disliked her, and Glenfern looked as if he could be stern indeed. Kelpie
-drooped her mouth into an expression of wistful apology, arranged the
-sling on her arm so that it showed up well, and hovered tentatively a few
-feet away.
-
-Glenfern’s face was kindly enough when he looked up and saw her. “Good
-morning,” he greeted her. “And how are you feeling?”
-
-“Good morning,” replied Kelpie, “and well enough,”—making it sound like a
-brave lie. “But—” She stopped, looking frightened. “Mina and Bogle came,”
-she began, and paused.
-
-“Oh. And you’ll be wanting a bit of breakfast before you’re away off
-with them?” suggested Glenfern with a smile.
-
-“They’re away off without me,” blurted Kelpie, looking helpless. “They’re
-not wanting me any more.”
-
-“_Dhé!_” said Glenfern. He didn’t seem overjoyed.
-
-“I have nowhere to go,” added Kelpie pathetically, in case he hadn’t got
-the point.
-
-“Aye,” said Glenfern, who had got it very quickly. “Well, come away in,
-and we’ll see my wife.”
-
-“_Mise-an-dhui!_” said Lady Glenfern when they told her. She looked even
-less delighted than her husband.
-
-Eithne looked up from sorting and polishing silver. “Och, what a wicked
-thing!” she exclaimed, her creamy oval face troubled and sympathetic.
-“And have you no other relations?”
-
-Kelpie shook her head. Wee Mairi, gathering that something was wrong, ran
-over and slipped her warm little hand into Kelpie’s, and the twins looked
-up in surprise, for they had thought everyone had more relations than
-could be counted.
-
-“Perhaps she had better be staying with us,” they suggested through
-mouthfuls of buttered scone—an extra breakfast, no doubt. “She could put
-the Evil Eye on all our enemies, whatever,” added Ronald hopefully.
-
-“You’re not really a witch, are you?” asked Lady Glenfern seriously. A
-white witch, of course, was a great benefit to have around, since all
-her powers were used for good; and the Kirk of the Lowlands had not
-yet reached far enough into the Highlands to make even white powers
-dangerous. Still, the lass of Old Mina was more likely to be a black
-witch, than a white one.
-
-“No!” Said Kelpie vehemently, and with perfect truth. (How she wished she
-were!) “And I would never be wanting to harm anyone,” she added, less
-truthfully.
-
-Alex, sitting cross-legged on the far window seat, sent her a bright
-hazel glance of derision, which Kelpie ignored.
-
-Glenfern raised an eyebrow at his wife, sighed, and smiled kindly. “Would
-you be wanting to stay with us, lassie?” he asked.
-
-“I would so,” replied Kelpie forthrightly. This was easier than she had
-hoped—if only Alex didn’t spoil it. “I could be working,” she offered
-meekly. “’Tis little enough I am knowing about the insides of houses, but
-I learn quickly.”
-
-Alex muffled a snort of laughter. They all glanced at him, but he merely
-gave Kelpie a look that was both warning and mirthful.
-
-Kelpie, who would have made a good general, seized the offensive boldly.
-“He is thinking I want to steal things,” she announced, nodding her
-tangled black head in Alex’s direction.
-
-“And do you not?” asked Glenfern bluntly.
-
-“Of course,” admitted Kelpie candidly. Didn’t everyone? “But I would
-not be doing it,” she went on, her blue-ringed eyes fixed on Glenfern’s,
-“because you would be sending me away if I did.”
-
-It was the best thing she could have said. Glenfern lifted his dark
-head with a shout of delighted laughter. Everyone seemed pleased and
-amused, and Kelpie made a mental note that truth was sometimes even more
-effective than a lie. She looked demure and managed at the same time to
-shoot a triumphant glance at Alex. But, disappointingly, he only grinned.
-
-“Very well so,” decided Lady Glenfern, smiling at her. “It is not many
-people can claim to having a friendly Kelpie staying with them. And I
-think you have it in you to be a good lass, and trustworthy.”
-
-Kelpie looked at her, deeply shocked. How could a great lady like this be
-so foolishly trusting? And all of them seemed the same—excepting Alex,
-of course, who was sensibly suspicious. Kelpie definitely approved of
-this, although she hated his uncanny astuteness and his mockery. As for
-the rest of them, indeed and indeed, it was a wonder they had managed to
-survive so long. Fooling them was almost too easy, like catching a baby
-hare with a broken leg.
-
-She felt the same way all over again on that very afternoon, after a most
-difficult morning.
-
-The difficulties had begun almost immediately after Kelpie’s too easy
-acceptance into the life of Glenfern. It seemed that Lady Glenfern had
-peculiar ideas on the subject of cleanliness and propriety. To begin
-with, there was the bath, the first Kelpie had ever had, supervised by
-the mistress herself, and executed by Fiona and her formidable mother
-Catriona. Catriona grumbled constantly, and Fiona crossed herself every
-time Kelpie looked at her—which she did frequently and maliciously.
-
-Then there was the matter of her name. “Have you not a proper Christian
-name?” asked Lady Glenfern while Kelpie’s matted hair was being violently
-combed and plaited into two long, thick tails. Kelpie, unable to shake
-her head, and with eyes smarting from the pulling, made a sound that
-meant no.
-
-“My sorrow!” remarked her new mistress. “A strange thing to be naming a
-lass for a water witch! Would you not rather be called something else?
-Rena, perhaps, or Morag?”
-
-But Kelpie caught a glimpse of herself just then in the small mirror that
-stood on a table, and a fleeting shaft of panic shot through her. It
-wasn’t herself at all! Her face was a stranger, with the dirt off and the
-hair pulled back wetly to show all of her eyes and forehead and even her
-fawn-shaped ears. _Dhé!_ If they changed her name as well, perhaps she
-would cease altogether to be herself and become someone else entirely!
-
-“No!” she said vehemently. And the subject was dropped.
-
-But when they gave her a fine-woven blue woolen dress of Eithne’s for her
-very own, and even something to wear under it, she began to take a more
-favorable view of the situation. And when, in the afternoon, she met Ian
-coming in the front door, he hardly seemed to know her at first. His eyes
-opened wide as he shook the heavy rain from his plaidie, and then he gave
-her one of his rare and sudden smiles that was like sunlight out of the
-drenching sky. Kelpie grinned back, preening herself frankly in her new
-finery.
-
-“Och, aren’t you grand, just!” Ian said admiringly.
-
-“Oh, aye,” agreed Kelpie, seeing no reason to deny it. “But I should have
-a pocket and a wee bit of silver to put in it,” she added hopefully.
-
-Ian laughed at her cheekiness. “Perhaps some day,” he said. “But I know
-that you will not be stealing them, for you have said you won’t, and I
-trust you.”
-
-There it was again! Kelpie shook her head in wonder. That wasn’t at all
-the reason she wouldn’t be stealing, and how could he be so daft as to
-think it? His warm brown eyes and the lovely chiseled, sensitive curve of
-his mouth quite melted Kelpie, and before she could stop herself she was
-warning him.
-
-“Och,” she blurted. “You mustn’t be trusting people so easily! It is not
-safe whatever!”
-
-“Mustn’t I trust you, then?” asked Ian gently. “Are you not wanting to be
-trusted, Kelpie?”
-
-“Indeed so,” explained Kelpie kindly. “Everyone is wanting to be trusted,
-because then it is much easier to fool the ones who trust them. And you
-may be trusting me because you have a stick over me, but it is foolish to
-do so otherwise.”
-
-They looked at each other pityingly.
-
-“Perhaps people are not so good as I would like to think,” said Ian
-slowly. “But I think they are not so bad as you have found them, either,
-Kelpie. And I would liefer trust mistakenly than to mistrust unfairly. Do
-you understand that?”
-
-“No,” said Kelpie.
-
-
-
-
-5. Bewitchery
-
-
-It was a strange new life she was in, indeed! Walls and roof were like a
-trap at first, although it was a grand thing to be warm and dry with all
-the storm demons howling over the earth. It was strange to have certain
-tasks at certain times, too, and not easy for a gypsy lass to whom time
-was nothing. It was strange to eat hot meals three times a day, and at a
-table, with the heat coming from the huge kitchen fireplace. But it was
-not so strange to have the servants lowering at her suspiciously. For the
-clanspeople of the glen, unlike their chief and his family, never trusted
-this water witch for a moment. An evil sprite she was, and no mistake
-about it. They watched every move she made.
-
-Still, suspicion was less after her first Sunday there, after she had
-gathered with the others to hear Glenfern read the service. It was well
-known that no witch would dare enter a church or hear the Holy Word,
-lest the roof fall in or some other dire thing happen. Kelpie herself was
-uneasy about this at first. True, she was not a witch, but she wanted to
-be, and she had read the crystal with Mina, and she wasn’t altogether
-certain what might happen. Still, it wasn’t a proper church, with a
-priest, but only Glenfern reading the Anglican service—and in any case,
-she dared not refuse. So she went, heart beating faster than usual, and
-was greatly relieved when nothing dreadful happened.
-
-True to her promise, Kelpie was diligent and learned quickly. Her reward
-was free time to wander in the encircling hills or to be with the other
-young people—and this was strangest of all, for they played and chattered
-and joked in a way quite novel to Kelpie, with laughter among them, and
-an ease and affection that held no wariness. Under the bewitchment of
-it, Kelpie found herself dropping her own guard more and more often.
-She liked being with them! There was more joy in it than in shouting
-and dancing alone on a hilltop; a different excitement from that she
-felt when cutting purses. As the days passed, she often had to remind
-herself of the advice she had given Ian. To be too relaxed could be
-dangerous—especially with that sharp-minded Alex about.
-
-Still, she couldn’t help enjoying those hours, and presently something
-clicked in her mind, and she understood the baffling thing they called
-teasing.
-
-Kelpie, Eithne, Ian, and Alex were sitting nearly waist-deep in the
-tangle of heather and bog-myrtle that rimmed Loch nan Eilean on a sunny
-afternoon.
-
-“Are you _sure_ you’re not wanting a proper name besides ‘Kelpie’?”
-Eithne asked, her soft voice worried and laughing at once. “It seems so
-insulting, just, that your parents....”
-
-Parents? Suddenly Kelpie remembered what Bogle had said. Suppose she had
-truly been stolen? Suppose she were really the daughter of a chief? Och,
-the glory of it! Wealth and importance, lovely gowns and jewels, silver
-buckles on real leather shoes, and a silver belt around her waist, and
-oh, the safety of never having to run from angry crowds....
-
-“_Dhé!_” she announced eagerly. “Mina and Bogle will not be my parents,
-at all.” She paused dramatically and prepared to launch the rest of her
-news. How startled and respectful they would be! Why hadn’t she thought
-of it sooner?
-
-“Och, now!” Alex turned twin sparks of laughter upon her. “And haven’t
-I been waiting, just, for you to be telling us? Kelpie has suddenly
-remembered,” he explained to the others solemnly, “that she was stolen by
-the gypsies when a wee bairn and is truly the daughter of a great chief,
-or perhaps of royal blood.”
-
-“How did you know?” began Kelpie and then stopped. The others were
-chuckling as at a great joke. Alex had put the blight of ridicule on
-her story—though it was at least half true. And now no one would ever be
-believing it at all!
-
-“Beast!” she spat. “It is _true_!”
-
-“As ever was!” agreed Alex jauntily and ducked her angry fist. Then he
-caught her wrist, put it firmly in her lap, and sat grinning at her.
-“You’re a wonderful wee liar, aren’t you just?” he observed admiringly.
-
-“Ou, aye,” admitted Kelpie a trifle smugly before she realized that he
-had tricked her again. “But this time,” she pointed out with indignation,
-“I am not lying.”
-
-“And would you not be saying the same thing if you were lying?” he
-persisted.
-
-This time Kelpie saw the trap, but she was already in it. “Of course,”
-she admitted with forthright logic. “For what would be the good of lying
-if you did not say it was the truth? But”—she bristled, slanted brows
-scrambling themselves darkly above her short nose—“_this_ time it _is_
-true!”
-
-Alex laughed.
-
-Kelpie tried for at least the twentieth time to put the Evil Eye on
-him. The result was a poisonous look, if not a blighting one. “Wicked,
-evil-minded beast!” she told him earnestly.
-
-Ian looked at Alex judiciously. “Och, no; not wicked,” he said. “He’s a
-bit evil-minded, ’tis true, and surely daft.”
-
-Kelpie blinked.
-
-“Aye, daft enough,” agreed Eithne happily. “Were you knowing, Kelpie,
-that he’s altogether foolish about an English lass, his cousin Cecily in
-Oxford? And yet all he can be saying of her is that she is like her own
-wee kitten, and that he will marry with her some day.”
-
-Alex grinned brazenly. “Well, and with who else?” he demanded. “You would
-not be having me, _m’eudail_.”
-
-“_Dhé_, no!” agreed Eithne promptly. “I’d as lief marry the twins!”
-
-“Mayhap Kelpie would have him,” suggested Ian lazily, and then he and
-Eithne shouted with laughter at the looks of sheer horror on both faces.
-
-“Mercy!” begged Alex, getting to his knees and clasping his hands
-pleadingly. “Anything but that! Curse me all you wish, water witch, but
-_please_ do not marry me!”
-
-Kelpie looked at him. It was then that something clicked. “Very well so,”
-she agreed with enthusiasm. “And what sort of curse would you be wanting?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-She went back to the house a little later, looking thoughtful and with a
-pleasant feeling in the heart of her—not merely because, for once, she
-had got the better of Alex, but also because of the thing that happened
-between people when they teased. It was a warm and happy thing that
-turned insults to joking and the hatred of Alex to something kinder. For
-surely a body did not tease where he hated! And surely he had been half
-teasing her from the first.
-
-Kelpie’s blue eyes glinted happily as she hurried into the big
-stone-floored kitchen, so that Marsali the cook almost smiled at her and
-Fiona for once forgot to cross herself.
-
-“And about time it is, too!” Marsali grunted, remembering her doubts
-about Kelpie. “The mistress has been looking for you while you were
-playing like a fine lady. Here, now, be helping to pluck this fowl, and
-let Master Donald go tell her that you’re here.”
-
-Kelpie glanced at the half of the twins who was arming himself for an
-afternoon of fishing, with a huge packet of scones and butter. “That’s
-Ronald,” she said absently as she picked up the small brown pheasant.
-
-Three pairs of eyes focused on her in sudden sharp attention, for it took
-far more than a brief glance to tell one twin from the other. In fact,
-only their mother and Wee Mairi could invariably do it.
-
-“I’m Donald,” asserted the twin, his eyes sparkling at her.
-
-“You’re Ronald.” Kelpie contradicted him serenely, hardly glancing up
-from her plucking job.
-
-Marsali at once took sides. “Och, now, will you be calling the wee master
-a liar?” she demanded indignantly, her fists planted against her hips.
-
-“Ou, aye,” said Kelpie. “He will be teasing you,” she added, pleased to
-recognize it.
-
-Fiona looked shocked. Marsali peered suspiciously from Kelpie to the
-twin, who giggled. “Och, well, then,” said Marsali, her ruddy face now
-ruddier with indignation, though she was not quite sure at whom to
-direct it. “Fine it is that Master Ronald has the wee mole on the back
-of his neck.” And she strode over to the grinning lad and lifted up the
-shoulder-length dark hair to look at the neck beneath. Kelpie went on
-plucking, perfectly sure of herself and feeling rather smug.
-
-“Master Ronald it _is_!” Marsali clucked, and Fiona crossed herself and
-edged away from Kelpie. “How could you be knowing, save with the Black
-Power?”
-
-“Aye,” demanded Ronald. “How were you knowing, Kelpie? Was it witchcraft?”
-
-Kelpie grinned and shrugged. She couldn’t really tell how she knew.
-It wasn’t the look of them, but rather the feel. Donald had a more
-aggressive and challenging tone, and Ronald more a feel of hungry
-curiosity. But how could a body explain this kind of knowing? No, they
-would just have to think it witchcraft.
-
-“_Mise-an-dhui!_” muttered Marsali, regarding her warily. Fiona had
-backed against the far wall. Donald appeared in search of his twin,
-and the two went into a conference. Presently they came out of it and
-presented a solid front to Kelpie, sturdy legs planted wide.
-
-“That is no proof you are a witch,” announced Donald. “Mother and Wee
-Mairi can tell us apart, and they are no witches, only Mother is knowing
-us too well and Mairi has Second Sight.”
-
-Kelpie yielded to temptation, made a horrible grimace, and began weaving
-mysterious signs in the air with her fingers. Fiona screeched, and
-Marsali turned pale. The twins stood their ground, grinning, belligerent,
-deeply interested—and just faintly worried.
-
-“Now whatever is all this?” It was Lady Glenfern herself, her full mauve
-skirts nearly filling the wide doorway, with Eithne, round-eyed, just
-behind.
-
-“Witchcraft!” squeaked Fiona.
-
-Kelpie flushed guiltily and found a sudden lump in her throat. Och, here
-was a mess! Why had she done such a foolish thing? All in fun it was,
-and yet who would believe her for a minute? Now she would be punished
-and sent away—and, for once, for a thing of which she was innocent! The
-novelty of the situation was so shattering that for once she lost her
-glib tongue. She simply stared at her mistress, her eyes growing wide
-with frustration and despair.
-
-The twins and Marsali broke into simultaneous explanations—all slightly
-different—with Fiona putting in exclamation points here and there, so
-that it was some time before Lady Glenfern could get an idea of what had
-happened. When she did, she turned questioningly to Kelpie, who was still
-trying to think up some lie that sounded more plausible than the truth.
-But Eithne spoke first.
-
-“Och, then, Mother!” she said, laughter and distress in her voice. “She
-was teasing; I am sure of it. Look you how the twins are always at her
-to cast a spell, and Fiona just begging to be teased by the very look of
-her. I am sure that was the way of it! Was it not, Kelpie?”
-
-Kelpie nodded a bit sullenly. This was humiliating. She wished she really
-had power to do a wee magic spell and dared show them, just to see their
-surprise.
-
-“Well—” Lady Glenfern hesitated, inclined to believe it, but not quite
-sure. After all....
-
-At that moment Wee Mairi popped into the kitchen, looking, in her full
-skirts, like a fairy child caught in an overblown rose. And, like a fairy
-child, she knew instantly that something was wrong, and what to do about
-it. She pattered across the floor and slipped her small, soft hand into
-Kelpie’s.
-
-“This is _my_ Kelpie,” she announced, smiling angelically at her mother.
-“’Tis myself loves her, and you must not be cross at her.”
-
-“There, Mother!” crowed Eithne. “Wee Mairi loves her, and Mairi has the
-Second Sight; you said yourself that she is never making a mistake about
-a person!”
-
-Lady Glenfern relaxed. “Aye so,” she agreed and smiled at Kelpie. “I can
-well see how you were tempted to tease,” she admitted and then became
-grave. “But you must be careful, lass. To joke about such matters could
-cause you sore trouble.”
-
-Kelpie hardly heard the warning. Her hand was gripping the small one
-still protectively clinging to it, and she found herself again seized by
-an alarming surge of feeling for its owner. Och, the fair, sweet heart of
-her....
-
-Wee Mairi chose this instant to lean confidingly against Kelpie and peer
-up with a beguiling smile. “_My_ Kelpie,” she repeated.
-
-And Kelpie was swallowed in a tide of the first real love she had ever
-known. She found it extremely upsetting. All her training and experience
-warned her that it was dangerous to be trapped into this sort of feeling.
-It left one vulnerable, could lead one into foolishness. And here she
-was, bewitched, unable to help it! She scowled helplessly.
-
-Lady Glenfern, seeing her distress, mercifully took her from the kitchen
-for the rest of the day and set her to work at a simple bit of weaving.
-For an hour or so Kelpie sat alone, brooding. Eithne came in for a while
-to work at her own more complicated length of Cameron tartan, but Kelpie
-was so unsociable that she left again.
-
-And then the twins arrived, dark heads cocked to one side, eyes dancing
-at her impishly. “We have found you,” they announced in triumph.
-
-“Fine I know it,” growled Kelpie, refusing to look at them.
-
-Undaunted, they seated themselves on two wee creepie-stools and regarded
-her with affable curiosity. “There is a thing that we have in our minds,”
-they told her.
-
-“I am doubting that!” snapped Kelpie.
-
-The twins digested this insult and then chuckled. “I am liking you fine,”
-said Donald, “even though you are not a witch.”
-
-Kelpie, touched again on that newly sensitive spot, shot the shuttle
-through the warp with unnecessary violence and said nothing.
-
-“Why were you saying you are a witch when you are not?” asked Ronald
-with interest. “Why,” he continued, getting warmed up, “do Fiona and the
-others think you are? Would you like to be? Are you truly Old Mina’s
-girl? Is she your Grannie Witchie? If you were a witch, Kelpie, what
-would you do first of all?”
-
-“Put a spell of silence on the tongue of you,” retorted Kelpie and found
-that her ill humor was beginning to evaporate. It was impossible not to
-smile back at their cheeky grins, not to chuckle when they said that
-Mother would probably approve such a spell. The atmosphere became quite
-congenial.
-
-“I thought you were going fishing,” observed Kelpie.
-
-The twins looked depressed. “We were,” they agreed. “But Father is come
-back from seeing Lochiel and told us to bide here for our lessons that we
-missed this morning. I think ’twill take him a wee while to find us in
-here, whatever,” added Ronald cheerfully, and Kelpie grinned again.
-
-“We are learning about the war between King Charles and Parliament and
-the Covenant,” volunteered Donald sadly, “and we could do fine _not_
-knowing about it. Grownups are gey confusing, so they are, and sometimes
-I think gey foolish besides, and we are not understanding it all very
-well.”
-
-“Are you loving King Charles?” demanded Ronald.
-
-“Ou, aye,” murmured Kelpie vaguely and hastened to turn the question.
-“Are you?” she countered.
-
-“As ever was!” they chorused instantly. “Is he not our King, and a
-Stewart, besides?”
-
-Well, Kelpie had already known that Glenfern was pro-Royalist. “And so
-the King is always right?” she pursued, trying to think what else to ask.
-
-“Och, no!” said the twins in surprise. “No one is always right,” they
-informed her gravely. “Except,” they added, “for Father.”
-
-Kelpie put her shuttle through the wrong way and had to take it out
-again, her lip twitching ever so slightly. The twins, having settled that
-subject of conversation, looked at her hopefully. “Can you,” they asked,
-“tell us a story?”
-
-Now if there was one thing Kelpie could do better than any other,
-it was to tell stories—pathetic tales to earn sympathy or a copper,
-outrageous lies to escape impending trouble, embroidered yarns of her own
-adventures, old gypsy stories, eerie folk tales of the wee people and
-other uncanny beings, or fanciful bits and snatches that she wove for
-herself among the hills or beside the campfire. Her eyes sparkled. “Fine
-I can that!” she asserted and dropped her voice to an eerie pitch.
-
-“Have you ever,” she whispered, “heard of the _uruisg_ of Glenlyon?”
-
-They shook their heads and drew their stools nearer.
-
-“Well, then.” Kelpie paused, shuttle in hand. “It was a farmer’s wife
-who was making porridge for breakfast on a wet morning, when who should
-come walking in but an _uruisg_. Och, a slippery, damp, uncouth monster
-he was, half man and half goat; and wasn’t he just sitting himself down
-at the fire to dry, and not so much as a wee greeting to her? Well, the
-farmer’s wife was fair angered at his impertinence, and she having to
-step over and around him every minute, so presently she just lifted a
-ladle of the boiling porridge from the pot over the fire, and poured it
-over him, just. Well, at that he leaped up, howling, and ran out the door
-and never dared set foot in that house again....”
-
-When Glenfern finally tracked down his elusive twins some time later,
-Kelpie had got very little weaving done, but she had made a place for
-herself forever in the hearts of Ronald and Donald.
-
-
-
-
-6. The Picture in the Loch
-
-
-“’Tis a terrible complicated matter, the war,” objected Eithne doubtfully
-as she began basting a sleeve into what was to be a fine linen shirt for
-Ian’s birthday. “I fear I’d only be confusing you.”
-
-Kelpie surveyed the four or five yards of red and green tartan wool which
-constituted a kilt for a small lad, and wondered how even Donald could
-have managed to tear such stout weave. “I could not be more confused than
-I am,” she pointed out, “for I am knowing nothing at all. Tell me at
-least a little.”
-
-Eithne sighed and obeyed. “Well,” she began hesitantly, “you know that
-King Charles is King of England and Scotland both?” Kelpie nodded. “But
-in both countries are representative bodies of men called Parliaments,
-and they help to rule. They are supposed to agree with the things the
-King does, and it is the English parliament who must vote to give him
-things like extra money when he needs it—which he usually does.”
-
-She paused to squint critically at her basting, and Kelpie waited.
-Somehow she had developed a great eagerness to learn about the matters
-which had thrown England and Scotland into civil war. “Aye, go on,” she
-murmured.
-
-“Well, so. Neither King Charles nor his father before him has got along
-well with Parliament. King and Parliament each said the other will be
-trying to take more rights and power than they should have, and they
-became angry. Parliament would refuse to vote money for the King, so the
-King would dissolve Parliament, which meant that they could not meet any
-more to vote on anything at all until King Charles called them back, and
-so everyone was unhappy.”
-
-She bit off her thread and held the shirt closer to the dim light
-which filtered through the thick diamond-shaped mullion panes of the
-casement window. “And then”—she sighed—“religion came into it. Father,”
-she remarked severely, “says that religion should never be mixed with
-politics, but they do not listen to wise people like Father, and so there
-is trouble.”
-
-“What has religion to do with it?” asked Kelpie curiously. She had never
-known anything of religion for herself, only that the stern Kirk of the
-Lowlands had severe views on all other faiths, on fun and laughter, and
-most particularly on witches. But the Anglican services here at Glenfern
-seemed peaceful and vaguely pleasant, even though she did not understand
-them.
-
-“Och!” protested Eithne, but Kelpie’s face was implacable, so she went
-on. “Well, the Catholics and Protestants do not like each other, and
-especially the Protestants of the new Reformed Church, like the Puritans
-in England and the Calvinist Covenanters in Scotland—and we Anglicans
-caught in the middle. King Charles is Anglican, but the Parliament is
-mostly Puritan, I think. At any rate, they were very angry when the King
-married Queen Henrietta, who is a Roman Catholic and said she would turn
-the country all Catholic and burn Protestants at the stake. And the
-Catholics said the Protestants were trying to rule the country and force
-their religion on everyone, and so it was a fine braw quarrel for years,
-with religion and politics all mixed together.”
-
-Kelpie carefully selected a strand of wool to match the soft, dull red of
-the Cameron tartan. This was the most difficult bit of mending she had
-yet been trusted with. “Mmm,” she murmured after a minute, turning her
-mind back to the conversation. “And then?”
-
-It was Eithne’s turn to pause, while the rain beat against the casement
-windows. Wee Mairi turned from her doll to lift a merry smile in the
-direction of “her Kelpie,” who felt a new pang of affection. Och, the
-bonnie wee thing!
-
-Eithne scowled at the shirt and then glanced up at Kelpie with a rueful
-shrug. “Ou, I cannot mind me of all the details.” She sighed again. “But
-the quarrel turned into fighting.”
-
-“But what of Scotland?” demanded Kelpie. “What had it to do with us at
-all?”
-
-“Why,” interrupted the dry voice of Alex, “King Charles himself must be
-bringing that on!” They looked up to see him standing in the doorway, a
-shirt in his hand and a wry grin on his angular face. “Scotland might
-have been loyal to him, even though all the Lowlands are Calvinist, and
-even more rigid than the Puritans, but he had the bright idea of forcing
-the Anglican prayer book on Scotland. And the next thing he knew, there
-was a Solemn League and Covenant formed against him, and Scotland divided
-as England was, with Lowlands against the King, and most of the Highlands
-loyal to him.”
-
-Eithne looked both relieved and worried, while Kelpie studied Alex’s
-expression in the dim light, not quite certain if he were teasing or not.
-She decided not—for once. There was a faint note of bitterness in his
-voice. “I thought you were a King’s man!” she challenged him.
-
-“I am so,” he returned promptly and unpropped himself from the doorway.
-“Look you, Eithne,” he went on, crossing the room to her. “I have ripped
-my shirt sorely and am needing a bonnie sweet lass to mend it for me.”
-
-Eithne tilted her chestnut curls at him and wrinkled up her nose in an
-impish grin. “If I do,” she said, bargaining, “will you be explaining the
-rest of the war to Kelpie?”
-
-“_Dhé!_” said Alex and raised both eyebrows at Kelpie.
-
-“She is truly wanting to know,” said Eithne sternly, “so do not be
-teasing her, Alex. And I am gey muddled about it, and you knowing so much
-more, with having been at Oxford and even seeing the King and his family
-yourself. Will you?”
-
-“’Tis a hard bargain,” complained Alex, “and I am thinking I pity the
-man who will one day marry you, Eithne _m’eudail_.” He perched on the
-corner of the massive table, his kilt falling in heavy folds about his
-lean knees. “Well, then, and what bit of my great knowledge should I be
-sharing with you first?”
-
-Kelpie gave him a wicked pointed smile. “Tell me,” she said softly, “in
-one word, just, _what are they fighting for?_”
-
-“My sorrow!” exclaimed Alex, straightening up as if he had sat on a
-thistle. “Is that all?”
-
-“Don’t you know?” asked Kelpie tauntingly. “I will tell you, then.
-They’re fighting for power. Is it not so?”
-
-Alex resumed his perch and surveyed her ruefully. “Och, and are you
-not the young cynic!” he observed. “And you have shocked my foster
-sister, too.” For Eithne was looking both dismayed and indignant. Both
-girls had forgotten their sewing for the moment and sat staring at Alex
-challengingly, waiting for his opinion.
-
-He laughed. “I fear me I shall anger you both,” he remarked, “and go
-through the rest of my life with an evil spell on my head and a tom
-sleeve in my shirt.”
-
-“Well?” demanded Kelpie.
-
-Alex gave her a crooked grin. “Sorry I am to agree with you even in
-part,” he confessed, “but no doubt some men are fighting for power.
-No, no, Eithne,” he added as she opened her mouth. “Do not deny it too
-quickly. What about Argyll?”
-
-Eithne subsided.
-
-“On the other hand, Alex _avic_, there is Montrose.” It was Ian. He
-pulled up a hassock and ranged himself quietly but firmly on Eithne’s
-side.
-
-“Montrose?” asked Kelpie.
-
-“Aye,” said Ian, turning his warm smile upon her. “James Graham of
-Montrose, and he one of the finest, truest men under the sun. He it is
-who is named to fight for the King’s cause in Scotland, even to form and
-organize the army. And he is fighting for no selfish reason whatever, but
-only for what he believes to be right. Alex cannot deny it, for we both
-met and talked to him last winter in Oxford.”
-
-“Indeed and I’ll not deny it,” agreed Alex amiably, “though Kelpie might.
-My point was just that all men are not like Montrose, and my proof of
-it is still Argyll. Och, and have you done, my sonsie Eithne?” he added
-as she held up the mended shirt. “Come away, then, Ian, and let’s be
-outside. I believe the sun is going to come out.”
-
-And they were gone before Kelpie could ask about Argyll. Perhaps it was
-as well, she decided, going back to her mending. For she really thought
-she had heard quite as much as she could absorb all in one lump.
-
-Eithne flickered a mischievous sideways glance at her. “And wasn’t I
-warning you ’twas complicated?” she murmured.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As if by tacit agreement, no one brought up matters like war and politics
-for some time. After all, it was easy enough, in that peaceful, secluded
-glen, to put such things far out of mind. Kelpie’s free hours were full
-enough, as spring days became longer, with other things. Wee Mairi
-tagged along with her, a self-appointed guardian, and the glenspeople
-had learned to hide their hostility when Mairi was there. The twins were
-insatiably hungry for more stories—and so, for that matter, were the
-older young people. Books were rare and precious, and mostly devoted to
-serious and difficult subjects. And, as Ian generously remarked on a
-sunny afternoon by the loch, Kelpie was a master at telling tales.
-
-Alex grinned impishly. “She is that!” he agreed with a wicked twinkle in
-his eye and a double meaning to his voice which Kelpie chose to ignore.
-
-“Next time I will tell you about the _sithiche_ (fairies) of Loch
-Maree—_if_ you are all very kind to me,” she said blandly and glanced
-impudently at Alex.
-
-She sat on alone by the loch for a little while after the others had
-left, thinking about things. How Alex had changed since she first met
-him! He was much nicer than she had thought. And she had begun to like
-his teasing and mockery, for it was all good-humored.... Or was it
-perhaps herself had changed? And if so—She rolled over to lie full-length
-on her face in the fragrant long grasses and pondered. Then, lazily, she
-stretched until her head was over the edge of the loch.
-
-What was her real self like? Had that changed? Could it?
-
-The bank at this point rose abruptly about two feet above the glassy
-surface of the water, with tough curling roots of heather overhanging
-the edge. Kelpie reached down skillfully, scooped up a handful of the
-cold water, and drank it from her palm before it could run through
-her fingers. The surface rippled slightly and returned to its mirror
-stillness, with sky, hills, and trees reflected so clearly that it would
-be hard to tell the reflection from the real. Or was one, perhaps, as
-real as the other?
-
-She stared down at her own face, still looking indecently bare with all
-the thick dark hair pulled back into plaits. Was that any less real—or
-more—than the scenes she saw in Mina’s crystal?
-
-And then it was no longer her own face she was seeing, but a town
-street and an ugly-tempered crowd surging down it. Not merely annoyed,
-that crowd, but murderous. Kelpie shivered a little, for she knew too
-well how bestial a mob could be. And this one had a victim, for there
-was savage satisfaction in the grim Lowland faces above their sober
-Covenanter garments, pressing closer and closer.... And there was Ian!
-Whatever could he be doing in the Lowlands? Pushing through the crowd, he
-was; and Alex came after, shouting at him, his angular face all twisted
-with fury. And now they were closer, and Alex was catching up to Ian....
-Alex was lifting his sword, and through the crowd Kelpie could see him
-bring it down savagely.... _Dhé!_ Ian had fallen, his dark head vanished
-in the throng! And Alex’s sword with blood on it!
-
-Kelpie jerked with horror, and a bit of dry heather plopped into the
-water—and the picture was gone. Nor did it return, though she waited,
-staring at the still water and brooding bitterly.
-
-_Dhé!_ That serpent Alex! She had never liked him from the beginning!
-And now he was going to turn on his foster brother, strike him down from
-behind, perhaps kill him—for the Sight never lied.
-
-She tried to tell herself that it didn’t matter to her, but it was too
-late. Ian had crept into her heart, and Wee Mairi, and the rest of them.
-Even Alex, deceitful scoundrel that he was, had somehow tricked her into
-liking him—for a while, anyway. But now she knew better. Och, she must
-try to warn Ian! Even if he could not prevent it, perhaps he could be on
-his guard, could put off the evil day of it, could duck in time to save
-his life.
-
-Dismayed, angry, resolute, Kelpie got to her feet, smoothed down the full
-folds of her blue dress, and started back up the loch.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Now what, wondered Alex, had got under the skin of their wolf cub lately?
-For there was a new venom toward himself—and after he had been thinking
-her nearly tamed, too. Aye, a wolf cub: belligerent, cunning, snarling,
-biting, thieving, destructive—and yet innocent, as a wolf cub is innocent
-because it knows nothing else.
-
-But she had been changing. She had been learning trust and affection,
-even to play and tease. And now, suddenly, there was a new and deadly
-hatred smoldering at him from those ringed eyes. It was puzzling, it
-was, and rather less amusing than her old spitting indignation had
-been; and even though it could hardly be a tragedy to him, still it was
-disconcerting. Alex kept a wary eye on her, lest she should decide to
-take her _sgian dhu_ to his back.
-
-As for Kelpie, she found the business of warning Ian a bit harder than
-it had seemed. For one thing, it was none so easy to find him alone, for
-he and Alex were usually together and about their own affairs, while
-Kelpie had her tasks in the house. In the evenings the family sat
-together in the withdrawing room, which was not Kelpie’s place. The big
-warm kitchen, or her wee cot in Marsali’s room, was where she belonged,
-or—more often—away by herself outside, in the pale half-light of the long
-northern gloaming. For summer was drawing near, and darkness now merely
-brushed down late upon the world and, like a gull’s wing, quickly lifted.
-
-So she glared at Alex and did her tasks and kept her eyes and ears open
-and bided her time. And at last Alex went off for a few days to visit his
-brother in Ardochy. And the next evening Kelpie, on one of her rambles,
-saw Ian on the hill above her, quietly looking down over the glen.
-
-Kelpie drew near, and then paused. Och, a braw lad he was! But how might
-she be approaching him best? It might be he wanted to be alone. Before
-she could decide, Ian saw her, smiled, beckoned, his face oddly blurred
-in the half-light that turned all things gray. She sat beside him and for
-a minute followed his gaze over the long shadowed cup of the glen, lit by
-the silver gleam of Loch nan Eilean.
-
-Finally Ian stirred and spoke. “I wish I might never need to leave it
-again,” he said wistfully.
-
-Did he love it so? Kelpie dimly sensed that he did; but she did not
-understand, for she herself had no roots to her heart, but only a
-wanderlust to her feet. “And must you, then?” she asked. Why could Ian
-not be doing as he pleased, since he was the heir to Glenfern?
-
-“Aye so,” he said, a bit more briskly. “For I must finish my schooling
-if I am to be a fit chieftain and leader to my people. However”—he
-brightened considerably—“I think we’ll not be able to return to Oxford
-for some time, with the war moving northward and becoming more serious,
-and Argyll endangering all the Highlands.”
-
-Now was the moment for her to warn him about Alex. But it was also a
-chance to ask about Argyll and put off the more difficult thing. “Tell me
-about Argyll!” she urged.
-
-Ian turned to look at her with friendly interest. “You’ve a good head on
-you, haven’t you, Kelpie? Mother says you’re quick to learn and that you
-speak English as well as Gaelic. Are you truly interested in national
-affairs, then?” Kelpie nodded.
-
-“Well, then,” began Ian, “you know who Argyll is, do you not? Mac Cailein
-Mor, Chief of Clan Campbell in the Highlands, and also head of the
-Covenant Army of the Lowlands. So he has that power added to the power
-of his own clan, and he uses it ill, Kelpie. He is a vicious man, cruel,
-ambitious, and vindictive.”
-
-Kelpie could not resist a gibe. “And is he not also a Campbell, and his
-clan at feud with yours?” she remarked.
-
-Ian flushed. Even in the dusk she could see it. “’Tis not that!” he
-protested. “I am not one to hate a man for his name, Kelpie! And in any
-case, my own uncle married a Campbell lass; and the son of Lochiel, our
-own clan chief, married Argyll’s sister, and we are anxious to be at
-peace. But Argyll, devil that he is, wishes to dictate his own terms
-entirely. Do you know what he has done, Kelpie? He has taken his nephew
-Ewen—Lochiel’s own grandson, who will be chief of the Camerons some
-day—and is keeping him at his own castle of Inverary. He says he wishes
-to see to his education—and I can guess what kind of education ’twill
-be—but do you see that Ewen is hostage for Lochiel’s actions? And if
-Lochiel dares to take the side of the King against Argyll—”
-
-“Mmmm,” said Kelpie, seeing.
-
-“Nor is it just our clan,” Ian went on, deep anger in his voice. “He
-was commissioned to secure the Highlands for the Covenant, which is bad
-enough, for we have not tried to inflict our politics or religion on
-them. But Argyll has used his commission and the Lowland army to settle
-his private grudges. He burned the great house of Airly, with no enemy
-there but a helpless woman. And he burned and ravaged the lands of
-MacDonald of Keppoch, and is even now laying waste the lands of Gordon of
-Huntly. They say he would make himself King Campbell, and a black day for
-Scotland if he should.”
-
-Kelpie remembered the face she had seen once in the crystal, which Mina
-had called Mac Cailein Mor, Marquis of Argyll. A cold, cruel face it
-had been, with twisted sneering mouth, a heavy and pendulous nose, and a
-squint in the crafty eyes of him, so that one couldn’t be just sure what
-he was looking at.
-
-“Aye,” she agreed suddenly. “He is a red-haired _uruisg_. I have been
-seeing him helping with his own hands to fire the homes and burn people
-too.” She didn’t add that the people burned were accused of witchcraft,
-as this might not be a tactful thing to mention.
-
-“You’ve seen that?” exclaimed Ian.
-
-“In the crystal, only,” confessed Kelpie. “I was also seeing him mounting
-the scaffold to be hanged,” she remembered with relish. “But,” she added
-regretfully, “he was looking much older then.”
-
-“_Dhé!_” exclaimed Ian, deeply impressed. “I did not know you were having
-the Second Sight, Kelpie.”
-
-“Aye,” said Kelpie. And here was her opening. “Ian!” she blurted, quite
-forgetting to give him a respectful title. “You must not be trusting Alex
-MacDonald.”
-
-“Not trust Alex?” Ian turned a dumfounded face to hers. And then he
-laughed. “Och, Kelpie, there is no one in the world I trust better! We
-are sworn brothers, and if my life were to rest in the two hands of him,
-there is no place I would sooner have it.”
-
-“And you would lose it, then,” said Kelpie flatly. “For I had a Seeing,
-and his sword fell upon you from behind, and you fell. And there was
-anger on his face and blood upon his sword.”
-
-Ian’s face was a pale blob in the dusk, and she could not see it turn
-white—and yet she knew, somehow, that it did. For the Second Sight never
-lied.
-
-And in spite of that, Ian shook his head. “I cannot believe it, Kelpie,”
-he said quietly. “It is a mistake, for the sun would fall from the sky
-before Alex could be untrue.”
-
-Kelpie thrust an angry face, long eyes glittering, close to his. “You
-think I am lying, but I am not. I would have been warning you, even
-though it is of no profit to me, whatever. But it is a spell he has cast
-upon you! And,” she added bitterly, “you will be discovering it too
-late.”
-
-
-
-
-7. The Return of Mina and Bogle
-
-
-Summer was upon the Highlands. The serene curves of the hills glowed with
-a hundred shades of green and tawny and rose, all with a faintly unreal,
-spirit-of-opal quality, so that the distances looked no more solid than a
-rainbow.
-
-Kelpie breathed the salt wind as she climbed higher above the glen, and
-stared hungrily at the distant hills. For she was beginning to feel
-restless. A wee glen was not space enough, and there were too many
-people, too much routine, and she must away to the hills to be alone.
-Here were only the mild shaggy cattle peering mournfully from behind long
-fringes of hair, and the hares and red deer, the hill larks and whaups
-and gulls, and an eagle—high and alone in the free air.
-
-Her acute senses had been lulled by the months of security at Glenfern,
-and she was startled to see the bent, wiry figure of Mina rise
-unexpectedly from behind a clump of juniper.
-
-They looked at each other, and Kelpie’s expression could not possibly
-have been mistaken for delight. Mina took one good look at it, swung back
-her strong, scrawny arm, and aimed it at Kelpie.
-
-It seemed that Kelpie’s reactions as well as her senses had become rusty.
-She didn’t duck in time. And, since Mina had fully expected her to, the
-resounding smack startled and pained them both.
-
-Mina shook her stinging hand and glared at Kelpie as if the girl had done
-it on purpose. Kelpie, her head ringing, glared back. And Black Bogle,
-who had appeared as silently as his eerie namesake, shook with malicious
-laughter.
-
-“_Amadain!_” grumbled Mina sourly. “Forgotten everything you ever knew!
-Fine-lady clothes and clean face, and hands that will have lost all their
-cunning—such as it was. Blind and deaf and slow as a sleeping snail.
-_Amadain!_”
-
-“Sssss!” remarked Kelpie, looking and sounding like a wrathful snake. She
-had forgotten how ugly and mean and dirty Mina was. Och, how she hated
-her!
-
-Mina looked pleased. She enjoyed Kelpie’s impotent hatred. And Kelpie,
-knowing this, controlled her feelings and hooded her eyes and made her
-sharp-jawed small mouth curl upward. She had been a fool to show her
-feelings at all at all!
-
-“Come away, then,” ordered Mina, suddenly becoming brisk. “You have kept
-us waiting long enough! Why weren’t you coming as soon as you got my
-message?”
-
-“What message?” asked Kelpie blankly. Mina’s eyes blazed with fury and
-humiliation. Bogle laughed aloud, and Kelpie knew that Mina had tried to
-send her a message by magic—and it hadn’t worked. Och, but she must say
-something quickly, or no telling what Mina might do!
-
-“It would be yon red-haired serpent down there,” she said improvising
-hastily. “He was no doubt setting up a spell to prevent your message from
-reaching me. Teach me to say spells, Mina,” she wheedled, “so that I may
-set one on him.”
-
-It worked. Mina’s pride was saved, and her wrath turned from Kelpie to
-Alex. “I will be cursing him myself,” she growled. “He is the same one
-who would not pay me enough when you were hurt, and who would not let you
-steal? Very well so! He will pay, and the others as well. We will go now
-and demand your wages before you leave.”
-
-Leave? Kelpie’s heart sank. Back to the old life of fear, hatred,
-beatings? Away from Wee Mairi and Ian and the companionship and teasing?
-She backed up a step and braced herself.
-
-“What for should I want to leave?” She stuck out her jaw rebelliously,
-and Mina slapped it.
-
-“Because I am saying so!” she snarled. “And because I will put an evil
-curse on you if you do not obey.”
-
-Kelpie prudently pulled in her smarting jaw and considered this. On one
-hand, Mina was not as powerful as Kelpie had thought, for she almost
-certainly could not read the crystal alone, and her magic message had
-failed to get through. But that was not to say she could not curse.
-Kelpie still had great faith in the power of Mina’s evil spells. And
-Mina’s curse would be even more disagreeable than her company. Kelpie
-brooded darkly over the unpleasant alternatives before her, almost
-inclined to risk the curse.
-
-“Why would you not want to come?” demanded Mina, and her cursing changed
-to wheedling. “And here I have been to the trouble of arranging for you
-to learn witchcraft at last, ungrateful wretch that you are, then! What,
-would you stay to be a slave to arrogant fools such as these? Stupid
-sheep, spending their lives shut in a wee glen?”
-
-“They do not, then,” muttered Kelpie mutinously. “Ian and Alex have been
-to school in England in a place called Oxford, and have seen the King and
-Montrose and know more than we about affairs. And they do not beat me,
-nor make me steal for them and then set the crowd on me. And I do not
-believe you plan to teach me witchcraft, whatever, for you are always
-promising it and never do it.”
-
-Mina’s face darkened, and she raised a scrawny, strong arm again, but
-Bogle loomed over her and drew her aside to speak for a moment in a
-voice like distant thunder. Kelpie watched apprehensively. When Bogle
-intervened, it was never for motives of kindness and charity.
-
-“Hah!” Mina cackled presently and turned back to Kelpie. “And what of the
-wee bittie lass we were seeing you playing with so tenderly this morning?
-Shall I put a curse on her, too? Aye, on all the glen I shall put the
-Evil Eye, so that they will all wither up and die horrible deaths!”
-
-Kelpie’s defiance collapsed like a deflated bagpipe. Not Wee Mairi!
-She could not bear to risk harm for her bonnie bairn. But she must not
-let Mina know how vulnerable she was on this point, or she would be in
-slavery and Wee Mairi in danger forever more! Carefully keeping her face
-impassive, she shrugged indifferently. “Och, well, just do not be putting
-it on me,” she murmured, and noted that both Mina and Bogle looked
-disappointed. “And will you truly be teaching me witchcraft if I come?”
-she demanded, as if this were her only interest.
-
-“Have I not said so?” Mina growled. “Was it trying to drive a hard
-bargain you were, then? I should beat you for it! Come away down, now,
-for we have wasted too much time already.” And she led the way down the
-hill.
-
-It was the twins who first spotted the assorted trio approaching, and
-they began to shout excitedly.
-
-“Kelpie, is yon your Grannie Witchie? Father, Ian, come and see!” they
-yelled in full voice. And then, short kilts swinging, they raced up the
-slope to stare at Mina and Bogle with frank, fearless curiosity.
-
-“Are you truly a witch?” demanded Ronald, and, in spite of her gloom,
-Kelpie stifled a grin at the look on Mina’s face.
-
-The old woman drew herself up and glared at them. “Best not be asking
-that!” she warned in an ominous croak that should have completely cowed
-them, but didn’t.
-
-“Why not?” asked Ronald with great interest. “What will happen if we do?
-Do you not think, Donald, that she looks like a witch?”
-
-“Ou, aye,” declared Donald judiciously. “But we have not seen her casting
-any spells yet. Can you cast spells, Grannie Witchie?”
-
-Kelpie’s amusement changed to apprehension as the infuriated Mina
-spluttered speechlessly. It was probably only her speechlessness and the
-timely arrival of Glenfern that saved the twins from an awful fate. Mina
-gave them one last baleful glare—Kelpie fervently hoped it wasn’t the
-Evil Eye—and turned to the tall chieftain. Kelpie glanced at him, and
-at Ian, Eithne, and Alex, who arrived just then from down by the loch,
-and then stared sullenly at the ground. She dared not look straight at
-them, for if they were to read her eyes and guess how she felt, then
-they would refuse to let her go, and so Mina’s curse would be upon them.
-And now Kelpie found that her old misgivings were justified. She had
-recklessly given her affection and left herself vulnerable, so now she
-must suffer the consequences. Angrily she promised herself never to be so
-weak again.
-
-“Well, then,” said Glenfern pleasantly at last. “And are you leaving us,
-Kelpie?” She jerked her head, not looking at him. “I am sorry to hear
-it,” he said gently, “for I think you were happy here, and we have come
-to like you well.”
-
-“Oh, Kelpie!” Eithne protested, shrinking a little from Mina and Bogle.
-“Can you not stay?”
-
-“Och, you cannot go!” clamored the twins in outrage. “Who will be telling
-us stories now?”
-
-Kelpie scowled, chewed her lip, and wished herself a thousand miles away.
-And worse was to come, for a brief glance upward showed her that all of
-them, from Mina to the twins, were on the verge of guessing her true
-feelings. She tossed her head and gave a hard little laugh. “Och, I’m
-away,” she said airily, “for I’ve bided too long in one place.”
-
-Glenfern was looking at her keenly. “You are welcome to stay, you know,”
-he told her.
-
-“Aye, to slave for you without pay!” whined Mina in her most put-upon
-voice. If she had been slow to the attack, she made up for it now. “We
-have come to have her wages.”
-
-From under her lashes Kelpie saw the hurt on Eithne’s face, and something
-like pity on Ian’s. Only Alex wore a look of acid amusement that set
-Kelpie’s teeth on edge. And Glenfern was giving Mina the same stern look
-he used when the twins had been naughty.
-
-“I think you must be joking,” he said quietly. “We have treated this lass
-far better than ever you have done. We have fed her properly, clothed her
-in decent, clean garments, taught her, given her affection and a roof
-over her head and a bed under her. What have you ever given her save harm
-and neglect?”
-
-“She is ours!” Mina squealed angrily, but she must have seen that she
-would get nowhere, for she suddenly changed tactics. “Would you be
-wanting Mac Cailein Mor to hear things about you?” she hinted softly.
-“Things about how you are favoring King Charles, and what you think of
-the Covenant, and your own son associating with the King and bringing
-back messages from him, and from Montrose as well, perhaps?”
-
-There was only one way Mina could have learned these things. Everyone
-looked at Kelpie, who stuck out her chin and grinned brazenly. Ou, the
-wicked, careless tongue of her, to be telling Mina that! Ian and Eithne
-were looking as if she had slapped them. There was a smile on Alex’s lean
-face and scorn in his eyes.
-
-“And so you have not really changed at all,” he observed softly, and
-was surprised at the bitterness of his own disappointment. After all,
-what else had he expected? But his tongue went on scathingly. “Selfish,
-faithless, unscrupulous you are and always will be. You could never think
-of inconveniencing yourself for the good of another, could you, Kelpie?”
-
-“Of course not,” said Kelpie defiantly, but the sweet face of Wee Mairi
-was warm and mocking in her heart.
-
-“Let be, Alex.” Ian sighed. “She cannot help it. There was not enough
-time to change old habits.”
-
-“Nor ever will be,” retorted Alex.
-
-Kelpie hissed at him venomously. “Faithless yourself!” she spat. “Do not
-be forgetting what I told you, Ian!” And she turned away to Glenfern, who
-was laughing at Mina.
-
-“By all means go to Argyll,” he said cheerfully. “Tell him whatever you
-like. He knows well enough where our sympathies lie. But leave the lass
-behind you when you go, for I should not like her to be burned as a witch
-along with the two of you. And now, farewell. I am sorry,” he added,
-turning to Kelpie, “that you could not stay with us, poor lass. Remember
-that we wish you well.”
-
-That was really almost too much. Kelpie turned abruptly and started up
-the pass with Mina and Bogle, who knew when they were defeated. At least
-it was over, and she must just put it away out of her memory.
-
-But it was not quite over. Halfway up the hill a small voice wailed
-after her. She turned to see Wee Mairi tugging at Eithne’s hand, one
-small arm stretched out and upward. “My Kelpie!” she shrilled. “Do not go
-away, my Kelpie!”
-
-Mina’s pale eyes were upon Kelpie, narrowed, watchful, suspicious. Kelpie
-set her jaw, hardened her face, and deliberately turned her back on the
-broken-hearted little figure below.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The next few miles were blurred. Kelpie tramped mechanically behind Mina
-and Bogle, unseeing, trying to wipe three months out of her life and
-become the person she had been before. Och, she had been right to begin
-with! A feckless, foolish thing it was to care for anyone, and only hurt
-could come from it. From now on she would be hard as the granite sides of
-Ben Nevis, which now loomed ahead, snow still patching its sheer northern
-side. She would be what Alex thought her—and a pox on him, too. Nor would
-she even care that he would strike down that braw lad Ian, for Ian had
-had his warning, and it was his own fault if he was too stupid to heed it.
-
-Scowling, she kicked at an inoffensive clump of bluebells and
-deliberately stepped on a wild yellow iris. She would become a witch,
-then; not a “coven witch,” either. She had seen them—silly people, who
-made a great ceremony of selling their souls to the Devil and met in
-groups of thirteen, called covens, and held Black Mass, and did a great
-deal of wild dancing. Mina said these were little more than playing at
-witchcraft and learned only a few simple spells. No, now, Kelpie would
-be a witch of the old sort, who needed no bargains with Satan, but who
-tapped a Power that was old before the beginnings of Christianity.
-A Power it was that could be used for either black or white magic,
-but Kelpie had seen little of the white, and black seemed much more
-congenial, especially in her present mood.
-
-She drifted into her old dream of what she would do one day to Mina and
-Bogle. Aye, and perhaps she would just add Alex as well. They were over
-the pass and heading south along the side of Loch Lochy before she came
-back to herself and began to wonder about the present.
-
-“Where is it we are going now?” she demanded, moving up to walk beside
-Mina, half off the narrow path. “When will you be teaching me witchcraft?
-What are you planning?”
-
-Mina cast a thoughtful eye at Kelpie’s blue dress, now kilted up through
-her belt for easier walking. “I think that would be fitting me,” she
-remarked casually. “We will be telling you what you will need to know
-when it is the right time for knowing it,” she added so mildly that
-Kelpie looked at her with dark suspicion.
-
-Falling behind once more, she began again to brood over her life. It
-consisted of being pushed from one situation into another. It was
-other folk who acted, and herself who reacted, who was acted upon.
-Was she, then, such a spineless creature? Was her whole life to be
-molded by others? Rebellion once more rose in her, but then subsided
-as she remembered the two-pronged stick that Mina held over her—nay,
-three-pronged, really. She could curse Kelpie, and she could curse Wee
-Mairi and Ian and the other folk of Glenfern, and only Mina could teach
-Kelpie witchcraft. And witchcraft, now, had become the only goal in her
-life, the only hope of escaping the hateful mastery of Mina and Bogle.
-Kelpie set her teeth, and the look on her face was neither pleasant nor
-attractive.
-
-Down to the tip of Loch Lochy and on down the river they plodded, past
-the home of Glenfern’s chief, Lochiel; and at last they made camp for the
-night in the old unfinished castle of Inverlochy. Roofless it was, and
-built four-square, with a round tower at each corner, and Kelpie narrowed
-her eyes thoughtfully as they went in. Mina and Bogle never looked for
-walls about them, except sometimes in the cold of winter. What was afoot?
-
-For the moment there was no time to wonder. Mina nodded brusquely at the
-river, which flowed just outside the arched stone entrance. “Gather us
-firewood,” she ordered, “and then guddle us some fish—if you have not
-forgotten how.” Her pale eyes rested again on Kelpie’s dress, and Bogle
-chuckled.
-
-An hour or so later, annoyed but not in the least astonished, Kelpie
-wiped her greasy fingers on the dirty rags which now covered her, and
-glowered across the fire at Mina. The hag and the blue dress were more or
-less the same size, but of far different shapes. The dress sagged across
-the front of Mina’s hunched shoulders and strained ominously across the
-back, and was at once too long and too narrow in the waist, and the cuffs
-reached in vain for those long bony wrists. Kelpie had a mental picture
-of bright hazel eyes dancing in wicked amusement in an angular red-topped
-face. For once she could have appreciated Alex’s sense of humor, and her
-own white teeth showed momentarily in a matching grin.
-
-Mina glared at her suspiciously, and Kelpie hastily stopped grinning.
-_Dhé!_ Mina was almost as bad as Alex himself at seeing what she
-shouldn’t! And she mustn’t anger Mina too much—not yet! So she lowered
-her slanted eyes more or less submissively and waited.
-
-“Hah!” said Mina suddenly. “You think I am not knowing what you are
-thinking?”
-
-Kelpie devoutly hoped not. She had no desire to be turned into a toad or
-something equally unpleasant. Best to walk warily—neither too innocent
-nor too defiant. “I am wondering what you are about,” she retorted
-sullenly. “I have learned the things you were wanting me to, but you have
-not told me why, nor have you taught me any spells.”
-
-“Hah!” said Mina again. “First we will read the crystal.”
-
-And presently, under the ghost-light of the summer night, Kelpie sat
-again with her hand in Mina’s horny claw and gazed into the blank crystal
-ball. It remained still and empty. “I see myself,” invented Kelpie
-impudently. “It is in a place that I have never been, and I am wearing a
-blue dress—”
-
-Mina turned on her in sudden suspicion, and Kelpie prepared to duck. But
-they were distracted by a small flicker of light that came from an upper
-window of one of the castle towers. For an instant, fear gripped Kelpie.
-Was it an uncanny creature of some sort? Then she noticed that Bogle was
-nowhere in sight, and she chewed her lip thoughtfully.
-
-Sure enough, presently his shadowy figure emerged from the tower door. He
-came back to the fire and sat down without a word. But Kelpie thought she
-had seen him put something in his new leather sporran (recently stolen,
-without doubt), and there passed between him and Mina a long look and the
-tiniest of nods.
-
-Kelpie pretended to notice nothing, but her mind was busy. It couldn’t
-have been magic he was up to, for Bogle did no magic except for ordinary
-curses. It must have been a message, then—a message left for him here,
-and they had known where to look for it. And that was why they camped in
-the castle instead of out in the open.
-
-Och, there was something in the air, indeed and indeed! Kelpie went to
-sleep wondering what it might be—and how she might be turning it to her
-own advantage.
-
-
-
-
-8. A Task for Kelpie
-
-
-From Inverlochy Castle they headed southeast, around the tip of Loch
-Leven and into the lands of the Stewarts of Glencoe. Now they definitely
-turned southward. Kelpie frowned.
-
-“Will we be going into Campbell country, then?” she asked, faintly
-alarmed. For the last time they had ventured into Argyll’s lands there
-had been an all too exciting witch hunt from which they had barely
-escaped, so it must be an important matter indeed that would bring Mina
-and Bogle back again into danger.
-
-Mina just grunted disagreeably, but by the next day Kelpie’s question was
-answered, for they reached Loch Etive, which was well into Campbell land.
-Mina glanced around nervously, and Kelpie again wondered where they were
-going, and why. Bogle stood for a moment, staring down the loch, then
-turned and purposefully led the way to the precise spot where the River
-Etive entered the northernmost tip. Clearly he knew exactly where he was
-going. And then Kelpie saw what must be the reason for this journey. A
-man sat waiting for them in a copse of alder near the river, looking
-oddly out of place in the sober gray breeches of a Lowlander.
-
-“Aweel,” he said and looked at them. Kelpie’s sharp eyes took in every
-detail of the stocky long-armed figure, with sandy hair cropped to
-its ears, and sandy eyebrows looking too thin for the broad face. She
-did not like what she saw, and even less what she felt. For there was
-no expression at all on the Lowlander’s face. His eyes were like cold
-pebbles, and there was a malignance about him that made her shrink inside.
-
-Suddenly Kelpie knew that he must be a warlock. Mina and Bogle would not
-be merely working with him; they were under his orders. Probably it was
-he who was behind Mina’s interest in politics, Kelpie’s long stay at
-Glenfern, this hurried trip. Och, it was a powerful and evil man, this,
-and she would do well to fear him.
-
-The small opaque eyes studied her for a moment and then turned to Mina,
-who looked small and shrunken before them. “Is yon the lass?” Their owner
-demanded in the burred English of Glasgow.
-
-Mina nodded, and the eyes turned back to Kelpie. “Come here!” he
-commanded.
-
-Kelpie had a passionate desire to assert her own will and refuse. But it
-would be daft to try to challenge his power now—and especially with Mina
-and Bogle watching her. Reluctantly, her own eyes smoldering with anger
-and foreboding, she went and stood before him, and he seemed to read her
-thoughts.
-
-“So, ye’d like tae be a witch,” he said, his voice half a sneer, half a
-caress. “Tae hae sich power, ye maun learn tae obey. Obey! Ye didna ken
-that, eh? Weel—ailbins ye can prove yersel’ the noo, and earn the powers
-ye’re wanting.” He turned to Mina again. “Hae ye told her?”
-
-Mina shook her head humbly. “Never a word.”
-
-“Good. She’ll hear it the noo,” returned the Lowlander. He turned back
-to Kelpie, whose small face regarded him with wary intensity. His face
-became genial and fatherly. “Ye’re a lucky lass,” he began, “tae hae us
-a’ so concerned wi’ yer ain guid.”
-
-Kelpie laughed aloud, and there was genuine amusement as well as derision
-in her laughter. Did they think her a bairn, and daft as well?
-
-At once the Lowlander became brisk and businesslike. Very well, then, he
-conceded, perhaps it was not merely her own good they were after. But she
-would profit greatly. Who, he demanded, was her worst enemy?
-
-Kelpie prudently did not name Mina and Bogle. Instead, she remembered
-Mina’s deep interest of late and made a shrewd guess at the answer he
-expected. “Mac Cailein Mor?”
-
-“Aye, Argyll,” he said approvingly and went on to point out why. The
-Kirk of the Covenant was reaching farther and farther into the Highlands
-now, with its persecution of honest witches, and even of stupid old folk
-who were not witches at all, for that matter. And who was head of the
-Covenant? Who was spearhead of the persecutions, the pricking and torture
-and burnings? Argyll. If he was not stopped, there would be no safe place
-in all Scotland for such as they.
-
-Kelpie nodded and found part of her mind thinking that on this one point
-only—Argyll and the Covenant—did her world and that of Glenfern agree.
-
-Very well, then, the Lowlander continued. They must take steps to destroy
-Argyll. And what better thing than a hex? A wee image of him, in clay or
-wax, they would make. And then they would stick pins in it, roast it,
-freeze it, pour poison over it, and, by the black powers of witchcraft,
-all these things would happen to Mac Cailein Mor himself, until at last
-he would die in great pain.
-
-Again Kelpie nodded warily. And how did she enter into all this, at all?
-
-She found out soon enough. In order to make a really effective hex
-on Argyll, something from himself was needed to mold into the wax
-figure—hair or fingernail clippings, preferably. And who was to obtain
-them? Why, Kelpie, of course.
-
-Now it was clear why she had been left at Glenfern to learn the ways of
-gentry and how to be a servant. She would hire herself as housemaid at
-Inverary Castle and, as soon as she managed to get the hair or fingernail
-clippings, just come away back here with them. And as a reward she would
-be taught all she wished to know about spells, potions, curses—even the
-Evil Eye itself.
-
-As easy as that!
-
-They were making her their tool again, of course, to do what they dared
-not do themselves. If she were caught, her life would not be worth a
-farthing. Still—Kelpie thought quickly behind narrowed eyes and an
-impassive face. It was a chance to get away from Mina and Bogle and
-perhaps take a hand in managing her own life. Once away in Inverary, she
-could decide whether or not to carry out the errand. Perhaps she would
-prefer Mac Cailein Mor to Mina and just stay for a while. Or perhaps....
-Well, she would see.
-
-She listened with great docility as they explained how she could get in
-touch with them once she had completed her task. She even nodded when
-the Lowlander suggested blandly that it might just be safest to send the
-hair—or half of it—on to them by the messenger they would tell her of,
-and then she herself could be bringing the rest later. Kelpie kept a
-sneer from crossing her face. If they thought her so witless as that, let
-them, then! But if and when she came to them, it would be with the hair
-hidden in a safe place, and they having to fulfill their part of the
-bargain before they saw it.
-
-The Lowlander was very pleased with her, and Kelpie went to bed very
-pleased with herself. But she awoke near dawn with the sense of something
-bothering her.
-
-The sky was a vast aching void, neither black nor light. The world was
-a great shadow. Kelpie crept silently away from the camp and over the
-crest of the nearest rise, still wrapped in the old woolen plaidie which
-served as cloak and blanket. She seated herself against the thickness of
-a rhododendron, so that she was lost in the black shadows of its great
-leaves and blossoms. Then she stared down along the long, steely sheet of
-Loch Etive and began to think.
-
-Obey, the Lowlander had said—and clearly Mina and Bogle were obeying him.
-But Kelpie had thought that to be a witch was to be free, to have power
-to command others, never to _be_ commanded again by anyone.
-
-Was it not so, after all? Did the Lowlander, in turn, obey someone—or
-Something? For an instant Kelpie sensed something infinitely dangerous
-and horrible. Was Satan merely another name for those ancient Dark
-Powers? And was the price for invoking them to be a slave to them? She
-shuddered, and cold droplets of sweat broke out on her short upper lip.
-
-Then she pulled herself together. She must not give in to foolish
-worries. The Lowlander was a fearsome man, but witchcraft was the only
-way to be free of Mina, and when she had learned it she need fear neither
-of them any longer.
-
-All the same, the first seed of doubt had taken root, and it no longer
-seemed quite so easy to become the most powerful witch in Scotland. It
-was a rather subdued Kelpie who meekly cooked the fish and oatcakes for
-breakfast, bade the Lowlander farewell, and followed Bogle and Mina on to
-Loch Awe.
-
-At a ruined old shieling hut by the loch they stopped and waited for a
-day, until there came a round-faced young woman with a wealth of brown
-hair and a slate-colored dress kilted up over a striped petticoat. She
-seemed an unlikely person to be working with witches and warlocks, for
-her bright-cheeked smile was quite artless.
-
-“_Dhia dhuit!_” She beamed. “Is this the lass who will be fetching the
-hair to hex Mac Cailein Mor, may the demons fly away with him? I am Janet
-Campbell, who will take you to Inverary. I will call you Sheena at once,”
-she added chattily, “so you can get used to it, for Mrs. MacKellar would
-never be hiring a lass named for a kelpie.” She chuckled cheerfully.
-
-Kelpie gave her an appraising look from under her thick black lashes, but
-Janet didn’t seem in the least put out. “I could not be doing the task
-myself,” she explained, “for I have my work, and no reason to be going
-into the castle. And,” she added forthrightly, “I am not brave or clever
-enough. But I will be your messenger, Sheena, when you need me.”
-
-Kelpie, more and more resentful of being used by others, nodded sullenly.
-But Janet’s next words cheered her considerably.
-
-“She cannot be asking for work in such rags,” pointed out that young
-woman matter-of-factly. “They would know her for a gypsy at once, and Mac
-Cailein Mor has a fearful hatred of such. Best be giving her your blue
-dress to wear, Mina.”
-
-Bogle chuckled, and Kelpie hid her satisfaction behind a blank face.
-Mina snarled and gave in. The string of epithets she flung at Kelpie
-along with the dress hardly amounted to an objection at all, and Kelpie’s
-earlier misgivings rose again briefly. If even the formidable Mina was so
-meekly obeying, then what power this Lowlander must have!
-
-She was still brooding on this as she and Janet set out on the last bit
-of the journey, her cheek still stinging from Mina’s farewell cuff. On
-down Loch Awe, and to the wild steepness of Glen Aray, and along that
-gash in the hills toward Loch Fyne, Janet led the way sturdily enough,
-although Kelpie’s wiry legs could have gone much faster. Part of the
-time Janet left the thin path altogether and threaded her way along the
-slopes, among great clumps of brilliant pink rhododendron, groves of oak
-and hazel and rowan, patches of lavender-blooming heath and the mystic
-white bog-cotton.
-
-“Best not to risk meeting anyone,” she remarked with a trace of
-nervousness. “I dare not be seen with you, in case....”
-
-She left the sentence unfinished and went on in a new and brisk voice.
-“Now I will be giving you your story to tell the housekeeper when you ask
-for work. You are Sheena Campbell, daughter to Sorcha and Seumas, who
-lived in the old shieling hut where we met on Loch Awe. When they died,
-you went in service with MacIntyre of Craignish, but now, with their
-daughter wedded and away, there is no need for you. So you have come to
-Inverary, to your own clan chief, to see is there a place for you.”
-
-For the next two hours she fed Kelpie the details of her fictional life
-and made her repeat them over and over, until Kelpie almost felt that she
-was two people at once.
-
-“Och, you’re glib, just!” said Janet at last, her round face admiring.
-“I’m almost believing you myself. ’Tis a clever mind you have, and a
-canny tongue.” She stopped and turned around to survey Kelpie’s face
-searchingly. “Aye,” she went on, “and your face, though it is not bonnie,
-just, is a face to beguile the lads. Have you a braw laddie who loves
-you, Sheena?”
-
-Four months ago Kelpie would have jeered at her in wonder and scorn.
-What had the lass of Mina and Bogle to do with love, or lads either—save
-to sell love-charms to the foolish? But though there had been no talk or
-thought of romance at Glenfern (except on one teasing afternoon), some
-sleeping thing in Kelpie had, perhaps, begun to stir. The face of Ian
-leaped into her mind, with the fine dark eyes of him, and the sensitive
-mouth curving downward and then up; and then she felt the strange,
-warm-faced sensation of her first blush—and she felt again the pain of
-her departure from Glenfern.
-
-“No!” She spat so violently that Janet raised her eyebrows and gave
-Kelpie another sharp glance before she turned to walk on.
-
-“A pity, that,” she observed mildly. “And a great waste,” she added
-presently, with a catch to her voice. “Had I your face and tongue, I
-would not be in the service of witchcraft, perhaps.”
-
-Kelpie kilted up her blue dress a bit higher and came even with Janet so
-that she could see her face. “Why are you?” she demanded curiously. “I
-think you could never be a witch.”
-
-“Och, no!” agreed Janet instantly. “At first I was only wanting a wee bit
-of a love potion to win the heart of the lad I loved. But before it could
-start to work at all, Mac Cailein Mor took him into the army and off to
-raid the MacDonalds. Och, my braw Angus.” She whimpered.
-
-“He was killed?” Kelpie asked, and tried to push down the sympathy in her
-voice. She had promised herself not to care for anyone again, but only
-for herself.
-
-“It was Mac Cailein Mor had him shot,” said Janet tonelessly. “He tried
-to save an old woman from the house they were burning. And for that I
-will help the Devil himself to destroy Mac Cailein Mor, my chief though
-he be. I am afraid of yon Lowlander, for he is evil, but I hate Mac
-Cailein Mor more than I fear the Lowlander.
-
-“You must be very canny, Sheena! If you are caught—” She shuddered. “Have
-you a _sgian dhu_?”
-
-Kelpie nodded and drew the small sheathed knife from inside her dress.
-Janet looked at it somberly. “If you’re caught, you’d do well to use it
-on yourself. ’Twould save you torment and burning, more than likely, and
-keep you from betraying the rest of us. You’ll say no word, ever, about
-me, Sheena? Pretend you have never seen or heard of me! Promise, Sheena!”
-
-Kelpie looked at her, and Janet’s eyes were humble and pleading. “I know
-I am a coward,” Janet whispered, “but I cannot help it. I could not bear
-the pain, and I would not dare to kill myself—but you would, for you are
-brave.”
-
-Kelpie looked at her _sgian dhu_ reflectively. It was the finest one
-she had ever had, the one stolen last spring in Inverness. The wee flat
-scabbard was darkly carved, and the four-inch blade, when she drew
-it out, winked sharply in the sun. Would she use it on herself? she
-wondered. Did she dare?
-
-The beauty of the Highlands shimmered around her in pure, clear colors
-never quite the same from one instant to the next. The sky was infinite
-and tender; the sun beat warmly on her head; the air was delight to
-breathe. The world was good—except for the people in it, defiling it with
-hate and greed. It would be a pity to die, a waste of living. She found
-it very difficult to imagine.
-
-She looked again at the gleaming edge of the _sgian dhu_, frowning a
-little. Dare? Yes, she thought she would dare, if it was to escape
-torture and burning. That would not take much courage. On the contrary,
-it would be the easy way—and she found that she did not like the taste
-of the idea. A feeling within her protested that suicide was shabby,
-debasing, a cheating of oneself. But Kelpie, who had never been taught
-such things as morals and integrity, could find no words and no reasons
-for this feeling. She shrugged and put the _sgian dhu_ back. Time enough
-to think about it if the occasion came up.
-
-Janet had been watching her with round eyes, guessing a little of her
-thought. She shivered slightly. “You are very brave,” and said again. “I
-think you will be getting away with the hair. And I am sure that whatever
-is happening at all, you will not speak any names.”
-
-Kelpie fell back a step or two. She looked thoughtfully on a golden
-patch of gorse blanketing the hillside ahead, and her smile was very
-pointed. No, she would not betray Janet—not, she reminded herself,
-because she was softhearted, but only because it would not help herself.
-But—if she was so unlucky as to be caught, which she did not at all
-intend to be—she would be very happy indeed to tell Mac Cailein Mor all
-about Mina, Bogle, and the Lowlander.
-
-
-
-
-9. Inverary Castle
-
-
-Loch Fyne stretched long and narrow between its hills—as what Highland
-loch did not? Glen Aray opened out into a meadow there, where the river
-entered the loch, and from the top of her hill Kelpie had a fine and
-leisurely view. There was the town of Inverary on the far side, nestled
-right on the loch. And on this side, almost below her, rose the massive
-stone bulk and towers of Inverary Castle, home of Mac Cailein Mor.
-
-Kelpie wriggled a little deeper into her nest of tall harebells and broom
-and stared down at it with interest. She had time to wait and think.
-Janet had braided the black hair neatly for her, used the hem of her
-own dress to wash Kelpie’s grimy pointed face, and then hurried on to
-the head of the loch. From there she would return to the village as if
-from her own home. And Kelpie was to bide here, out of sight, until the
-next day, and then come down from the glen. Kelpie had agreed willingly
-enough, not for Janet’s sake, but for one more night under the free sky.
-
-She glowered at the brooding gray castle, for it was just occurring to
-her that it would be much more like a prison than Glenfern. And would
-they allow her to be out and away in the hills when her tasks were
-done, as she had done at Glenfern? She doubted it. Och, it was a great
-sacrifice she was making for those who had sent her, and she must see
-that her reward was as great. And then.... She drifted into her favorite
-daydream.
-
-In the long white twilight she backed down the hill until she found a
-tarn sheltered by birch, and settled herself for the night. The Dancers
-were absent tonight, and the sky a pale shadowed silver in which only the
-largest stars flickered feebly, for it was midsummer. Then the moon came
-over the crest of the hill, and there were no more stars, and the tarn
-became a pool of cold light. Deliberately Kelpie leaned over the bank and
-stared into the tarn.
-
-The reflected brilliance of moonlight glowed, closed in upon itself,
-became a silver point, and then in its place there was a strange land—a
-place with giant forests, dark and wild, and a crude house made of logs
-in a rough clearing. She tossed her head with annoyance. What was this to
-her? What of her future, her career as a witch? What of destruction of
-those she hated? What of her enemies?
-
-The tarn obeyed, as if with a malicious will of its own, and she saw
-Argyll’s face, the eyes coldly burning, the mouth twisted in anger,
-staring straight at her, and in her mind’s ear Kelpie heard the word
-“witch.”
-
-She threw herself backward and sat with beating heart for several moments
-after the water stood clear and blank. Was she fey, then? Was it her own
-doom she was seeing? Och, no, perhaps not. For she had not seen herself,
-and surely Mac Cailein Mor had looked so to many a person accused of
-witchcraft. She had asked to see her enemy, and the picture was telling
-her, just, that here was a dangerous enemy—a warning to be canny, that
-was all. She curled up comfortably in a patch of rank grass free of
-nettles, and slept.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the thin light of morning she smoothed back her hair and washed her
-face in the cold, peaty water of the tarn. Then, wary but confident, she
-made her way back to the glen and along the river to the castle.
-
-As she approached the massive stone gateway, Kelpie put on the proper
-face and attitude for this occasion as easily as Eithne might have put on
-a different frock. The task was not so easy, really, for there was little
-that could be done about the long slanted eyes and brows or the pointed
-jaw. But the severely braided hair helped, and by tucking in her lower
-lip and drooping the corners she added a helpless and wistful note. She
-pulled her chin down and back and pressed her elbows to her sides for a
-look of brave apprehension, and then she changed her free, fawnlike walk
-for a most sober one.
-
-Through the gate she stepped into a subdued world of drab colors. Her
-blue dress looked insolently bright beside the grays and blacks of the
-other women in the courtyard. Only the tartan—that proud symbol of the
-Highlander—had failed to be extinguished by the decree of the Covenant
-and Kirk. And even the tartans, being colored with vegetable dye, were of
-muted shades.
-
-A man leading a horse stopped and regarded her with little approval.
-“What is it that you are wanting?” he asked.
-
-“Could I be seeing Mrs. MacKellar, the housekeeper?” asked Kelpie, her
-eyes lowered modestly.
-
-He looked at her for a moment and then called over his shoulder,
-“Siubhan, the lass is wanting Mrs. MacKellar. Take her away up to the
-door.” And he went on about his business.
-
-A sad-faced woman put down her basket of laundry, regarded Kelpie without
-curiosity, and jerked her head. Kelpie followed with great meekness and
-waited obediently at the castle door until Siubhan had gone inside and
-reappeared with a tall, gaunt woman in black.
-
-Once again there was the disapproving look. “And who may you be?”
-
-“I be Sheena Campbell.” Kelpie launched into her story, not too glibly,
-with downcast eyes and humble voice. “And it’s hoping I am to serve Mac
-Cailein Mor,” she finished earnestly.
-
-“Mmmm,” commented Mrs. MacKellar. “We’ve lasses aplenty in Inverary
-Village.”
-
-“Och,” protested Kelpie, “but ’tis experience I’ve had! And,” she added
-pitifully, “they will be having homes, and I with nowhere to turn.”
-
-Mrs. MacKellar softened, but only slightly. “To tell the truth,” she said
-bluntly, “there is something—I’m not altogether liking the look of you!
-How am I knowing you are what you say?”
-
-“But and whyever else would I be coming to Mac Cailein Mor?” demanded
-Kelpie artlessly.
-
-“Mmmm, that will be the question,” retorted Mrs. MacKellar. “No, now, I’m
-thinking—”
-
-What she thought was never said, for from the corner of her eye Kelpie
-saw a tall figure just passing the foot of the stairs—not Argyll, but his
-tallness, his long face, red hair, and manner of dress suggested that he
-must be Argyll’s son. Kelpie took a chance.
-
-She turned away blindly from the imminent refusal, carefully stumbled a
-bit, and tumbled herself neatly down the steps to land in a pathetic heap
-in front of the startled young man.
-
-“My sorrow!” he ejaculated.
-
-Kelpie swiftly decided against being injured, as this might prove
-inconvenient. So she gave a small scared glance upward at the faint frown
-above her and shrank back against the wall. “Och, your pardon!” she
-whispered. “Please do not be beating me!”
-
-The young man—she was quite sure now that he must be Lord Lorne, son of
-Argyll—gave a short laugh. “Whatever you may have heard, I am no beater
-of bairns.”
-
-Kelpie drooped her lip at him. “Sir, I would not mind a beating, if only
-I could be staying here to work for Mac Cailein Mor.”
-
-“What is this? Who is she?” Lord Lorne switched to English, and Mrs.
-MacKellar replied in the same tongue.
-
-“She iss saying her name iss Sheena Campbell from Loch Awe, and that
-she iss an orphan who hass peen working in the home of MacIntyre of
-Craignish who iss not needing her any more.” Mrs. MacKellar’s English,
-sibilant with the soft Gaelic sounds, was really not nearly as good as
-Kelpie’s—but Kelpie was careful to keep her face blank, as if she did not
-understand. “But sir,” went on the housekeeper, “I am not liking the look
-of her whateffer. Her eyes—”
-
-Lord Lorne bent and looked at them. Kelpie tried to make them wide and
-pleading.
-
-“Oddly ringed, aren’t they?” he observed. “Well, she can’t help that. You
-could use her, I think. Why not try her out?” And he went on to wherever
-he had been going.
-
-“_Seadh._” Mrs. MacKellar shrugged and washed her hands of the decision.
-“You can be staying a bit, then, until I see can you do the work. We will
-see does Peigi have an old dress you can be wearing, of a proper color.
-You’re of the Kirk, are you no?” she demanded suddenly, turning to cast a
-suspicious eye on the blue of Kelpie’s dress.
-
-Kelpie wasn’t quite sure what that meant, and, even with Janet’s
-tutoring, she dared not bluff too far. She took an instant to think as
-she rose slowly to her feet. “I am wanting to be a better Christian,” she
-said, temporizing, with an earnest face. “And that is one reason I was
-coming here, for the house of Mac Cailein Mor is surely the most godly of
-all.”
-
-“Well—” Mrs. MacKellar looked somewhat appeased. “Come away in, then.”
-And Kelpie came.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Life in Inverary Castle was quite different from life at Glenfern, even
-though Kelpie’s duties were similar. There was a coldness here—and not
-only physical, although the castle was chill enough, with draughts
-constantly blowing down the halls and pushing out against the wall
-tapestries. But the chill of spirit was even more depressing. Laughter
-was near sacrilege, and a smile darkly suspect. Dancing simply didn’t
-exist, and singing was confined to dour hymns regarding hellfire and
-damnation. If Kelpie had ever chafed at the restrictions of Glenfern, she
-now realized what a free and happy life that had been. Och, that people
-could live like this! Worse, that they seemed to approve it! One could
-hardly say they _liked_ anything.
-
-And here Kelpie heard the other viewpoint regarding Mac Cailein Mor.
-Everyone seemed to fear him, even his rather mousy wife and sullen son.
-But they also saw him (except possibly Lord Lorne) as the Right Hand of
-God, fighting the battles of righteousness against such enemies of Heaven
-as witches, King Charles, Papists, Anglicans, everyone else who was not
-of the Covenant, and, most particularly, Lord Graham of Montrose, who was
-supposedly leading the King’s army in Scotland. But no one seemed to know
-where Montrose was now, at all. He had started north to raise an army for
-the king and then vanished altogether, and it was to be fondly hoped that
-the Devil had snatched him away to Hell where he belonged.
-
-Kelpie listened and said nothing. She didn’t like what she heard and
-began to hate Argyll on her own account. Indeed and it was true that he
-would take all freedom from all people if he could. Kelpie cared little
-enough about anyone else, she told herself, but her own freedom mattered
-more than anything at all, and she began to feel a personal enthusiasm
-for her task here. A hex was what he deserved, and she hoped that the
-Lowlander would make it a fine horrible one indeed.
-
-It was lucky, she discovered, that himself was home at all now, for he
-spent much of his time these days heading his Covenant army, raiding the
-Highlands, and occasionally daring a small skirmish with other enemies.
-(Kelpie received the impression that he was not, perhaps, the boldest and
-most audacious leader when it came to fighting.) But now he was home, as
-no doubt the Lowlander had known.
-
-Still, three bleak weeks had passed, and she still had never had a chance
-to lay her hands on any bit of his person or even come near his private
-rooms. Mrs. MacKellar kept a watchful eye out, and Kelpie’s duties were
-confined to all wings of the castle but that of Mac Cailein Mor. And so
-she watched and waited through June, tense, wary, inwardly chafing.
-
-
-
-
-10. A Bit of Hair
-
-
-It was an impossible errand they had sent her on! Kelpie realized it
-slowly, angrily. A bit of Argyll’s hair, indeed and indeed! Nobody at
-all would be so feckless as to leave a bit of his hair lying about,
-convenient to the hand of any witch who happened to be passing. And
-how much less Mac Cailein Mor, who was thrice as crafty, ten times as
-suspicious, and a thousand times more hated than most folk? Och, no; for
-him such carelessness would be altogether impossible. It was certain
-that he would stand over his barber while every last hair or fingernail
-clipping was safely burned. The best she could hope for was a bit of his
-personal belongings, which would be much less effective; and whatever
-Mina and the Lowlander would say she did not know. No doubt they would
-make an excuse to refuse to teach her spells, after all.
-
-And so she seethed under the joyless Covenant mask which was becoming
-harder and harder to wear. How she longed for the freedom of the open!
-Her legs ached with the longing to run and leap and dance upon the hills,
-and her face ached with the need to laugh. And yet she stayed on, hoping
-for some miracle, reflecting sourly that Mrs. MacKellar and Argyll were
-very little improvement over Mina and Bogle.
-
-It was in mid-July that it happened, during morning prayer.
-
-Kelpie knelt with the rest of the household on the cold stone floor in
-grim endurance, for this long, twice-daily torment was nearly unbearable
-for an active young gypsy.
-
-Her place was in the very back, among the meanest of the servants. Ahead,
-the bowed backs graduated in rank, with Mrs. MacKellar far up front, just
-behind meek Lady Argyll, Lord Lorne, and Ewen Cameron, whose red kilt
-blazed sharply alien amid all the blue and green of the Campbell tartan.
-And before them all stood Mac Cailein Mor’s long, stooped figure, telling
-of the anger, jealousy, cruelty of a God who could surely have nothing to
-do with the opal world outside. With cold satisfaction and in grim detail
-he described God’s will (which seemed indistinguishable from Argyll’s
-will); and his pale eyes were most disconcerting, for if one seemed fixed
-upon Siubhan or Peigi, the other seemed to stare straight at Kelpie, and
-who was to know what himself was really looking at, whatever?
-
-“Behold, the day of Jehovah cometh, cruel, with wrath and fierce anger;
-to make the land a desolation, and to destroy the sinners thereof out of
-it,” said Argyll. “He shall destroy the minions of Satan, those evildoers
-who are not of the Kirk, who blasphemously question the Covenant. For
-all those who are not with the Covenant are against the Lord and vile in
-His sight. They shall burn forever in Hell, and above all shall burn all
-witches and that servant of the Devil, Montrose. They shall be tormented—”
-
-Kelpie felt the presence of the messenger in the open door behind her,
-but dared not turn to look. She saw Argyll’s eye flicker briefly in that
-direction and noticed the slight pause before he went coldly on with his
-orders to and from God. And something inside Kelpie stirred, and she knew
-that something was about to happen which would be important to her.
-
-Dropping her dark head over clasped hands in an attitude of great
-reverence, she tried to think what it could be. There was nothing she had
-done. Unless—Had Ewen Cameron said something about yesterday?
-
-For yesterday Kelpie had found her first opportunity to get away over to
-the wing which held the chambers of Mac Cailein Mor and his family. She
-had actually reached his door, and as she hesitated there, heart beating
-quickly, another door nearby had opened, and through it came a lad of
-about fifteen.
-
-Kelpie had not needed to look at the oddness of a Cameron tartan in the
-Campbell stronghold to know that this was Ewen, the grandson of Lochiel.
-Ian had told her about him, and she had seen him now and again about the
-castle. And Peigi had told her proudly how fine it was that Mac Cailein
-Mor was taking on himself the education of his nephew, for fear it should
-be neglected or his own family should teach him to believe the wrong
-things.
-
-Kelpie had hidden a cynical smile at the time, but now, when the grave,
-clear-eyed lad stood regarding her in the hall, she wondered briefly how
-much this “education” would really mean. For he had about him the air of
-one with a mind of his own.
-
-“You’ll be Sheena, will you not?” he asked as Kelpie belatedly made a
-stiff bob. She nodded. “Best not to linger here,” he went on. “If my
-uncle should see you—”
-
-“Aye,” Kelpie had murmured, and slipped away back to her own territory
-with the odd feeling that he had seen through her mask—not, perhaps, that
-he knew exactly what was under it, but that he knew she was alien to this
-world of Inverary.
-
-Could he have said anything, just? Kelpie wondered as she shifted her
-knees ever so slightly on the painfully hard stone. The thing inside said
-no. He was another of those strange people, like Ian and Eithne, who
-seemed not to hate anyone or even wish them ill.
-
-But still, something was about to happen, and she must find out as soon
-as ever she could. When prayers were over, and the household rose and
-respectfully made way for himself to go out first, it was easy enough
-for her to slip nearest the door, for she had had a wealth of experience
-at picking pockets and melting through crowds. And so she saw the
-travel-weary messenger waiting outside, and heard the news when Argyll
-did.
-
-“Antrim of Colonsay and his clan of Irish MacDonalds have landed at
-Ardnaburchen and taken the castle of Mingary, and will even now be taking
-the keep of Lochaline, your Lordship!”
-
-The Marquis of Argyll said something under his breath, and the freckles
-suddenly stood out under the red hair that Kelpie coveted. “May the Devil
-take his impudence!” he said aloud, and there was no doubt that he meant
-it literally.
-
-Kelpie tried to remember something she had heard at Glenfern.
-Antrim—Colkitto, they called him—was chief of a branch of MacDonalds
-that the Campbells had driven westward, over the islands, and at last to
-Ireland. And now, it seemed, he had decided to bring his clan back to
-Scotland to fight the Campbells and perhaps take back some land.
-
-“Have messengers ready to ride,” Argyll said viciously to his son. “I’ll
-have the army up and wipe him out once and for all!” By this time the
-rest of the household had filtered out into the hall, and it didn’t seem
-to matter if they all heard or no. But then, there’d be no keeping this
-kind of news secret, whatever.
-
-Kelpie clenched her fists. We? Then would Mac Cailein Mor be away with
-the army himself?
-
-“Isn’t there an English Parliament garrison at Carlisle?” ventured Lord
-Lorne in English. “Why not send to them to take warships up the coast? If
-they captured Antrim’s ships, there’d be no retreat for him.”
-
-Argyll nodded brusquely and strode off toward his chambers to write the
-necessary letters—taking his hair with him, of course. “Get my things
-ready to ride,” he ordered one of his retainers, thus destroying Kelpie’s
-last hope.
-
-“_Dhé!_” she muttered, without changing the blank and sober expression
-considered suitable for God-fearing people. Whatever could she be doing
-now, at all, with him away?
-
-Impulsively, she slipped out of the hall before Mrs. MacKellar or Peigi
-should see her, and made her way to the tower next to Argyll’s wing.
-There she hid her thin self partway up the steep, twisting stairs, where
-with one eye she could see his door, and waited. Not that he would be
-likely to be trimming his hair or fingernails now, but perhaps in the
-flurry of his leaving she could just slip in and lay hold of some wee
-personal item to be used instead, and it the best she could do.
-
-It was a full half-hour before Argyll’s door opened. Kelpie glimpsed the
-full tartan folds of his belted plaid and then pressed herself out of
-sight as the halting steps assured her that it was indeed Mac Cailein Mor.
-
-She waited until they had passed down the hall and out of hearing, and
-then slipped out of the tower and across to the massive oaken door.
-She paused an instant, hand lifted to open the door, but it was almost
-certain there could be no one else in there, for the entire household
-had been at morning prayer, and no one else had gone in. The door opened
-heavily, with never a creak, and closed firmly behind her.
-
-Here must be his Lordship’s private withdrawing room. Kelpie had never
-seen such a room, and she glanced around with interest. The clan crest,
-a boar’s head, was carved over the large stone fireplace and on the back
-of the high oaken settle that stood at one wall. A bulky armchair with a
-triangular seat going to a point in back stood by a long table on which
-quills, ink, sand, and paper still stood. But there was nothing personal.
-His bedroom must be on through that other door.
-
-She darted across the room silently, opened the door, and saw an enormous
-four-post bedstead of inlaid walnut—a fine piece indeed, she thought
-cynically, for an unworldly Covenanter! No less than three great-chests
-doubtless held his clothing and perhaps Lady Argyll’s—but clothing would
-be too bulky for Kelpie’s needs. A plaid-brooch might just do nicely,
-though, and they should be in a cupboard, perhaps, or a wee box somewhere.
-
-Kelpie began investigating. And then she nearly yelped with triumph. A
-brush! A brush in which were tangled several long strands of red hair!
-Och, and he _had_ been careless, then, perhaps with being upset from the
-news of Antrim. Och, the fine luck of it! Chuckling, she pulled them
-loose, looked around for something to wrap them in—and saw the bedroom
-door swing inexorably open.
-
-There he stood, Mac Cailein Mor, one eye regarding her balefully, the
-other apparently fixed on the wall behind; and the thin lips were
-pitiless. For once Kelpie’s quick mind and glib tongue failed her
-altogether, and she just stood there while he crossed the room in three
-strides and seized her wrist.
-
-“A thief, is it?” he rasped.
-
-Kelpie found her wits. “Och, no, your worship!” she cried. “I know it’s
-no right I have to be coming here, but it’s the fine and godly man you
-are, and leaving now, and I just wanting to see—”
-
-He pried her hand roughly open, and the damning evidence of the hairs lay
-exposed on her palm.
-
-“A witch!” he said with savage glee. “A witch in my own household. Ah,
-the Devil is trying hard to destroy me, for I do the work of the Lord.
-Blessed are those who are persecuted for Thy name’s sake. Spawn of Satan,
-do you know what we do with witches?”
-
-“Witches?” faltered Kelpie with desperate innocence, though she knew by
-now that pretense was hopeless. Far less evidence than this would have
-been fatal, and even with a much less suspicious man than Mac Cailein
-Mor. Sudden hot anger almost drove out her terror for an instant—not
-so much at Argyll as at Mina and Bogle and the Lowlander, who had so
-callously sent her on this errand. They had surely known how slim her
-chances were, and that she would almost certainly be caught and burned.
-And they would never have taught her the Evil Eye, even had she been
-successful. She had been their tool and cat’s-paw, and she cursed herself
-for being such a fool. Och, she would see to it before she died that
-Argyll knew their names and the meeting place.
-
-She didn’t once think of the _sgian dhu_ that rested within the bodice of
-her sober gray dress.
-
-Mac Cailein Mor was dragging her out of the room, baying for his
-servants, the dangerous hairs safely in his own hand. Kelpie submitted
-passively because it would do no good at all to struggle. Her mind darted
-here and there, like a moth in a glass ball, finding no way out at all.
-
-And now all the household was running, and two husky men took her from
-Argyll and hustled her brutally through the castle and out to the
-courtyard, while Argyll sputtered his tale to his son between bellows for
-Mrs. MacKellar.
-
-“Was it you hired her?” he demanded ominously of the cringing
-housekeeper. “Could you not see the eyes of her, the teeth, the brows? Or
-was it yourself plotting against me too? Are the minions of Satan filling
-my own home?” He was working himself into a fine frenzy, and even through
-her terror Kelpie found time to wonder briefly at the idiotic honesty of
-Lorne, who spoke up then.
-
-“’Twas my fault, Father. Mrs. MacKellar didn’t like the look of the
-lass when she came to ask for employment, and I was fool enough to feel
-sorry for her, and I said to take her in.” He met his sire’s black glare
-straight. “’Twas stupid,” he said firmly, “but no plot against you by any
-here.”
-
-“The Devil addled your wits, then,” retorted Argyll, not to be deprived
-of his martyrdom. “Could you not see the ringed eyes of her? No, do not
-look into them! She’ll cast a spell!” He glared at Lorne, and then,
-dourly, at Ewen Cameron, who stood near with an expressionless face.
-
-Kelpie was again fervently wishing that she _could_ cast a spell! Och,
-the plague she would be putting on the lot of them, and himself in
-particular! Since she couldn’t, she tucked in her lower lip, lowered the
-offensive eyes, hung meekly in the painful grip on her arms, and made one
-last hopeless try for her life.
-
-“What was it I was doing wrong?” she whimpered. “It was nothing valuable
-I was taking, but only a wee bit token to protect me from the Devil
-whilst yourself was away.”
-
-It was no use at all. Everyone knew what hairs were used for, even
-children.
-
-“Shall we burn her now, Mac Cailein Mor?” asked one of the men. Kelpie’s
-heart thudded sickly. But Argyll brooded.
-
-“No time now,” he said reluctantly. “I’ll be wanting to test her for
-witch marks and get a full confession and the names of her accomplices.
-And there’s Antrim to deal with first.” He looked frustrated at having to
-delay, and Kelpie realized that here was a man who enjoyed cruelty for
-its own sake. She shuddered.
-
-“Put her in the dungeon,” ordered Argyll, “the wee cell at the bottom,
-and with no blanket. And let no one open the door or speak to her until
-I return. Put bread and water through the grate, but nothing else. Is
-everything ready, Buchanan? My horse, then.”
-
-He turned away, and Kelpie drew a small shaky breath. A wee respite,
-then, and perhaps a chance to escape altogether from the torture and
-burning, if they didn’t search her and take away the _sgian dhu_—and if
-she made up her mind to use it.
-
-
-
-
-11. Argyll’s Dungeon
-
-
-The cell was tiny, damp, cold, and inconceivably black. Within ten
-minutes after the solid door thudded behind her, Kelpie was cowering on
-the floor. Even an ordinary roof was oppressive to her, and this—Ou,
-the dark and the smallness were almost tangible things that seemed to
-press down and in on her, smothering and squashing! It was even hard to
-breathe, just with the thinking of it.
-
-By the time half an hour had passed, it was all she could do not to
-shriek wildly and beat her head against the stone. She gritted her
-teeth, sensing that self-control was her only hold on sanity. How could
-mere darkness hurt the eyes so? Kelpie began fingering her _sgian dhu_
-longingly. It was escape, escape from this torment and that to follow.
-She had no great fear of death, in spite of all she had heard of Hell,
-for at worst it was almost certain to be interesting.
-
-And yet, the thing inside would not let her use the wee sharp dagger that
-nestled so temptingly in her hand. It gave no reason, except that this
-was a mean and shabby way to die.
-
-For nearly the first time in her memory, Kelpie cried. On and on she
-sobbed, for as space was closing in on her, time was stretched into a
-long and empty void, and she was alone in chaos and terror.
-
-Once she thought that perhaps if she did kill herself now, her Hell
-would be an eternity of this, and she shuddered at the thought. Argyll’s
-God might just do such a thing, and Satan’s fire was surely to be
-preferred—but which of them would be having the decision, at all? Her
-thoughts blurred off into confusion.
-
-Some time later a grate in the door opened, a hand pushed a bit of bread
-through the pale oblong, and it clanged shut again. Kelpie roused herself
-to explore the spot with her long, sensitive fingers but found it small
-and solidly bolted. She took a few halfhearted bites of bread and lapsed
-again into a shivering huddle.
-
-After more time she drifted up from a semi-sleep to hear another sound at
-the door. Was it the next day, then, and time for more bread?
-
-_Dhé!_ The door was opening, when Mac Cailein Mor had ordered against
-it! Was he back, then? She shrank against the wall as an oblong of gray
-spread like a shaft of light into the thick black of the cell.
-
-“Sheena?”
-
-It was Ewen Cameron! She knew the voice of him!
-
-“Sheena, are you awake?”
-
-With a small gasp, Kelpie was at the door. “Och, it’s near dead I am!
-Will you no let me free? You wouldn’t see me burned, an innocent wee
-lass, and put to torment before it? I’ll—”
-
-“Hist!” There was a hint of strain in his voice, with a thread of humor
-around it. “And what were you thinking I came for? ’Tis quite likely you
-_are_ a witch,” he added ruefully, “but for all that, I cannot abide
-cruelty. Come away, then, and like a mouse.”
-
-Gasping with relief, Kelpie was out of the door before he had finished
-speaking. He groped to find her face in the dark that was to her almost
-light. “Wait, now. I must be bolting the door again. I cannot see.”
-
-Kelpie moved beside him and helped. “Follow me,” he said when it was
-done. “I can put you outside the walls, and then ’tis up to you.”
-
-It was all she asked. Scarcely able to believe her good fortune, she
-followed him through a dark, narrow labyrinth of stone corridors, most
-of them damp with being underground. Twice he unlocked doors for them to
-pass through, and finally they crept on hands and knees through a tunnel
-quite as black as her cell had been. It twisted on and on, and finally
-upward.
-
-“’Tis an escape route in case of siege by an enemy,” Ewen explained
-over his shoulder. “None but the family is supposed to know of it, and
-even they have nearly forgotten it, because for the last hundred years
-Clan Campbell has been too strong to be attacked in its own stronghold.
-Instead, it is they who attack other clans.”
-
-The narrow tunnel picked up the faint note of anger in his voice,
-magnified and echoed it. Kelpie, engrossed though she was in her own
-important affairs, suddenly wondered how it felt to be fostered by a
-wicked uncle who was, in addition, enemy to one’s own clan, and to know
-you were being used as a hostage to control the actions of your own
-grandfather, your own people. It was the first time Kelpie had seriously
-tried to put herself into the mind of another person, and it felt most
-peculiar and disturbing.
-
-“What if real war is coming to the Highlands?” she demanded. “Will
-Lochiel dare call out the Camerons to fight against your uncle and the
-Covenant, or—”
-
-There was a brief silence in which their small scufflings seemed to shout
-aloud. Then: “Grandfather will dare to do what is right,” said Ewen
-tersely.
-
-Another silence, and then his low voice reached back to her again,
-strongly earnest. “There are things more important than safety, Sheena. I
-wonder if you know about them. Was it for a principle you were wanting to
-put a hex on my uncle, or for something else?”
-
-Kelpie didn’t answer this, for the simple reason that she was not at all
-sure what a principle was. Unless—Could it have anything to do with not
-using the _sgian dhu_ on herself when it seemed much easier to do so? Or
-had she not used it because the thing inside her had known that she was
-going to be rescued? Och, it was much too confusing to bother with now,
-for she could at last see a pale blob of night sky ahead.
-
-They emerged in a shallow cave on the hill above Inverary, not far from
-where Kelpie had first looked down upon the castle.
-
-“Now,” said Ewen, “be away out of Campbell territory as quickly as
-ever you can! Away around the tip of Loch Fyne, and then east is best,
-but be canny. You’ll not be safe with the MacFarlanes, either, but the
-Stewarts of Balquidder are hostile to the Campbell, and the MacGregors
-and MacNabs, and they are past Loch Lomond. Best to skulk low during the
-day, for you’ll not get so far this night—though I’m hoping you’ll not be
-found missing until Uncle Archibald is returned and the cell door opened.”
-
-Kelpie nodded. The weight of horror was lifting (though she would never
-quite forget it), and she began to feel quite cocky again. Fine she was
-now, for who knew more about skulking and wariness in the hills? And yet
-through her cockiness crept an odd curiosity.
-
-“Will _he_ be finding out ’twas you who freed me?”
-
-“I think not,” said Ewen, and there was laughter in the lilt of his
-voice. “No one is thinking I know about the secret tunnel, and they will
-probably believe you escaped by witchcraft. Be careful, Sheena, the next
-time you’re wanting to hex someone,” he added and vanished back into the
-tunnel.
-
-Kelpie stared down the blackness after him and shook her head
-wonderingly. He was another daft one, to take a risk for someone else,
-and with no profit to himself whatever! But she was grateful, for all
-that. She owed much to his daftness.
-
-She left the cave, lifted her face to the infinite space of the open
-sky, and breathed deeply of the free air. The moonlit side of the hill
-was ghostlike, a pale glow without depth. The dark side was a soft, deep
-purple-black. Patches of glimmering mist rose from the loch, and there
-was a line of it behind the western hills. Kelpie laughed aloud and
-headed northeast.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Thick gray mist poured over the hills from the west, covering the world
-with a layer of wetness. A curlew gave its eerie call, the whaups
-shrilled, and presently it began to rain. Kelpie shivered a little,
-even though the gray wool dress was the warmest she had ever owned.
-She had got soft, then, living in houses. She must steal a plaidie
-somewhere—preferably one of plain color, or a black and white shepherd’s
-tartan. Wearing the tartan of a clan could get her into trouble.
-
-By the time it was really light, she had passed the tip of Loch Fyne.
-She rested for a while, but it was cold sitting still, she was getting
-more and more hungry, and as there was little enough chance of being
-seen through the thickness of the mist she went on again. Once out of
-Campbell country she might risk stealing as well as begging, but she must
-be careful about telling fortunes or selling charms, for she would be
-getting near the Lowlands, where the arm of the Kirk was long and strong
-and people were narrow-minded about such activities. And Kelpie very much
-wanted to avoid any more trouble of that sort.
-
-She waded through the dripping tangle of heather and bracken and wondered
-what to do next. She was free of Mina and Bogle—unless they found her
-again. Did she dare return to Glenfern, having left the way she had? No,
-for they no longer trusted her, and Alex was now her enemy. Moreover, if
-Mina ever found out, she would put a curse on Wee Mairi. It seemed she
-must give up her hopes of learning witchcraft from Mina, and any other
-witches who still lived in Covenant territory would be very canny and
-quiet indeed. She might try the Highlands, but there was a problem too,
-for in order to get there without recrossing Campbell territory, she must
-go far east and then north and through another danger zone, where there
-had been fighting and trouble since spring. And even in the Highlands
-there was danger of meeting Mina and Bogle, and further danger that Alex
-might have set all the Camerons and MacDonalds against her, as he had
-threatened.
-
-_Dhé!_ Indeed and it was a braw mess she had got herself into! She cursed
-the Lowlander, Mina, Bogle, Mac Cailein Mor, the Kirk, and Alex, with
-fine impartial vigor and in two languages. Then, for good measure, she
-added Antrim (for forcing her hand too soon), the King (for his general
-fecklessness), all religious bodies, God, the Devil, and people in
-general.
-
-When she had finished she felt no better, either mentally or physically.
-She had now traveled some twenty miles over thickly brushed and wooded
-hills, on an empty stomach, after a shattering experience, and even
-Kelpie’s wiry toughness had its limits. Had she reached friendly
-territory yet? How was she to know without seeing a clan tartan that
-would tell her? Well, surely she was for the moment way ahead of any
-possible alarm out for her. She must have food, and there was a shieling
-hut below.
-
-She sat down in the drenched heather and absently regarded a small twig
-of ling, already in bloom a month ahead of the ordinary heather. The tiny
-lantern-shaped blossoms were larger and pinker than heather too, not
-quite as charming, perhaps, but still tiny perfect things. Plants were
-nicer than people, if less exciting. She stared at it while she thought
-up two stories; one to use on a Campbell or a MacFarlane, the other for
-Stewart or MacNab. Then she stood up, brushed the wet from her skirts,
-and started slowly down the hill.
-
-An old woman stepped out of the low hut to empty a pail of water, and
-there was no mistaking the light and dark reds crossed with green on her
-plaidie. It was MacNab. Her husband, no doubt, would be out in the hills
-with the sheep or cattle. Fine, that. Women living alone in the hills
-were rather more likely to be sympathetic and motherly toward a forlorn
-wee lass than men. (On the other hand, women of the Kirk towns were like
-to be dourly suspicious and hating.)
-
-The old woman started to go back inside and then caught a glimpse of
-Kelpie, who stumbled a bit because she was hungry and tired—and because
-it was her general policy.
-
-“Whoever is it, then?” The Highland lilt of the Gaelic was less marked
-here, near the Lowlands, and the voice cracked slightly with age—and yet
-there was in it a note like a bell.
-
-“Och, forgive me, just.” Kelpie’s voice was faint, and she swayed
-slightly. “I am weary and hungry, and could you be sparing just a crust?”
-
-“_Seadh_, the little love!” Mrs. MacNab was all sympathy. “Come away in,
-then, and I’ve a fine pot of oatmeal on the fire. Whatever will you be
-doing all alone and in the hills?” She looked at Kelpie with wise old
-eyes as they entered the dark shieling, and frowned in puzzlement. “From
-your dress you would be a lass from a Covenant home, but your face is
-giving it the lie.”
-
-Kelpie instantly revised her story in the brief time it took to step
-through the low doorway under its bristling roof of rye thatch. She stood
-meekly on the earthen floor under the smoke-blackened rafters and noted
-at a glance that these folk were better off than some, for there was a
-real bedstead in the corner instead of a pile of heather and bracken, and
-four three-legged creepie-stools.
-
-“Eat now,” invited her hostess, handing her a big bowl of oatmeal from
-the iron pot over the fire. “And there are bannocks here, and milk. And
-then perhaps you will tell me about yourself, little one, for I confess
-I’ve a fine curiosity, and strangers are none so common here.”
-
-Kelpie made use of the respite to ask some questions and get her
-bearings, in between ravenous mouthfuls of food. “Be ye Covenant here?”
-she ventured around half a bannock.
-
-“Och, and can you no see my tartan?” demanded Mrs. MacNab. “We MacNabs
-are loyal to our own Stewart King, foolish darling. Why, then, are you of
-the Kirk?”
-
-Kelpie shook her head vigorously. “Not I! ’Tis a prisoner of the
-Campbells I’ve been. They wanted me to be of the Covenant and refused to
-tell me who my parents are, at all. And so I have run away—”
-
-“_Dhé!_” interrupted Mrs. MacNab with wide eyes. This was the most
-exciting thing that had happened in the braes of Balquidder this many a
-year. She was ready to believe anything of the hated Campbells. “Oh, my
-dear! Is it that they were stealing you, then? Tell me all about it,
-heart’s love, every bit!”
-
-And so, replete and comfortable, warm and very nearly dry, Kelpie spun
-a wonderful long tale of truth and fiction mixed. The lonely old woman
-eagerly drank it in, with exclamations of indignation and sympathy. When
-Callum MacNab, looking like a twisted and weatherworn pine, came in at
-dusk, he had to hear it all over again, and by this time Kelpie had
-thought up a few more interesting details. She fairly basked in their
-attention and tenderness, while the old couple glowed with kindness and
-the rare treat of company and news. And so, with one thing and another,
-Kelpie spent the night and the next day with them.
-
-
-
-
-12. Meeting at Pitlochry
-
-
-“’Tis sorry I am to see you away, wee dark love, but you must be
-putting more distance between yourself and the Campbells. And you must
-be searching for your own true family. To think of it! And you say Mac
-Cailein Mor was telling you himself that ’twas from a chief he stole you?”
-
-“And I but a bairn,” agreed Kelpie firmly. Having Callum and Alsoon
-believe her tale so readily almost made her believe it herself—and,
-after all, might not some of it be true? She tucked the little bundle
-of oatmeal and scones into her belt, and hugged the rough warmth of her
-new plaidie about her shoulders, pleased that it was the neutral black
-and white of the shepherd’s tartan and would not associate her with any
-particular clan.
-
-Luck was with her again, she reflected, that she had found these kind and
-simple people, willing to give her the food from their mouths and the
-clothes from their backs—much simpler, if less exciting, than stealing.
-It made her feel odd to be _given_ things this way. Perhaps if all folk
-were like these, or like Ian and his family, there would be no need to
-steal. Warm with a novel sense of gratitude, she was careful not to take
-anything from Callum and Alsoon that they had not given her.
-
-They stood just outside the low doorway in the brightness of the summer
-evening. The rain had become mere clouds glowing to the northwest, where
-the sun would soon dip briefly below the hills. The old couple regarded
-her anxiously, not at all happy to see her set off in the white gloaming.
-
-“Look you, now,” repeated Callum, “you must be going south and east for a
-bit, through Drummond and Stewart country, and then north through Murrays
-and Menzies, and when you reach Pitlochry, just be finding the home of
-my daughter Meg, at the tanning shop next the Tey River, and tell them I
-sent you, and they will care for you until you are away again.”
-
-“Aye, then,” murmured Kelpie, anxious to be gone. She had heard these
-directions at least twice before, and in any case she knew the country
-far better than she dared to let Callum know.
-
-“Haste ye back,” they said, and this Highland phrase was never used
-unless truly meant. No one had ever said it to Kelpie before. She caught
-her breath, turned her head away, and hurried off.
-
-Traveling, she found, was easier without Mina and Bogle than with them,
-in one way. For folks had only to take one look at those two to know
-the worst. But Kelpie, as long as she kept her eyes lowered and her lip
-tucked demurely in, looked quite innocent, so that, even on the edge of
-the thrifty and Kirk-trained Lowlands, people were usually willing to
-give her food—and when they didn’t, Kelpie simply helped herself.
-
-Now and then she picked up rumors about what was going on in the
-Highlands, particularly concerning Argyll, who was, it appeared, still
-away in the west, chasing an elusive Antrim.
-
-As nearly as Kelpie could make out from bits here and there, Argyll
-had chased Antrim back to Ardnamurchen, where the latter had left his
-ships. But the ships had been spirited away by the English, just as
-Lorne had suggested, and since then the two forces had been playing
-catch-me-if-you-can all over the Highlands, with Antrim trying to rouse
-the clans against Argyll, the clans either afraid or quarreling among
-themselves, while Argyll tried to catch Antrim’s small army before it
-should become a larger army.
-
-“Aye,” said an old man, chuckling, in a voice not meant to be overheard.
-“Argyll will never be fighting a battle against more than half his number
-if he can avoid it.”
-
-“Dinna mock him!” whispered another. “Ye’ll no be wanting yon wild
-foreign Hielanders crossing the mountains wi’ their wicked screechin’
-pipes and attacking us, will ye?”
-
-“Dinna fret, they’ll no come. ’Tis too busy they are wi’ their own
-heathen fighting; Papists, the lot o’ them.”
-
-“They might, if Montrose could stir them up tae fight for the King
-against the Covenant.”
-
-“They would never do that. He’s a Graham from the East Coast, and those
-savages in the West would never stir a foot for any but their own chiefs.
-Anyway, they say Montrose is vanished altogether, and no doubt dead.”
-
-They both bent lowering gray brows when they saw the shamelessly
-eavesdropping Kelpie. She scurried away hastily, lest they think her a
-spy.
-
-She wandered on, begging, stealing, and listening, until she came at last
-to Pitlochry.
-
-There seemed a braw lot of people in the narrow streets of the town,
-and, surprisingly, many of them seemed to be wearing Gordon or MacDonald
-tartans. Whatever were those clans doing here? And those two young men
-striding along the street toward her.... “_Dhé!_” said Kelpie, and they
-all stopped short.
-
-They stared at one another with mixed feelings. “Why, whatever will ye be
-doing here, at all?” demanded Kelpie with astonishment.
-
-Alex recovered his wits first. “Why,” he said with the old mocking grin,
-“we were missing you and your bonnie friends so badly that we had to come
-away to look for ye.”
-
-“Sssss!” remarked Kelpie, concealing her pleasure at the old bantering
-and reminding herself that Alex was a treacherous enemy. Moreover, she
-was never again going to permit herself the dangerous luxury of caring
-for anyone at all. Having told herself this, she turned to look at Ian
-with delight. A braw lad! Did he carry a grudge against her? she wondered
-anxiously.
-
-“And are you all right, Kelpie?” he asked kindly. “Mina and Bogle are
-treating you well?”
-
-“Sssss,” she said again. “They are wicked _uruisgean_, and I have left
-them this long time ago. I did not want to be leaving Glenfern whatever,”
-she added hopefully.
-
-Ian looked pleased, but Alex laughed. “Aye, it was a good enough life you
-were leading there, after all. But you seem to be doing well enough for
-yourself the now. Where were you stealing the gey sober gown and plaidie?”
-
-“I was not stealing them whatever!” Kelpie was outraged more by his
-manner than by his words.
-
-“But you would be saying the same thing even if you had,” encouraged Alex
-with a straight face.
-
-Kelpie’s lips began to curve upward as she remembered the teasing at the
-loch-side at Glenfern. She tried to frown, for it was not right to be
-teasing with Alex when they were no longer friends. But she could not
-help it. “Of course,” she agreed cheekily and grinned.
-
-“Och, the wicked wee lass!” Alex chuckled. “She’ll never change!”
-
-“No, now, but she has changed!” Ian objected. “She could not laugh at
-herself when first she came to Glenfern.”
-
-“Are you sure ’tis herself she’s laughing at?” gibed Alex. “Or is it
-ourselves, just, for being ready to forgive her so easily—and after she
-was breaking the ancient code of hospitality.”
-
-“It was not my fault!” protested Kelpie. “Mina was threatening to put a
-curse on you all if I did not come with them.”
-
-“Och, how tender you are of our welfare!” said Alex derisively. “And
-that, I suppose, is why you were so quick to tell her all about how Ian
-and I met the King and Montrose in Oxford?”
-
-There was no use trying to explain, for he would never believe her—not
-that she cared a groat what Alex MacDonald thought, anyway. Perhaps she
-would be able to tell Ian about it some day, with Alex not around. An
-idea was growing in her mind. After glowering at Alex, she turned to Ian
-and looked up at him meltingly through long lashes. She had never before
-set out to beguile a lad, but Janet had put the thought in her head, and
-she might as well try now and see could she do it. Some deep instinct
-awoke, so that she seemed to know just how to go about it. “And what is
-it you are doing so far from Glenfern?” she asked softly.
-
-Was it her fancy that Ian’s smile seemed a wee bit warmer than usual?
-“Why,” he said, “we are with Colkitto’s army, up at Blair Atholl, and—”
-
-Kelpie forgot about beguiling him. “Colkitto!” she yelped. “You mean
-Antrim?”
-
-“Aye, ’tis what we call him; Alistair MacDonald, Earl of Antrim, who has—”
-
-“Fine I know that!” interrupted Kelpie. “But where will Mac Cailein Mor
-be, then? On your tail?” There was alarm in her voice, and both lads
-regarded her curiously.
-
-“Na, na,” Ian said soothingly. “He’s away back to his own country,
-raising a larger army, no doubt, since some five hundred Gordons have
-joined us. Are you afraid of him, Kelpie? And what are you doing here,
-and where are you living?”
-
-Kelpie looked wistful. “I am all alone, and nowhere to five.” She sighed
-and then smiled up at him brightly. “It is in my mind to come along with
-you,” she announced.
-
-Alex laughed. Unprincipled little thing though she was, he did enjoy her
-shameless, incorrigible audacity! The workings of her mind fascinated
-him, and even though he could see through her so easily, he could never
-remain angry for long.
-
-Ian looked thoughtful. “Well, and why not? We’ve nearly as many women and
-bairns as we have men, for Colkitto brought the whole of his clan over
-with him to take back their land from the Campbells. And Lachlan brought
-his wife Maeve along to be cooking and nursing and caring for us, for
-she does not trust Lachlan to do it properly. You’d be far safer than
-wandering alone. What about it, Alex?”
-
-Alex shrugged and lifted a red eyebrow. “Ou, I’ve no doubt at all that
-she can look after herself,” he observed dryly. “But I’ve no objection;
-only, Ian _avic_, let us not be trusting her as far as tomorrow, for
-there is no loyalty in her.”
-
-The lazy mockery of his voice had a whiplash in it, and Kelpie flinched,
-unexpectedly hurt by it. She lashed back, remembering the scene in Loch
-nan Eilean.
-
-“You!” she fumed. “You, to be talking of loyalty, who would strike down a
-friend from behind!”
-
-Alex gaped. It was the first time she had ever caught him out of
-countenance, and it gave her great satisfaction. Ian looked distressed.
-“Och, now!” he protested hastily. “Let you both be saving your fighting
-for the Covenant armies. Come away back to the camp, now, and we’ll talk
-as we go.”
-
-They started back, out of Pitlochry and over the narrow road lined with
-tall blooming thistles. The heather, just preparing to bloom, glowed
-rustily under the patchy sunlight. Alex strode along frowning, still
-smarting and dumfounded over the outrageous flank attack. What could she
-have meant by it, the wee witch? She had seemed genuinely indignant,
-too. For once she was not acting; Alex had been matching wits with her
-long enough to be sure of that. Then what under the great heavens could
-he have done to draw such a denunciation, such withering scorn from an
-unprincipled gypsy lass who would doubtless betray her own grandmother
-for a bit of copper? It made no sense whatever. And although Alex
-reminded himself that the opinion of a wee witch could scarcely matter,
-he found that it rankled. “_Dhiaoul!_” he muttered under his breath and
-knit his brows in annoyance, leaving most of the conversation to Ian.
-
-“And why is it you’re so concerned over Mac Cailein Mor, Kelpie?” Ian
-asked. “Have you been studying more politics since you left Glenfern?”
-
-Kelpie hedged. “Is it likely I’d be wanting to run into the head of the
-Covenant army, and him death on gypsies and all who do not belong to the
-Kirk? No, now”—she shifted the subject—“tell me what has been happening,
-and why Colkitto has his army at Blair Atholl.”
-
-“Well, so.” Ian thought for a minute, his sensitive profile clear and
-grave against the mauve and russet and olive of the August hills. Kelpie
-tilted her own face to look at him as she kept easy pace while Alex
-walked, brooding silently, behind.
-
-“Did you know,” began Ian, “that Colkitto brought over his whole clan to
-fight for the King against Argyll and the Covenant, and perhaps take back
-some of the MacDonald land from the Campbells?”
-
-“Fine, that!” murmured Kelpie, remembering that day at Inverary. “And
-Argyll away after him all over the Highlands.”
-
-Ian nodded. “And the English burned Antrim’s ships, so that he must stay
-here, will he, nil he. So he has been trying to get the other Highland
-clans to join him. He’s not had much luck, for some of the clans fear
-the Campbells too much, and some others have decided that they hate the
-MacDonalds even more than the Covenant—for the moment, at any rate.
-Lochiel doesn’t dare call out our clan yet, with Ewen still in Argyll’s
-hands, and—more important—with Argyll’s army so near to Lochaber. Can you
-imagine what would be happening to our women and children at Lochaber if
-Lochiel took the men away to fight the Covenant?”
-
-Kelpie could imagine, easily. Her blood ran cold at the thought of Wee
-Mairi in danger, and she nodded soberly.
-
-“Some of us Camerons have come along anyway, and so have some five
-hundred Gordons who are wanting revenge against Argyll,” continued Ian.
-“But most on this side of the mountains think we Western Highlanders are
-a band of wild savages, like the Red Indians of America. And even Stewart
-of Atholl—although he hates Argyll and the Covenant—will have nothing to
-do with the Irish MacDonalds. So—” He grinned at Kelpie mischievously.
-“We have just borrowed Atholl’s castle from him, and now we sit and
-wait.” He sobered again. “I do not know what we will do next. There is a
-rumor that Graham of Montrose is still alive, and perhaps he is our hope.
-But to tell the truth, things do not look very good, and the Covenant
-armies will not sit still forever.”
-
-Kelpie’s lip lifted in sudden anger. “Och, ye will be losing this war,
-just!” she predicted despairingly. “For yourselves, and for the folk like
-me who want only to be left alone. You cannot get together even to save
-your own lives, but must always be quarreling clan against clan, and so
-ye will lose!”
-
-Ian looked depressed, but Alex came out of his black reverie with a
-laugh. “Listen to her, just!” he taunted. “The lone lass who lives for
-herself and no other will be giving us a lesson on cooperation! But even
-though you don’t practice what you preach,” he added somberly, “you’re
-right.”
-
-A puffy cloud blew over the sun, darkening the bright hills, and the
-thistles waved in a sudden sharp breeze.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The small army was spread over the hill and moor near Blair Atholl,
-looking somewhat dispirited. Some men were hopefully cleaning their gear,
-polishing the huge two-handed claymores and battle axes which struck such
-terror into Lowland hearts. Others just sat, or wandered, or gambled,
-or talked. Women were busy gossiping, sewing, cooking, arguing; but
-one tall, gaunt woman brooded alone. Children ran about playing tag or
-hanging about the men. A ragged, motley crowd it was, but fierce-looking
-enough, no doubt, to folk on this side of the mountains. Kelpie frowned
-suddenly. The whole scene looked familiar.
-
-“We’ve set up our wee camp spot over yon, just near those rowan trees,”
-said Ian, pointing to a spot partway up the hill. But before they were
-halfway there a flurry of excitement near the edge of the moor turned
-into an uproar. Men began shouting, running. A single shot was fired, and
-then several more.
-
-“It couldn’t be an attack!” Ian frowned, staring across the moor, “but
-what is it?”
-
-“’Tis he!” shouted Alex. “’Tis Graham of Montrose! Look you there!”
-
-“The King’s Lieutenant!” “He’s come!” “My Lord of Montrose!” The words
-were being shouted back and forth, and the sound swelled into a thunder
-of cheers. Kelpie found herself running with the lads toward the center
-of the excitement.
-
-As nearly as she could see through the crowd, the Lord of Montrose seemed
-to be a slight young man in groom’s clothing, with brown hair and a bunch
-of oats stuck in his bonnet. _Dhé!_ She had seen him before! And now from
-the wooded hill a red-bearded giant in the MacDonald tartan—Antrim—rushed
-down to clasp the hand of the slight young man, and Kelpie remembered.
-She had seen it in the crystal, that first morning at Glenfern.
-
-And so now they had come together, Antrim and Montrose, totally different
-and yet fighting for the King’s cause. What would be the outcome?
-
-
-
-
-13. The Hexing of Alex
-
-
-The immediate effect of Montrose’s arrival was that of a most powerful
-magic charm. It could not have been more telling had he come with a full
-army at his back instead of just one man, his cousin Patrick. The King’s
-standard was raised then and there on the hillside and saluted with a
-flourish of trumpets, and cheers, and triumphantly skirling bagpipes.
-And some of the clans who had been hovering about waiting to attack
-the Irish Highlander Antrim now came to join the King’s Lieutenant,
-Montrose—including Stewart of Atholl.
-
-Kelpie decided to stay for a while. Things looked interesting. She was
-safer here than wandering alone. Besides, she liked Ian’s company, even
-if it meant putting up with Alex. She even thought that she just might
-persuade Ian to guard himself against his precious foster brother,
-though she had not much hope of this, Ian being so stubbornly trustful.
-Besides, since she had “seen” the thing in the loch, it would surely
-happen, and there was nothing she could do to stop it.
-
-For a while, staying with the army meant simply staying right there where
-it was. Nothing much seemed to be happening. Clans—or, more often, bits
-of them—drifted in. Kelpie roamed where she liked, usually with the lads
-and their watchful _ghillie_, Lachlan, exchanging insults with Alex and
-hostile silence with Lachlan and his wife Maeve, who had no use for her
-whatever and made no secret of it.
-
-She also spent some of her time gazing speculatively at the tall, gaunt
-woman whom she had noticed the first day she arrived. The woman would
-stare for hours into space, a black, brooding look on her face, her hands
-twisting together as if she were wringing someone’s neck—or perhaps
-casting a new kind of spell. A bulky Gordon plaidie covered her broad
-shoulders, and, though she was not old, there was the beginning of gray
-at her dark temples, and there were strong, grim lines along her mouth.
-Her eyes were deep-set and a little alarming, and Kelpie wondered whether
-she might be a witch. She looked it. Perhaps she had been tortured by
-witch-hunters and had somehow escaped? Kelpie considered approaching
-her about learning the Evil Eye, but the woman’s fierceness made her
-hesitate. She might get a curse put on herself for her boldness, and she
-could do fine without _that_.
-
-The coppery hills began to turn purple with the blooming of the heather.
-It rained. No more was heard of Argyll, but there were rumors that the
-enemy commander, Lord Elcho, was in Perth with an army of seven thousand
-and looking with considerable interest toward Blair Atholl. “And we with
-only two thousand men,” commented Alex cheerfully.
-
-“Ou, aye,” agreed Ian with a grin. “But just think of our fine store of
-weapons!” Lachlan looked sour, and Kelpie raised a derisive eyebrow.
-
-“Artillery?” mused Alex. “None.”
-
-“Cavalry—three old horses, one of them lame,” chanted Ian.
-
-“Guns—some old-fashioned matchlocks, and all the ammunition we could be
-needing to shoot a third of them for one round each.”
-
-“And then,” finished Ian in triumph, “just in case we’re needing them,
-there’s a few swords, claymores, and battleaxes—not to mention the _sgian
-dhu_” he added, reaching down to tap the wee dirk where it nestled in his
-stocking, just on the outside of his right knee.
-
-“And”—Alex chuckled with ironic optimism—“Montrose has been saying that
-the enemy has plenty of weapons, and those of us without can just help
-ourselves once the fighting has started.”
-
-Kelpie looked at them. There was, she felt, a definite limit to the
-things a body should be joking about. She said so. And Lachlan, who felt
-personally responsible for the safety of Ian and Alex, for once agreed
-with her.
-
-And now came Maeve, whose loyalty was all toward Mac ’ic Ian, heir to
-Glenfern (for Master Alex, although a foster son, was not actually a
-Cameron at all). Her orange hair gleamed even in the cloud-filtered sun,
-and she addressed herself to Ian.
-
-“Food will be ready,” she said and crossed herself as she looked at
-Kelpie. As they all started toward the rowan tree they called home, she
-added, half under her breath, “Herself eats enough, whatever, but will
-never be doing any cooking.”
-
-“You were not liking my cooking,” observed Kelpie complacently. It was
-no accident that the one meal she had produced, at Alex’ insistence, had
-been perfectly awful.
-
-“_Dhé_, no!” Ian agreed, laughing. “You said she was trying to poison us,
-Maeve. You’d not be wanting to try that again, would you?”
-
-“’Tis gey queer,” retorted Maeve, “for a gypsy not to be able to cook
-over an open fire.”
-
-Ian looked at Kelpie, his keen mind as usual fighting with his desire
-to believe the best of people. Alex began to laugh. “Och!” he exclaimed
-ruefully. “And I the one who was never going to be fooled by her again!”
-
-Kelpie saw an opening. “Gypsy taste will be different from yours,” she
-announced blandly. “When I was first stolen, it was a dreadful time I had
-getting used to gypsy food! It was nearly starving I was, for a while.”
-Her blue ringed eyes widened with the picture of a poor wee bairn pining
-away with hunger.
-
-Lachlan snorted.
-
-“Ou, the pity of it!” said Alex mournfully, his angular face looking
-almost tender. “And you used to royal food, and all. I’ve wondered, just,
-whether ’tis yourself was the princess stolen from our King and Queen all
-those long years ago when they visited the Highlands.”
-
-For a minute Kelpie was fooled. Her eyes were a smoky blue blaze as
-visions of royal grandeur hurtled through her mind. Of course! Why not?
-
-“For shame, Alex,” said Ian reproachfully. “She’s nearly believing it.”
-
-Kelpie jerked out of her dream and hissed venomously at Alex, who
-chuckled impenitently and wondered how she would try to get even this
-time.
-
-The next day Kelpie went down to the burn, where she had noticed that
-the soil had a sticky, claylike quality. There she sat for some time,
-screened by broom and high bracken, and slowly shaped a small clay
-figure—not that it looked much like Alex, she being no artist. In fact,
-she admitted, a body could barely tell that it was supposed to be human
-at all. But perhaps the intent was the main thing. If only she could get
-hold of a bit of his hair or a fingernail—but Kelpie had had enough of
-hair-stealing for a while, particularly red hair. Anyway, Alex was much
-too canny. She had never yet managed to steal anything from him without
-being caught. No, she would just have to be trying her hex without it.
-
-There were brambles conveniently near. Kelpie picked a long thorn,
-regarded her clay figure thoughtfully, and then plunged the thorn deep
-into the area where the stomach might be expected to be.
-
-Then she wrapped up the hex figure, went back to the rowan tree, and
-began to watch Alex hopefully.
-
-Two days passed, but if he had any pains in his stomach, he concealed
-them very well. Kelpie added a second thorn to the figure, this time in
-the head, and again waited. By rights, his brains ought to start melting
-away, but she must not be doing it right, for Alex’s brains remained as
-uncomfortably keen as ever. He didn’t even get a headache.
-
-Kelpie began looking wistfully at the tall, gaunt woman again. If she
-_was_ a witch, she could undoubtedly help. And yet—Kelpie noticed that
-the men of the army did not treat her at all as a witch. Far from
-shunning her, they went out of their way to be kind, to bring her choice
-bits of food, to talk to her. Once again Kelpie decided not to risk
-trouble. She would manage her own hex, impotent as it seemed to be.
-
-In disgust, she took it out again, plunged thorns all over it, rubbed it
-with nettles, burned it, and then watched again. After five days Alex
-did twist his wrist slightly, but somehow Kelpie failed to feel much
-satisfaction. She was quite sure that she had never put a thorn in the
-left wrist. So she gave up trying to hex him. Either she didn’t have the
-power at all, or else—which seemed quite possible—Alex had a greater
-power.
-
-Lord Graham of Montrose had a great power too. Kelpie found herself more
-and more interested in him. The look of him was not that of a strong
-leader at all. Slight, he was, with gentle dark gray eyes and a quiet and
-courteous air that hardly seemed to belong in an army at all, much less
-at the head of one. Now, Antrim looked like a leader indeed, massive red
-giant that he was, with a great roar of a voice. Yet there was no doubt
-that Montrose was the heart and soul of the army. Everyone, even Antrim,
-listened to him with respect amounting almost to worship, and everyone
-said that he had a genius for warfare.
-
-Was it magic? Quite likely, Kelpie thought. She took to watching and
-listening whenever he was among the men. But she never saw him make any
-magic signs, and his words were about such things as honor and loyalty
-and why he was fighting for the King. Ian had said Montrose wanted no
-power for himself, but only for right to be done, but Ian was gullible.
-Skeptical, Kelpie kept her ears open.
-
-“Loyalty is the great thing,” Montrose remarked one day, sitting at ease
-in a misty drizzle, kilted Highlanders all around him. They listened with
-eagerness and respect, but Kelpie, at the edge of the group, narrowed her
-eyes mistrustfully.
-
-“Loyalty to your clan and your King, to an ideal, to a friend, to a thing
-you believe,” he went on. “This is integrity; and it is loyalty also to
-yourself.” Kelpie frowned. It was only loyalty to oneself that paid.
-She had found that out. Montrose was like Ian, then, too generous and
-trusting. They would both suffer for it, no doubt, unless they learned to
-care only for their own welfare.
-
-“You see,” said Montrose, “King Charles is a Stewart, and so we have a
-double loyalty to him—as our King, and as a Stewart and a Highlander. The
-English Parliament and the Scottish Covenant wish to rule the King and
-all of us as well. I think I need not tell you that.”
-
-There was a growl from the group. “Aye, Mac Cailein Mor would be King
-Campbell with the help of the Covenanters!” “A plague on the lot of them!”
-
-“And so,” urged Montrose, “we must put aside lesser loyalties and
-quarrels amongst our own clans, and stand together.”
-
-“Aye!” shouted the men, but Kelpie privately thought that Montrose’s
-magic would fail at this point. Who ever knew a Highlander to give up his
-clan feuds for anything at all—except a greater clan feud?
-
-She did learn one thing about Montrose. He used different words with
-different kinds of people—just as she herself did, in a way. She was
-eavesdropping one evening as he sat by his campfire with Antrim and
-Patrick Graham of Inchbrakie, and his words to them were less simple and
-certain than those to the untaught clansmen.
-
-“No,” he said, “I do not fight for what people call the Divine Right of
-Kings. I don’t believe there is such a thing, Alistair. A king must be
-subject to the laws of God, nature, and the country that he rules. But as
-long as he stays within those laws, then he should _be_ the ruler.”
-
-“And if he doesn’t?” It was Patrick Graham, called “Black Pate.”
-
-The youthful face looked troubled in the firelight. “It’s true King
-Charles hasn’t always obeyed the rules,” murmured Montrose. “That is why
-I supported the Covenant at first. But then I saw the greater danger we
-courted. If a group of subjects takes over the king’s power, they may
-become a far worse tyrant than ever a king could be, and that is what
-happened. You see yourselves how the Covenant oppresses the people; and
-I think those who are fighting for the Parliament in this war may find
-that they’ve used their own blood and their own fortunes to buy vultures
-and tigers to rule over them. To tell you the truth, my friends, I don’t
-know the right way to handle a king who abuses his power, but I do know
-that this is the wrong way. Perhaps there should be some limit set to the
-amount of power that one man or group can have.”
-
-Kelpie chewed her lip thoughtfully. Och, now, and there was a good idea.
-She could think of several such whose power should be limited to nothing
-at all. She would begin with Argyll and the Covenant, and go on to the
-Lowlander and Mina and Bogle. But how would one set about arranging this?
-
-In her preoccupation, Kelpie forgot that she was hiding and carelessly
-shifted her position so that a twig cracked. A small twig it was, and
-most folk would never have noticed, but these men were well schooled in
-danger. Three heads turned as one, and an instant later Antrim’s huge
-hand was plucking her from her hiding place as he would a puppy.
-
-“_Dhé!_” He chortled, holding her up in the orange light of the fire and
-looking her over with interest. “Here’s a fine dangerous enemy in our
-midst.”
-
-“Och, indeed and I am not!” protested Kelpie as well as she could. She
-tucked in her lip and looked pathetically at Montrose. “Do not be letting
-him hurt me, your Lordship!” she begged in English. “’Tis only a poor,
-wee, harmless—”
-
-“Let her down, Alistair,” suggested Montrose gently, “and perhaps she can
-tell us what she was doing there.”
-
-“Spying for Argyll, perhaps?” suggested Patrick narrowly, looking at her
-gray dress.
-
-Kelpie’s indignation was genuine. “That _nathrach_!” She
-sputtered earnestly and went on to curse him vigorously. “He is a
-_droch-inntinneach uruisg_ and a red-haired devil with a black heart in
-him!”
-
-Montrose, who knew little Gaelic, looked interested. “What was that?” he
-inquired, and Antrim chuckled.
-
-“She called him a serpent and an evil-minded monster,” he translated.
-“And I’m thinking she meant it, too! Well, then, why _were_ you skulking
-there, lass?”
-
-Once again Kelpie found semi-truth to be the most effective answer.
-“Och,” she whispered, ducking her head shyly. “I was wanting to see
-himself, and to be hearing him talk, for the singing tongue in his
-mouth.” From beneath lowered lids she observed that their faces were
-amused and tolerant.
-
-“Well, and so you’ve heard him,” said Antrim, not unkindly. “Away with
-you, then, and don’t be doing it again. Next time you might just be
-getting a claymore instead of a question.”
-
-Kelpie left meekly enough, relieved to get off so easily. But none of
-her questions was really answered. She had wanted to learn the source of
-Montrose’s power, and whether or no it was from magic, and if and how she
-could learn it. For although it was just possible that Montrose could
-destroy his archenemy, Argyll, which would be a fine thing indeed, Kelpie
-felt that Mina and Bogle and the Lowlander were another matter, and up
-to her. For sooner or later she was almost sure to run into them again,
-and when that day came she was going to need a great deal of magic power
-indeed!
-
-
-
-
-14. The Battle of Tippermuir
-
-
-At last word went round that the army was to move, but not, as Kelpie
-had expected, away from the danger of Perth and Lord Elcho’s great army.
-Quite the contrary. They were, it seemed, going to take Perth.
-
-Recklessness and practical caution fought within Kelpie. A fine, daft,
-gallant, and suicidal idea it seemed to her. If she had any sense in the
-head of her, she would take her leave now and head for safety. But she
-decided, instead, to go along but to stay with the women and children
-well behind the lines, once the fighting started, and then take to the
-hills when the battle was lost.
-
-The small, poorly equipped army gathered itself together and started
-south to the sound of pipes playing valiantly. They had got no farther
-than the hill of Buchanty when they ran into one of the enemy forces
-which had been surrounding them all the time. A full five hundred bowmen
-it must be, and Kelpie looked around hastily for something to hide under.
-
-But she had reckoned without Montrose. He and Antrim rode to meet the two
-leaders of the bowmen, and they talked. And, sometime during the talking,
-Montrose cast his spell, for presently the two forces spread out over the
-purple masses of blooming heather and ate together, the leaders still
-talking over wine and food.
-
-And then one of the enemy leaders sprang to his feet, and Kelpie could
-hear his words clearly. “You’re wrong!” he shouted. “’Tis not two
-thousand men ye have, but two thousand and five hundred! For we’ll never
-be fighting against Montrose!”
-
-Kelpie shook her head wonderingly. Why on earth did Montrose fight at
-all, if he could do this? Or did Argyll and others have some kind of
-counter-magic? Kelpie began to feel newly discouraged about her own
-prospects for magical powers, with so much competition about.
-
-The newly expanded army moved on again, undisturbed by the news that, in
-addition to his seven thousand infantry, Lord Elcho also had some eight
-hundred cavalry and nine pieces of heavy artillery. The Highlanders, like
-Kelpie, put their faith in the magic of Montrose. With him to lead them,
-no force on earth could beat them.
-
-They spent the night on the moor of Fowlis, and early in the morning were
-away down the Small Glen, and on to Tippermuir. There stood the walled
-town of Perth, some three miles away. And between stood the Covenant
-army, spread wide, waiting to catch Montrose’s impudent small army
-between its fierce jaws.
-
-Kelpie looked at it with awe, and some of her assurance left her. Surely,
-now, Montrose was stretching his powers too far! Lord Elcho would be
-wiping them out as easily as Antrim might knock down herself. There they
-stood, six deep, every man protected by corselet and an iron headpiece,
-and the most of them armed with muskets, against one-third the number
-of Highlanders, who wore only ragged kilts and rawhide brogans and
-had claymores and bows and arrows, or no weapons at all. It was a sad
-contrast.
-
-The citizens of Perth seemed to regard the coming battle as a fine new
-kind of Sabbath sport, for they had turned out in great numbers to
-watch the fun. Kelpie shoved through the palpitating crowd of women and
-children, now well behind the army, until she reached a spot on high
-ground which gave her both a good view and a quick escape route for when
-she needed it. And she expected to need it. She hoped that Ian might
-escape the slaughter somehow, but she was going to be quite sure that
-_she_ did.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Ian, who had an even better view in his spot in the front row of the
-battle line, was not feeling very optimistic himself. He looked with
-resignation over the flaunting blue banners of the Covenant ranks bearing
-the motto: _For Christ’s Crown and Covenant_—and then back to the one
-brave royal banner—three golden leopards on a red background—floating
-above the Highland rabble. The breeze rippled its folds and shivered
-across the purpled moors. It seemed too fine a day for men to die.
-
-Alex turned from chaffing his cousins among the small band of Keppoch
-MacDonalds and looked at Ian. There was a touch of pallor beneath the
-sunburn of his angular face, but his eyes were bright.
-
-“And are you frightened, Ian?” he asked with a crooked grin.
-
-“As ever was!” retorted Ian forthrightly, and Alex chuckled.
-
-“And I too,” he agreed. “My cousin Archie has just been saying it’s only
-a fool does not fear danger—in which case, I’m a wise man indeed!”
-
-Ian looked around him. Most of the ordinary clansmen seemed not
-much worried. There was an almost supernatural faith in Montrose,
-that he would bring victory at any odds. And Antrim—the magnificent
-Colkitto—strode down the line with confidence in every inch of him. His
-legs were pillars beneath the MacDonald kilt he wore, and they were
-matched by the size of his shoulders.
-
-“I think _he_ isn’t afraid,” observed Ian.
-
-Alex nodded agreement. “Montrose is worried, though,” he murmured. “You
-can see it behind his eyes. What is happening now?” For one of Montrose’s
-officers was going toward Lord Elcho, waving a white flag of truce.
-
-“Here’s Ranald,” said Archie. “He’ll know. Ranald learns everything.” If
-Archie was frightened, one would never know it. His black eyes sparkled
-wickedly from under his thick black hair, and he turned eagerly to make
-room for another Keppoch cousin. “What is it Ranald, _avic_?”
-
-“An envoy of courtesy,” reported Ranald, shaking his fair head
-wonderingly. “Montrose has sent to ask is it against their principles
-to fight on the Sabbath, and would they rather wait for tomorrow. Only
-Montrose would think to make such a gesture!”
-
-Archie, who seemed to have a low opinion of Covenant principles, shook
-his head disapprovingly. Alex opened his mouth for a jesting remark,
-and forgot to close it again. For, incredibly, outrageously, the envoy
-was being taken prisoner! He was seized, bound, hustled off through the
-Covenant ranks.
-
-Incredulous anger rippled through the Highland army. Ian stood aghast.
-“He couldn’t!” he whispered. “He _couldn’t_ violate a flag of truce!” And
-for once even the more cynical Alex shared Ian’s feelings.
-
-Oddly, Kelpie’s face came to Alex at that moment. Her narrow, slant-eyed,
-impudent face would be wondering what was so awful about violating a
-white flag. Was it any worse than killing a man in battle? And the envoy
-wasn’t even dead—yet, anyway. To his disgust, Alex found himself, in
-his own mind, trying to explain it to her. “_Dhiaoul!_” he muttered and
-turned his attention to the matters at hand.
-
-It was quite possible that Lord Elcho had done himself an ill service,
-for a flame of Celtic rage had engulfed the Highland army. Alex found
-that he had shifted forward an inch or two without knowing it, and the
-rest of the army with him. Those without weapons had picked up stones.
-For a moment it seemed that they would all break into a wild charge, but
-Montrose achieved the minor miracle of holding them back. “Wait!” said
-his outflung arm. “Wait!” boomed Antrim. “Be patient a wee while, men of
-my heart, and we soon will be giving them cold steel for it.”
-
-And they waited, only inching forward a toe at a time, as the Covenant
-army moved closer, until not a hundred paces separated them. A long wait
-it seemed, long enough for all the army to hear Lord Elcho’s answer to
-the message of the unfortunate envoy. “The Lord’s Day,” he had said,
-“is fit for the Lord’s work of exterminating the barbarous Irish and
-Highlanders.”
-
-“When we charge,” muttered Archie, who had been in battles before, “keep
-just one thing in mind. Choose your enemy and kill him, and then a second
-man if you can.”
-
-“Very well so,” agreed Alex mildly. “And what will I do with my third
-man?” He was pleased that his voice had just the nonchalance he wanted
-for it.
-
-Ian’s was equally cool. “Just be leaving him to me,” he said. “I’ll have
-had my three by then.”
-
-Another inch forward, and the Covenanters closer yet, and still no signal
-to charge. And now came the Covenant battle cry for the day. “Jesus and
-no quarter!” they yelled, and Ian shuddered at the blasphemy.
-
-And then suddenly came a shrill wild skirl from the gaunt woman at the
-back of the battle. A voice lifted and pealed savagely. “Wolves of the
-North! Let the fangs bite!”
-
-And the signal was given, and as they rushed forward Ian’s voice answered
-with his own clan battle cry. “Sons of the dogs, come hither, come
-hither, and ye shall have flesh!”
-
-“God and St. Andrew!” answered the Keppoch MacDonalds, and the air was
-thick with the wailing menace of pipes and clan cries, until the pipers
-abandoned their pipes for the claymores, and the slogans became scattered
-and mixed with mere yells.
-
-Neither Alex nor Ian remembered the rest clearly—only a wall of armed
-men ahead, and then the smashing, tearing impact of battle. There was
-Archie’s fighting laughter, and the blazing red beard of Antrim ...
-someone yelling “A Gordon, a Gordon!” the whole of the fight. And then
-there was no wall of armored men, but only fleeing backs, and the charge
-went on and on—until they were at the gates of Perth.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When Kelpie reached Perth, some time later (and a messy three miles it
-was too, littered with Covenant casualties), she fully expected to find
-it being thoroughly sacked and looted, and to be in time to pick up a
-few wee things herself. It was just for this that she had managed to get
-slightly ahead of the rest of the women and children.
-
-But there was unexpected quiet and order. Kelpie paused inside the gate,
-frowning. A few citizens peered fearfully from windows, waiting for the
-worst, but the worst did not seem to be happening. Instead, Highlanders
-stood about, glaring at the frightened heads and at a shouting preacher
-on the near corner, and looking disgruntled.
-
-“He shall rain snares upon the sinners,” screamed the preacher, “and fire
-and brimstone and storms of wind shall be the portion of their cup!”
-
-Kelpie joined a group of ragged Highlanders who were standing there
-listening. “_Now_ will he remember their iniquity and visit their sins!”
-the preacher was suggesting hopefully. “I will consume them by the sword,
-and by the famine, and by the pestilence! I will pour their wickedness
-upon them!”
-
-“Is it ourselves he means?” asked Kelpie of the nearest Highlander.
-
-He nodded, looking disgusted. “And we not even allowed to feed his words
-back to him,” he growled. “And,” he added regretfully, “I am thinking
-that the fine coat of him would be fitting me, whatever.”
-
-“But why? Why not be silencing him and taking it?” demanded Kelpie.
-He shrugged, looking aggressive. Montrose, it seemed, had ordered no
-sacking, no looting, no harm to the citizens.
-
-Several Highlanders turned from the preacher, who was now informing
-them that they were to be cast forth from the land, and chimed in. An
-unheard-of thing, that! And they half-starved and in rags, and counting
-on food, clothing, and a fine wee bit of loot from these overfed,
-psalm-singing heathen hypocrites! And what was Montrose about, then, to
-be depriving them of their just reward? And yet, not a man suggested
-disobeying.
-
-The preacher, a gaunt, long-faced man in a fine black coat, was working
-himself up into a fine passion of Covenanter Christianity. “They shall
-die grievous deaths,” he announced. “They shall not be lamented, neither
-shall they be buried; they shall be as dung upon the face of the earth.”
-
-“Is it his own friends he’s speaking of?” came Alex’s mocking voice.
-“’Tis a fine burial service you’re preaching, my friend, but shouldn’t
-you be helping to dig the graves first?”
-
-The preacher stopped, glared, and began to launch forth with more Bible
-verses. But the Highlanders had got the idea.
-
-“Now then,” one of them called, chortling. “’Twould be no harm to the
-bonnie man if we just see to it that he helps bury his friends, now,
-would it? Come away out, now, and be useful!” And in a moment the
-preacher was being propelled firmly out of the gate, protesting loudly
-that yon muckle redshanks were gang to murther him. Alex and Ian, Archie
-and Ranald were left, grinning after them.
-
-Kelpie spared them no more than a glance and then returned to her
-grievance. No looting! And she had been wanting a nice silver belt and
-perhaps a silken purse.
-
-Disgustingly, Ian and Alex agreed with Montrose. “’Tis a barbaric
-practice, sacking cities,” said Ian with quiet intensity. “Why should
-soldiers war on civilians, especially women and bairns? If there were
-more leaders with the principles of Montrose, war would be less evil than
-it is.”
-
-“There’s no use one army stopping, and the others going on doing it,”
-argued Kelpie.
-
-“Someone must be stopping first,” Alex pointed out. Odd how he kept
-trying to explain principles to this little witch, who could no more
-understand them than could his cousin Cecily’s wee and wicked yellow
-kitten. “If Montrose shows mercy, perhaps the Covenanters will do the
-same.”
-
-Kelpie sneered audibly, and Archie made a rude noise. Alex shrugged.
-“To be more practical,” he pointed out, “perhaps Montrose is hoping that
-these towns near his own home may be turned to our side if we treat them
-well.”
-
-“I think he would do so anyway,” insisted Ian, “’Tis a point of
-integrity, Kelpie.”
-
-Kelpie looked blank, and Alex laughed. “Do not be trying to explain
-integrity to _her_, Ian!” he pleaded. “Begin first on a creature with
-more capacity—like Cecily’s kitten, for example—and then Dubh, perhaps,
-and after that you might be working up to a kelpie.”
-
-At the mention of Cecily, Ian saw in his mind a heart-shaped, mischievous
-face in a halo of tawny hair. And then he put it away from him, for Alex
-had said fifty times that he was going to marry his cousin one day; and
-if his foster brother wanted Cecily, then she was not for Ian to think
-of. So he thought instead of Kelpie, who was tossing her black head
-scornfully.
-
-“Well, whatever integrity is,” she announced, “this is daft. For,” she
-predicted with gloomy relish, “all the towns around will be thinking
-they may do as they please, with no fear of punishment. Just wait you
-now, they’ll be shouting more loudly and burning more witches than ever
-before.”
-
-Surprisingly, Alex nodded. It was Ian who was about to argue. But at this
-moment Lachlan and Maeve arrived, shouting that at last they had found
-Mac ’ic Ian, and would he be coming away this minute to have his sore
-wound tended.
-
-Ian laughed, faintly embarrassed, and began to protest. And Kelpie,
-with a pang of concern, noticed for the first time that his plaidie was
-wrapped oddly about his left arm and that a stain of red was creeping
-along the sleeve beneath it.
-
-“_Dhé!_” she cried. “It may be only a wee bit cut as you say, Ian, but
-yon orange-top”—she glared at Maeve—“has not the sense to be tending it
-for you, and it will surely mortify if you let her. I,” she announced
-firmly, “will bind it myself, with bread mold and cobwebs on the cut, and
-a wee charm or two over it, and ’twill heal overnight, for I know about
-such matters.”
-
-Maeve promptly screamed that the wicked little witch would poison Mac ’ic
-Ian only over her dead body. Kelpie retorted that it was a fine idea,
-that last. Ranald said that he had known mold and cobwebs to work very
-well. Archie’s black eyes sparkled with amusement, and it fell upon Alex
-to arbitrate.
-
-Firmly, with the masterful air that Kelpie usually resented hotly, he
-declared in favor of her bread mold but against her charms. He pacified
-Maeve by allowing her to supervise and to put the sign of the cross upon
-Ian’s arm. And because both Maeve and Kelpie were genuinely concerned
-over Ian’s welfare a truce of sorts was declared—for the moment.
-
-
-
-
-15. Witch Hunt
-
-
-An uneasy peace brooded over the whole of Perth the next day. Not only
-the citizens but also their Gaelic conquerors tended to feel slightly
-abused, and they spent the morning glooming at one another. By noon the
-high Celtic spirits had risen again in the conquerors, and a spirit of
-mischief took over. They released prisoners from stocks and jails (most
-of them guilty of such crimes as failing to attend kirk), and some of
-the Irish MacDonalds began preaching back at the dour, hell-spouting
-Calvinist preachers.
-
-But this palled too, and presently a group of young and adventurous
-Highlanders decided just to go out and have a wee look round the
-neighboring countryside. Archie and Ranald came hunting Alex and Ian,
-who were delighted. Lachlan firmly attached himself to the party, with
-strict orders from Maeve not to be letting Mac ’ic Ian do anything to
-start his cut bleeding afresh.
-
-At this point Kelpie announced that she would just go too. Ranald looked
-at her dubiously, but Archie laughed. “And why ever not?” he demanded.
-“The women do full share of work, what with cooking and nursing, and
-should have a bit of fun when they can. Will you come too, Maeve?”
-
-Maeve hesitated, glared at Kelpie, and declined. And the party, some
-dozen or fifteen altogether, set off.
-
-“Is Kelpie your true name?” demanded Archie as they started west across
-the sweep of moor. He grinned at her engagingly. “It wouldn’t be every
-day a body could have a kelpie as mascot. Tell me,” he asked, “have I
-seen you turn a soft eye upon Ian? Could you not be giving him a wee love
-potion?”
-
-Kelpie smiled enigmatically and declined to answer. But she turned the
-idea over in her mind.
-
-It was a lovely day, this second of September. The birches were beginning
-to yellow and the bracken to turn rusty underneath. Rowan trees flaunted
-clumps of brilliant red-orange berries in the sun; and only now and
-again did a cloud shadow glide silently over the rosy-heathered swelling
-ground, patching it with somber purple. Kelpie tied her plaidie around
-her waist, for she would not be needing it until the chill of evening.
-
-They walked on, with the long, tireless Highland stride, chattering and
-laughing with the upsurge of spirits that was a normal reaction from the
-fear and triumph of yesterday.
-
-“And did you get your dozen men, Alex?” inquired the fair-haired Ranald.
-“I saw you once cutting down an armored musketeer twice your size, and
-glad I was to be fighting with and not against you.”
-
-Alex’s red brows slanted upward. “_Dhé!_” he said. “I was so frighted I
-just held out my sword, and it seems the enemy was obliging enough to run
-into it. ’Twas Ian was the braw fighter, and none better in Scotland. It
-was he saved me more than once.”
-
-“Only so that you could be saving me, Alex _avic_,” retorted Ian, “and
-Lachlan saving the both of us,” he added. “Besides, it was I was so
-scared I could only think to run away.”
-
-“And since you were headed for Perth, already, the only thing to do was
-just cut your way through the face of the enemy,” finished Archie with
-bland seriousness.
-
-Ian nodded gravely. “That was the way of it. I was too frightened to
-think of turning around.”
-
-And so they went on, with the same old bantering Kelpie had heard so
-often at Glenfern, and each of them claiming to have been more frightened
-than any of the rest. Kelpie listened with an odd feeling of contentment.
-This brotherhood, this easy straight-faced teasing which was an unspoken
-love between friends, was a warm and joyous thing to hear—for all that
-it was dangerous to have it. There was wistfulness in her heart as she
-walked silently among the cheerful group, and a shadow on her face.
-
-Presently they came to a river and a small gray town on the near side. “I
-doubt they’ll love us there,” predicted a tall lad in Duncan kilt, “but
-perhaps their good Lowland sense of business will make them willing to
-sell us a pint or two of ale—or even good _uisghebaugh_, if there is such
-a thing outside of the Highlands.”
-
-It was a popular suggestion, and the long Highland strides became even
-longer, so that Kelpie—though she denied it—had to stretch her own to
-keep up. As they drew near the cluster of stone houses with the somber
-square kirk in the center, she frowned a little. A dour, gloomy place it
-was! Not that it looked different, really, from other towns, but there
-was a bad feel to it. None of the others seemed to notice, but Kelpie’s
-bones were wary.
-
-There seemed to be very few people about. Perhaps most of them had seen
-the Highlanders coming and gone inside. The few folk they did meet cast
-looks of hate at the kilted barbarians—which the barbarians, secure in
-the safety of numbers and reputation, found rather amusing.
-
-An innkeeper sourly sold them ale, with black looks thrown in for good
-measure. “Och, wouldn’t he like to poison it, just!” said Alex in Gaelic
-as Kelpie refused the ale Ian offered her. It might not actually be
-poisoned, but it could have an evil spell on it, all the same. She said
-so.
-
-“If your spells haven’t worked, I doubt anyone’s could!” Alex taunted
-her. “For you’ve tried hard enough, haven’t you?”
-
-Kelpie glowered from under her thick lashes. Had he seen her, then, all
-that while at Blair Atholl? Or was it just his evil way of always knowing
-what she was thinking? She had begun to feel a trifle more friendly since
-learning that he had saved Ian yesterday instead of cutting him down. But
-once again Alex was taking the offensive.
-
-Alex had known what she was about at Blair Atholl, and it had amused him,
-in a way—once he was sure her spells were impotent. But just now, for
-some reason, all her hatred for him was rankling, and he was in the mood
-to goad her a bit for her irritating ways—although he was not at all sure
-why she got under his skin so easily. So he deliberately treated her to
-his most satirical grin. “And didn’t your hex work at all, poor lass?” he
-inquired sympathetically.
-
-Kelpie started to hiss at him, but Ian was looking at her oddly. He would
-not take it kindly that she had tried to hex his foster brother, even
-though it was himself she was trying to protect. And she wanted to keep
-Ian’s good will.
-
-Her lip drooped. “Always and always you will be thinking evil of me,
-Alex MacDonald!” she lamented. “You will be trying to make everyone hate
-me, and never giving me the chance at all to be better, no matter how I
-might try.”
-
-The other lads were listening to all this with great interest, and they
-now regarded Alex with severity, and Kelpie with sympathy. But it was
-Ian’s sympathy she wanted—and got.
-
-“’Tis true enough, Alex,” he said accusingly. “You’ve ever thought the
-worst of the poor lass, and her only sin is in being what she was taught
-to be. How could she ever change with you condemning her in advance?”
-
-A rare blaze of rage swept over Alex. “_Dhiaoul!_ ’Tis a fool you are,
-Ian!” And suddenly he was quarreling—it was incredible—with his foster
-brother, dearer than kin, and over a young rogue of a gypsy lass not
-worth a hair on Ian’s head! And yet the quarrel went on and on.
-
-Kelpie had never seen them angry at each other before, and she was
-frightened. It was the town had done it! The town was filled with hate
-and malice and had put a spell on them all! And she, who should be
-pleased at seeing Ian turn from Alex, found that she couldn’t enjoy it.
-She couldn’t even bear to listen. She slipped out of the tavern with
-their angry words drifting after her.
-
-The streets were no longer empty. A crowd was streaming out of the
-four-square meeting house and along toward the town square, and it was
-the sort of crowd she knew all too well. Their faces held a savage and
-bloodthirsty fanaticism, and this was not a mob looking for a victim, but
-one which had found one. It was someone, no doubt, who had committed the
-sin of breaking the Sabbath, or dancing, or perhaps chancing to glance at
-a neighbor’s cow before it fell ill. Och, it was a witch trial they had
-been having! No knowing was it a real witch or not, nor would it matter;
-for to be accused was to be condemned.
-
-“Burn them!” the crowd growled as it surged past the tavern. Kelpie
-should have ducked back inside, but her curiosity was too great. And
-despite her vow to be hard-hearted there was a flicker in her of pity.
-The victims were coming now, being roughly hustled along toward the
-square. The crowd swept Kelpie along, not noticing one more gray gown
-among so many others.
-
-Kelpie squeezed through a gap between a stout man and a bony woman, and
-as it closed behind her she found herself almost pushed against the
-victims, her eyes staring straight into theirs—and their eyes were as
-filled with hatred as those of the crowd.
-
-Mina and Bogle!
-
-Panic gripped her heart. Frantically she tried to back up, to melt back
-into the crowd. But there was no gap now, only a wall of townsmen at her
-back. And it was too late. Mina’s shrill screech cut the other sounds.
-
-“There she is! The kelpie who led us into witchcraft! In the gray dress!
-There! Look at the ringed eyes of her!”
-
-“She’ll be putting the Evil Eye on ye all” croaked Bogle venomously.
-
-Sick fear and revulsion were in Kelpie as her quick eyes swept
-around—vainly—for an avenue of escape. They were not accusing her to save
-themselves, which would have been logical, but in sheer malice. That she
-might have done the same didn’t occur to her, for there was no time for
-thinking. The crowd was responding with a new roar, seeking more blood,
-turning to find its new victim.
-
-Kelpie looked instinctively for a scapegoat, another gray dress to point
-out—but again, too late. Hands grabbed her. She wrenched free with a
-twist, only to be grasped by more hands, caught beyond hope of escape.
-
-“Alex!” screamed Kelpie. “Ian! Help!” And she lifted her voice in the
-Cameron war rant, hoping that the familiar words might reach Ian.
-“_Chlanna non can, thigibh a so_—” A blow on the head cut it short, and
-she thought with bitterness that it could not matter. How could they
-hear her so far away, and over the crowd, and when they were themselves
-quarreling in the tavern, and herself being carried farther away every
-minute?
-
-“Ye’ll not be taking a witch’s word!” she cried out. “I am of the Kirk,
-and have been servant to Argyll himself!”
-
-One or two of the nearest people hesitated doubtfully, for Argyll was a
-name to conjure with. But Mina dashed Kelpie’s faint chance. “Aye!” she
-shrieked. “To be getting a bit of his hair for a hex! Look at her eyes,
-just!”
-
-She was doomed, then. “Sons of the dogs!” she yelled once more, with
-despair in voice and heart. And then she was being shoved along with Mina
-and Bogle.
-
-“_Chlanna non can, thigibh a so’s gheibh sibh feoil!_” It was Ian’s
-voice. A wedge began to cut itself into the crowd from behind, a bright
-blade gleaming, and Ian’s wild face at the back of the sword.
-
-And then another voice, that of Alex. “_Ian!_” it roared, and another
-wedge appeared behind the first. And now figures in MacDonald and Duncan
-bonnets cut a swathe, more swords gleamed, voices roared happily with the
-joy of battle.
-
-But Alex was coming after Ian, and a black rage on his face, and his
-voice bellowing Ian’s name. He was angry still, then, and the more so
-because Ian was trying to save her! Kelpie’s feet were set against the
-cobblestones of the street, her body twisted to see behind. And now the
-hold on her was loosening as the witch-burners began to take alarm. But
-oh, would Ian be in time? Would Alex stop him?
-
-Ian had nearly reached her. The crowd, mostly unarmed, swirled and shoved
-in disorganized fury. They turned from their victims now, and two or
-three dirks were flashed. The MacDonalds were gleefully wreaking havoc
-somewhere behind, but Alex had caught up with Ian now, and his face was
-fearful to look on. Ian’s back was to Alex, his attention on dealing with
-those dirks still separating him from Kelpie. Kelpie could not see his
-hands, for the shoulders and heads in the way, but his face was grim,
-intent. “Hold on, Kelpie!” he shouted.
-
-“_Ian!_” roared Alex again, and his sword rose—rose and then fell with a
-furious slash. And Ian was down, and his dark head had vanished in the
-crowd.
-
-It was just as she had seen it in the loch! For an instant Kelpie felt
-nothing at all but a terrible cold emptiness, and then grief was in her
-very bones, and a small cry of anguish on her lips. She made a move
-toward the swarming, fighting spot where Ian had vanished. There was one
-brief glimpse of Alex, raging like one gone mad, and then the MacDonalds
-were there, making a havoc that sent townspeople screaming for safety.
-And somewhere, being trampled beneath, was the body of Ian, and perhaps
-she could reach him and help....
-
-And then she hesitated. Alex would be wanting to kill her too! And now
-was her chance to be away and safe from him. And after all, what good
-could she be to Ian? For either he was dead and past help, or, if not,
-there were the MacDonalds to care for him, and Maeve back at Perth.
-
-Kelpie hesitated a moment longer, then she reverted to old habits and
-saved herself. She slipped like a hunted wildcat through the crowd, which
-now had other things on its mind than stopping her. She was out of it,
-around a corner, through the narrow streets in a swift streak of gray.
-The clamor grew muffled and scattered. She tore across the stone bridge
-and the moor and along a glen and over a hill. She ran until she could
-no longer breathe, and then crawled into a thick patch of broom and lay
-gasping and sobbing.
-
-She must not think! She could not bear to think. Alex had really done it,
-then! The thing inside her had never really believed he would, and that
-was the thing now keening in black anguish that he could have done it.
-
-And Ian! Was he dead, then? Dead trying to save herself, who had then
-fled without a backward look?
-
-But it was only sense to have saved herself! It was what Ian had been
-trying to do, to save _her_, and wouldn’t he have wished it? Why should
-it be the weight of a stone on her? Ian would have wished it, she told
-herself. And then she rolled over on her face and was violently sick.
-
- * * * * *
-
-How long had she been walking? And to where? It was just away from the
-town she had been going, and she was now far away, for she had spent more
-than one night in the heather. And yet she could not get away from the
-beating blackness in her mind.
-
-Kelpie sank down in the drenched heather and discovered with vague
-surprise that rain was pouring steadily from a dreary sky. She looked
-wearily around and saw nothing but hills and heath closed in mist. She
-was wet as a water horse, and when had she last eaten?
-
-What was she to do now? And where was she going? She didn’t care much.
-It would be nice just to lie down and not be waking at all at all. But
-some inner vitality would never let her do that. She sighed. She must be
-finding food, then, and learning where she was. For all she knew, she
-might be back in Campbell country—and that thought roused her just a
-little.
-
-She dragged herself to her feet and tramped on again. The glen ended in a
-long loch, so large that both ends were out of sight around the curves of
-the hills. Kelpie sat down again and thought, slowly, because she could
-not seem to think very well. There were not so many lochs of this size.
-She did not think she could have got so far as Loch Rannoch, and this
-seemed too long for Loch Earn and not wide enough for Loch Lomond. It
-must be that it was Loch Tay, and if this were so, then she might well be
-in Campbell country.
-
-If only the sun would come out! If only there were some place that she
-could go and rest and hide away from the world and her thoughts....
-
-And then she remembered the braes of Balquidder and two kind and lonely
-old folk who had said, “Haste ye back.”
-
-At this point Kelpie’s instinct and gypsy training took over. Without
-stopping to wonder was she right or no, she turned to the left and
-trudged along the southern bank of the loch. She found berries and roots
-to eat. She lay down in the wet heather and slept, her plaidie around
-her, when she could go no farther. And then she awoke and went on. To the
-end of the loch she went, and down a glen, and around a mountain.
-
-And late on a drizzly afternoon old Alsoon MacNab heard a faint scratch
-at her door and opened it to find her own plaidie back—wrapped round a
-morsel of wretched humanity that for once was not shamming in the least.
-
-
-
-
-16. Morag Mhor
-
-
-It was pleasant to be cared for, pleasant and strange. Kelpie lay for
-several days on the pile of springy heather which served for her bed.
-At first she just slept and awoke to eat and sleep again. But then she
-began lying awake, her eyes on the smoky fire, or on the mortarless stone
-walls that leaned a little inward against the black rafters and thatched
-roof. Alsoon was always busy, cooking or sweeping the earthen floor with
-a besom broom or weaving or knitting, one eye always on her patient.
-
-And why should they take her in and care for her so, when they had
-nothing to gain by it? Glenfern had done the same thing—no, best not
-to think of Glenfern, for that was too painful. She must learn to wall
-off those memories from her feelings, so that they would become like a
-witch-spot on the body, a spot that could feel no pain even though a pin
-was stuck in to the head. Kelpie had no witch-spots, though Mina did. But
-then, Kelpie was not a witch, and what was more, she never would be,
-however hard she might try!
-
-The knowledge crept upon her stealthily, while she was still too weak and
-drained to resist it. She had no power at all. None of her spells had
-ever worked. And Mina had lied about teaching her the Evil Eye. It came
-to her with bitter clarity that the Evil Eye was a thing one must be born
-with; it could never be learned. All Kelpie had was the Second Sight, and
-many Highlanders had that.
-
-She received the knowledge with a strange kind of indifference. Later,
-when she wasn’t so tired, she would no doubt feel a savage sense of loss.
-But she could not think about it now—not yet.
-
-Alsoon was bringing her some broth now and crooning to her wee dark love
-to drink it and sleep. Callum must have tramped far over the hills to
-find a deer to make it, and they knew very well that she could never
-pay for it at all, and they would be hurt even if she offered payment.
-Highland hospitality was a warm, strong thing with rules to it. It made a
-grace between host and guest and a bond not to harm each other. This was
-why Alex had been so angry at the way she left Glenfern, and Eithne so
-hurt, and—and Ian—
-
-She wrenched her mind from the thought of Ian, drank her broth, and
-drifted back to sleep.
-
-When she was on her feet again, Kelpie was strangely content just to
-stay where she was. It seemed to her that her life had been violently
-wrenched apart, and she hardly knew how to begin putting it back together
-again. She needed time to think. Kelpie had always found the world full
-and interesting, however cruel. She played a game. She avoided the
-cruelty when she could, and bore it if she must, and fought back when
-she had the chance. She adapted herself to each new situation that came
-along, and had quite enjoyed—on the whole—the glimpses of various new
-worlds that the last few months had offered.
-
-But now she seemed to be cast out of every world she knew, for she could
-never go back to Glenfern, or to Mina and Bogle (even if she would), or
-to Campbell country. Worse, she did not even know what she wanted, now
-that the power of witchcraft was denied her. The old gypsy life no longer
-seemed attractive. New ideas had been planted in her mind, and she had
-found herself groping restlessly for something she could not name.
-
-To keep her mind and hands busy, she began to help Alsoon and Callum with
-the various chores, and took an unexpected pleasure in them. For once,
-walls seemed not a trap but a warm, safe shelter from the early frost and
-biting wind outside, and from the world in general.
-
-And so the autumn passed, and it was the dark of the year, with only a
-few brief hours of daylight and long gray dusks. In that remote glen they
-heard little of the outside world. It wasn’t until she had been there for
-two months that a neighbor from over the hill came that way in search
-of stray cattle and stopped in to pass on the news that his brother had
-heard from someone’s cousin who had been away in to a town.
-
-Montrose had taken his army north to Aberdeen, and this time he had let
-his men sack the city. “It was because they had shot a wee drummer boy,”
-explained the neighbor. “The lad was just along with the envoy, asking
-them would they like to send their women and bairns to safety. And Graham
-was so angry at it that he took the town and turned his army loose on it,
-but they say he was sorry after.”
-
-And then, it seemed, the old game of tag had started again, with Argyll
-panting after Montrose all the way from Bog o’ Gight to Badenoch, Tumnel
-to Strathbogie, devastating lands as he went, and slaughtering people if
-he even suspected them of royalist sympathies.
-
-When Kelpie awoke the next morning, she saw the white light of the first
-snow coming through the cracks in the shutters, and her first, unbidden
-thought was: did Ian lie somewhere beneath that blanket? Had Alex been
-punished for killing him? Where was Montrose now, and what was happening
-in Scotland? It was the beginning of a new restlessness and a growing
-desire to learn whether Ian was dead, and perhaps even to take vengeance
-herself on Alex, if no one else had done it already. Even without magic
-powers, she reflected with narrowed eyes, she could still use her wee
-_sgian dhu_!
-
-The dark, smoky shieling became too cramped for such thoughts, and, in
-spite of the cold, Kelpie took to making long walks over the braes and
-around the foot of Ben More. Alsoon looked at her wisely. If she guessed
-that confusing thoughts were disturbing the young waif, she said nothing
-but merely finished whatever task Kelpie might have left undone when the
-restlessness was upon her.
-
-“Och, and you’ll be away again one day,” predicted old Callum mildly one
-crisp afternoon when Kelpie paused at the sheep pen where he was working.
-“’Tis the wanderlust you have in your feet—but are you not also wanting
-somewhere to call home?”
-
-Kelpie had never thought of the matter. She did so now. What _was_ a
-home? For Ian it had been Glenfern, where his heart stayed wherever the
-rest of him might be. But for Kelpie, Glenfern was not just a place;
-it was a feeling and it was people. It was Wee Mairi’s bonnie face and
-confiding smile; and the twins crowding close, bright-eyed, to demand
-more stories; and Eithne’s quick sympathy; and laughter beside the loch.
-It was teasing and love and trust among them all, and her own heart given
-recklessly against her better judgement.
-
-No, home was not a place but a feeling—a deceitful feeling, she
-remembered bitterly. She had endangered Wee Mairi by her very affection,
-and Ian had trusted too much.... And Kelpie thought again that if
-Glenfern had not settled the score with Alex, she herself might do it
-one day. She thought of Mina and Bogle too, and hoped fiercely that they
-had not escaped.
-
-There was more heavy snow the next week, and now this was nearly the
-longest time she had ever spent in one place—except for Glenfern,
-and Glenfern had been much more lively. She longed more and more for
-excitement, for adventure, aye, even for danger, for these were the spice
-of life. And so she stiffened with anticipation on the morning that wee
-Angus MacNab came racing over the hill toward the shieling hut. Important
-news was in his every movement.
-
-“Och, Callum, and have you seen it?” he demanded in a shrill shout.
-“Montrose himself it is, and his army, just yon over the braes on the
-edge of Campbell land. It is said they will be going to harry Mac Cailein
-Mor in his own castle!”
-
-Kelpie had been standing over near the sheep pen, very still, watching
-the small lad come. A too large kilt flapped about his knobbly knees,
-and himself and his long shadow and his twisting track were all dark
-against the white of the snow. To her left was the black of the shieling
-hut, smoke rising vaguely against the pearl-blue of the sky, and Callum
-standing by the door. Everything seemed to stop in time for just an
-instant, while something inside Kelpie awoke, stretched, looked around,
-and made a decision.
-
-She didn’t ask herself any questions then, but turned in her tracks and
-walked back to the hut, where Callum and Alsoon were greeting the lad and
-asking for more details.
-
-“And where are they?” she demanded.
-
-Angus waved a skinny arm toward the north. “Yon, near Loch Tay. The clan
-is called out and will be joining there. I wish I could be going!”
-
-Sudden reasonless elation filled Kelpie. She wrapped her plaidie more
-firmly about her shoulders and looked at Callum and Alsoon. “I’m away,”
-she announced.
-
-“Och, no, heart’s darling!” protested Alsoon. “Not into Campbell lands,
-and in midwinter! Bide with us a wee while longer, until spring.”
-
-“I’m away,” repeated Kelpie, a little sharply, as she realized that once
-again she was in danger of giving her heart. “And what harm from cold or
-Campbells when the army and all the women and bairns are along? I cannot
-bide longer, for my feet have the urge in them.” And she tossed her dark
-head like a young Highland pony, so that the thick braids—well tended
-by Alsoon—leaped over her shoulders and beat against her waist, as if
-impatient.
-
-Alsoon sighed. “Well, then, and you must go if you must. But come away in
-first, my light, and I’ll be giving you food to take along. Dried venison
-there is, and fresh bannocks, and oatcakes. And here are the new skin
-brogans that Callum has finished for you.”
-
-“Haste ye back, white love,” she added at last as Kelpie took the food
-and put on the shoes and stood looking at her.
-
-“Aye,” said Kelpie, and her heart was torn. The MacNabs gave and asked
-no return but to be able to give more. “You’ve been kind, and I not
-deserving it,” she murmured, and then clenched her fists and walked
-quickly out of the low doorway, lest she be caught up in folly again.
-
-Halfway up the hill she paused, stared back at the long, low shieling
-hut, and then waved at the two old people standing there. Tears stung her
-eyelids for a moment, and impulsively she crooked her forefinger, calling
-down a blessing upon them.
-
-Five minutes later she had shaken off her sadness. She lifted her head
-and breathed the air of new adventure. The hills had been calling this
-long while, calling through the spell of black depression that was on
-her. But the spell was broken now, and she was answering the call.
-
-At the top of the hill she was seized by fresh exuberance. Curving her
-arms upward like a stag’s antlers, she broke into the light, wild leaps
-of a dance that the Highland men did around the campfire or at friendly
-gatherings, and then laughed aloud at her own impertinence—she, a lass,
-to be doing a man’s dance, and doing it well too. The dance took on a
-distinctly mocking and impudent quality.
-
-From the top of the next hill she looked down on Montrose’s army, which
-had made camp by the loch. From the mouth of the glen, the MacNabs were
-arriving, great-kilts swinging about their bare, strong knees, and the
-top halves of the kilts wrapped round massive shoulders. Kelpie surveyed
-the scene for a moment before going down, counting tartans. MacDonalds
-were still most plentiful, with Gordons, MacPhersons, Stewarts—but she
-saw no Cameron tartans.
-
-She also saw no children, and only a small scattering of women. Where
-were they all, then? Frowning a little, she went down, over the snowy
-hillside, to the camp.
-
-“Whist, lass, and what is it you’re wanting?” It was a bearded Irish
-MacDonald. “The time for sweethearts’ farewells is past, and we off to
-raid and harry the Campbells in their lair.” The beard split in a grin of
-vengeful glee.
-
-“It is I that am coming with you,” announced Kelpie cheekily. “Where are
-all the women and bairns?”
-
-He stared. “Back at Blair Castle, the most of them, safe in Stewart
-country. It is only a few of the strongest, and they with no children,
-that we have brought. ’Tis no adventure for you, lassie. Be away back
-home.”
-
-“I am strong, and with no bairns,” argued Kelpie. “And I’m frightened to
-travel alone.” She looked helpless and pleading. “I have no home, and I’d
-like well to raid the Campbells. Can I not be coming?”
-
-He grinned sympathetically. “Och, well—we’ve a bloody enough work to
-do, and might even use an extra nurse once or twice. Go find Morag Mhor,
-then, who is head of the women.”
-
-Kelpie recognized Morag Mhor as soon as she saw her—the tall, gaunt woman
-she had noticed at Blair Atholl, who well deserved the title of “great”
-Morag. Ragged woolen skirts were kilted up over a bright red petticoat,
-showing ankles as sturdy as a man’s. The worn Gordon plaidie had fallen
-back from her head, and her face was more alive than it had been at Blair
-Atholl, but as fierce as ever. When Kelpie found her, she was berating a
-red-faced MacGregor at least two inches shorter than she, who clearly had
-no fight left in him.
-
-“And don’t be crossing my path again until I feel forgiving, or I’ll box
-the other ear!” she finished briskly and then turned to look at Kelpie.
-“Gypsy!” she said, crossing brawny arms on her breast.
-
-“Indeed and no!” protested Kelpie with great promptness. “Only a poor
-lost lass, and away from home—”
-
-Morag Mhor laughed loudly. “Gypsy!” she repeated, pointing a long
-forefinger.
-
-Kelpie regarded her warily and trimmed her tale. “The gypsies were
-stealing me when I was a bairn,” she conceded, not expecting to be
-believed.
-
-“Aye, then,” agreed Morag Mhor surprisingly. “Because of the ringed eyes
-of you, I think. You’ll have the Second Sight. Are you a witch?”
-
-“Are you?” countered Kelpie, remembering with a pang that she herself was
-not and never could be.
-
-Morag shrugged wide shoulders. “I have a healing power. But I’m not
-belonging to any coven of daft folk who hold Black Mass and dance their
-silly feet off at midnights. My power is in what I’m doing, not what
-I’m saying.” Her lined face drew down fiercely. “I’ll be helping to put
-the curse of deeds on the Campbells this week. They passed my happy wee
-home in Gordon country and left behind a blackened stone—and I arriving
-back from over the hill to find the thatch still smoldering, and my man
-dead, and my son beside him, and the lad not yet ten! I have thirsted for
-Campbell blood ever since, and I shall drink deep.”
-
-She stopped, staring into the white distance with eyes that were of
-burning stone. Kelpie reflected that she would not like to have this
-woman for an enemy. Best to go canny.
-
-“I was prisoner of Mac Cailein Mor,” she volunteered. “He would have
-burned me, but I escaped.”
-
-“Och, then, and you’re another who hates him!” Morag’s eyes returned
-from unpleasant places. “Stay along with me, then, gypsy lass. We’ll see
-revenge together, and no man nor devil will harm you whilst I am near.”
-And Kelpie believed her.
-
-
-
-
-17. The Road to Inverary
-
-
-They had slept on the border of Campbell country, after feeding on
-Campbell cattle collected by some twenty or thirty Highlanders. Their
-tightly woven woolen plaids had helped to keep out the cold, and so had
-the fires scattered along the glen. But Kelpie was glad enough of the red
-wool hose that Alsoon had knitted for her, and of the warm bulk of Morag
-beside her.
-
-Now they were heading up Strath Fuile, and the warm-hearted comradeship
-of the Highlanders became a savage expectation, for here at last was the
-great enemy ahead. Montrose might talk all he liked of getting to the
-border to aid the King in England—but a score or two must be settled
-first. Montrose had had to compromise; otherwise too many of his army
-would have just slipped away home, taking with them as many stolen cattle
-as possible.
-
-Now an advance party had gone ahead of the main army to find cattle
-before the owners could be warned and drive them off to hide in the
-hills. And Morag Mhor, with a dark and unpleasant grin, had attached
-herself and Kelpie to them. The men, knowing of her murdered husband and
-child, let her join them, with a grim jest or two about the fate of any
-Campbells unlucky enough to run into her.
-
-They rounded a curve in the river, and there before them was a long,
-low shieling hut with two children playing out in front and a handful
-of cattle scattered up the hill behind. Morag saw the hut first and was
-off toward it with a flash of red petticoat. Kelpie wished suddenly
-that she had stayed with the rest of the women, but she hurtled after
-Morag simply because it didn’t occur to her to do anything else. Now the
-men had seen it too, and a menacing yell rose from thirty throats as
-some of them raced around after the cattle, and the rest—mostly Irish
-MacDonalds—followed Morag and Kelpie toward the hut.
-
-Even as she was running, the thing inside Kelpie felt sick at what was
-to come. Campbells they were, certainly, but what fault had the bairns
-committed? Montrose would be angry, surely, with his scruples about
-making war on the innocent. Now the children had seen them and were
-running toward the house, screaming with terror. An ashen-faced woman
-gathered them to her and then paused in the doorway, uncertain whether to
-run inside or away into the hills. Kelpie could almost taste the fear in
-her.
-
-Then Kelpie’s foot hit something soft and yielding. She tripped and flew
-head first into a patch of wet snow. There was a wail of pain and—the cry
-of a small child.
-
-Kelpie raised her head from the snow in time to see Morag stop, whirl,
-and race back toward Kelpie and the child. Was she going to begin her
-revenge by killing the bairn?
-
-“Is it hurt that you are?” roared Morag, but she was not speaking to
-Kelpie. She picked up the crying child and stood, her gaunt face twisted
-with the conflict of feelings going on in her. Then she turned to Kelpie,
-with the Irish MacDonalds only a few yards from them. “Come on!” she
-ordered and raced with the child toward the hut and the cowering woman.
-
-Bewildered, Kelpie scrambled up and followed, just barely ahead of the
-men. Morag thrust the baby into its mother’s arms, whirled, and drew her
-_sgian dhu_.
-
-“You’ll not be touching them, whatever!” she bellowed at the astonished
-giant who led the pack. “Back, or I’ll skewer you, Rab MacDonald! Am I
-not a woman and mother myself? A plague on men and war! Back, I say!”
-
-She was terrifying; her avenging fury turned to defense of her prey. It
-was altogether too much for the Highlanders. They stood and stared, a
-full dozen of them in a semicircle before her.
-
-“Fine brave soldiers ye are!” jeered Morag. “Are ye no afraid to be
-attacking such dangerous foes? Here’s the wee bairn, now. Will one of
-you not challenge him to fair combat?”
-
-They shuffled their feet, quite taken aback. The madness that Morag
-herself had kindled in them trickled out, to be replaced by the Highland
-sense of the ridiculous. One of them chuckled, and then several others
-began to roar with laughter. “And is this your own vengeance, Morag
-Mhor?” they hooted. “I will be remembering this the next time you are
-clouting me on the ear and send for a bairn to protect me,” added the
-giant called Rab.
-
-Morag Mhor seemed not to care about the teasing. She stood guard over the
-grateful little family while the cattle were caught and while the rest
-of the army arrived on the scene. And, with the backing of Montrose, she
-defied those who wanted to burn the house.
-
-“I can do no more for ye,” she told the Campbell woman when the army and
-its captured cattle had started on once again. “You have your bairns and
-your home—although your Campbell army left me neither, nor husband. I
-intended to do the same to you, but I could not, for I saw myself in you,
-and it came to me that a woman’s place is to give life, not to take it.
-It comes to me, too, that men are a senseless lot with all their useless
-killing, and perhaps we mothers should be raising our sons to different
-ideas.”
-
-And then she turned abruptly and headed in long strides back to the
-Highland army, not waiting for the stammered words of thanks.
-
-Kelpie trailed along at her heels, saying nothing but thinking a good
-deal.
-
-And so it went, along to Tyndrum and up Glenorchy. Morag Mhor vehemently
-defended every woman and child they found, against the threats and
-wild arguments of the Highland soldiers. It didn’t take Kelpie long to
-discover that all this was a great act put on by the Highlanders for
-Morag’s benefit, and it was a surprise to her that a woman as shrewd as
-Morag didn’t know it too. But she never guessed.
-
-“I know you for the braw liar you are,” remarked Kelpie saucily to Rab
-one morning over their beef-and-oatmeal breakfast. “You will be teasing
-her every time, and you as softhearted as herself.”
-
-“As ever was,” agreed Rab, rolling a dark eye at her. “But do not be
-telling Morag, whatever, for it is not just teasing. With the grief of
-her, she is needing something to fight, but she is happier to be fighting
-us to save bairns than the other way around.”
-
-Although the campaign through Campbell territory was less bloodthirsty
-than Kelpie had expected, still it was not pretty. Men of fighting age
-found little mercy, few cattle escaped the voracious appetite of the
-army, and more than a few barns and thatch roofs went up in smoke behind
-it.
-
-Blazing fires and roasted meat were good at night, after long and cold
-marches. Since there were so few women to do the cooking, the men helped
-too, with good will and bantering. Kelpie poked at a haunch of beef
-one chill but clear evening, thinking to herself that they were going a
-long way round to Argyll at Inverary, in a huge triangle to north and
-west. Surely by now Argyll would have received word of this invasion!
-Kelpie wondered what he would be doing about it. The obvious thing would
-be to come away after them, and she looked apprehensively toward the
-purple-black hills that surrounded the orange firelight.
-
-“Is there food for a starving—Why, ’tis the water witch!” Kelpie turned
-to face Archie MacDonald, whose black eyes were sparkling with curiosity.
-They stared at each other.
-
-“And where did you vanish to that day?” he demanded. “A braw lot of
-trouble and grief you caused! If you’ve the power to vanish into thin
-air, you might have been doing it before Ian Cameron was cut down trying
-to save you.”
-
-Kelpie winced. “Was he killed entirely?” she asked, her heart pounding
-for fear of the answer.
-
-“Na, na, not entirely. But a nasty wound it was. Still, he survived it,
-although he had to go back to Glenfern, and no more fighting for the
-time.” Kelpie saw again in her mind the savage downward sweep of Alex’s
-broadsword and had to push aside the tumult of feelings that it brought.
-But—Ian was not dead! Alex had not killed him!
-
-“And Alex MacDonald?” she demanded balefully.
-
-“He’s—away,” said Archie, and it was clear that he was going to say no
-more. But then, he was Alex’s cousin and not likely to want to speak
-of it. At least Kelpie knew now that Alex had not been hanged, and she
-thought again that she might be the one to avenge Ian some day. For she
-doubted that, even now, Ian himself would raise a hand against Alex.
-She looked right through Archie, and her slanted blue eyes held no very
-pleasant expression.
-
-The meat was done now and being divided. Archie pulled his _sgian dhu_
-from his stocking, vanished briefly into the crowd of hungry men, and
-emerged with a smoking hunk for Kelpie in one hand and one for himself in
-the other. She bit into the meat hungrily and then looked up to find the
-deep black eyes still fixed on her, and a question in them.
-
-“That day,” he began, with an uncertain note in his voice, “were you
-sending a call in the mind to Alex before you gave the Cameron rant with
-your voice?”
-
-Kelpie looked as blank as she felt. “I don’t understand you whatever!”
-she said warily.
-
-“Why,” he began, and frowned a little, “there we were in the tavern,
-with Alex and Ian in a fury at each other, and none of us even hearing
-the sounds outside. It was a braw quarrel, with Ian gone white with the
-anger in him, and Alex the color of a rowan berry. And then Alex was
-stopping in mid-word, with an intent, listening look on the face of him,
-and looking round. And it was because of his silence that an instant
-later we were hearing the Cameron rant, and Ian shouting ‘’Tis Kelpie in
-trouble!’”
-
-Kelpie shook her head blankly. “And what then?” was all she said.
-
-Archie shrugged. “Why, then, Ian forgot the quarrel and was away out the
-door, and Alex after him with drawn sword, and the rest of us collected
-our wits and followed, not knowing if Alex’s black fury was still for
-Ian, or for the witch-hunters. His face was a fearful thing to see, and
-I’m hoping I never meet the like in battle, for ’twould be the end of me.
-But you know the rest better than I. How was it, Kelpie, that Alex heard
-you even through the quarrel, and before the rest of us?”
-
-“I don’t know,” said Kelpie absently, her mind on another question
-altogether. For the thing she had suspected was clear. It was herself
-had helped bring about the scene in the loch, and hatred of her had
-caused Alex to strike down his foster brother. It was the only possible
-explanation, and there was a sore hurt in the thought of it. How could
-Alex have hated her that much, who had never seemed to hate her at all,
-but only scorn her? Her short upper lip curled. Och, he would pay for it,
-just! Even though Kelpie could no longer hope for witchcraft to help her,
-he would pay for it.
-
-Archie looked at her uneasily. There was a look about her not quite
-canny, and it was occurring to him that folk called after water witches,
-who could communicate without the voice, might not be a braw choice for
-companionship, so he brought her another hunk of meat—to avoid offending
-her—and melted hastily into the crowd of soldiers.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The army passed the very spot near Loch Awe where Kelpie had first seen
-Janet Campbell that June day six months ago. And then they were heading
-at last toward Inverary, through the steep wilds of Glen Aray where she
-and Janet had gone. And what had been happening to Janet all this time?
-she wondered. Not that she really cared, she tried to tell herself,
-except that Janet was a harmless soul and not deserving to be harmed by
-either Mac Cailein Mor or his enemies.
-
-There was no detour to the top of the hill this time. Straight down
-the glen the army came, pipes shrieking in ominous triumph. It was a
-braw sound indeed, a wild song that set the blood running with joyful
-madness—or the blood of Montrose’s army, at any rate. Kelpie wondered
-briefly how it sounded to the ears in Inverary. Along the river they
-marched, half running now, and erupted into the valley, the town of
-Inverary seeming to cower ahead on its point of land, and the castle—so
-familiar to Kelpie—to the left.
-
-Morag Mhor was with the men heading for the village, loudly daring them
-to lay a finger on woman or child, her voice rising as they insisted,
-grinning, that this time every wee babe would be slaughtered, just. For
-once, this game had no interest for Kelpie, and she headed straight for
-the castle. If Mac Cailein Mor was captured, she wanted to be there to
-gloat.
-
-Everywhere there was clear evidence of surprise and panic. The town and
-castle, unaware of the approaching invasion, had been celebrating the
-Christmas season—in their sober Puritan way, of course, with longer and
-more frequent sermons. Kelpie’s lip curled with scorn for a chief so
-feckless as not to know what was happening in his own country—or else so
-sure of his invulnerability that he took no precautions. Och, she could
-hardly wait to see him taken prisoner! Her small white teeth fairly
-glittered in her smile.
-
-She had just reached the castle wall when a shout of dismay and fury
-broke out. Kelpie rushed to a high knoll where she could see. Men were
-pointing to the small bay. A fishing boat was hastily heading out into
-the loch.
-
-“’Tis himself is running away!” And Kelpie hardly needed a second glance
-to confirm it. Her keen eyes picked out two red heads, the short bulk of
-Lady Argyll, the patch of Cameron tartan that was Ewen.
-
-“Ssss!” said Kelpie in savage regret.
-
-The pipes lifted a wild wail of derision. “Oh, the great Argyll!” someone
-yelled. “Brave General Campbell! What, will you be away off, Mac Cailein
-Mor, and us just come to visit?”
-
-Montrose wasted no time fuming over what couldn’t be helped, although
-he must have been bitterly disappointed. The capture of Argyll this day
-might have changed history—although he had not the Second Sight to tell
-him how much. Even Kelpie did not know, for the crystal had not yet
-showed her the scene to come later, when Montrose himself calmly mounted
-the scaffold.
-
-His face was calm now as he gave orders to set about taking the castle
-abandoned by its owner. It wasn’t as difficult as it might have been. One
-couldn’t expect inspired defense from the men who had been left behind
-while their leader fled. And once Montrose’s men were in full possession,
-Kelpie entered the castle through those massive gates she had passed
-through before—but this time with an arrogant sway to her slim body.
-
-She wasted no time with the fine white bread and wine that had been
-discovered, nor even with the miserable figure of Mrs. MacKellar huddled
-on a chair in the hall. She knew where she was going, and she wanted to
-be the first one there.
-
-Argyll’s apartments were deserted. She walked boldly through the massive
-oaken doors, on into the inner chamber. There was a fine large cairngorm
-brooch on the table, mounted in silver, bigger than her fist. Fine, that!
-She looked around. What else?
-
-A thought struck her. The next chamber must be that of Lady Argyll. In
-she went, and in a moment was kneeling beside a chest of fine gowns. A
-pity there were none of bright colors. Kelpie had always wanted a gown of
-flame-red velvet, but of course such a thing would never be found in a
-Covenant household. Still, there was one of moss-green, and the softest,
-finest wool she had ever seen, and not so _very_ much too big, provided
-she belted it tightly about the waist. And she laughed with joy. Here was
-the fine silver belt she had always wanted.
-
-Next she pulled out a lovely cloak the color of juniper—and she must have
-it, although it was lined with Campbell tartan—and a silken purse, a
-linen kerchief, and several baubles. She tried on a pair of square-toed
-leather shoes with silver buckles, but they hurt her feet sorely, so she
-kicked them off and went back into Argyll’s room for a silver snuff box
-she had seen there.
-
-And as she stood, green gown bunched about her waist under untidy thick
-braids (uncombed since leaving Alsoon), the cairngorm in one hand and the
-snuff box in the other, the outer door opened.
-
-For an instant memory played tricks on her and she thought that it was
-Mac Cailein Mor finding her there with the hairs in her hand, and blind
-panic was on her. Then it cleared as a voice spoke.
-
-“_Dhé!_” boomed Antrim. “And whom have we here?”
-
-“’Tis the eavesdropping lass from last summer,” answered Montrose,
-standing still, taking in every detail.
-
-Kelpie looked back at him fearlessly. He was amused, she could tell. And
-besides, did not his scruples prevent him from harming women or children,
-even enemy ones, and she no enemy?
-
-“I see you’ve wasted no time,” he observed mildly. “How is it you’re here
-ahead even of your army commander?”
-
-“I was knowing the way and wanting to be first,” explained Kelpie
-artlessly. She waved her loot at him with great pride in her cleverness.
-
-He looked at it, and at her. The corners of his mouth moved slightly.
-“That would be Argyll’s cairngorm, I suppose?”
-
-She nodded, regarding it happily. Then something occurred to her, and she
-glanced up at him dubiously from under her thick lashes. Perhaps it might
-be wise to sacrifice material gain—if necessary—for policy.
-
-“Were you wanting it yourself?” she asked reluctantly. “I will give it to
-you, if you like. There’s another nearly as good in yon box,” she added,
-“and this a wee bit heavy for a lass to be wearing.”
-
-Montrose laughed. “No, I don’t want Argyll’s brooch,” he assured her, to
-her relief. Then he looked at her seriously. “I don’t suppose it’s ever
-occurred to you,” he suggested, “that stealing could be a bad thing?”
-
-“Och, aye!” exclaimed Kelpie earnestly, “You must be very canny at it,
-my Lord, and lucky, too. For ’tis a bad thing indeed and indeed to be
-caught! But Mac Cailein Mor’s away in his wee boat, and no danger now.”
-
-This time it was Antrim who boomed with laughter, and Kelpie looked at
-him resentfully. Clearly he had had no experience at getting caught, or
-he would never be laughing at such a serious matter.
-
-“I didn’t mean quite that, although I’m sure it must be true,” explained
-Montrose gently, and the corners of his mouth were jiggling again. “I
-mean, did you never think that it might be wrong to steal, whether you
-were caught at it or no?”
-
-“Och, no!” said Kelpie, wide-eyed. “But then, perhaps ’tis different for
-you,” she added kindly. “Being a chief and lord and all, you will be able
-to get things without stealing them, and I doubt you’re ever hungry,
-whatever.”
-
-Montrose sighed. “Aye,” he agreed, seeming sad for some reason. “’Tis
-different for me. You’d best run along now, though.” And he turned to
-look after her as she left the room.
-
-Kelpie went back to the other wing, picked up an item or two from
-Mrs. MacKellar’s room, and then stood still for a minute, frowning at
-nothing at all. Why did people persist in making her think about new
-and uncomfortable ideas? A few months ago she would have been genuinely
-puzzled by the notion that it might be wrong to steal, even though a body
-was not caught at it. But now, even though she had pretended not to know
-what Montrose meant, the idea wasn’t really as startling as it would once
-have been. It was the sort of thing the folks at Glenfern might have
-said, or Ewen Cameron, or even Alsoon and Callum. It undoubtedly had
-to do with the integrity thing Alex and Ian talked of, and all of them
-wanting her to apply it to herself. Why should she? Mina and Bogle had
-taught her that anything was right if one got away with it—but then, Mina
-and Bogle were evil, and perhaps everything they said was wrong.
-
-Kelpie sighed. On the other hand, Alex talked about those ideas, and he
-was evil too. So what was a lass to think, at all?
-
-She wandered down into the main hall, which was still a chaos of
-triumphant men. But she was so engrossed in her problem of right and
-wrong that she quite forgot to taunt the dejected and weeping Mrs.
-MacKellar. In any case, it no longer seemed necessary. After all, the
-housekeeper had been loyal to her chief, and it the only safe thing
-to do—but would it not be safer now for her to side with the royalist
-victors?
-
-Kelpie frowned at the red-eyed and unlovely figure of Mrs. MacKellar,
-for in it there was something undefeated and almost gallant. No, Mrs.
-MacKellar would never change sides, but would stay loyal to Mac Cailein
-Mor, even though he was not worthy of it. Why? Did she fear that he would
-come back? Or was this something like not stealing, that a body did even
-against his own interest? Was that what integrity was? But what good was
-it? As far as Kelpie could see, it was more likely to be a nuisance than
-an asset.
-
-She wandered over to one of the deep-set windows and stared out,
-unseeing, her whole attention focused on her thoughts. The folk at
-Glenfern, like Mrs. MacKellar, would remain loyal for always to a person
-or ideal. This was part of the thing about them which she had sensed from
-the first—the daftness, the difference. True they would be, whether or
-not it was profitable or safe, aye, though it cost them their lives—all
-but Alex. And it was this, perhaps, that had shocked her so. For Alex,
-surely, would never change sides but would be true to an ideal—and how
-was it, then, that he could betray a friend?
-
-She leaned her forehead against one of the thick diamond-shaped panes,
-dimming it even more with her breath, and remembered that Montrose had
-talked of such things back at Blair Atholl. But neither he nor anyone
-else had ever explained to Kelpie why this way of acting was desirable.
-Was it possible that there was some strange kind of happiness in it? Did
-they have things inside which would make them uncomfortable if they acted
-otherwise?
-
-Kelpie stopped trying to understand, for she found that there was an
-argument going on within her. The thing inside her was saying that this
-was a fine and proud way to be, but her common sense told her that it was
-not at all practical, and had she not vowed to think of herself first,
-last, and always? And surely if it was a choice between her own safety
-and any other thing (and she forced the thought of Wee Mairi from her
-mind), surely it would be only sensible to look out for herself, as ever
-was!
-
-
-
-
-18. The Black Sail
-
-
-Kelpie awoke from a dream in which she was trudging along beside a loch
-against blinding rain. She blinked a little as she remembered that she
-was back at Inverlochy Castle—the same place she and Mina and Bogle had
-spent the first night after leaving Glenfern. She shivered a little,
-partly at the memory of Mina and Bogle, and partly from cold. Hugging the
-stolen cloak and her old plaidie about her, she hurried down the tower
-stairs and out to the central court, where Morag Mhor and the other women
-were preparing breakfast.
-
-“Slugabed!” Morag greeted her, and Kelpie grinned cheekily, knowing all
-about Morag’s pretended fierceness by now. There were more men than ever
-to feed, since the Glencoe MacDonalds and the Stewarts of Appin had
-joined, and Kelpie was glad that they were in friendly Cameron country,
-where it was safe to build fires and they could have hot porridge.
-She had got heartily tired of a diet of oatmeal mixed with cold water.
-She looked thoughtfully up at Ben Nevis, which looked larger and more
-lowering under its quilt of snow than in the green and tawny blanket of
-summer, and realized suddenly that she had had enough of army life.
-
-Rab paused by the fire to sniff the oatmeal hungrily and announce that
-he thought he would just go out and lift some cattle for breakfast. He
-chucked Morag Mhor under the chin as he said it, and received a sound
-clout on the ear as a reward. “Ouch!” he exclaimed, making a great show
-of nursing his ear. “You will ever be bullying me, Morag _avic_, and I a
-poor helpless man at your mercy.”
-
-Kelpie giggled, and Morag shook her fist at the other ear. “This is the
-day we go to ask Lochiel and the Camerons to join us, and you would be
-lifting their cattle! _Amadan!_”
-
-Rab began explaining that they didn’t really need the Camerons at all,
-but Kelpie stopped listening, for she was thinking that this would be a
-good time indeed to leave the army. She had had enough of battles. Just
-a few miles up the Great Glen was the pass that led to Glenfern. Would
-she be welcome there? Surely Ian would remember that she had warned him
-against Alex, and so would forgive her for running away and leaving him
-struck down and half dead. Would he and his father join Montrose? she
-wondered. Or would Lochiel dare to raise his clan?
-
-She turned to Morag Mhor, who had sent Rab, protesting, out to the river
-for more water, and was now vigorously stirring the porridge. “Lochiel
-would be daft to call out his clan,” she suggested. “With his grandson in
-Campbell hands, he could not dare.”
-
-Morag thought about it for a while, her lean face still and
-expressionless. “There was a wise woman in our village long ago,” she
-said at last, “who used to say to me, ‘Always dare to do what is right,’
-and I am thinking Lochiel will say the same. Would you understand that,
-Kelpie?”
-
-“No!” said Kelpie forcefully and scowled. Ewen Cameron himself had used
-those same words. So here again were those ideas that she did not want
-to think about. She set her small face into a hard mask and dropped the
-subject. “I am thinking I have had my fill of armies and battles,” she
-announced. “I will stay behind when you go up the Great Glen, and perhaps
-go to stay with friends here in Lochaber.”
-
-“Well, then, and a blessing on you,” said Morag. “May you find a home
-for your bones and your spirit—though I think you will never stay in one
-place for long. I’m thinking I’ll go back to Gordon country myself soon.
-No doubt there are orphans left by the Campbells who would be needing a
-mother.”
-
-Kelpie followed the army as far as Lochiel’s home at Torcastle, curious
-to see whether or not Lochiel would raise his clan. He did. The
-traditional cross was made of two sturdy sticks bound firmly together.
-And according to the ancient ceremony the ends were set aflame,
-extinguished in goat’s blood, then lighted once more: one of Lochiel’s
-men held the cross proudly high and set off at a trot that carried him
-deeper into Cameron territory. The torch would be passed from runner to
-runner until the whole area had received the message of war.
-
-The army stayed at Torcastle for two days while Camerons came flocking to
-the call of their chief. If any had misgivings about Argyll’s possible
-revenge on them, they did not show it; nor did Lochiel, that stern old
-man who held his head so high. Kelpie did not wait to see the Glenfern
-Camerons arrive, for she had sudden misgivings about seeing Ian again.
-Instead, she went back to the tower room at Inverlochy Castle in a very
-thoughtful frame of mind.
-
-For several days she stayed at the castle, enjoying her solitude, and
-getting her food from homes nearby with surprising ease. For the very
-people who had once regarded her with deep suspicion were now delighted
-to give food and hospitality to the wistful lass who had been a prisoner
-of Argyll, who had been helped by Ewen Cameron himself, and who had even
-got away with Lady Argyll’s fine cloak. Food, scanty though it might be
-with the men away in the army, was shared, and there was not a home where
-she was not urged to bide awhile.
-
-But she shook her black head. Och, no, she said. She was away up the
-Glen. But she would take her leave marveling at such openheartedness to a
-stranger—even one who had not yet stolen anything. After thinking about
-it, Kelpie decided not to take anything at all. Somehow the good will
-seemed more valuable than anything she might steal.
-
-Then the mild weather turned into sudden bitter cold. The night wind
-hurled blasts of snow against the tower walls, crept up the winding
-stairs, and whined outside like the banshee. It was so cold that Kelpie
-thought she might put away misgivings and go to Glenfern after all.
-Surely Lady Glenfern would not refuse her shelter in this cold!
-
-She was heading back to Inverlochy in the early dusk when she decided
-this. Her stomach was comfortably full of hot broth and scones from
-a generous young Cameron wife, she was a trifle sleepy, and it would
-be good indeed to sleep tomorrow night or the next in the comfort of
-Glenfern, under the same roof with Wee Mairi.
-
-It was fortunate that Kelpie’s senses remained alert even when her mind
-was on other things. Even so, she had nearly walked up to the castle
-gate before she realized that something was wrong, and she never knew
-exactly what it was that warned her. But suddenly she stopped, alive to
-the sharp feel of danger, her small figure dark and taut against the
-faintly luminous patches of snow. An instant later she simply was not
-there, and the Campbell soldier who came running out of the gate, under
-the impression that he had seen something, shook his head and cursed the
-weather.
-
-Kelpie lay in the snow where she had thrown herself behind a small
-hillock, not daring to raise her head but listening as if her life
-depended on it—which it did. Soon there was no doubt. Inverlochy Castle
-was being occupied—by Mac Cailein Mor and his army!
-
-With sick dismay she pieced things together. Someone called for Campbell
-of Auchinbreck. Then there was a harsh and authoritative Lowland voice.
-And by crouching behind a thick clump of juniper and twisting her
-head cautiously, Kelpie could just make out a galley with black sails
-silhouetted against the gray waters of the Loch.
-
-Oh, there was no doubt whatever! The Campbell had gathered his courage
-and his army and had come after Montrose.
-
-
-
-
-19. Footprints in the Snow
-
-
-Kelpie spent the night at the shieling hut of Lorne Cameron, which was
-nestled at the foot of Ben Nevis. Lorne had urged Kelpie to stay, for
-she and her four bairns were alone since her husband had gone off with
-Montrose and his army. Now her ruddy young face paled at Kelpie’s news.
-
-“Campbells! _Dhé!_ and they will be murdering us all, then!”
-
-“Perhaps not,” said Kelpie hopefully. “If Mac Cailein Mor is after
-Montrose, perhaps he’ll not be lingering in Lochaber.”
-
-But she slept with one ear well out of the folds of her plaidie, cocked
-for any sounds of danger. The hut was only a mile or so from Inverlochy
-Castle, and if Lorne had reason to fear Mac Cailein Mor, Kelpie had that
-much more.
-
-She had planned to be off the first thing in the morning, out of danger.
-But somehow she found herself waiting, even after she had eaten the hot
-oatmeal Lorne cooked, and tucked some food into her pouch. There was
-Lorne here, and the wee ones, and none of Kelpie’s concern at all. But
-Lorne was frightened and uncertain what to do, and they so helpless and
-looking up to Kelpie—and after all, perhaps it would be wise just to take
-a wee peek at what Argyll was doing, and see the size of his army.
-
-“You might just be getting food and blankets together in case you need to
-hide,” she suggested. “And I’ll go have a look around.”
-
-“Och,’tis both good and brave you are!” said Lorne gratefully. Kelpie
-left the house hurriedly, feeling oddly embarrassed.
-
-She moved cautiously around the flank of the ben, skulking behind
-masses of juniper and pine clumps, until she could see the castle.
-_Mise-an-dhui!_ It was an army indeed and indeed! Highland Campbells and
-Lowlanders too, and well more than twice what Montrose could have, even
-with his new recruits. But Argyll seemed to be making no move to follow
-him up the Great Glen, even with this advantage.
-
-Kelpie’s heart sank as she watched groups of men forming before the
-castle. It was what she had expected in the heart of her. Mac Cailein
-Mor had no heart for battle but would be about his usual practice of
-wiping out women and children. Even now one of the groups of soldiers
-was setting off toward the little cluster of homes on the edge of Loch
-Linnhe, and another was turning west along Loch Eil.
-
-She watched no longer but headed back around the northern side of Ben
-Nevis. In a way this might be fortunate for her, giving her time to be
-up the Great Glen ahead of them. But suppose they penetrated as far as
-Glenfern? Perhaps she ought to be heading eastward, and out of the way
-altogether. In any case she would be passing Lorne’s home on the way,
-and it costing only a few minutes to warn the lass. Nor was this just
-profitless foolishness, she told herself, for who knew when she might be
-needing a friend under obligation to herself?
-
-An hour later she was laboring up the side of the mountain with a bundle
-of food in one arm and the next-smallest bairn in the other; Lorne, with
-the baby, and the older children panting behind. “Mind ye stay clear of
-soft snow,” she warned over her shoulder. “It could be putting them on
-your trail.”
-
-Another hour saw them settled in a well-hidden shepherd’s shelter, cold
-and uncomfortable and not daring to have a fire, but at least safer than
-at their home.
-
-“Will you not be staying too?” begged Lorne, her dark eyes anxious for
-the safety of this generous new friend. But Kelpie shook her head. She
-wanted to be farther than this from Argyll. And besides, a new thought
-was beginning to hound the fringes of her mind. Montrose, all unknowing,
-was now between two armies, for was not Seaforth at Inverness with
-five thousand men? And if he should be caught in a trap and wiped out,
-it would put Argyll altogether in control of the Highlands as well as
-Lowlands—and what would happen to Kelpie then? For her own safety, it
-seemed, she must try to warn Montrose.
-
-It was a sore uncomfortable thought, filled with hardship and danger.
-She tried to put it out of her mind as she picked her way down the gaunt
-wintry slope, but it wouldn’t leave. And with it were thoughts of Morag
-Mhor and Rab and Archie and Montrose himself lying slain in the snow, and
-all the comradeship and merry teasing silenced forever. A pity that would
-be. With a sigh she headed up the glen, a sharp eye out for any movement
-that might spell danger.
-
-Och, then, but it was cold! Her feet were icy in their hide shoes, even
-with the woolen hose, and it was threatening to snow again. However could
-she catch up with the army at all? Perhaps it had already met Seaforth.
-But she kept on going.
-
-She saw nothing but hares and deer and a lone eagle, until she reached
-the River Spean. Then a short, wiry figure came from the brush just
-ahead, and Kelpie sank swiftly to the ground for a tense moment before
-she saw he was not a Campbell. He was alone and in a faded Cameron kilt.
-Kelpie followed him to a dilapidated hut on the bank of the river and
-watched him enter. A drift of smoke began to rise. Might not he help
-himself and his clan by taking the message for her? And then she would be
-free to seek safety. She walked up to the door boldly.
-
-“Come away in,” came the expected lilt of Gaelic when she knocked, and
-the man’s face turned to her in surprise as she entered. “_Dhia dhuit_,”
-he greeted her politely. “And what is a wee lass doing alone in the cold?
-Will you no have a sup of hot food?”
-
-“I will, then,” agreed Kelpie promptly. “And give an important word to
-you, and also a task if you will do it.”
-
-The man listened while she talked and ate, his face growing graver and
-grimmer. “Aye so,” he agreed. “’Tis the hand of destiny that I live alone
-here and knew nothing of the clan rising, or I would be with them, and a
-bad time of it you would be having alone and in this weather. Eat your
-fill, then, whilst I fill my pouch, and I’ll be away before you’re done.
-You can be biding here whilst I am gone.”
-
-“That I will not!” retorted Kelpie firmly. “For every house in Lochaber
-is a danger. I’ll be away east out of trouble.”
-
-He frowned and shook his head. “There is no shelter to the east of here,
-lass, and it too cold to be sleeping out. And I have just come from
-hunting a wolf that has been skulking upriver. You would be safer here,
-I am thinking, for my house is alone and well hidden. But if you’re
-feared to rest here, there is a bittie cave nearby, and you are welcome
-to my blankets and food. Follow the Spean along up for a mile or so, and
-where the Cour is entering it turn south for a bit and mark sharp the
-west bank. The cave is in a high bluff and well hid with juniper. But I’m
-thinking you’ll be safe enough the night here, whatever, and it nearly
-dark already. There’ll be no Campbells along this day, and ’tis no good
-for you to be freezing.”
-
-“Aye, then,” agreed Kelpie, seeing the sense to this, and the man was
-off. Odd, she didn’t know the name of him, nor he hers, and yet he was
-away on a dangerous errand on her word. A purpose in common—or common
-danger—she decided, was like a spell, binding even strangers one to
-another.
-
-The morning was heavy with clouds, the new snow a dead white beneath the
-gray of the sky. Kelpie put out the fire for fear of any betraying smoke
-and set out to locate the cave, wishing she dared stay in the warmth of
-the shieling. But as she trudged along the Cour River, watching the west
-bank, she stopped. Clear in the snow were footprints coming down the
-Cour—and stopping just ahead in a tumbled heap of snow. Kelpie stared,
-eyes narrowed. Footsteps didn’t just stop, unless someone had wings.
-
-No, there were no wings. There the prints went, back the way they came.
-In a moment Kelpie had read the story. A man it was, by the size of the
-prints, and coming north along the Cour in a great hurry, so that he did
-not notice the treacherous slab of granite by the river, with ice under
-the snow. And there he had slipped and fallen; the mark was plain. Then,
-it would seem, he had made back the way he had come, limping sorely.
-
-Kelpie straightened and looked up the glen cautiously. Where was
-he, then? And who was he? Warily she began to follow the retreating
-footprints.
-
-They angled up the hill to the right presently, through a thick patch of
-pine and juniper. Kelpie hesitated, peering through it, her right hand
-reaching for the _sgian dhu_ in the front of her dress, feet ready to
-run. Nothing stirred. And then a tiny trickle of smoke floated up just a
-few feet away from behind the brush. _Dhé!_ It must be that he had found
-the cave and taken shelter there. Probably he was not a Campbell, then,
-but more likely hiding from them—though he would not stay hidden long,
-with the smoke giving him away. Kelpie grinned sourly and shrugged. This
-was no place for her, then. She turned and prepared to slip quietly away,
-back to the shieling.
-
-“And have I taken the home of the water witch?”
-
-It was a low voice with a mocking note that Kelpie could never mistake.
-She whirled. Alex! She could see him now through the brush, nearly
-invisible against the low winter sun. He sat at the mouth of a small,
-shallow cave, regarding her quizzically—but with a drawn look about the
-mouth of him. One foot, badly swollen, was propped up before him.
-
-Och, then, wasn’t it her curse on him that had come at last to bear
-fruit? Moving thru the juniper, but keeping a safe distance away, Kelpie
-told him so with considerable relish.
-
-Alex grinned wryly. “It may be so,” he conceded. “Sure it is you’ve
-cursed me enough. But have I not told you that such things are likely to
-fly back in the face of the one who curses? And if this is your curse at
-work, then ’tis not just me you’ve harmed, but Montrose and his army, and
-yourself as well. For Argyll is about, and I was on my way up the Great
-Glen to warn Montrose when I fell; and what will you do if Argyll wins
-and puts his witch-hunters over the whole of the Highlands?”
-
-His tone was still mocking, but Kelpie could hear bitterness and despair
-in his voice. It made her feel most peculiar, for Alex was usually so
-infuriatingly self-assured—and much easier to hate that way. His distress
-was not quite as satisfying as it should have been. For a moment she
-toyed with the idea of leaving him to his worry, but she could not resist
-bragging. She gave him a pointed grin.
-
-“You will always be thinking yourself the only clever body in the world,”
-she observed smugly. “I myself have already sent a messenger to Montrose.”
-
-Alex stared, frankly unbelieving. “You?”
-
-“And why not, whatever? Wasn’t I crossing Campbell land myself with the
-army, and you away safe out of it? Haven’t I the wits to see I’m not
-wanting Mac Cailein Mor king in the Highlands? It is I should be doubting
-you, for if Ian and his father are with Montrose now, I’m thinking you’d
-not be going near whatever.”
-
-Alex narrowed his hazel eyes at her, and Kelpie prudently moved a step
-farther away. “And why not?” he inquired lazily.
-
-Kelpie laughed nastily. “I’ve eyes in my head!” she retorted. “Did you
-think I was not seeing? Aye, and I saw it before, as well, with the
-Second Sight, last spring.”
-
-Alex’s eyes widened for an instant, then narrowed. He seemed about to say
-something, but changed his mind. Instead, the planes in his face became
-more angular than ever, and he gave Kelpie a long, hard, brooding stare
-that made her thankful for the hurt foot which kept him from moving. For
-surely he was thinking that he would like to silence her. He shrugged
-finally. “I wonder,” he said, “whether ’tis the truth you’re telling me
-about that messenger. If so, I could find it in my heart....”
-
-He didn’t finish the thought, nor did Kelpie answer. Instead, she stared
-back at him, at the freckles and straight lines of his face, at the way
-the cheekbones stood out above the narrow strength of jaw, and at the
-tangled red hair which had not been trimmed or combed recently. He was
-thinner than he had been and pale under his freckles, and she could see
-a tiny pulse in his temple that was his life itself—so easy to stop,
-so small a thread of life. And was there not something she should be
-doing the now, to avenge Ian? But she could not think what. Alex was not
-asleep, nor by any means helpless, even with a sore foot; and she had
-no intention at all of risking her own life for Ian or anyone else. She
-pulled her thick brows together and regarded him darkly.
-
-Alex laughed suddenly. “You cannot be planning to rob me, so it must be
-some other devilment you have in mind. Are you not satisfied yet, water
-witch? Is it another wee spell, or have you learned the Evil Eye by now?”
-
-“Sssss!” said Kelpie earnestly.
-
-“Well, and why will you not be going to Mac Cailein Mor to say that I am
-here?” he asked. “He would make short enough shrift of me, and would you
-not be liking that?”
-
-“Aye so,” agreed Kelpie with enthusiasm. “But,” she pointed out
-regretfully, “he would be making even shorter shrift of me, and I’d not
-be liking that so well.” And then she bit her tongue in annoyance as Alex
-laughed again. It was a spell he had put on her, to be always telling him
-the truth she had never intended to say!
-
-She scowled and lifted her lip in the old wolfish snarl, and then found
-herself grinning ruefully, though she had never intended that, either. It
-was not funny; it was _not_! She stamped her foot.
-
-“Ou, aye!” said Alex. “Your sense of humor has slipped out again, and why
-will you be squashing it under? Laugh at yourself, Kelpie. ’Tis the cure
-for all ills, and it is in my mind that perhaps most evil is caused by
-folk who take themselves too seriously.”
-
-“You’re daft,” said Kelpie and turned away uncertainly. She should be
-off about her business and leave Alex to his fate. But it seemed that
-the thing inside that had been pushing her for days against her will was
-pushing still. It was as if she were living a pattern, and it was yet
-unfinished, and the thing would not permit her to go off and leave it
-until it was complete. She paused, her back turned to Alex, who sat still
-and silent in the mouth of his refuge.
-
-“What will you be doing now?” she asked against her will.
-
-“Bide here,” he returned philosophically, “since I can do nothing else,
-and see what will happen.”
-
-“They will be seeing your smoke,” she pointed out, still reluctantly.
-
-“I will let my fire die during the day, and try to keep warm by moving
-about,” he returned, and the quizzical note was back in his voice. “And
-why do you warn me of that, water witch? Wouldn’t it please you just to
-see me captured?”
-
-“It would that!” Kelpie’s eyes flashed. “I will be laughing that day, and
-not at myself either!” And this time she did leave, heading angrily back
-toward the Spean River.
-
-
-
-
-20. The Campbell Lass
-
-
-Kelpie went back to the hut, since there was no other shelter and it was
-better to risk Campbells than to freeze to death. But she found a hiding
-place on the river bank, just in case, and for three days she alternately
-huddled over the tiny coals which were all she dared have during the
-daytime and watched the path for signs of the invaders.
-
-There was plenty of time to think. She wondered whether the message had
-got through to Montrose, and what he could do even if it had. For he was
-trapped in the Great Glen between two armies, and no way out except over
-mountains impassable with snow. She wondered about Alex and that long,
-inscrutable look he had given her, and it came to her that she had been a
-fool to tell him that she knew what he had done. For if he could strike
-down his foster brother, it would be nothing for him to silence her. She
-began to feel very trapped herself. Was no place in the world safe for
-her?
-
-Lost in brooding, she failed to keep her sharp watch, and on the third
-afternoon she heard, too late, the crunch of heavy steps in the crusted
-snow. Before she could do more than turn, a heavy-set Campbell flung the
-door open, two or three others looming behind him.
-
-“Here’ll be another cursed Cameron or two,” he shouted, and his
-broadsword bore grim stains from the last house he had visited. “And
-where is your husband hiding, lass?”
-
-Kelpie’s wits, well trained in crisis, worked quickly. “Husband indeed!”
-she retorted, staring boldly into the ruddy face. “Where are your eyes,
-man, that you cannot recognize a Campbell when you see one?” She snatched
-up Lady Argyll’s cloak and waved it at him, thankful for that particular
-theft. “Och, but I am glad that you have come,” she went on with a
-trusting upward smile through her lashes. “It was my wicked Cameron uncle
-who came by my home on Loch Awe with that devil Montrose and all the
-army, and stole me away to keep house for him, since his wife died, and
-he saying I must be his daughter now and some day marry a Cameron; and
-have I not been biding my time and waiting for warm weather to run away
-back home?”
-
-The Campbells blinked and believed her. She was utterly convincing, and
-in any case, what Cameron would have claimed to be a Campbell, even at
-the edge of death? And had she not the once fine Campbell cloak, clearly
-given her by a lady of that clan? The sword went back into its sheath.
-
-“Och, well,” said its owner with a sigh. “Naught to do here but burn the
-place. But at least you can be coming back the now.”
-
-This was the last thing Kelpie wanted! “To another army?” she jeered,
-hiding her panic. “No, now, I’ve enough of armies and battles. Leave me
-be, just, and when ’tis warmer I’ll be finding my own way. Will you not
-be fighting Montrose soon?” she demanded. “Or is it only women and bairns
-you are after?”
-
-They shuffled their feet. “We’ll be taking care of Montrose,” promised
-the stout one. “But we cannot leave you here, lass. You must just come
-along back to Inverlochy, and perhaps himself will be seeing you’re sent
-back home.”
-
-Kelpie’s heart threatened to choke her. He’d be sending her back, fine
-enough! “_Dhé!_” she sputtered, knowing her life might depend on her next
-words. “Will ye be bothering the likes of him with a nobody, and him with
-a war on his hands? He’d no be thanking ye for it! Besides,” she confided
-beseechingly, “it is myself am afraid of Mac Cailein Mor, and he so great
-and all. No, now, just leave me here, and then it’s away back I’ll be by
-myself.”
-
-The stout one was not unsympathetic. “Well, women have daft fears,” he
-observed. “But ’tis true enough that himself is an awesome man. We cannot
-leave you here, but perhaps we can be tucking you into a wee bit place
-near Inverlochy where you’ll not be noticed until we move on. There is
-a burned shieling just near the loch, with one end left untouched. Come
-along now.”
-
-To argue further would be hopeless and perhaps fatal. This was a stubborn
-man, already close enough to suspicion. Numb with apprehension, Kelpie
-wrapped the cloak firmly around herself and let them lead her outside
-while they fired the thatch.
-
-And then, just as they were climbing up the bank, a tall man pointed to
-a faint wisp of smoke to the southeast. “Another shieling,” he announced
-happily.
-
-It was no shieling at all, of course. It was Alex’s fire, and now
-Kelpie’s curse would be well and truly fulfilled. Why hadn’t she thought
-of telling them herself? And why was it that she felt more dismay than
-elation? Frowning, she probed at the feeling, trying to figure it out.
-Och, of course; It was not for Alex’s sake she did not want him caught,
-but for her own. For he would be sure to tell them that she was no
-Campbell at all but a gypsy lass, and then they would take her straight
-to Argyll. She bit her lip as she silently followed the Campbells up the
-Cour in the direction of the telltale smoke, hoping passionately that
-Alex would either get away or be killed before he could betray her.
-
-He nearly did get away. The cave, when they finally found it, was empty,
-the fire quenched with snow. The tangled footprints in the snow seemed
-to lead nowhere, and they might have given up but for the stubbornness of
-Hamish, the stout man. But at last someone saw Alex hiding high up amid
-the dark needles of a pine tree.
-
-“A MacDonald!” Hamish peered upward. “Come away down, now, or we’ll shoot
-you there.”
-
-“And what difference?” asked Alex mockingly from his high perch. “I’d as
-lief be shot here as on the ground.”
-
-Kelpie set her teeth. She hoped they’d shoot him now, before he could see
-her and speak against her. She _did_! But again Hamish had other ideas.
-What was a MacDonald doing here at all, he wanted to know, and one,
-moreover, who was clearly well educated and therefore at least the son of
-a chieftain? It was a thing out of the ordinary and had better have the
-attention of his own chieftain, Campbell of Auchinbreck.
-
-“We’re no for shooting you now,” he announced, “but will be taking you
-prisoner.”
-
-Alex seemed to think it over for a moment. Then he laughed. “’Twill be a
-braw task for you, then,” he observed, “for I’ve a sore hurt ankle and
-can no longer set it to the ground—or else you’d not have found me here,
-whatever. Are you wanting to carry me all that way? For if not, you may
-as well shoot me here.”
-
-This last clearly appealed to most of the Campbells, but Hamish stuck out
-his jaw. “Aye, then. Finlay and Angus will carry you,” he announced, to
-the displeasure of two of his men.
-
-Alex shrugged and came down, leaning for an instant against the trunk of
-the tree as he reached the ground. His face was cool, although his ankle
-must be hurting him badly. But his lips tightened slightly when he saw
-Kelpie, and he stood for an instant, fixing her with another of those
-long, penetrating looks. There was more than mockery in it now. Kelpie
-flinched from it, and it came to her that Alex thought she had brought
-the Campbells to find him.
-
-Of course he did! How could he suppose anything else? And he knew quite
-well that he held the power of vengeance in his own tongue. For although
-he could not know what was between Kelpie and Mac Cailein Mor, the mere
-word “witch” would be quite enough to destroy her.
-
-She waited for it, head high, with the look of a trapped fox in her eyes,
-hoping they might kill her swiftly, for Argyll would do worse. But Alex
-did not say it. Looking into her eyes, he gave one short contemptuous
-laugh and turned away. And while he arranged himself in the hand-chair
-made by the reluctant Finlay and Angus, Kelpie stood quite still, hot and
-shaken by feelings she hadn’t known she possessed.
-
-She tried to collect her thoughts during the long, slow trip back to
-Inverlochy Castle. Why had Alex not denounced her? He must be waiting,
-knowing she would be tormented by uncertainty. He would do it, doubtless,
-when they reached the castle. Och, then, she must forget the searing pain
-of his laughter, and try to get away!
-
-Dusk was lowering as they neared Inverlochy, and she sidled up to walk
-alongside Hamish. “I am frightened,” she whispered pathetically. “There
-are too many men, and I used to the lonely hills and cattle. Can I not
-just be slipping away down the loch and home? I know the way well enough.”
-
-He looked at her kindly. “No, ’tis much too cold for you to be traveling
-alone,” he said with firmness.
-
-Kelpie’s lip trembled—and for this she required no great dramatic
-ability, either. He looked alarmed. “Do not be crying, now,” he said
-hastily. “I tell you, I know a place where you can bide, and no need
-to be going among the army at all. Just wait now until I’m turning the
-prisoner over to Auchinbreck. Fergus, run ahead a bit and see can you
-find out where he is the now.”
-
-He clasped Kelpie’s cold hand firmly in his, no doubt thinking he was
-comforting her; and Kelpie had to trudge along beside him, her heart
-thudding with fear. It thudded harder when Fergus returned to report that
-Auchinbreck was away down at the loch with Mac Cailein Mor, seeing about
-the two cannon.
-
-“Fine, then,” said Hamish. “For the wee bit placie for you to hide is
-down there too, and we need not be going near the castle at all but just
-deliver the prisoner and ask can you stay there at the same time.” And
-he beamed heartily upon the quaking Kelpie, who saw no escape now from a
-witch’s death by fire.
-
-Setting her teeth hard upon her lower lip, she tried to remember that she
-had faced death before. But this time she seemed to have no courage in
-reserve. The long strain had drained it from her. She could only remember
-Mac Cailein Mor’s cruel face and unbearable dungeon, and think that this
-could not really be happening, and wish that she could drop dead on the
-spot and be done with it.
-
-They were just past the castle now, and Hamish turned to watch a
-scattered group of soldiers come running from the slopes of Ben Nevis,
-cutting behind his group, in a great hurry to reach the castle. There was
-an air of alarm in their gray shapes in the dusk, and Hamish stared after
-them curiously.
-
-“A fine hurry they are in,” he said. “I wonder what news it is they are
-bringing from the ben, and what they could be finding at all on that wild
-place.”
-
-“Perhaps the water-bull of Lundavra has been straying north a bit,”
-suggested Alex, breaking his long silence. His voice dropped to an eerie
-whisper, and only Kelpie could hear the hint of laughter in it. “You’ll
-have heard of it, no doubt, with its broad ears and black hoofs and wild
-demon eye?”
-
-The soldiers shivered, and one made a gesture, quickly halted, of
-crossing himself. For though the Campbells were now all good members of
-the Kirk, old habits remained from many generations past and were likely
-to pop up in a crisis.
-
-They went on, with occasional furtive glances over their shoulders at
-the brooding shape of that giant mountain Ben Nevis—the highest, it was
-said, in all of the British Isles, and therefore an apt place for uncanny
-and ungodly things. Kelpie too would have been glad to scurry from its
-menace, had there not been a greater one facing her. As it was, she would
-gladly have fled to Ben Nevis for protection, even if there were a dozen
-water-bulls there.
-
-They had circled below the castle now, to the river, and were perhaps a
-mile from Loch Linnhe. If only Hamish would relax his hard, reassuring
-grip on her hand, she might be able to dive into the surrounding dusk and
-lose herself. But when she gently tested his grip, he merely tightened it.
-
-Perhaps if she should suggest to him that she could walk better with
-both hands free? Or was it already too late? There was a group of dark
-shapes in the gloom just ahead now. If that was Argyll, this was her last
-chance! “Please,” she began in her softest voice, and got no further.
-
-From behind came the pound of running footsteps, and an excited voice
-raised. “Mac Cailein Mor! Mac Cailein Mor!”
-
-A soldier rushed past them to the figures a few yards ahead, and the cold
-voice of Argyll answered. “Here. What is it, then?”
-
-“Montrose!” The soldier gasped. “Some of our scouts have just come back.
-They say Montrose is on Ben Nevis!”
-
-
-
-
-21. Vengeance
-
-
-In the shocked silence which followed, Hamish forgot his comforting grip
-on the poor wee frightened lass for an instant, and in that instant the
-poor wee frightened lass vanished.
-
-She crouched on the far side of a rhododendron bush, tensed and ready for
-further flight. For the moment, it was best not to move again, for there
-was silence beside the river, and she dared make no noise that might call
-attention to herself. Och, the good luck of it! And a fine chance there
-was that, with this news, no one would think of her again at all.
-
-“Impossible!” said Argyll. His voice was thin.
-
-“It is true, Mac Cailein Mor!” insisted the messenger. “On the north
-slope of Ben Nevis it was, his army ran into our outpost, and some of our
-scouts escaped and came to warn us.”
-
-“Impossible,” repeated Argyll more thinly yet. “He couldn’t. He went up
-the Great Glen, and he hasn’t come back down it. And there’s no other way
-he could have come in this cold and snow—not with an army and horses and
-cannon. It’s not humanly possible.”
-
-There was a good deal of sense in this. Even Kelpie, still as a bogle
-behind her bush, frowned in puzzlement. How _could_ Montrose have come
-so quickly, and _not_ through the Great Glen? Over the bitter impassable
-mountains, then? Och, Glen Roy, it must be! Argyll didn’t know this
-country as she did, and as the Camerons and MacDonalds would. Through
-Glen Roy, then—and it was next to impossible even then, but if anyone at
-all could do it, then it would be Montrose and his Highlanders, and she
-the cause of it all, with her message! She hugged herself silently.
-
-“It couldna be the army,” said an Edinburgh voice soothingly. “Gin ’tis
-Montrose at all, which I doot, ’tis a mere handfu’ o’ wild Hieland
-thieves he could ha’ brought, and we’ll wipe ’em oot the morn.”
-
-“Still and all,” came another voice, “it might be best for you to be
-going on board your galley, your Lordship. You’ve an injured shoulder,
-remember, and you’re too valuable to risk your life in a mere skirmish.”
-
-“You may be right.” There was unmistakable relief in Argyll’s voice,
-and Kelpie lifted her short lip in contempt. “I can put you in charge,
-Auchinbreck, and send commands from my galley. Who is that over there?”
-
-His voice rose sharply, and Kelpie’s hair stood on end until she heard
-Hamish’s apologetic answer. “Hamish Campbell, just, with a MacDonald
-I found skulking up near the Spean River, and I thinking you might be
-wanting to see him.”
-
-“A MacDonald?” Auchinbreck’s voice was incisive. “Aye, he’s likely a
-scout for Montrose and may be able to tell us something. Will you speak
-to him, your Lordship?”
-
-“Later,” said Argyll. “Take him down to the shelter by the loch and stay
-there yourselves on guard. See that no one goes near the galley, and I’ll
-question the prisoner before I go board.”
-
-There was a crunch of snow as Argyll and his party started back toward
-the castle, and then a pause. “Why isn’t he tied?” came Argyll’s voice
-accusingly.
-
-“Och, your Lordship, he has a hurt foot, and it would be too hard to
-carry him this whole way if—”
-
-“He could have been shamming, you fool!” Argyll was furious. “Tie him
-now.”
-
-He went on, leaving the other group of dark shapes where they stood.
-“Well, so, and himself was saying ‘now,’” muttered Hamish, “so now it is,
-my lad. We’ll have your two hands behind you. _Were_ you shamming?”
-
-“Not a whit,” said Alex coolly. “I’d have left you before this, if I
-were.”
-
-“Well, I almost have it in my heart to pity you, just for your courage,
-though you’re a cursed MacDonald. Angus, where’s the wee lass?”
-
-“She was off and away at the word Montrose,” reported Angus, “and no
-wonder. She’s frighted even of our army and will be in terror of his.
-She’ll no be staying for a battle.”
-
-“Och, she’ll freeze, just, poor _amadain_!” said Hamish worriedly. “And
-she could have been staying at the shelter with us, and quite safe. Well,
-so. Come away now.”
-
-They moved off toward the loch, leaving Kelpie to figure out her new
-situation.
-
-It was a great improvement, surely, but hardly rosy. If only the weather
-were warm, there would be no problem at all. She could set off for
-safety, leaving Alex just where she wanted him, and Montrose over behind
-the mountain to settle with Argyll after Argyll had settled with Alex.
-But it was cold! And there would be no shelter near, what with all the
-homes burned. And she didn’t want to freeze.
-
-An hour earlier she would gladly have taken the chance, gladly frozen,
-even, in preference to meeting Argyll. But now that she was out of
-danger from him for the moment, she wanted to live, and how could she be
-arranging it? If it were not for Alex, she might slip down to the shelter
-after all, and just hide when Argyll came. But Alex would not miss
-another chance to betray her. He had delayed too long once before, and he
-must be cursing himself for it.
-
-But she had to do something! Shivering, she got to her feet and silently
-followed an orange glimmer down near the loch. Och, a fire! Kelpie
-hurried her steps until she could see the ruins of a shieling hut, one
-side open to the night, but with a warm fire just at the edge, where the
-fireplace had once stood. Alex, well bound now, was lying against one
-wall, and the other men were grouped around. As she watched, they began
-taking food from their pouches.
-
-In an agony of indecision, Kelpie crouched in the bushes, just too far
-away to feel the warmth of the fire, but she didn’t dare to go closer.
-She could almost wish Alex free, so that—
-
-Her eyes widened. Alex had turned over to face the wall and was
-unmistakably settling down to sleep! How could he? Reluctantly Kelpie
-admired him for it. He was a bad one, but for all that he had a cool
-courage that was fine.
-
-She waited a few minutes more; then she _had_ to get warm! And Alex
-seemed to be truly asleep. Standing up, she raised her voice scarcely
-above a whisper. “Hamish!”
-
-He was up, his ruddy face turning to search the bushes. “The wee lass!
-Are you frozen, just? Come away to the fire. It was gey foolish of you to
-run off.”
-
-She came, rubbing her numbed hands in the heavenly warmth, even though it
-made them hurt sorely. “I was affrighted,” she explained, “of Montrose,
-and of all the men, and of Mac Cailen Mor, and even of him.” She nodded
-toward Alex. “Please, if anyone comes, could I not be hiding away at the
-back behind the walls until they go?”
-
-“Ou, aye,” said Hamish tolerantly, “if you’re so frighted as all that.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was nearly morning, and Kelpie had napped a little herself and was
-warm and fed (with a wary eye on the sleeping Alex), before voices and
-steps announced a party coming from the castle. In a flash she was around
-behind the ruined shieling, just at the corner where she could hear
-everything and even see a bit. She would be safe enough from now on,
-for although it was still dark enough to escape, the faintest of gray
-appeared over the stern dome of Ben Nevis, and the peaks farther south
-were beginning to show starkly black against the lighter clouds. The
-night was over, and she could afford to stay and watch what happened to
-Alex.
-
-“Put my things aboard,” ordered Argyll’s cold voice. “I’ll be along as
-soon as I see to this prisoner. Where is he?”
-
-“Here, asleep,” replied Hamish humbly. “Wake you up, MacDonald! Mac
-Cailein Mor wants to talk to you.”
-
-Apparently Alex awoke as Kelpie always did, all at once, for there was
-no trace of sleepiness in his voice. “Well, then, and let us talk,” he
-returned casually.
-
-Kelpie knew that his coolness would enrage Argyll, who repeatedly fled
-danger and was about to do it again. This would go hard with Alex. She
-_must_ see! There was a hole in the wall, just at the corner, where a
-stone had fallen out, and surely no one would be noticing a wee eye in
-the dark!
-
-She applied the eye to the hole. Sure enough, Argyll’s pale face was
-twisted with anger, the habitual sneer deeper than usual. And Alex had
-that faintly amused smile on his face, despite bound hands and swollen
-foot, and despite his fear.
-
-“Your name?” asked Argyll harshly.
-
-“Alexander MacDonald of Ardochy on Loch Garry,” replied Alex proudly.
-
-“So. Son of a chieftain, then. And what were you doing skulking in
-Lochaber?”
-
-“Nursing a sprained ankle,” replied Alex, still with a faint smile, “and
-hoping to be overlooked by your men.”
-
-“You knew we were here, then?” Argyll pounced upon the idea like a man
-looking for an excuse to unleash a storm of venom. And there was no doubt
-he had his victim. Kelpie’s revenge would be better than she had ever
-dreamed! She pressed closer to her peephole to see if Alex’s face would
-betray fear. But he just lifted a sandy eyebrow.
-
-“Could anyone _not_ be knowing you were here, with the smoke of burning
-homes rising like the plague?” he retorted reasonably.
-
-“You are one of Montrose’s men!” Argyll said accusingly, and Kelpie found
-herself thinking of the things Alex might answer to that. He would never
-claim to be a Covenanter, proud fool that he was, but he could say he was
-not with Montrose, that he never had been, that he had had a quarrel with
-the Camerons—any number of things. But he said none of them. Did he not
-know that his silence would seem an admission of guilt? Kelpie fumed at
-his stupidity before she remembered that—this time—she was on Argyll’s
-side.
-
-“You are a spy left behind!” Argyll went on threateningly. “It was you
-warned him we were here!”
-
-“I wish I _had_ been the one,” confessed Alex wryly. “I would not be here
-if I had. But since I _am_ here, and not with Montrose, that is clearly
-nonsense.”
-
-“Don’t quibble with me!” Argyll was in a cold rage, the cruel, bullying
-streak in him showing clear. “You were responsible. You hurt your foot
-and sent someone else with the message.”
-
-In the gleam of the fire, Alex’s jaw moved up and outward a fraction. “I
-would have done so,” he retorted proudly, “but that I could find no one
-to send.”
-
-“You’ll not save your life that way.” There was wintry satisfaction in
-Argyll’s face. “Unless you can produce the guilty party and prove your
-innocence ...” The sentence went grimly unfinished.
-
-Even Hamish looked shocked at this unfairness, and for an instant Kelpie
-missed the full irony of the situation. Then it dawned on her. Alex was
-to die for the thing she herself had done—and he well aware of it and
-helpless, since he had no notion where she was! It was almost too good to
-be possible!
-
-She bit her lip and pressed closer to the chink, and a squeak of what
-must be delight—although it felt almost like a sob—escaped her.
-
-Alex turned—oh, so casually!—and his eyes, dark in the shadow of the
-shelter, looked straight into hers.
-
-Kelpie stopped breathing. Too appalled even to move, she stood frozen,
-waiting for the simple, deadly words that must come next. In her mind she
-heard them clearly. “Very well so, and you will find the guilty party is
-the witch lass hiding this very moment outside the wall....” She should
-be away, running like a hare! But she could not, for her shock had glued
-her feet to the ground, and already Alex had begun to speak.
-
-“And how,” he asked deliberately, “could I be doing that?”
-
-Kelpie missed the next part of the conversation, for she was altogether
-stunned. He had seen and recognized her; never a doubt of it. In that
-instant she had handed him the victory, his own life and hers as well,
-and he had dropped them indifferently at his feet! Why? Was he fey, then,
-to be deliberately throwing away his life? Not even the scruples of Ian
-could account for it, for Alex owed her nothing and less than nothing,
-especially since he believed she had betrayed him to the Campbells.
-
-In her bewilderment she didn’t even feel relief at her own narrow escape.
-And when she was again able to concentrate on the scene inside, she found
-that Alex had taken the edge off her victory simply by giving it to her.
-Where had the triumph and savor gone? Frowning, she reminded herself that
-Alex was being justly punished for what he did to Ian, and she was _not_
-sorry! No, nor would she ever dream of wanting to save him whatever, for
-he deserved to die, and had she not been planning revenge? She would not
-_want_ to help him even if she could—and couldn’t if she wanted to, for
-was it not her rule of life to look out for herself and no one else?
-And if Mac Cailein Mor should so much as glimpse the witch lass caught
-trying to hex him, and herself wearing his own wife’s gown and cloak this
-moment.... She laughed at herself for even thinking that such a daft idea
-could ever enter her head. It was gloating she was. She _was_!
-
-Intent on her gloating, she risked another peep through the chink and
-saw that Argyll was biting his lip with anger. Alex had no doubt just
-said something derisive, for he was smiling recklessly. But for all his
-composure, Kelpie knew that he was afraid in the face of death. Had not
-she herself, more than once, acted calm when she did not feel that way?
-Och, she knew how his heart must be pounding, as her own was just from
-imagining it.
-
-Or perhaps it was pounding with happiness and excitement and triumph. Her
-fists were clenched painfully and her lips drawn back from her teeth.
-This was the moment, and she would watch while—while—
-
-“Take him out yonder and shoot him,” said Argyll.
-
-Then Kelpie heard a reckless laugh coming from her own lips, and she
-found herself around the wall and in the firelight and confronting Argyll
-with her head held high.
-
-“No, now,” she said, “for ’twas I sent the messenger.”
-
-One part of her stood aghast and terrified at the insane thing she had
-done, but the other part—the thing inside, which had been pushing her for
-so long—was glad and triumphant.
-
-
-
-
-22. The Last Word
-
-
-For a moment even the daybreak seemed to pause over the Highlands. The
-thin sky of morning lighted a wan world of muted gray and white and
-purple with an eerie, ghostlike tone. There was no sound outside the
-ruined shelter with its circle of sickly firelight, and for just an
-instant there was no sound even there.
-
-Alex’s face seemed carved in an odd expression of exultation and anguish
-combined, and his eyes fixed upon her as if they would never leave. But
-Kelpie did not see this, for her own eyes were fixed defiantly upon
-Argyll, waiting.
-
-She had not long to wait. “The witch!” he whispered, and his eyes blazed
-in pale fury. “And in her Ladyship’s stolen clothes!” he added with new
-outrage.
-
-Alex laughed, and his laughter was delighted, exasperated—and somehow
-sad. He moved to stand beside Kelpie. “Och,” he said, “and isn’t
-it just the way you will be overdoing things? I would have had you
-remain unprincipled and live. I would have called you liar and saved
-you yet. But you must appear in Lady Argyll’s stolen clothes and seal
-your doom—and knowing it!” His eyes were stricken, exultant, tender;
-but Kelpie only looked at him dazedly. All of it was beyond her
-understanding, except that she had doomed herself irrevocably by her own
-madness, and the thing inside said it must be so.
-
-Argyll was breathing hard, taut with hatred; his menace was overwhelming.
-“Shoot the man now,” he said between his teeth, “but bind the witch
-and take her aboard the galley. I will try her and burn her when this
-business with Montrose is over.”
-
-And then all Lochaber seemed to explode at once. Shots echoed from Ben
-Nevis just as Alex went quite berserk. His face was as she had seen it
-in the witch-hunting town, jutted with sharp angles of rage. He hurled
-himself against Argyll, the full force of his hard shoulder driving into
-the Campbell’s midsection; and down they went. The others rushed forward
-with yells, and from the castle came more yells and a new volley of shots.
-
-Hamish was pulling his chief from under Alex and shouting, “The battle
-has started!” Someone kicked Alex brutally in the head, and Kelpie flung
-herself at the culprit, using both teeth and nails, and was herself
-flung to the ground, while still another voice shouted, “Get you to the
-galley, Mac Cailein Mor!”
-
-Kelpie, dazed from her fall, saw Argyll, staggering and winded, clutching
-his shoulder and croaking contradictions. “Shoot them! Take the witch on
-board! I’ll burn them both! Shoot them at once!” Alex struggled up and
-tried to shield Kelpie with his own body as someone raised a gun. She
-heard a wild shriek of pipes from the direction of Ben Nevis, more shots
-and more yells. And then came a blaze of pain, and nothing at all.
-
- * * * * *
-
-She lay for a while without opening her eyes, trying to decide whether
-she was really alive. It seemed quite unlikely. But on the other hand,
-except for a sore pain in her head and a hot, smoldering one in her body,
-this did not seem like Hell. For one thing, she seemed to be in a soft
-bed with sheets, and surely Hell would never provide such things. She
-decided to open her eyes and find out.
-
-Opening her eyes did not help much, but only added to her confusion. For
-was not this one of the bedrooms at Glenfern, which she had helped often
-enough to clean? And whatever could she be doing here at all? Clearly she
-could not be here—but how was it that a stout and smiling Marsali seemed
-to be feeding her beef broth? Och, it was too much effort to worry about
-it! She swallowed the broth, closed her eyes, and slept again. The next
-time she awoke, it was to morning light, and she felt much stronger.
-
-There was a small movement to the left of the bed, and Kelpie slowly
-focused her eyes toward it. A flower face lighted and moved closer. “Och,
-my Kelpie!” whispered Wee Mairi, radiant. “You’ve come away back to me!”
-
-Hot tears stung Kelpie’s eyes. She closed them and moved her left hand
-gropingly and felt a small warm one creep into it. Och, the wee love! The
-tears slid down her cheeks.
-
-There was more movement presently, and then Ronald’s voice asking with
-deep interest, “Is she awake yet?”
-
-“Of course she is, or how else could she be weeping?” demanded his twin
-scornfully. “Kelpie, is it hurting you are? Can you open your eyes,
-Kelpie? Fiona, will you run to tell Mother she is awake?”
-
-Kelpie opened her eyes mistily and saw the rosy, concerned faces over
-her. Fiona, crossing herself as usual, appeared beyond them and then
-disappeared again. Donald vanished too, while Kelpie—still gripping Wee
-Mairi’s hand—closed her eyes again and tried to sort out the confusion of
-her thoughts. Presently there was a slight denting of the bed near her
-elbow.
-
-“I’ve brought Dubh,” announced Donald cheerfully. “We decided before that
-you were not a witch, but now Alex says you are, but a nice one; and I
-was thinking, if Dubh is still liking you, perhaps Alex is right.”
-
-Kelpie wrinkled her forehead as Dubh spat nastily at Donald. Alex? Alex
-at Glenfern? Dubh regarded her with slitted yellow eyes and then draped
-himself in a scraggy, purring fur piece across her shoulder. “Alex?” said
-Kelpie aloud, puzzled.
-
-“Ou, aye, and he sore hurt, too.” Ronald nodded. “But he is better now.
-Kelpie, when you are well, will you tell us about your adventures? Why
-were you leaving Glenfern at all, Kelpie? Do you _like_ your Grannie
-Witchie, or was it that you were afraid of her, as Father said? Is she
-truly a witch, Kelpie? Where is she the now? Are you going to stay with
-us? Wee Mairi says you love her. Do you, Kelpie?”
-
-The small hand in Kelpie’s stirred. “Aye so!” piped Wee Mairi
-indignantly. “My Kelpie _does_ love me!”
-
-“Aye,” confessed Kelpie, her defenses quite down. “But,” she went on
-incredulously, “is Alex truly here? At Glenfern?”
-
-“Of course,” said Donald. “He has been telling us of his adventures too,
-and how Montrose was sending him on a special important mission to talk
-to clan chiefs and see if Lochiel would join the army, and all; and that
-was why he was alone and caught by the Campbells. But we do not know why
-you were there at all.” He paused, head tilted hopefully to one side.
-
-But Kelpie, more and more bewildered, was in no state to tell stories.
-“Alex?” she repeated stupidly.
-
-“Himself.” It was his voice, with something new in the laughter of it.
-Suddenly the room was full of people. Eithne and Lady Glenfern smiled at
-her from the foot of the bed, and Alex himself was coming slowly across
-the floor. There was a bandage round his head, and he leaned heavily on
-Glenfern and Ian.
-
-Och, it made no sense at all! Kelpie closed her eyes again and moved her
-head fretfully.
-
-“Alex has told us what you did,” said Glenfern. “It is at such times that
-a person’s true character comes forth.” He smiled down at her warmly.
-“Let you know now, Kelpie, that you will always have a home at Glenfern,
-and our love; and for saving Alex we owe you a debt that we can never
-pay.”
-
-Kelpie’s puzzlement deepened. _Dhé!_ It must be that Ian had never known
-that it was Alex who struck him down! In the confusion, perhaps herself
-was the only one who had really seen it. It must be so, for no other
-explanation made sense. Perhaps Archie hadn’t known either, and she had
-merely read meanings into his words that evening in the camp. Her blue
-eyes flew open and met Alex’s quizzical ones. What an actor he was, then,
-behaving as if nothing had happened! But _she_ could tell them what had
-happened, and Alex knew it, and yet here he stood quite at ease.
-
-They stared at each other for a long, searching moment, and a look of
-baffled frustration came to both faces. And then Kelpie closed her eyes
-once again, too weak to cope with such a puzzle or even to decide
-whether or no she should tell Ian what his foster brother had done.
-
-“_Dhé_, and she’ll be confused enough, poor water witch!” The old teasing
-note in Alex’s voice overlaid a new tenderness. “Just be settling me in a
-chair by the bed, and then away out, the rest of you, whilst I tell her
-the end of our adventure.”
-
-Presently the room was silent again, except for Dubh’s purring. Conscious
-of a presence beside the bed, Kelpie opened a cautious eye again after a
-minute and found the hazel eyes fixed on her broodingly.
-
-“Och so,” he murmured, shaking his head sadly. “I had thought my cousin
-Cecily unpredictable and you an open book, with your devious wiles, and
-so candidly unprincipled. And then—you put a spell on me, with the ringed
-witch-eyes in your head. You baffled me, you haunted me, you eluded me,
-leaving me forever two jumps behind and never knowing what to think at
-all. Aye me, I suppose I shall never understand you at all, and that is
-my fate and destiny.”
-
-Kelpie slowly progressed from bewilderment to indignation. Only the last
-words had any meaning whatever, and that was little enough.
-
-“_I!_” she fumed, causing Dubh to dig in a protesting claw. “It is you
-who make no sense at all, and I never knowing what to think!”
-
-Alex grinned ruefully. “At least we are even, then. Are you wanting to
-know what has happened since Argyll’s men put bullets in the both of us?”
-
-Kelpie nodded.
-
-“Well, then, were you hearing the start of the battle, just as our own
-wee war was getting exciting?” asked Alex. She nodded again, content to
-lie still and listen. “Well,” he went on, “it was the battle that saved
-us, for Argyll rushed off to the safety of his galley, and his men left
-us for dead—and very nearly right they were. And so we lay unknowing
-while Montrose won a great victory over an army twice his size. It was
-another Tippermuir, and this time the fighting force of the Campbells
-is crippled for years to come. Some say as many as fifteen hundred were
-slain, and the rest taken prisoner or chased back to their own country,
-and our men on their heels all the way to Lundavra. I think it will be
-another generation, Kelpie, before Clan Campbell can come raiding other
-clans again—and a good blow for the King’s cause as well,” he added,
-almost as an afterthought. Loyal to the king though he was, Alex was a
-Highlander, and Highland affairs were his closest concern.
-
-Kelpie found herself wondering suddenly about Morag Mhor and Rab, Archie,
-and the others. “And had we many killed?”
-
-Alex shook his head. “It was a rout,” he said. “They tell me there
-are some two hundred or more wounded, but scarce over a dozen killed
-outright. It seems fair unbelievable.”
-
-Kelpie assimilated this and then returned to another matter of interest.
-“What of Mac Cailein Mor?” she demanded vindictively. “And what was
-happening to us, after all?”
-
-“Och, the great General Campbell was away down the loch in his galley
-before the fight was yet over, hero that he is!” Scorn was bright in
-Alex’s voice. “But as for us, we lay until some of our men found us and
-recognized my tartan, so they took us up to the castle with the other
-wounded. There were plenty of the army who knew me—and you, too, it
-seems, for there was a hulking great man named Rab and a huge fierce
-woman called Morag Mhor nearly come to blows over which could be doing
-most for you.” His eyes crinkled at her with approval and amusement. “So
-it was soon enough that my brother and Ian both found us. And when we
-were fit to be carried, they brought us here.”
-
-“Here!” echoed Kelpie, renewed bafflement upon her. Forgetting her
-wounds, she tried to sit up and then changed her mind. Wincing, she lay
-back again, and her ringed eyes stared beneath lowered brows at Alex.
-Dubh, his nap disturbed, glared with equal fierceness, and Alex found the
-combination disconcerting.
-
-“You would be coming _here_?” Kelpie spat. “You, with all your prating of
-loyalty and the laws of hospitality and this principles thing? And you
-have not even good sense, for here am I, and whatever makes you think I
-will not be telling? And yet you have not even tried to threaten me.”
-
-Complete bewilderment was on Alex’s face. “Either your wits or mine are
-wandering entirely,” he said. “What are you talking about? Tell what?”
-
-“That you tried to kill Ian!” answered Kelpie.
-
-“_What?_” He was utterly dumfounded, and Kelpie’s conviction wavered, but
-only briefly. She knew what she had seen!
-
-“Do not be denying it, for I saw it myself, and twice over—once with the
-Second Sight, which never lies, and again when it happened.”
-
-Alex’s eyes narrowed thoughtfully, as if he had begun to see a clue to
-some deep puzzle. “You were saying something of the sort back at yon
-cave,” he said. “It made no sense, but I had already given up expecting
-to understand you, and there were other urgent matters on my mind.
-Tell me now: What was it that you saw twice over? Tell me exactly, for
-although the Second Sight never lies, sometimes the reading of it can be
-wrong. What was it you were seeing, water witch?”
-
-Kelpie frowned. “It was the crowd of witch-hunters, although the first
-time I did not know who or where, or that it was me they were going to
-burn. But I saw Ian coming through them, and you after him with a black
-anger on your face. And when you reached him, you raised your sword and
-brought it down on him, and he dropped like a stone and out of sight.”
-She glared at him defiantly.
-
-A whole series of expressions chased one another across Alex’s face, but
-they were not quite the ones Kelpie had expected. Wonder and relief and
-joy surely had no place there!
-
-“My sorrow,” he whispered, closing his eyes for an instant. “And is
-it for that you’ve hated me so darkly this long while? No wonder!” He
-looked at her suddenly with new delight. “And for Ian too, though you
-tried so hard to admit no loyalty or friendship, and I believed you!
-Think carefully,” he commanded as Kelpie was about to burst out at him in
-frustration and fury. “Were you actually _seeing_ my sword _strike_ Ian?”
-
-“Aye so—” began Kelpie hotly, and then paused. “Well, and there was a
-head in the way for a wee moment,” she conceded, conjuring up the vivid
-picture and looking at it carefully. “Your sword is striking him just
-behind the head—the other head, I mean—but now Ian is falling straight
-away, and so—”
-
-“Look again!” interrupted Alex. “Look closely, Kelpie, and do not judge
-too quickly. For my sword was falling on the man who was in the act of
-dirking Ian, and they went down at the same moment. Little _amadain_,
-how could you be thinking I would turn on my foster brother, dearer than
-kin, for whom I would give my heart’s blood?”
-
-Kelpie scowled in sudden, unreasoning resentment, but he leaned forward
-to place his hand on her arm where it lay outside the covers. “Look in
-your heart for the truth,” he commanded urgently. “Ask it of your reason
-as well. You _must_ know that I did not do it.”
-
-It was true. She did know it. She felt slightly dizzy, as if the sun had
-spun round suddenly and begun rising in the west. And was it a mistake
-that she had hated Alex this long time? Och, no! Had he not always
-infuriated her with his mockery and scorn and his uncanny knowledge of
-what she would think and do next? But whatever had possessed the both of
-them that dawn in the shelter, each offering his own life to save the
-other? She could hardly believe that it had really happened.
-
-The eyes she raised to Alex were night-blue with wonder. “You knew I
-was hiding behind the wall! Why didn’t you save yourself by telling Mac
-Cailein Mor it was I sent the message? And especially when you thought
-that I had betrayed you to the Campbells? _Why?_”
-
-There was sudden gladness on Alex’s lean face. “Kelpie!” he fairly
-shouted. “You didn’t betray me, then?”
-
-She shook her head irritably and immediately wished she hadn’t. “I _told_
-you I did not dare! And now you know why, with Mac Cailein Mor already
-wanting me for a witch, and I with his wife’s clothing on my back. ’Twas
-the smoke from your fire betrayed you, fool that you were!” She glared
-at him. “But you were _believing_ it was I, and you needing only a word
-to save yourself and settle all accounts. Why did you not tell?” she
-demanded angrily.
-
-Alex grinned flippantly at her, but the angles of his face seemed
-softened, and his voice as well. He seemed to be laughing at her and at
-himself too. “Perhaps, _mo chridhe_, it was for the same reason that you
-spoke out when you needed only to stay still. Can you answer me your own
-question, Kelpie? Why did you come forth?”
-
-“I was daft, just!” she retorted promptly. “And,” she added, remembering,
-“there was a thing in me pushing where I was not wanting to go.” She
-frowned.
-
-“There has been a thing in me too, this long while,” said Alex softly,
-and for an instant he saw her as she had appeared from the shadows to
-face Argyll—intense then too, but heartbreakingly brave, nearly tearing
-him apart with joy for her gallantry and with despair for its result. And
-he had not known, then, the full horror of what she was facing, that she
-was giving herself up to be burned as a witch.
-
-She was regarding him with annoyance. “I think it was a spell, whatever,”
-she announced accusingly.
-
-Alex looked at her oddly. “Aye so, a spell,” he muttered with a wry twist
-to his mouth. “And I with a fondness for merry, fair-haired lassies, like
-my sweet Cecily in Oxford. And now she will have to marry Ian, just,
-though perhaps neither of them will mind much. I have _never_ cared for
-witches!” he told her plaintively. “And especially not black-haired ones,
-with dark, pointy faces, all uncanny eyes. It’s never a moment’s peace I
-shall have again; but ’tis a terrible, strong spell you have put on me,
-and I cannot break it. Och, there’s no way at all out of it, but I shall
-have to marry you, just!”
-
-“Marry me!” Kelpie’s shock reached to the very soles of her feet.
-
-“Ou, aye,” answered the outrageous lad, wagging his head sadly. “And a
-dreadful life it will be, never a doubt of it, wed to a wild wee water
-witch. But marry you I must, for I cannot help myself.”
-
-“_I_ can, then!” Kelpie sizzled with outrage. “Did you never think of
-consulting _me_? Were you thinking I would—_Dhé!_ I’d sooner be wedding
-the sea horse in Loch Ness, or Argyll himself! And the very conceit of
-you to be thinking it! ’Tis a spell indeed I’ll be putting on you! Wait
-until I learn the Evil Eye, and then see will you not be begging my
-mercy, and with the horrid spots all over you, and—”
-
-Alex silenced her by the simple expedient of putting his lips firmly over
-hers. When at last he lifted them, it was to laugh into her startled and
-indignant eyes with the old mockery.
-
-“I’m thinking,” he said, just as if she had never uttered a word of
-her last speech, “that I shall have to be taking you out of Scotland
-altogether, or sooner or later it would be to the stake with the both of
-us. And in any case, what else could I be doing with the gypsy wanderlust
-in your feet?”
-
-“The gypsies _stole_ me, I tell you!” retorted Kelpie automatically.
-
-He raised a quizzical eyebrow. “And did they so, truly? Well, and what
-does it matter? You could never be finding your parents now, nor fit into
-their life if you did. And in any case, you’re going to marry me, and
-we’ll away to the New World. A grand wilderness it is, they say, with all
-the space needed for wandering in and out of trouble.”
-
-He bent toward her again, and reached for her hand, as Kelpie opened a
-mutinous mouth. Dubh, who had patiently endured the last disturbance of
-his nap, opened one yellow eye, saw Alex’s hand approaching, and slashed
-it. Then he rearranged himself across Kelpie’s neck and went back to
-sleep.
-
-Kelpie laughed at Alex, who was also laughing and sucking at his torn
-finger. “You see?” he said. “The Red Indians and wild animals will never
-have a chance against you with your dark power over man and beast, witch
-that you are. I wonder, would next week be too soon for the wedding?”
-
-“Sssss!” said Kelpie contentedly.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: PHOTO BY LARRY WAY
-
-_Sally Watson in costume for the Highland Games competition_]
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WITCH OF THE GLENS***
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-<h1 class="pgx" title="header title">The Project Gutenberg eBook, Witch of the Glens, by Sally Watson,
-Illustrated by Barbara Werner</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
-restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: Witch of the Glens</p>
-<p>Author: Sally Watson</p>
-<p>Release Date: February 9, 2020 [eBook #61360]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WITCH OF THE GLENS***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="pgx" title="credit">E-text prepared by Tim Lindell<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images digitized by the<br />
- Google Books Library Project<br />
- (<a href="https://books.google.com">https://books.google.com</a>)<br />
- and generously made available by<br />
- HathiTrust Digital Library<br />
- (<a href="https://www.hathitrust.org/">https://www.hathitrust.org/</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- HathiTrust Digital Library. See
- <a href="https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015005597078">
- https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015005597078</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger">Witch of the Glens</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="475" height="700" alt="Cover image" />
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-
-<img src="images/titlepage.jpg" width="700" height="500" alt="Titlepage image" />
-
-<p class="center larger">Witch<br />
-of the Glens</p>
-
-<p class="center">By SALLY WATSON</p>
-
-<p class="center smaller">Drawings by Barbara Werner</p>
-
-<p class="right">THE VIKING PRESS<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>New York</i></span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="front-matter">
-
-<p class="right">Copyright © 1962 by Sally Watson<br />
-All rights reserved<br />
-First published in 1962 by The Viking Press, Inc.<br />
-625 Madison Avenue, New York 22, N. Y.<br />
-Published simultaneously in Canada<br />
-by The Macmillan Company of Canada Limited</p>
-
-<p class="right"><i>Library of Congress catalog card number: 62-17071</i></p>
-
-<p class="right smaller">PRINTED IN THE U.S.A. BY THE VAIL-BALLOU PRESS, INC.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="front-matter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="right">To my favorite witch and <i lang="gd">uruisg</i><br />
-Jean and Don<br />
-and their two small kelpies<br />
-Kathy and Mark</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>Contents</h2>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">1.</td>
- <td>The Gypsies</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_1">15</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">2.</td>
- <td>The Waif</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_2">26</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">3.</td>
- <td>Glenfern</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_3">36</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">4.</td>
- <td>The Daft Folk</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_4">48</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">5.</td>
- <td>Bewitchery</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_5">60</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">6.</td>
- <td>The Picture in the Loch</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_6">73</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">7.</td>
- <td>The Return of Mina and Bogle</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_7">88</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">8.</td>
- <td>A Task for Kelpie</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_8">102</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">9.</td>
- <td>Inverary Castle</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_9">115</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">10.</td>
- <td>A Bit of Hair</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_10">124</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">11.</td>
- <td>Argyll’s Dungeon</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_11">135</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">12.</td>
- <td>Meeting at Pitlochry</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_12">146</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">13.</td>
- <td>The Hexing of Alex</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_13">159</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">14.</td>
- <td>The Battle of Tippermuir</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_14">170</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>15.</td>
- <td>Witch Hunt</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_15">182</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">16.</td>
- <td>Morag Mhor</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_16">195</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">17.</td>
- <td>The Road to Inverary</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_17">206</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">18.</td>
- <td>The Black Sail</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_18">223</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">19.</td>
- <td>Footprints in the Snow</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_19">229</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">20.</td>
- <td>The Campbell Lass</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_20">240</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">21.</td>
- <td>Vengeance</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_21">250</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr">22.</td>
- <td>The Last Word</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#Chapter_22">261</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>Gaelic Terms</h2>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Amadain</i> (masculine, <i lang="gd">amadan</i>). Fool.</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Briosag.</i> Witch, sorceress.</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Chlanna nan con, thigibh a sh’s gheibh sibh feoil.</i> “Sons
-of the dogs, come hither, and you shall have flesh”
-(Cameron war cry).</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Dhia dhuit.</i> A greeting (“good day,” literally, “God today”).</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Droch-inntinneach.</i> Evil-minded.</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Dubh</i> (also <i lang="gd">dhu</i>). Black.</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Each uisghe.</i> Water horse (mythical sea-monster, probably
-with some connection to the Loch Ness Monster,
-which has been seen frequently for at least 1500 years
-and to which Saint Columba of Iona gave a good scolding
-in 565, as recorded by the Abbot of Iona).</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Filleadh mór.</i> The great-plaid, kilt and plaid in one piece.
-(The plaid, or plaidie, was worn around the shoulders
-and sometimes over the head.)</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Ghillie.</i> An attendant or follower of a clan chief or chieftain.</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Kelpie.</i> A water witch.</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Mallaichte.</i> Wicked.</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">M’eudain.</i> An endearment.</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Mise-an-dhuit.</i> An exclamation (literally, “Me today!”).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span></p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Mo chridhe.</i> An endearment (literally, “My heart”).</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Mo thruigh.</i> An exclamation (literally, “My sorrow!”).</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Mor</i> (or <i lang="gd">mhor</i>). Great, large.</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Nathrach.</i> Serpent.</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Seach.</i> Interjection: “Yes?” “Well—” “Truly!” “Really?”</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Sgian dhu.</i> Black knife: a small dagger usually worn in the
-top of the right stocking by men, just below the knee on
-the outside, where it is most convenient to reach.</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Slaoightire.</i> Scoundrel.</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Uruisg</i> (plural, <i lang="gd">uruisgean</i>). A hobgoblin; sometimes
-thought to be half human, half hobgoblin. A most disagreeable
-fellow, in any case.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2>Pronouncing Gaelic</h2>
-
-<p>Gaelic pronunciation is in some ways totally different
-from English. For instance, <i>s</i> in front of <i>i</i> or <i>e</i> sounds like
-<i>sh</i>; <i>th</i>, <i>bh</i>, <i>dh</i>, and <i>gh</i> are sometimes (but not always)
-silent; <i>mh</i> is usually pronounced <i>v</i>; and <i>ch</i> has a sound not
-found in English at all, and made by trying to say <i>kh</i> as
-far back in the throat as possible.</p>
-
-<p><i>Following are the pronunciations for some of the names
-and words found in this book</i>:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>dubh—doo</p>
-
-<p>each uisghe—ekh oosh-ga (“oo” as in “look”)</p>
-
-<p>Eithne—Ay-na</p>
-
-<p>Ewen—Yew-en</p>
-
-<p>ghillie—gilly</p>
-
-<p>Hamish—Hay-mish</p>
-
-<p>Ian—Ee-an</p>
-
-<p>Lachlan—Lakh-lan</p>
-
-<p>Loch Leven—Lokh Leeven</p>
-
-<p>Mairi—Mah-ri</p>
-
-<p>mhor—vore</p>
-
-<p>mo chridhe—mo cree</p>
-
-<p>Seumas—Shay-mas (James)</p>
-
-<p>sgian dhu—skean doo</p>
-
-<p>uruisg—oorishk</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2>Historical Note</h2>
-
-<p>To avoid confusion I have in this book described clan
-tartans more or less as they exist today. This is not strictly
-accurate. To begin with, in 1644 clans had not yet adopted
-specific tartans to be worn by all their members, and probably
-none of the tartans were the same, in either pattern
-or color, as they are today. In fact, it is very difficult to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-know just what they did look like, for all kinds of vegetable
-dyes were used, and the remnants of old tartans
-that we find today are so faded and changed in color that
-they seem mostly gray or gray-brown, and it is hard to tell
-what colors they once were.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1>Witch of the Glens</h1>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
-<img src="images/map.jpg" width="450" height="700" alt="Cover image" />
-<p class="center">THE PART OF <i>SCOTLAND</i> WHERE KELPIE’S ADVENTURE TOOK PLACE</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_1">1. The Gypsies</h2>
-
-<p>The people of Inverness were deeply annoyed. A number
-of them stood in the square and scowled with
-great hostility at the three tattered wanderers in their
-midst—but their anger held a wary quality.</p>
-
-<p>“Tinklers! Gypsies!” they cried accusingly, and the soft,
-sibilant sound of the Gaelic was less soft but more sibilant
-than usual. “<i lang="gd">Briosag!</i>” (“Witch!”) muttered some with
-conviction but caution. “Thieves!” they added, getting to
-the real heart of the annoyance. And with this fresh reminder
-of their grievances they began picking up stones
-as they advanced toward the man, woman, and girl.</p>
-
-<p>Anyone who expected to see clan loyalty in this gypsy
-family would have been terribly disappointed. The massive
-bent shoulders and stringy legs of the man somehow
-evaporated between two houses, and the final glance from
-his pasty dark face was one of hooded derision.</p>
-
-<p>Old Mina Faw didn’t seem at all put out by her man’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-desertion. One might have thought she had expected it.
-Her scrawny figure seemed to grow taller as she turned a
-once-handsome hag face toward the crowd, and her
-sunken pale eyes flashed. The crowd hesitated. Everyone
-knew Old Mina was a witch, with the most devastating
-Evil Eye in all Scotland.</p>
-
-<p>But surprisingly Mina chose to pacify them. After all,
-there weren’t many towns in the Highlands in this year of
-1644, and it was well not to be alienating those few too
-deeply. “Och, now!” She wheedled the crowd in her thin
-but powerful voice. “Ye wouldn’t be wishing to harm a
-poor old woman, now, would ye?”</p>
-
-<p>It wasn’t at all that they weren’t wishing to harm her.
-But no one wanted to risk having his hands fall off or his
-cattle die. They regarded her dubiously, making up their
-minds. “Witch!” repeated someone from the safety of the
-back. “Thief!” cried several more with fresh indignation,
-and they began to move forward again.</p>
-
-<p>“Thief?” echoed Mina indignantly. “Not I! I would only
-be reading your palms and telling good fortune for ye. If
-anyone has been lifting your belongings, it must be my
-wicked wee Kelpie, whom I am beating every night for
-her sins.” And she pointed accusingly at an undersized
-goblin-lass who might have been perhaps fifteen or seventeen
-years old, dressed in an outrageous assortment of
-faded scraps. Long black elf-locks flapped about her thin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-face and down her back. Eyes that were not quite canny
-peered out like those of an alarmed wee beast—or a witch.</p>
-
-<p>The “wicked wee Kelpie” didn’t stay to dispute the
-issue. With one bright, mutinous glance at Mina, she dived
-through the startled fringe of the crowd like a young stoat
-and ran away into the narrow steep lanes of the town.</p>
-
-<p>The Inverness crowd promptly forgot Mina and took
-after the lass. “Thief!” they yelled with new enthusiasm.
-And whatever was convenient to pick up, they threw.</p>
-
-<p>It was fortunate that Kelpie was experienced in this
-sort of thing, for it was a nasty chase, and she knew all
-too well what might happen if they caught her. With
-cunning amounting to sheer genius she ran and dodged,
-doubled back and forth between houses, wriggled over
-and under and around obstacles. Now and then her intense
-small face broke into a pointed grin of appreciation
-at her own cleverness—for there was something exhilarating
-in outwitting an entire town—but very real fear lurked
-behind those uncanny blue eyes. To tell the truth, it was
-the tide of ill will surging behind her which oppressed her
-even more than the stones. But Kelpie did not realize this,
-for she was so used to ill will that she could not remember
-anything else.</p>
-
-<p>As for Mina’s deplorable behavior, Kelpie was annoyed
-but not in the least astonished. Mina had merely followed
-the law of self-preservation, the only law Kelpie knew.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-She herself would do the same thing, given the chance. It
-was the only way to stay alive.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Briosag!</i> Witch!”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie swerved round a corner and wished that she
-<em>were</em> a witch. If so, she wouldn’t be running now but putting
-a braw spell on them all, causing their legs to buckle
-under them and stay that way for three days too, so that
-the whole town would be crawling about on hands and
-knees, just—She laughed at the picture and took another
-corner at full speed. Just wait until she <em>was</em> a witch! Och,
-no one would chase her then, or beat her, either....</p>
-
-<p>A red petticoat spread on a gorse bush vanished magically
-as she flew past. Why not? If she got away, she was
-a petticoat richer. If not, what would it be mattering, a
-petticoat more, since she already had two stolen purses, a
-kerchief, and a fine <i lang="gd">sgian dhu</i> on her anyhow?</p>
-
-<p>Up hill and down and around, and finally away out of
-the town, and presently the stones ceased to bite at her
-ankles and back, and the yells were lost behind. Her
-breath seared her lungs now, and she hurtled down the
-hill toward the river which led from Loch Ness to Moray
-Firth. At last she threw herself into a cold, wet, but safely
-thick bank of broom, bracken, and juniper, where she lay
-panting and gasping painfully. Mina and Bogle would be
-safely away by now and waiting for her down along the
-path that was the only road along Loch Ness. Let them
-wait. She had earned a rest. She was sore bruised and aching<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-from the stones, and her bare feet, tough as they were,
-hurt from the cobbled streets of the town.</p>
-
-<p>Och, she thought pleasantly, if only they would some
-day be catching and hanging Mina, and Bogle too—but
-only, of course, after Kelpie had learned all the witchcraft
-that Mina knew, and perhaps more. Oh, to be a more
-powerful witch than Mina, and to be putting all kinds of
-curses on her until all scores were settled!</p>
-
-<p>Curled up in her nest of bracken, head resting on the
-scarlet petticoat, Kelpie drifted into her favorite daydream.
-<i lang="gd">Dhé</i>, how Mina would plead for mercy! Her arms
-and legs would shrivel up, just, and her few remaining
-teeth fall out. Kelpie smiled, looking like a starry-eyed lass
-dreaming of romance. Then her short upper lip curled and
-lifted, revealing a row of small, sharp white teeth, so that
-she looked more like a wolf cub dreaming of dinner.</p>
-
-<p>The long northern twilight was beginning to creep into
-the Great Glen, for sunlight vanished early in the valley
-between those high, steep, massive hills, even in March.
-She must go on now, or she would be beaten for delaying.
-And presently, still sore, she was loping silently down the
-path by the loch, where new gorse and bracken grew between
-patches of old snow. Two or three miles down she
-met Bogle and Mina sitting on their bundles and waiting.</p>
-
-<p>“You have taken your time about getting here,” said
-Bogle. “And how many purses were you taking?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Twilight had deepened into the toneless half-light of
-gloaming. Light had slowly drained from the Glen, leaving
-a world of eerie gray on the hill above Loch Ness. The
-loch itself was liquid iron, from which might easily arise
-the three black humps and snaky neck of the <i lang="gd">each uisghe</i>,
-the water horse who lived there. A meager supper was
-over, and the only color left in the world was the small
-salmon-pink pennant of cloud flying over the black shoulder
-of Meall Fuarvounie and reflected in the shining
-crystal ball in Mina’s hand.</p>
-
-<p>She spread a shabby bit of stolen black velvet on the
-springy turf and set the crystal sphere lovingly in the exact
-center. “And now you will be reading the glass with me,”
-she said.</p>
-
-<p>It was a nightly ritual. Ordinarily Kelpie found it interesting,
-exciting, but tonight she was sore and aching and
-rebellion was in her. It was foolish, of course, to express
-such feelings. It was to risk not only a beating—which,
-being used to, she did not fear—but an evil spell, which
-she did. But she expressed them now and then, all the
-same.</p>
-
-<p>“May the <i lang="gd">uruisg</i> be away with you!” she said sweetly
-and ducked. Mina’s fist merely caught the top of Kelpie’s
-tangled head, but her snarl was more effective.</p>
-
-<p>“Mind me so!” Her voice rasped. “And how do you
-think to be learning witchcraft else?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I am reading the crystal with you every night,” muttered
-Kelpie. “But you’ll never let me be trying alone, and
-you’ve taught me never so much as a single wee spell.”</p>
-
-<p>“And listen to her now!” The hateful voice was a croak
-of derision, echoed by a snort from the bulky gray shadow
-that was Bogle. “She cannot crawl yet and she is wanting
-to run!” And this time the blow fell on Kelpie’s high, thin
-cheekbone before she could think to duck. “Look into the
-crystal, <i lang="gd">amadain</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie considered further defiance and then decided
-against it. She didn’t really feel up to another beating tonight,
-and she did want to learn witchcraft. So she permitted
-Mina’s long gnarled hand to clutch her own so that
-Kelpie would be able to see what Mina did. For a seer
-could share his sight with another by touching him, and
-Kelpie, said Mina, was not yet ready to see alone. Night
-after night, for as long as she could remember, Kelpie had
-looked into the ball with Mina, describing what she saw,
-while the old woman questioned and corrected her.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said Mina, and Kelpie stared into the luminous
-ball. First it clouded, then the center began to glow dully,
-and then a vague picture developed. Kelpie’s dark head
-bent forward on its long neck, and her eyes grew wide
-and fixed....</p>
-
-<p>Two young men were riding along a loch-side on fine
-horses, with a blond giant behind them on a shaggy Highland
-pony. Bright tartan <i lang="gd">filleadh mór</i>—the bulky great-kilts—beat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-heavily against their thighs and swung over
-their shoulders, and their heads were high with the proud
-confidence of the well-born.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie recognized one of them. Young Glenfern, it was,
-whose father was a minor chieftain of Clan Cameron, and
-who had once given her a farthing and a sudden compassionate
-smile that lit his grave dark-eyed face like sunshine.
-The smile had roused in Kelpie a strange sensation
-of joy and resentment combined, and the feeling came
-back now as she stared. There was gladness behind the
-composure of his face as he rode, and his dark shoulder-length
-hair lifted in the breeze. And Kelpie, ignorant of
-the eternal attraction of lad for lass, frowned at the pleasant
-pain of her own feelings. She spared no more than a
-glance for the other young man in MacDonald tartan,
-whose narrow face seemed composed of straight lines,
-whose freckles matched the blaze of his red hair, whose
-expression seemed to laugh at all the world.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is that?” muttered Mina, peering. “What will
-they be to us? Do you know them?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” lied Kelpie, whose policy was to deceive Mina
-and Bogle whenever possible, just on principle.</p>
-
-<p>“I would be seeing something of the King, or the war,
-or Mac Cailein Mor,” said Mina fretfully.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie spared her a narrow, speculative glance. Why
-was Mina so interested of late in politics? Of what benefit
-to her was the blaze of civil war sweeping through the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-remote world of England and even the less remote world
-of the Lowlands? As far as Kelpie could see, it affected
-them not at all—except, of course, that Mac Cailein Mor,
-Marquis of Argyll, Chief of Clan Campbell, was head of
-the Covenant army of the Lowlands and therefore a
-merciless hunter of witches. But then Mac Cailein Mor
-came into these Western Highlands only now and then,
-and merely to wipe out here and there a few of the clans
-whom he had always hated. A terrible fierce enemy he
-was, no doubt, and one deserving the Evil Eye—but
-what was he to Mina, at all?</p>
-
-<p>“Is it still the lads riding, then?” Mina persisted. “And
-who will they be, whatever?”</p>
-
-<p>Always and always Kelpie must describe every detail,
-just as if Mina couldn’t see for herself. Kelpie was irritated.
-“How should I be knowing?” she snapped, and a
-blow on the ear set her head ringing.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t know! <i lang="gd">Amadain!</i> What tartan will they be wearing?”</p>
-
-<p>It was too much. Kelpie jerked away, too angry to care
-about the consequences. “<i lang="gd">Nathrach!</i>” She spat. “Look for
-yourself!”</p>
-
-<p>The motionless gray bulk in the shadows now stirred
-and gave a low, spiteful chuckle. “She cannot,” Bogle
-said, wheezing with satisfaction. “It is sure I am now; her
-Sight will be going from her. It was for that, these long
-years ago, that she must be stealing a wee bairn with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-ringed eyes of the Second Sight, and holding her hand so
-that she can see through other eyes what she cannot see
-for herself—”</p>
-
-<p>There was a scream of fury from old Mina, and a battered
-saucepan hurtled through the dusk, hit Bogle’s
-ragged shoulder, and fell into the heather. Bogle chuckled
-with malicious triumph. It wasn’t that he hated Mina in
-particular. He was quite impartial, was Bogle; he simply
-hated all mankind and greatly enjoyed seeing anyone unhappy.
-Now he ducked his head slightly and shook with
-laughter as the saucepan was followed by an assortment
-of sticks, stolen objects, and curses.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie sat perfectly still. A universe of startling possibilities
-was opening to her mind—because, with Mina’s
-hand no longer touching hers, the tiny picture in the
-crystal glowed more sharply, brightly clear than she had
-ever seen it.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">Wrapped in her tattered plaidie in a nest of last year’s
-dry bracken, she lay awake after the long gloaming had
-deepened to black and stars peeped out to grow dim again
-as the unearthly white radiance of the northern lights—the
-Dancers—shimmered and pulsed over the western
-hills. The wonder of the lights, as Kelpie watched, seemed
-to match the wonder in her heart.</p>
-
-<p>Had Bogle told the truth? Mina’s behavior made Kelpie<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-think he had. And it was certain that the crystal was even
-clearer for her without Mina’s touch.</p>
-
-<p>So then, was it also true that she had been stolen? From
-where? Kelpie reached back into her memory but could
-find nothing but the vagrant life of gypsies—tramping,
-begging, stealing, telling fortunes and selling spells and
-charms in the Highlands, running from witch-hunters in
-the Lowlands, sleeping under the sky.</p>
-
-<p>Och, how could she ever be finding out? Only, perhaps,
-by becoming a greater witch than Mina and putting the
-power upon her. And indeed, it was a great advantage if
-Mina no longer had the Sight! <i lang="gd">Dhé</i>, but she had other
-powers, had Mina, terrible powers of cursing and spells!
-She was clever, too, and for all her age she used a stick
-with great strength. Kelpie must be canny, she must so.
-The cold streams of the northern lights faded, and when
-they were gone, Kelpie was asleep.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_2">2. The Waif</h2>
-
-<p>It was one of those days that couldn’t decide between
-winter and spring. A cold, gusty wind whistled thinly
-through dark pine and barren birch and chased fat clouds
-over the sky one by one, causing flurries of hard rain to
-alternate with pale and hesitant sunshine.</p>
-
-<p>They had traveled the thirty miles of Loch Ness, stopping
-at the village near Urquhart Castle, and again at
-Kilcummin, where they had nearly been caught picking
-the purse of one of the MacDonald chieftains. And now
-they were moving south beside the silver ripples of Loch
-Lochy.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie was far ahead of Mina and Bogle, moving along
-high on the hillside with a prancing motion caused partly
-by high spirits and partly by the masses of tough-stemmed
-heather that covered the slope. She was still sore from her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-latest beating, and also hungry. Her life consisted largely
-of pain and hunger and cold, and was peopled by enemies
-to be feared and hated or fools to be tricked, but Kelpie
-had discovered all that long ago and was quite used to the
-fact and found life very enjoyable anyway. Certainly it
-was never dull, and she had a zest for adventure.</p>
-
-<p>And in spite of everything, the world was beautiful.
-Kelpie could forgive it a lot for that. In any case, her day
-was coming! She had deliberately described the details in
-last night’s crystal quite wrongly, and Mina hadn’t known.</p>
-
-<p>Or had she?</p>
-
-<p>This appalling thought caused Kelpie to miss her usually
-sure footing and to step right in the middle of a gorse
-bush. Neither the travel-hardened toughness of the bare
-brown foot nor the deceptive beauty of the silvery leaves
-saved her from a good pricking, and Kelpie swore with
-an ardent fluency that would have pleased Bogle greatly.
-Still hopping and cursing, she saw the movement and
-color of the three horsemen down the loch much later
-than she should have. They were coming along toward
-her in the path below and doubtless had well-filled purses
-which might well be lightened. She was halfway down
-the steep slope when suddenly the sun shone brightly
-from behind the latest cloud, and Kelpie recognized the
-scene from the crystal: young Glenfern and his red-haired
-companion and the giant blond <i lang="gd">ghillie</i> riding behind.</p>
-
-<p>But there was no time to wonder about it. Timing her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-movements carefully, Kelpie threw herself headlong down
-the last steep bank and sprawled full length in the path,
-almost under the horses’ feet.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Dhé!</i>” exclaimed Ian Cameron as he and Alex reined
-the horses so sharply that they reared for a moment on
-their hind legs. All he could see on the ground was a pitifully
-small and tattered figure, clearly in great danger of
-being trampled to death.</p>
-
-<p>Alex MacDonald, from his better position behind, saw
-something a little more. As Ian’s horse stepped alarmingly
-close to Kelpie, one “thin and helpless” arm moved, neatly
-and efficiently, the precise six inches required for safety.
-Alex’s red eyebrows arched, and an appreciative grin
-danced on his face. He relaxed and prepared to enjoy the
-comedy that was sure to follow.</p>
-
-<p>The crisis was over in a moment. “Is it all right you
-are?” demanded Ian of the wee figure, and the wee figure
-nodded biting its lip in a fine imitation of silent courage
-as it raised itself painfully to an elbow. For Kelpie had
-discovered that this sort of act was much more touching
-than loud wails and tears. She decided to have a hurt
-back, this being hard to disprove, as well as more impressive
-than other hurts. So she winced to indicate great pain
-and looked up with a brave and pathetic smile.</p>
-
-<p>The lads looked back at her. A scrawny waif it was,
-tattered and unbelievably dirty. The tangled dark hair,
-apparently never touched by water or comb, fell over the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-thin face in a way that reminded Ian of shaggy Highland
-cattle—except that these eyes were unlike those of any
-cattle that ever lived. They were long and black-fringed,
-set at a slant in the narrow face, and strangely ringed.
-Around each black pupil was a wide circle of smoky blue,
-then a narrow one of lightish gray, and a third of deep
-and vivid blue. Astonishing eyes, almost alarming! Where
-had he seen them before?</p>
-
-<p>While Ian stared in wonder and pity, Alex made a few
-further observations of his own. He noted the high cheekbones
-and the pointed chin and the wicked slant of black
-brows and the short upper lip—giving rather the effect,
-thought Alex, of a wicked elfin creature, or perhaps a
-witch. Amused but wary, he sat back and let his foster
-brother make up his mind. Ian wouldn’t have been noticing,
-of course, that the wee <i lang="gd">briosag</i> threw herself into the
-path on purpose. Ian had the way of always believing the
-best of everyone.</p>
-
-<p>Ian was aware of the cynical smile behind him. A nasty
-suspicious mind Alex had! It was a pity. What else could
-he be expecting of a poor wild waif like this? What sort
-of life must she have had? Then Ian remembered where
-he had seen her before: with that wicked old witch Mina.
-Och, the poor creature!</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis hurt you are,” he said worriedly, to Kelpie’s relief.
-She had feared for a moment that she’d been too
-subtle altogether.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Och, only a little,” she whispered, putting on a braw
-show of dreadful pain heroically borne.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, do not be overdoing it,” drawled Alex.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie shot him a look which, had she been a properly
-qualified witch, would surely have caused him to break
-out with every loathsome disease known to mankind. Unfortunately
-the only effect of her venomous glare was that
-Alex’s smile broadened to an insulting chuckle. Och, what
-a beast he was, then, with the bony, freckled, jeering face
-of him, and the two jaunty tufts of red hair jutting upward
-just where horns ought to sprout! She was about to
-tell him so, and in great detail, but just in time she remembered
-her role and Ian, who was still showing his
-pity and dismay.</p>
-
-<p>What a misfortune, he thought, that this should happen
-now, just when he and Alex were nearly home again after
-those long months away in Oxford, where he had been
-savagely homesick. They were about to get home early,
-and with very important news, and now this had to happen,
-not five miles from Glenfern.</p>
-
-<p>“What shall we be doing with you at all?” he said. “We
-cannot just be leaving her here!” he added fiercely, turning
-on Lachlan, the blond <i lang="gd">ghillie</i>, who, looking larger
-than usual on his short shaggy pony, had muttered something
-from behind.</p>
-
-<p>“Give her a copper,” Alex said, laughing, “and see how
-quickly she’ll mend!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Copper indeed! thought Kelpie. It was silver she was
-wanting. But she didn’t hide the gleam in her eyes quickly
-enough.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll show you,” said Alex. Slowly, tantalizingly, he drew
-a coin from his sporran and held it up. It gleamed silver,
-and Kelpie stared at it greedily. “See?” Alex chuckled
-and spun it toward her.</p>
-
-<p>Quick as the flash of bright metal in the air, her brown
-hand shot out to catch it in flight—then dropped, and the
-coin fell noiselessly on the path. Kelpie sat staring first at
-it and then at her own shoulder with dismay that was, for
-a change, perfectly genuine.</p>
-
-<p>“I—I <em>am</em> hurt!” she said with astonishment and then
-hastily snatched up the coin with her good left hand before
-they should change their minds.</p>
-
-<p>“Not too hurt to be picking up the silver,” observed
-Alex, but the gibe lacked his earlier light tone. Ian had
-already dismounted and was touching rather gingerly the
-filthy rags covering the shoulder in question. The lass
-frankly stank.</p>
-
-<p>This time Kelpie’s face showed an honest flicker of pain.
-“I think it will be sprained, or perhaps out of place,” Ian
-decided and looked at Alex.</p>
-
-<p>Alex looked back at him. “Well, so. And where does she
-live, then? Where are her people? Perhaps Lachlan could
-be taking her home.”</p>
-
-<p>Ian shrugged. “I think I’ve seen her with Old Mina and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-Black Bogle. Is that so?” he asked Kelpie, who nodded.</p>
-
-<p>Alex raised his eyebrows, not in the least surprised. It
-was logical that she should belong to the nastiest witch in
-Scotland.</p>
-
-<p>“Will they be coming along, then?” Ian inquired, and
-again Kelpie nodded, so bewildered by her unexpected
-hurt and the pain that was now shooting sharply through
-her shoulder that she couldn’t really think clearly at all.</p>
-
-<p>A glum silence settled on them, broken only by furtive
-and disapproving mutters from Lachlan. His duty was to
-be protecting his young masters, and now here they were
-consorting with witches, and he not able to prevent them
-at all, at all. He crossed himself.</p>
-
-<p>Ian sighed with relief when the bent figures of Mina and
-Bogle appeared up the loch-side. They would take care of
-their lass, and he and Alex could be away home.</p>
-
-<p>But it wasn’t that easy. Mina, after taking in the situation
-at a glance, burst into lamentations and curses that
-caused the ruddy Lachlan to go pale. “And is it our poor
-lass you have harmed, wicked beasts that you are?” she
-wailed, while Bogle stood like a massive old tree in disconcerting
-silence. “Ocho, ocho, whatever shall we be
-doing now? May the Evil Eye fall on all your cattle, and
-the pox upon yourselves, <i lang="gd">uruisgean</i> that you are!”</p>
-
-<p>Ian himself recoiled, not from the curses, but from the
-evil that was in this horrible old woman. What a dreadful
-thing that a young lass should belong to such as these! It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-was wicked! And yet, what could he do? What could anyone
-do? Unhappily he stood and stroked his horse’s nose
-while Alex handled the matter.</p>
-
-<p>Alex did handle it beautifully, with just the right mixture
-of indulgence, severity, and money. “’Twas no fault
-of ours that she fell, but altogether her own,” he told
-them. “Still, we are kind-hearted and willing to give you
-a bit of silver.” And when Mina would have demanded
-more, he fixed her with a stern hazel stare that caused her
-own pale, muddy eyes to waver and fall. It was all settled
-then, and Ian, feeling depressed, turned to mount his
-horse.</p>
-
-<p>And then Black Bogle, perhaps feeling that they had
-been worsted in the bargaining, reached down and jerked
-Kelpie roughly to her feet by the injured arm.</p>
-
-<p>The bit of brutality wrenched a choked cry of anguish
-from the girl. Ian whirled around, and Alex was off his
-horse in a flying leap and seized Bogle’s arm in a grip that
-had no gentleness whatever.</p>
-
-<p>“Let go of her, you vile bully!” Alex snarled, red with
-fury, while Ian removed the sagging Kelpie from Bogle’s
-grasp. Lachlan, brandishing a steel dirk a foot long, loomed
-ominously behind....</p>
-
-<p>When Kelpie was again able to take an active interest
-in events, she heard several voices: a cold, contemptuous
-one and a dangerously quiet one, Bogle’s growl and Mina’s
-whine, with dour grumblings in the background. More<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-money changed hands, and then Mina bent over Kelpie,
-a cunning, complacent look on her face.</p>
-
-<p>“The fine gentlemen will be taking you home with them
-to fix your hurt, and we will come to fetch you in the
-morning,” she said. “You will be properly grateful—and
-behave as I’d be wishing you to,” she added meaningly,
-and Kelpie nodded. She knew quite well what Mina meant—steal
-whatever she could lay hands on.</p>
-
-<p>Then Ian’s concerned face was close to hers as he removed
-the grimy once-red sash from about her waist and
-gently bound the injured arm to her side. “And who’s
-knowing what further damage the brute will have done?”
-he muttered.</p>
-
-<p>After that she found herself lifted to the fearful height
-of Alex’s horse and felt his hard young arm firmly around
-her. And at a slow walk they set along toward the fork
-in the path that led through the hills to Glenfern.</p>
-
-<p>By the time they reached the top of the pass, Kelpie
-was feeling much better. She began to relish the adventure,
-and she stared with interest at the scene before her
-as they paused. Ian’s face was alight with joy, and Lachlan
-actually had tears in his eyes. A strange thing that was,
-she thought wonderingly, ignorant as she was of the love
-of the Highlander for his own hills. Kelpie knew no home
-but the ground she walked on.</p>
-
-<p>The glen ran westward ahead of them, a long little
-valley cradled in hills that were just turning jewel-green<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-with new bracken and showing dark with juniper and
-white here and there with birch trunks and unmelted
-snow. On the northern slope stood a weathered gray house
-which seemed large and grand indeed to Kelpie, and
-scattered along the glen were little rye-thatched shieling
-huts of unmortared stone, nestled into the hillside as if
-they had grown there. Farther down the glen was a wee
-loch of silver and blue, ringed with white birches and
-dotted with green islets.</p>
-
-<p>“Loch nan Eilean—Lake of the Islands,” murmured
-Ian with his heart in his voice, and they rode on down
-the hill and along to the stables.</p>
-
-<p>Alex lifted Kelpie down from the horse, looked at her
-oddly, and then with a grin forced open her left hand.</p>
-
-<p>“You little devil!” He laughed. “You’ve picked my
-pocket!”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_3">3. Glenfern</h2>
-
-<p>Kelpie perched gingerly on a fine brocaded chair near
-the door of the drawing room and gazed curiously
-at the scene before her. For house and glen had, on their
-arrival, erupted into a perfect frenzy of excitement, questions,
-tears, laughter, shouting, teasing, and hugging.</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Dhé!</i> And was this the way most families were behaving
-toward one another? Kelpie found it baffling and achingly
-strange, and vaguely annoying; and on the whole she was
-glad enough to have been forgotten for the moment while
-she recovered her usual cool head.</p>
-
-<p>Talk rose and surged in a mixture of Gaelic and English.
-Cameron of Glenfern paced back and forth, the rusty-red
-and green of his kilt swinging about strong knees. Lady
-Glenfern, smiling and anxious at once, sat in a carved oak
-chair, her harebell-blue skirts billowing about her feet.
-Two small kilted lads pranced with excitement, a bittie<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-lass clamored to be away up in Ian’s arms, and a bonnie
-lass in green, perhaps near Kelpie’s age, clung affectionately
-to both Ian and Alex at once.</p>
-
-<p>Through the open window Kelpie could see Lachlan
-standing in a ring of laughing and chattering clansmen,
-and it began to dawn on her that this was no ordinary
-homecoming. The lads had been away to school in a far-off
-place in England and had returned quite unexpectedly
-with important news.</p>
-
-<p>“We knew that King Charles had fled London and set
-up his court at Oxford,” said Glenfern. “And you wrote
-that Montrose was there, awaiting permission to come and
-raise an army in Scotland for the King. Now you say he’s
-coming?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye so,” said Alex cynically, “but a bit late, now that
-Argyll has got all the Lowlands and some of the Highlands
-well under the thumb of the cursed Covenant! Were you
-knowing that the Covenant army has crossed the border
-into England and will be fighting along with the Parliament
-army against the King?”</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Dhé!</i>” exclaimed Glenfern in dismay. “Is it too late,
-then? Why was the King waiting so long?”</p>
-
-<p>Alex shrugged. “Och, King Charles has a grand talent
-for not seeing what he doesn’t like, and for doing the
-wrong thing altogether or the right thing too late.”</p>
-
-<p>Ian, whose loyalty was a simple and wholehearted
-thing, frowned at his foster brother. “He’s our king and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-a Stewart,” he reminded him and then turned to his father.
-“At any rate, we were thinking we’d best come home while
-we still could—and perhaps join Montrose when he
-arrives.”</p>
-
-<p>None of this meant a great deal to Kelpie, so she began
-looking around with greedy wonder at the drawing room.
-Och, the glowing fine old silver on the sideboard, the
-great portraits on the tapestry-hung walls, the grand,
-massive carved furniture worn smooth as silk by time and
-polish, and the damask draperies at real glass windows!
-It wasn’t fair that some people should have so much! They
-should be sharing it, they should, and it was up to Kelpie,
-she felt, to see to the sharing.</p>
-
-<p>A small silver snuff box was lying on a table near her;
-an instant later, it wasn’t. Kelpie’s long slanted eyes
-flickered with satisfaction, but before she could so much
-as thrust her loot under her rags, a redheaded figure bent
-over her and a sinewy long hand grasped her wrist gently
-but with great strength.</p>
-
-<p>“Really, Ian,” observed Alex lazily, “you must be paying
-more attention to your guest.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ssssss!” said Kelpie, again wishing she could cast the
-Evil Eye on him. But instead the eyes of the entire family
-were now on her.</p>
-
-<p>“My sorrow!” said Ian ruefully. “I was forgetting!”</p>
-
-<p>“A shame to all of us, and she injured!” declared his
-mother, standing up. “’Tis only for the night, you were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-saying, Ian? Well, so, we will see to the shoulder—but not
-in the house, I think,” she added, looking at Kelpie’s filthy
-clothes.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” agreed her husband. “Come away out to the wee
-room in the stable, which will do nicely, I think.”</p>
-
-<p>And Kelpie, who had expected to be beaten and turned
-out for her theft, stared. They were daft, all of them! But
-presently she forgot their daftness because of the surprisingly
-painful business of having her shoulder tended.
-She gritted her teeth and cursed vigorously, and after it
-was over she was glad enough to lie down on the small cot
-in the stable-room and be left alone to sleep.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">Kelpie awoke with an oppressive sense of being trapped.
-Blindly hostile walls and ceiling surrounded her, shutting
-out sky and wind. In sudden panic she would have leaped
-up and fled to the safety of outside, but the first movement
-brought the sharp, forgotten pain of her shoulder. She
-gasped slightly, blinked, and noticed a pair of dark eyes
-regarding her from a flower face. It was the wee bit of a
-lassie she had seen in the big house, who stood watching
-Kelpie with grave sympathy. She was a tiny thing, her
-body slight as it rose from the primrose bulk of her long
-skirts, but Kelpie was disconcerted. The gaze seemed to
-understand too much.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor lady!” said the mite, shaking her honey-brown
-head sorrowfully. “Is it a sore bad hurt, then?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Kelpie said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Light danced into the dark eyes. “Wee Mairi will kiss
-it and make it well.” Quite undeterred by thoughts of
-cleanliness, the child leaned over the cot and dropped a
-soft kiss on the bandages covering Kelpie’s shoulder, and
-then another on her cheek. “Now it will stop hurting,
-just, and you can be happy,” she announced. Crooking a
-small finger in the old gesture of calling down a blessing
-from heaven, she turned and trotted out, leaving a shaken
-Kelpie behind her.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing like this had ever happened to her before!
-Children had always clung to their mothers, frightened
-of the witch’s lass. No one at all had ever kissed her and
-Kelpie, to her dismay, found that her eyes had filled with
-tears. Och, this would never do at all! She must be hard
-and strong, or else how would she ever survive in the
-world she knew? She closed her treacherous eyes and
-concentrated on subduing the weakness.</p>
-
-<p>The weakness was just about subdued when she became
-aware of more company in the room. This time it was a
-pair of seven or eight-year-old lads with penetrating
-blue eyes set in identical tanned faces which were alight
-with passionate curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie, still shaken and very much on the defensive
-from her encounter with Wee Mairi, glared at them with
-frank hostility. They went on staring at her with unwavering
-interest. <i lang="gd">Dhé!</i> They were nearly as disconcerting as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-Wee Mairi—and there were two of them. Kelpie decided
-to take the offensive.</p>
-
-<p>“Ssssss!” she hissed, baring her teeth and beetling her
-thick eyebrows menacingly. The bright eyes rounded
-slightly, but with increased curiosity rather than alarm.</p>
-
-<p>“Were you crying?” asked one boy candidly.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you a witch?” demanded the other.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie considered. It wasn’t in the least safe to be
-thought a witch. It could lead to all sorts of uncomfortable
-and fatal things. On the other hand, she had never known
-real safety in any case, and it would be pleasant to impress,
-or even frighten, these complacent lads.</p>
-
-<p>“I am so,” she said with an intimidating scowl. “I can
-put curses on ye, or the Evil Eye whatever.”</p>
-
-<p>They were unintimidated. “Show us!” suggested one
-hopefully.</p>
-
-<p>“Alex was saying you cannot,” challenged the other.</p>
-
-<p>“Och, just you wait!” said Kelpie darkly. “I will be
-fixing that Alex as ever was!”</p>
-
-<p>“What will you do to him?” persisted the skeptic with
-morbid curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>“What is your name?” asked his twin.</p>
-
-<p>“Kelpie!” said she in triumph, and at last she had impressed
-them. For every Highland child knew that a
-Kelpie was a kind of fairy person, a water witch who wails
-at night by lochs and rivers for a victim, or cries for admittance
-at shuttered windows.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I don’t believe it,” said the skeptical twin, but he said
-it halfheartedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ronald! Donald!” The green-frocked lass who was
-Kelpie’s age stood in the doorway, with a big-boned young
-woman behind her carrying a tray. “Och, naughty lads!
-Ye shouldn’t be bothering in here, and well ye know
-it!”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s a witch, and a kelpie too,” reported one of them,
-unabashed.</p>
-
-<p>“At least she says so, but we haven’t seen her put a
-spell yet,” added the other. “When will you be showing
-us one?”</p>
-
-<p>The young woman nearly dropped her tray as she hastily
-tried to make the sign of the cross. Her young mistress
-looked faintly alarmed but stood her ground. “Be away,
-now,” she told the twins. “I’ll take that, Fiona.” She took
-the tray from the quaking Fiona and set it on a stool beside
-Kelpie’s cot.</p>
-
-<p>“We thought you’d be waking up hungry,” she said and
-then looked at Kelpie apologetically, as if ashamed of her
-own good fortune and pretty clothes. “My name is Eithne,”
-she added, pronouncing it “Ay-na,” with the Highland
-lilt in her voice. “And the twins must not be saying such
-things—about your being a witch, I mean. Are you?” she
-asked, overcome by curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie already had hand and mouth full of cold venison<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-pie and new-baked bannocks and had no intention of
-risking the rest of the food. She shook her head firmly and
-put on her most innocent and helpless expression.</p>
-
-<p>“Och, no!” she mumbled truthfully around her bannock.
-“Not I!”</p>
-
-<p>At this moment a gaunt black cat sidled through the
-open door, spat at Fiona, and with a joyful yowl leaped
-right on top of Kelpie. This was unfortunate, since black
-cats were known to have a fondness for witches.</p>
-
-<p>Fiona backed up to the door, crossing herself furiously,
-and Eithne looked awed. “<i lang="gd">Dhé!</i>” she whispered. “Dubh
-has never done that before for anyone!”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie looked at Dubh with a mixture of pleasure and
-irritation. She liked cats, but this one had timed his appearance
-poorly.</p>
-
-<p>Dubh looked back at her, great topaz eyes glowing into
-hers steadily and inscrutably, and his purring filled the
-room.</p>
-
-<p>“He is wanting some food,” suggested Kelpie lamely.
-But Dubh didn’t show the slightest interest in her meal.
-Instead, he arranged himself comfortably on top of her
-legs.</p>
-
-<p>“Animals are always liking me,” Kelpie went on with
-better success. Eithne’s face brightened and cleared. Of
-course! And if animals liked a person, it was a sure sign
-that the person was to be trusted. Eithne, like her brother,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-wanted to think the best of everyone, especially of those
-whom life seemed to have treated unfairly. Besides, Kelpie
-interested her.</p>
-
-<p>Presently she was seated on the edge of the cot, listening
-to the lurid tale of Kelpie’s life and even being shown
-some of the scars and bruises on the thin shoulders and
-back. Eithne was hot and shaking with shocked indignation.
-It was perfectly dreadful, appalling!</p>
-
-<p>And Kelpie, rising to great tragic heights, played up
-to the most sympathetic audience she had ever had. The
-long ringed eyes fixed on Eithne’s brown ones were soft
-and luminous and oh, so innocent.</p>
-
-<p>But the “innocent” eyes reminded Alex of Dubh’s,
-as he entered the room and got a good view of both pairs.
-He hadn’t been easy in his mind about Eithne’s being in
-here so long. Ringed eyes like that weren’t canny. The
-lass might well be a witch, at that, though likely too
-young to be very dangerous. All the same, his foster
-sister must be protected.</p>
-
-<p>“Come away from her and out of here!” he ordered
-Eithne brusquely.</p>
-
-<p>He should have known better. She whirled on him,
-round chin jutting out indignantly. “And will you be judging
-her unfairly, like all the villagers and all?” Eithne
-demanded. “Don’t deny it, Alex MacDonald! You’re thinking
-hard, suspicious things about her this very minute!”</p>
-
-<p>Alex’s sunburned face looked disconcerted at this sudden<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-attack, but only for an instant. “Oh, aye,” he agreed
-cheerfully. “I am that. And why wouldn’t I be, with the
-many reasons she’s given me already? Has she put a spell
-on you, <i lang="gd">m’eudail</i>? Best be away to the house and see if
-Catriona can break it.”</p>
-
-<p>Eithne stamped her foot, but it wasn’t easy to find a
-retort. “You—you talk like a Covenanter!” she finally
-flung at him scathingly and flounced out in a swirl of
-petticoats, Fiona behind her.</p>
-
-<p>Alex scratched his red head, more confounded by her
-passion than by her rather shaky logic. He grinned wryly
-at Kelpie, who looked back at him in triumph.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor innocent waif!” he jeered, putting one foot up on
-the edge of the cot, where Dubh spat at it. He rested an
-elbow on his kilted knee and stared at Kelpie with interest.
-She stared back through slitted eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Before you’re up and away again,” he said, casually,
-“I’ve a wee word to be saying to you, and it is this. Unlike
-Ian and Eithne, I’ve a nasty suspicious mind, I have.”
-He wagged his head sadly. “And I’ve a picture in my head
-of you away off tomorrow bearing every movable thing in
-the glen hid in your rags, and we sitting here without so
-much as a stick of furniture left to us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed, and I would never be doing such a thing!”
-cried Kelpie indignantly. “How could I be carrying it
-all?”</p>
-
-<p>Alex laughed outright. Kelpie scowled. She had been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-cursed and beaten often enough, but she had never before
-been laughed at, and she didn’t like it.</p>
-
-<p>Alex stopped laughing and grinned at her. “Well, so,
-and I’ve a soft heart in me, so I’ll be doing nothing about
-such matters as pocket-picking or a certain snuff box, nor
-will anyone else, I think. But”—and he leaned forward a
-little—“should anything else just happen to be missing
-when you leave, then you’ll be finding the hand of every
-Cameron and MacDonald, all through the Great Glen and
-Lochaber from Loch Leven to Loch Ness, turned against
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie showed sharp white teeth in a defiant laugh.
-“Are you thinking I’ve never heard threats before?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, I’m sure you have, and most unpleasant ones,”
-retorted Alex. “But have you ever had one like this carried
-out, and two entire clans arrayed against you, and every
-<i lang="gd">ghillie</i> on the watch?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie narrowed her eyes. He had her, just! And to have
-the Great Glen and Lochaber closed against them would
-be a sore handicap indeed.</p>
-
-<p>“Sssss!” said Kelpie with deep sincerity.</p>
-
-<p>Alex grinned again. “I’m not done,” he said briskly. “It
-seems that my foster sister has given you her friendship.
-You’re not deserving it, of course, but for Eithne that’s
-good enough reason for giving it. Now, I am fond of
-Eithne, and if you should be taking advantage of her or
-hurting her in any way, I shall see to it that you are punished—even<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-if I must denounce you as a witch. Do you
-understand?”</p>
-
-<p>It was a fearful threat, and Kelpie, used to bluster and
-invective, was unnerved by his very calm.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Nathrach!</i>” She spat “Remember, witches can curse!
-Shall I be putting the Evil Eye on you?” And she widened
-her slanted eyes until the dark and light rings were smoldering
-circles.</p>
-
-<p>Alex laughed again, infuriatingly. “And if you haven’t
-already put the Evil Eye on me at least three times today,
-it must be that you have not got it at all. For you’ve
-wanted to, haven’t you? No, I’ll wager you cannot do it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mina can,” muttered Kelpie sulkily.</p>
-
-<p>“Now that I’ll believe,” he agreed readily. “But even
-the Evil Eye wouldn’t save the two of you from being
-burned as witches, would it?”</p>
-
-<p>Och, and he was so sure of himself! Kelpie saw suddenly
-that great cunning and apparent submission were her best
-weapons. “And if I am keeping the bargain?” she hinted,
-looking at his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve no bargain.” Alex corrected her mildly. “I’m no
-such fool. It’s just that I’ve been telling you in a friendly
-way what will happen if you should be stealing anything
-or hurting Eithne, that’s all.” And he sauntered out, his
-kilt swinging jauntily about his brown knees.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_4">4. The Daft Folk</h2>
-
-<p>Kelpie slept heavily for the first part of the night and
-then awoke to stare restlessly into the stifling,
-closed-in darkness. How could a body tell the hour, shut
-in like this? She must be out into the free air and waiting
-when Mina and Bogle came for her.</p>
-
-<p>She got up and groped her way out into the warm, horse-scented
-main part of the stable. Dubh, a blacker shape in
-the dark, came and wove himself around her ankles as
-she felt for the door with her good left hand; her right
-shoulder was still too sore to move.</p>
-
-<p>And then she was outside in the cold sweet air of pre-dawn.
-The hills to the southeast stood black against a
-thin ghost of gray in the sky, and the glen was filled with
-a toneless purple except for the ropes of pearly mist strung
-down the clefts of the hills and over the loch. A tiny
-burn and waterfall danced in a white thread at the far end
-of the glen, and the wind smelled of the sea.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Kelpie drew in her breath deeply, and the beauty of it
-made a sore ache inside her and a daft desire to cry. It
-was something deep within her, just, that had these
-strange feelings now and then, and she must be careful
-never to let them out.</p>
-
-<p>It was these daft folk at Glenfern who were making her
-feel peculiar. She must be away from them, away from the
-trapping walls and alien people, to the freedom of the hills
-and sky. She slipped like a wraith around to the back of the
-stable, where the ground sloped upward, wrapping her
-bare ankles in the wetness of rank grass and heather and
-stinging nettles, which she had long ago stopped noticing.
-And at the upper corner a long skinny arm reached out
-with the swiftness of a snake, seized Kelpie’s wrist (fortunately,
-the uninjured one), and shook her.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve been waiting for you this long while!” Mina
-began pulling her up the hill.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie came willingly enough. She was almost glad to
-see Mina’s evil old face. She knew where she was with
-Mina. She could hate and be hated single-mindedly, and
-always know how Mina would behave. The people at
-Glenfern were unpredictable and confusing.</p>
-
-<p>Black Bogle was waiting in a clump of snowy-trunked
-birches halfway up the hill. He said nothing, just grinned
-without warmth or welcome.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, and what have you got?” demanded Mina, turning
-upon Kelpie with greedy fingers held out.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Nothing at all,” muttered Kelpie defensively. “The
-red-haired <i lang="gd">uruisg</i> took back the silver and the snuff box
-and said if I was taking anything else he would be setting
-all the Camerons and MacDonalds against us.”</p>
-
-<p>Mina cursed Alex and Kelpie both, but with her mind
-so clearly upon other matters that Kelpie didn’t feel the
-curses would be very effective. “Well, so!” concluded the
-old woman suddenly. “And just as well, perhaps. For we
-are wanting you to bide here for a time.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie stared, her mouth drooping open. <i lang="gd">Dhé!</i> Now
-Mina was being as unpredictable as anyone in the glen
-below! “And whatever for, if I cannot be stealing anything?”
-she demanded. “And why would they be letting
-me stay?”</p>
-
-<p>Mina struck at her. Kelpie ducked automatically, and
-Bogle chuckled. He would also have chuckled had the
-blow landed.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be persuading them, just,” commanded Mina.
-“Play upon their sympathy. Let them be making you a
-maidservant if they will—and mind that you be a good
-one. ’Tis a spy you’ll be, to watch and listen, for the lads
-are fresh from England and knowing about affairs. Be
-learning how they feel about the King and Mac Cailein
-Mor and the Lord Graham of Montrose. And keep them
-feeling kindly toward you, for we may use them one day.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie hooded her eyes thoughtfully. She had already
-learned a good bit—but why tell Mina now? Better to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-wait and see where her own advantage lay and learn
-what Mina was up to.</p>
-
-<p>“And where will ye be going?” she ventured to ask.</p>
-
-<p>“Never you mind!” snapped Mina. “We will be returning
-for you when we are ready, and then it may be that
-you can learn some of the witchcraft you are wanting so
-badly.” Beneath their wrinkled lids her faded old eyes
-gleamed at Kelpie watchfully.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie kept her own eyes veiled. She knew how much
-Mina’s promise was worth, but here was hope that Mina
-might really be going to teach her at last, for her own
-profit. Kelpie must be very docile, then, and never let
-Mina suspect what was in her mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well so,” she agreed indifferently, it being best
-to show neither reluctance nor enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>“Once more with the crystal, then,” ordered Mina, producing
-it; and Kelpie obediently sat down in the dew-heavy
-clumps of long grass. Her face was lowered meekly,
-to conceal the knowledge that Mina depended on her to
-see the picture. The gray light was now growing rosy over
-the bare top of Meall Dubh. The rosiness was reflected
-in the shining ball and then moved and scattered.</p>
-
-<p>“A battle!” whispered Kelpie, her eyes large and fixed
-on the scene. But it wasn’t like the other battles she had
-seen in the crystal—no cavalry charge of armored men
-on green slopes, but a charge of Highlanders on the
-steeper, wilder hills of Scotland. She could clearly make<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-out the bright tartans, and the double-handed claymores
-flashing, and she could almost hear the wailing skirl of
-the pipes. There was a red-bearded giant in the thick
-of it, and a slight brown-haired man on a horse, wearing
-a blue bonnet, and it was he who seemed to be the power
-behind the charge—though Kelpie couldn’t say how she
-knew. And now the others were fleeing in the fury of
-the attack, and it seemed to Kelpie that she saw the blue
-and green Campbell tartan among the defeated.</p>
-
-<p>Her voice muted and hurried, Kelpie described the
-scene to Mina, leaving out the name of the tartan and
-any other details that she guessed Mina might not be able
-to make out for herself.</p>
-
-<p>And now there was a different scene, and there was the
-brown-haired man, dressed quite unfittingly as a groom,
-clasping the hand of the red-bearded one, who was looking
-altogether astonished and overjoyed, and behind them,
-on the hillside, was a cheering crowd of Highlanders.</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” demanded Mina.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie shook her head. “A hillside and a crowd of
-people,” she murmured, “but ’tis all cloudy.” And then
-she held her breath.</p>
-
-<p>But Mina didn’t seem to know that Kelpie was deceiving
-her. “I wanted news of Argyll,” she grumbled and put
-the crystal away. Then, after a parting cuff, she strode up
-the hill with Bogle—and not so much as a parting glance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-from either of them. Och, they had some pressing purpose,
-the two of them, and whatever could it be?</p>
-
-<p>The eastern sky was apricot now. The sun would be up
-in a few minutes, and already golden light was pouring
-across the very tops of the hills on the far side of the
-glen, but a fitful wind was coming from the west, promising
-to bring rain clouds over those same bright hills....</p>
-
-<p>What if, after all, Glenfern refused to let her stay?
-Feeling excited and forlorn at once, Kelpie turned her
-back on the sunrise and walked slowly down the hill.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">She approached the house on lagging feet, suddenly
-nervous. Ian’s father was outside the door, talking to
-Lachlan and an old man. Lachlan already disliked her,
-and Glenfern looked as if he could be stern indeed. Kelpie
-drooped her mouth into an expression of wistful apology,
-arranged the sling on her arm so that it showed up well,
-and hovered tentatively a few feet away.</p>
-
-<p>Glenfern’s face was kindly enough when he looked up
-and saw her. “Good morning,” he greeted her. “And how
-are you feeling?”</p>
-
-<p>“Good morning,” replied Kelpie, “and well enough,”—making
-it sound like a brave lie. “But—” She stopped,
-looking frightened. “Mina and Bogle came,” she began,
-and paused.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh. And you’ll be wanting a bit of breakfast before<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-you’re away off with them?” suggested Glenfern with a
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re away off without me,” blurted Kelpie, looking
-helpless. “They’re not wanting me any more.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Dhé!</i>” said Glenfern. He didn’t seem overjoyed.</p>
-
-<p>“I have nowhere to go,” added Kelpie pathetically, in
-case he hadn’t got the point.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye,” said Glenfern, who had got it very quickly.
-“Well, come away in, and we’ll see my wife.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Mise-an-dhui!</i>” said Lady Glenfern when they told her.
-She looked even less delighted than her husband.</p>
-
-<p>Eithne looked up from sorting and polishing silver. “Och,
-what a wicked thing!” she exclaimed, her creamy oval
-face troubled and sympathetic. “And have you no other
-relations?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie shook her head. Wee Mairi, gathering that something
-was wrong, ran over and slipped her warm little
-hand into Kelpie’s, and the twins looked up in surprise,
-for they had thought everyone had more relations than
-could be counted.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps she had better be staying with us,” they suggested
-through mouthfuls of buttered scone—an extra
-breakfast, no doubt. “She could put the Evil Eye on all
-our enemies, whatever,” added Ronald hopefully.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re not really a witch, are you?” asked Lady Glenfern
-seriously. A white witch, of course, was a great benefit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-to have around, since all her powers were used for good;
-and the Kirk of the Lowlands had not yet reached far
-enough into the Highlands to make even white powers
-dangerous. Still, the lass of Old Mina was more likely to
-be a black witch, than a white one.</p>
-
-<p>“No!” Said Kelpie vehemently, and with perfect truth.
-(How she wished she were!) “And I would never be
-wanting to harm anyone,” she added, less truthfully.</p>
-
-<p>Alex, sitting cross-legged on the far window seat, sent
-her a bright hazel glance of derision, which Kelpie ignored.</p>
-
-<p>Glenfern raised an eyebrow at his wife, sighed, and
-smiled kindly. “Would you be wanting to stay with us,
-lassie?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I would so,” replied Kelpie forthrightly. This was easier
-than she had hoped—if only Alex didn’t spoil it. “I could
-be working,” she offered meekly. “’Tis little enough I am
-knowing about the insides of houses, but I learn quickly.”</p>
-
-<p>Alex muffled a snort of laughter. They all glanced at
-him, but he merely gave Kelpie a look that was both
-warning and mirthful.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie, who would have made a good general, seized
-the offensive boldly. “He is thinking I want to steal things,”
-she announced, nodding her tangled black head in Alex’s
-direction.</p>
-
-<p>“And do you not?” asked Glenfern bluntly.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” admitted Kelpie candidly. Didn’t everyone?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-“But I would not be doing it,” she went on, her blue-ringed
-eyes fixed on Glenfern’s, “because you would be
-sending me away if I did.”</p>
-
-<p>It was the best thing she could have said. Glenfern
-lifted his dark head with a shout of delighted laughter.
-Everyone seemed pleased and amused, and Kelpie made
-a mental note that truth was sometimes even more effective
-than a lie. She looked demure and managed at the same
-time to shoot a triumphant glance at Alex. But, disappointingly,
-he only grinned.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well so,” decided Lady Glenfern, smiling at her.
-“It is not many people can claim to having a friendly
-Kelpie staying with them. And I think you have it in you
-to be a good lass, and trustworthy.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie looked at her, deeply shocked. How could a
-great lady like this be so foolishly trusting? And all of
-them seemed the same—excepting Alex, of course, who
-was sensibly suspicious. Kelpie definitely approved of
-this, although she hated his uncanny astuteness and his
-mockery. As for the rest of them, indeed and indeed, it was
-a wonder they had managed to survive so long. Fooling
-them was almost too easy, like catching a baby hare with
-a broken leg.</p>
-
-<p>She felt the same way all over again on that very afternoon,
-after a most difficult morning.</p>
-
-<p>The difficulties had begun almost immediately after
-Kelpie’s too easy acceptance into the life of Glenfern. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-seemed that Lady Glenfern had peculiar ideas on the
-subject of cleanliness and propriety. To begin with, there
-was the bath, the first Kelpie had ever had, supervised
-by the mistress herself, and executed by Fiona and her
-formidable mother Catriona. Catriona grumbled constantly,
-and Fiona crossed herself every time Kelpie looked
-at her—which she did frequently and maliciously.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was the matter of her name. “Have you not
-a proper Christian name?” asked Lady Glenfern while
-Kelpie’s matted hair was being violently combed and
-plaited into two long, thick tails. Kelpie, unable to shake
-her head, and with eyes smarting from the pulling, made
-a sound that meant no.</p>
-
-<p>“My sorrow!” remarked her new mistress. “A strange
-thing to be naming a lass for a water witch! Would you
-not rather be called something else? Rena, perhaps, or
-Morag?”</p>
-
-<p>But Kelpie caught a glimpse of herself just then in the
-small mirror that stood on a table, and a fleeting shaft of
-panic shot through her. It wasn’t herself at all! Her face
-was a stranger, with the dirt off and the hair pulled back
-wetly to show all of her eyes and forehead and even her
-fawn-shaped ears. <i lang="gd">Dhé!</i> If they changed her name as well,
-perhaps she would cease altogether to be herself and become
-someone else entirely!</p>
-
-<p>“No!” she said vehemently. And the subject was
-dropped.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But when they gave her a fine-woven blue woolen dress
-of Eithne’s for her very own, and even something to wear
-under it, she began to take a more favorable view of the
-situation. And when, in the afternoon, she met Ian coming
-in the front door, he hardly seemed to know her at
-first. His eyes opened wide as he shook the heavy rain
-from his plaidie, and then he gave her one of his rare
-and sudden smiles that was like sunlight out of the
-drenching sky. Kelpie grinned back, preening herself
-frankly in her new finery.</p>
-
-<p>“Och, aren’t you grand, just!” Ian said admiringly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, aye,” agreed Kelpie, seeing no reason to deny it.
-“But I should have a pocket and a wee bit of silver to
-put in it,” she added hopefully.</p>
-
-<p>Ian laughed at her cheekiness. “Perhaps some day,” he
-said. “But I know that you will not be stealing them, for
-you have said you won’t, and I trust you.”</p>
-
-<p>There it was again! Kelpie shook her head in wonder.
-That wasn’t at all the reason she wouldn’t be stealing,
-and how could he be so daft as to think it? His warm
-brown eyes and the lovely chiseled, sensitive curve of his
-mouth quite melted Kelpie, and before she could stop
-herself she was warning him.</p>
-
-<p>“Och,” she blurted. “You mustn’t be trusting people so
-easily! It is not safe whatever!”</p>
-
-<p>“Mustn’t I trust you, then?” asked Ian gently. “Are you
-not wanting to be trusted, Kelpie?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Indeed so,” explained Kelpie kindly. “Everyone is
-wanting to be trusted, because then it is much easier to
-fool the ones who trust them. And you may be trusting
-me because you have a stick over me, but it is foolish to
-do so otherwise.”</p>
-
-<p>They looked at each other pityingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps people are not so good as I would like to
-think,” said Ian slowly. “But I think they are not so bad
-as you have found them, either, Kelpie. And I would liefer
-trust mistakenly than to mistrust unfairly. Do you understand
-that?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Kelpie.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_5">5. Bewitchery</h2>
-
-<p>It was a strange new life she was in, indeed! Walls and
-roof were like a trap at first, although it was a grand
-thing to be warm and dry with all the storm demons
-howling over the earth. It was strange to have certain tasks
-at certain times, too, and not easy for a gypsy lass to whom
-time was nothing. It was strange to eat hot meals three
-times a day, and at a table, with the heat coming from the
-huge kitchen fireplace. But it was not so strange to have
-the servants lowering at her suspiciously. For the clanspeople
-of the glen, unlike their chief and his family, never
-trusted this water witch for a moment. An evil sprite she
-was, and no mistake about it. They watched every move
-she made.</p>
-
-<p>Still, suspicion was less after her first Sunday there,
-after she had gathered with the others to hear Glenfern
-read the service. It was well known that no witch would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-dare enter a church or hear the Holy Word, lest the roof
-fall in or some other dire thing happen. Kelpie herself was
-uneasy about this at first. True, she was not a witch, but
-she wanted to be, and she had read the crystal with Mina,
-and she wasn’t altogether certain what might happen.
-Still, it wasn’t a proper church, with a priest, but only
-Glenfern reading the Anglican service—and in any case,
-she dared not refuse. So she went, heart beating faster
-than usual, and was greatly relieved when nothing dreadful
-happened.</p>
-
-<p>True to her promise, Kelpie was diligent and learned
-quickly. Her reward was free time to wander in the encircling
-hills or to be with the other young people—and
-this was strangest of all, for they played and chattered and
-joked in a way quite novel to Kelpie, with laughter among
-them, and an ease and affection that held no wariness.
-Under the bewitchment of it, Kelpie found herself dropping
-her own guard more and more often. She liked being
-with them! There was more joy in it than in shouting and
-dancing alone on a hilltop; a different excitement from
-that she felt when cutting purses. As the days passed, she
-often had to remind herself of the advice she had given
-Ian. To be too relaxed could be dangerous—especially with
-that sharp-minded Alex about.</p>
-
-<p>Still, she couldn’t help enjoying those hours, and presently
-something clicked in her mind, and she understood
-the baffling thing they called teasing.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Kelpie, Eithne, Ian, and Alex were sitting nearly waist-deep
-in the tangle of heather and bog-myrtle that rimmed
-Loch nan Eilean on a sunny afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you <em>sure</em> you’re not wanting a proper name besides
-‘Kelpie’?” Eithne asked, her soft voice worried and laughing
-at once. “It seems so insulting, just, that your parents....”</p>
-
-<p>Parents? Suddenly Kelpie remembered what Bogle had
-said. Suppose she had truly been stolen? Suppose she
-were really the daughter of a chief? Och, the glory of it!
-Wealth and importance, lovely gowns and jewels, silver
-buckles on real leather shoes, and a silver belt around her
-waist, and oh, the safety of never having to run from angry
-crowds....</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Dhé!</i>” she announced eagerly. “Mina and Bogle will
-not be my parents, at all.” She paused dramatically and
-prepared to launch the rest of her news. How startled and
-respectful they would be! Why hadn’t she thought of it
-sooner?</p>
-
-<p>“Och, now!” Alex turned twin sparks of laughter upon
-her. “And haven’t I been waiting, just, for you to be telling
-us? Kelpie has suddenly remembered,” he explained to the
-others solemnly, “that she was stolen by the gypsies when
-a wee bairn and is truly the daughter of a great chief, or
-perhaps of royal blood.”</p>
-
-<p>“How did you know?” began Kelpie and then stopped.
-The others were chuckling as at a great joke. Alex had put<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-the blight of ridicule on her story—though it was at least
-half true. And now no one would ever be believing it at
-all!</p>
-
-<p>“Beast!” she spat. “It is <em>true</em>!”</p>
-
-<p>“As ever was!” agreed Alex jauntily and ducked her
-angry fist. Then he caught her wrist, put it firmly in her
-lap, and sat grinning at her. “You’re a wonderful wee liar,
-aren’t you just?” he observed admiringly.</p>
-
-<p>“Ou, aye,” admitted Kelpie a trifle smugly before she
-realized that he had tricked her again. “But this time,” she
-pointed out with indignation, “I am not lying.”</p>
-
-<p>“And would you not be saying the same thing if you
-were lying?” he persisted.</p>
-
-<p>This time Kelpie saw the trap, but she was already in it.
-“Of course,” she admitted with forthright logic. “For what
-would be the good of lying if you did not say it was the
-truth? But”—she bristled, slanted brows scrambling themselves
-darkly above her short nose—“<em>this</em> time it <em>is</em> true!”</p>
-
-<p>Alex laughed.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie tried for at least the twentieth time to put the
-Evil Eye on him. The result was a poisonous look, if not a
-blighting one. “Wicked, evil-minded beast!” she told him
-earnestly.</p>
-
-<p>Ian looked at Alex judiciously. “Och, no; not wicked,”
-he said. “He’s a bit evil-minded, ’tis true, and surely daft.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie blinked.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, daft enough,” agreed Eithne happily. “Were you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-knowing, Kelpie, that he’s altogether foolish about an
-English lass, his cousin Cecily in Oxford? And yet all he
-can be saying of her is that she is like her own wee kitten,
-and that he will marry with her some day.”</p>
-
-<p>Alex grinned brazenly. “Well, and with who else?” he
-demanded. “You would not be having me, <i lang="gd">m’eudail</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Dhé</i>, no!” agreed Eithne promptly. “I’d as lief marry
-the twins!”</p>
-
-<p>“Mayhap Kelpie would have him,” suggested Ian lazily,
-and then he and Eithne shouted with laughter at the looks
-of sheer horror on both faces.</p>
-
-<p>“Mercy!” begged Alex, getting to his knees and clasping
-his hands pleadingly. “Anything but that! Curse me all
-you wish, water witch, but <em>please</em> do not marry me!”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie looked at him. It was then that something
-clicked. “Very well so,” she agreed with enthusiasm. “And
-what sort of curse would you be wanting?”</p>
-
-<p class="tb">She went back to the house a little later, looking thoughtful
-and with a pleasant feeling in the heart of her—not
-merely because, for once, she had got the better of Alex,
-but also because of the thing that happened between
-people when they teased. It was a warm and happy thing
-that turned insults to joking and the hatred of Alex to
-something kinder. For surely a body did not tease where
-he hated! And surely he had been half teasing her from
-the first.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Kelpie’s blue eyes glinted happily as she hurried into
-the big stone-floored kitchen, so that Marsali the cook
-almost smiled at her and Fiona for once forgot to cross
-herself.</p>
-
-<p>“And about time it is, too!” Marsali grunted, remembering
-her doubts about Kelpie. “The mistress has been
-looking for you while you were playing like a fine lady.
-Here, now, be helping to pluck this fowl, and let Master
-Donald go tell her that you’re here.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie glanced at the half of the twins who was arming
-himself for an afternoon of fishing, with a huge packet
-of scones and butter. “That’s Ronald,” she said absently
-as she picked up the small brown pheasant.</p>
-
-<p>Three pairs of eyes focused on her in sudden sharp
-attention, for it took far more than a brief glance to tell
-one twin from the other. In fact, only their mother and
-Wee Mairi could invariably do it.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m Donald,” asserted the twin, his eyes sparkling at
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re Ronald.” Kelpie contradicted him serenely,
-hardly glancing up from her plucking job.</p>
-
-<p>Marsali at once took sides. “Och, now, will you be calling
-the wee master a liar?” she demanded indignantly, her
-fists planted against her hips.</p>
-
-<p>“Ou, aye,” said Kelpie. “He will be teasing you,” she
-added, pleased to recognize it.</p>
-
-<p>Fiona looked shocked. Marsali peered suspiciously from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-Kelpie to the twin, who giggled. “Och, well, then,” said
-Marsali, her ruddy face now ruddier with indignation,
-though she was not quite sure at whom to direct it. “Fine
-it is that Master Ronald has the wee mole on the back of
-his neck.” And she strode over to the grinning lad and
-lifted up the shoulder-length dark hair to look at the neck
-beneath. Kelpie went on plucking, perfectly sure of herself
-and feeling rather smug.</p>
-
-<p>“Master Ronald it <em>is</em>!” Marsali clucked, and Fiona
-crossed herself and edged away from Kelpie. “How could
-you be knowing, save with the Black Power?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye,” demanded Ronald. “How were you knowing,
-Kelpie? Was it witchcraft?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie grinned and shrugged. She couldn’t really tell
-how she knew. It wasn’t the look of them, but rather the
-feel. Donald had a more aggressive and challenging tone,
-and Ronald more a feel of hungry curiosity. But how
-could a body explain this kind of knowing? No, they
-would just have to think it witchcraft.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Mise-an-dhui!</i>” muttered Marsali, regarding her warily.
-Fiona had backed against the far wall. Donald appeared
-in search of his twin, and the two went into a conference.
-Presently they came out of it and presented a solid front
-to Kelpie, sturdy legs planted wide.</p>
-
-<p>“That is no proof you are a witch,” announced Donald.
-“Mother and Wee Mairi can tell us apart, and they are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-no witches, only Mother is knowing us too well and Mairi
-has Second Sight.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie yielded to temptation, made a horrible grimace,
-and began weaving mysterious signs in the air with her
-fingers. Fiona screeched, and Marsali turned pale. The
-twins stood their ground, grinning, belligerent, deeply
-interested—and just faintly worried.</p>
-
-<p>“Now whatever is all this?” It was Lady Glenfern herself,
-her full mauve skirts nearly filling the wide doorway,
-with Eithne, round-eyed, just behind.</p>
-
-<p>“Witchcraft!” squeaked Fiona.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie flushed guiltily and found a sudden lump in her
-throat. Och, here was a mess! Why had she done such a
-foolish thing? All in fun it was, and yet who would believe
-her for a minute? Now she would be punished and sent
-away—and, for once, for a thing of which she was innocent!
-The novelty of the situation was so shattering that
-for once she lost her glib tongue. She simply stared at her
-mistress, her eyes growing wide with frustration and despair.</p>
-
-<p>The twins and Marsali broke into simultaneous explanations—all
-slightly different—with Fiona putting in exclamation
-points here and there, so that it was some time
-before Lady Glenfern could get an idea of what had
-happened. When she did, she turned questioningly to
-Kelpie, who was still trying to think up some lie that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-sounded more plausible than the truth. But Eithne spoke
-first.</p>
-
-<p>“Och, then, Mother!” she said, laughter and distress in
-her voice. “She was teasing; I am sure of it. Look you how
-the twins are always at her to cast a spell, and Fiona just
-begging to be teased by the very look of her. I am sure
-that was the way of it! Was it not, Kelpie?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie nodded a bit sullenly. This was humiliating.
-She wished she really had power to do a wee magic spell
-and dared show them, just to see their surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“Well—” Lady Glenfern hesitated, inclined to believe
-it, but not quite sure. After all....</p>
-
-<p>At that moment Wee Mairi popped into the kitchen,
-looking, in her full skirts, like a fairy child caught in an
-overblown rose. And, like a fairy child, she knew instantly
-that something was wrong, and what to do about it. She
-pattered across the floor and slipped her small, soft hand
-into Kelpie’s.</p>
-
-<p>“This is <em>my</em> Kelpie,” she announced, smiling angelically
-at her mother. “’Tis myself loves her, and you must not
-be cross at her.”</p>
-
-<p>“There, Mother!” crowed Eithne. “Wee Mairi loves her,
-and Mairi has the Second Sight; you said yourself that
-she is never making a mistake about a person!”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glenfern relaxed. “Aye so,” she agreed and smiled
-at Kelpie. “I can well see how you were tempted to tease,”
-she admitted and then became grave. “But you must be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-careful, lass. To joke about such matters could cause you
-sore trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie hardly heard the warning. Her hand was gripping
-the small one still protectively clinging to it, and she
-found herself again seized by an alarming surge of feeling
-for its owner. Och, the fair, sweet heart of her....</p>
-
-<p>Wee Mairi chose this instant to lean confidingly against
-Kelpie and peer up with a beguiling smile. “<em>My</em> Kelpie,”
-she repeated.</p>
-
-<p>And Kelpie was swallowed in a tide of the first real love
-she had ever known. She found it extremely upsetting.
-All her training and experience warned her that it was
-dangerous to be trapped into this sort of feeling. It left
-one vulnerable, could lead one into foolishness. And here
-she was, bewitched, unable to help it! She scowled helplessly.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Glenfern, seeing her distress, mercifully took her
-from the kitchen for the rest of the day and set her to
-work at a simple bit of weaving. For an hour or so Kelpie
-sat alone, brooding. Eithne came in for a while to work at
-her own more complicated length of Cameron tartan, but
-Kelpie was so unsociable that she left again.</p>
-
-<p>And then the twins arrived, dark heads cocked to one
-side, eyes dancing at her impishly. “We have found you,”
-they announced in triumph.</p>
-
-<p>“Fine I know it,” growled Kelpie, refusing to look at
-them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Undaunted, they seated themselves on two wee creepie-stools
-and regarded her with affable curiosity. “There is
-a thing that we have in our minds,” they told her.</p>
-
-<p>“I am doubting that!” snapped Kelpie.</p>
-
-<p>The twins digested this insult and then chuckled. “I
-am liking you fine,” said Donald, “even though you are
-not a witch.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie, touched again on that newly sensitive spot, shot
-the shuttle through the warp with unnecessary violence
-and said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>“Why were you saying you are a witch when you are
-not?” asked Ronald with interest. “Why,” he continued,
-getting warmed up, “do Fiona and the others think you
-are? Would you like to be? Are you truly Old Mina’s girl?
-Is she your Grannie Witchie? If you were a witch, Kelpie,
-what would you do first of all?”</p>
-
-<p>“Put a spell of silence on the tongue of you,” retorted
-Kelpie and found that her ill humor was beginning to
-evaporate. It was impossible not to smile back at their
-cheeky grins, not to chuckle when they said that Mother
-would probably approve such a spell. The atmosphere
-became quite congenial.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought you were going fishing,” observed Kelpie.</p>
-
-<p>The twins looked depressed. “We were,” they agreed.
-“But Father is come back from seeing Lochiel and told
-us to bide here for our lessons that we missed this morning.
-I think ’twill take him a wee while to find us in here,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-whatever,” added Ronald cheerfully, and Kelpie grinned
-again.</p>
-
-<p>“We are learning about the war between King Charles
-and Parliament and the Covenant,” volunteered Donald
-sadly, “and we could do fine <em>not</em> knowing about it. Grownups
-are gey confusing, so they are, and sometimes I think
-gey foolish besides, and we are not understanding it all
-very well.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you loving King Charles?” demanded Ronald.</p>
-
-<p>“Ou, aye,” murmured Kelpie vaguely and hastened to
-turn the question. “Are you?” she countered.</p>
-
-<p>“As ever was!” they chorused instantly. “Is he not our
-King, and a Stewart, besides?”</p>
-
-<p>Well, Kelpie had already known that Glenfern was pro-Royalist.
-“And so the King is always right?” she pursued,
-trying to think what else to ask.</p>
-
-<p>“Och, no!” said the twins in surprise. “No one is always
-right,” they informed her gravely. “Except,” they added,
-“for Father.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie put her shuttle through the wrong way and had
-to take it out again, her lip twitching ever so slightly. The
-twins, having settled that subject of conversation, looked
-at her hopefully. “Can you,” they asked, “tell us a story?”</p>
-
-<p>Now if there was one thing Kelpie could do better than
-any other, it was to tell stories—pathetic tales to earn
-sympathy or a copper, outrageous lies to escape impending
-trouble, embroidered yarns of her own adventures, old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-gypsy stories, eerie folk tales of the wee people and other
-uncanny beings, or fanciful bits and snatches that she
-wove for herself among the hills or beside the campfire.
-Her eyes sparkled. “Fine I can that!” she asserted and
-dropped her voice to an eerie pitch.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you ever,” she whispered, “heard of the <i lang="gd">uruisg</i> of
-Glenlyon?”</p>
-
-<p>They shook their heads and drew their stools nearer.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then.” Kelpie paused, shuttle in hand. “It was a
-farmer’s wife who was making porridge for breakfast on
-a wet morning, when who should come walking in but an
-<i lang="gd">uruisg</i>. Och, a slippery, damp, uncouth monster he was,
-half man and half goat; and wasn’t he just sitting himself
-down at the fire to dry, and not so much as a wee greeting
-to her? Well, the farmer’s wife was fair angered at his
-impertinence, and she having to step over and around him
-every minute, so presently she just lifted a ladle of the
-boiling porridge from the pot over the fire, and poured it
-over him, just. Well, at that he leaped up, howling, and
-ran out the door and never dared set foot in that house
-again....”</p>
-
-<p>When Glenfern finally tracked down his elusive twins
-some time later, Kelpie had got very little weaving done,
-but she had made a place for herself forever in the hearts
-of Ronald and Donald.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_6">6. The Picture in the Loch</h2>
-
-<p>“’Tis a terrible complicated matter, the war,” objected
-Eithne doubtfully as she began basting a
-sleeve into what was to be a fine linen shirt for Ian’s birthday.
-“I fear I’d only be confusing you.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie surveyed the four or five yards of red and green
-tartan wool which constituted a kilt for a small lad, and
-wondered how even Donald could have managed to tear
-such stout weave. “I could not be more confused than I
-am,” she pointed out, “for I am knowing nothing at all.
-Tell me at least a little.”</p>
-
-<p>Eithne sighed and obeyed. “Well,” she began hesitantly,
-“you know that King Charles is King of England and Scotland
-both?” Kelpie nodded. “But in both countries are
-representative bodies of men called Parliaments, and they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-help to rule. They are supposed to agree with the things
-the King does, and it is the English parliament who must
-vote to give him things like extra money when he needs
-it—which he usually does.”</p>
-
-<p>She paused to squint critically at her basting, and Kelpie
-waited. Somehow she had developed a great eagerness
-to learn about the matters which had thrown England and
-Scotland into civil war. “Aye, go on,” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, so. Neither King Charles nor his father before
-him has got along well with Parliament. King and Parliament
-each said the other will be trying to take more rights
-and power than they should have, and they became angry.
-Parliament would refuse to vote money for the King, so
-the King would dissolve Parliament, which meant that
-they could not meet any more to vote on anything at all
-until King Charles called them back, and so everyone was
-unhappy.”</p>
-
-<p>She bit off her thread and held the shirt closer to the
-dim light which filtered through the thick diamond-shaped
-mullion panes of the casement window. “And
-then”—she sighed—“religion came into it. Father,” she
-remarked severely, “says that religion should never be
-mixed with politics, but they do not listen to wise people
-like Father, and so there is trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>“What has religion to do with it?” asked Kelpie curiously.
-She had never known anything of religion for herself,
-only that the stern Kirk of the Lowlands had severe<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-views on all other faiths, on fun and laughter, and most
-particularly on witches. But the Anglican services here at
-Glenfern seemed peaceful and vaguely pleasant, even
-though she did not understand them.</p>
-
-<p>“Och!” protested Eithne, but Kelpie’s face was implacable,
-so she went on. “Well, the Catholics and Protestants
-do not like each other, and especially the Protestants of
-the new Reformed Church, like the Puritans in England
-and the Calvinist Covenanters in Scotland—and we Anglicans
-caught in the middle. King Charles is Anglican, but
-the Parliament is mostly Puritan, I think. At any rate, they
-were very angry when the King married Queen Henrietta,
-who is a Roman Catholic and said she would turn the
-country all Catholic and burn Protestants at the stake.
-And the Catholics said the Protestants were trying to rule
-the country and force their religion on everyone, and so it
-was a fine braw quarrel for years, with religion and politics
-all mixed together.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie carefully selected a strand of wool to match the
-soft, dull red of the Cameron tartan. This was the most
-difficult bit of mending she had yet been trusted with.
-“Mmm,” she murmured after a minute, turning her mind
-back to the conversation. “And then?”</p>
-
-<p>It was Eithne’s turn to pause, while the rain beat against
-the casement windows. Wee Mairi turned from her doll
-to lift a merry smile in the direction of “her Kelpie,” who
-felt a new pang of affection. Och, the bonnie wee thing!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Eithne scowled at the shirt and then glanced up at Kelpie
-with a rueful shrug. “Ou, I cannot mind me of all the
-details.” She sighed again. “But the quarrel turned into
-fighting.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what of Scotland?” demanded Kelpie. “What had
-it to do with us at all?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” interrupted the dry voice of Alex, “King Charles
-himself must be bringing that on!” They looked up to see
-him standing in the doorway, a shirt in his hand and a wry
-grin on his angular face. “Scotland might have been loyal
-to him, even though all the Lowlands are Calvinist, and
-even more rigid than the Puritans, but he had the bright
-idea of forcing the Anglican prayer book on Scotland. And
-the next thing he knew, there was a Solemn League and
-Covenant formed against him, and Scotland divided as
-England was, with Lowlands against the King, and most
-of the Highlands loyal to him.”</p>
-
-<p>Eithne looked both relieved and worried, while Kelpie
-studied Alex’s expression in the dim light, not quite certain
-if he were teasing or not. She decided not—for once.
-There was a faint note of bitterness in his voice. “I thought
-you were a King’s man!” she challenged him.</p>
-
-<p>“I am so,” he returned promptly and unpropped himself
-from the doorway. “Look you, Eithne,” he went on,
-crossing the room to her. “I have ripped my shirt sorely
-and am needing a bonnie sweet lass to mend it for me.”</p>
-
-<p>Eithne tilted her chestnut curls at him and wrinkled up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-her nose in an impish grin. “If I do,” she said, bargaining,
-“will you be explaining the rest of the war to Kelpie?”</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Dhé!</i>” said Alex and raised both eyebrows at Kelpie.</p>
-
-<p>“She is truly wanting to know,” said Eithne sternly, “so
-do not be teasing her, Alex. And I am gey muddled about
-it, and you knowing so much more, with having been at
-Oxford and even seeing the King and his family yourself.
-Will you?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis a hard bargain,” complained Alex, “and I am
-thinking I pity the man who will one day marry you,
-Eithne <i lang="gd">m’eudail</i>.” He perched on the corner of the massive
-table, his kilt falling in heavy folds about his lean knees.
-“Well, then, and what bit of my great knowledge should
-I be sharing with you first?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie gave him a wicked pointed smile. “Tell me,” she
-said softly, “in one word, just, <em>what are they fighting for?</em>”</p>
-
-<p>“My sorrow!” exclaimed Alex, straightening up as if he
-had sat on a thistle. “Is that all?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you know?” asked Kelpie tauntingly. “I will tell
-you, then. They’re fighting for power. Is it not so?”</p>
-
-<p>Alex resumed his perch and surveyed her ruefully.
-“Och, and are you not the young cynic!” he observed.
-“And you have shocked my foster sister, too.” For Eithne
-was looking both dismayed and indignant. Both girls had
-forgotten their sewing for the moment and sat staring at
-Alex challengingly, waiting for his opinion.</p>
-
-<p>He laughed. “I fear me I shall anger you both,” he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-remarked, “and go through the rest of my life with an evil
-spell on my head and a tom sleeve in my shirt.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well?” demanded Kelpie.</p>
-
-<p>Alex gave her a crooked grin. “Sorry I am to agree with
-you even in part,” he confessed, “but no doubt some men
-are fighting for power. No, no, Eithne,” he added as she
-opened her mouth. “Do not deny it too quickly. What
-about Argyll?”</p>
-
-<p>Eithne subsided.</p>
-
-<p>“On the other hand, Alex <i lang="gd">avic</i>, there is Montrose.” It
-was Ian. He pulled up a hassock and ranged himself
-quietly but firmly on Eithne’s side.</p>
-
-<p>“Montrose?” asked Kelpie.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye,” said Ian, turning his warm smile upon her. “James
-Graham of Montrose, and he one of the finest, truest men
-under the sun. He it is who is named to fight for the King’s
-cause in Scotland, even to form and organize the army.
-And he is fighting for no selfish reason whatever, but only
-for what he believes to be right. Alex cannot deny it, for
-we both met and talked to him last winter in Oxford.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed and I’ll not deny it,” agreed Alex amiably,
-“though Kelpie might. My point was just that all men are
-not like Montrose, and my proof of it is still Argyll. Och,
-and have you done, my sonsie Eithne?” he added as she
-held up the mended shirt. “Come away, then, Ian, and
-let’s be outside. I believe the sun is going to come out.”</p>
-
-<p>And they were gone before Kelpie could ask about Argyll.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-Perhaps it was as well, she decided, going back to
-her mending. For she really thought she had heard quite
-as much as she could absorb all in one lump.</p>
-
-<p>Eithne flickered a mischievous sideways glance at her.
-“And wasn’t I warning you ’twas complicated?” she murmured.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">As if by tacit agreement, no one brought up matters like
-war and politics for some time. After all, it was easy
-enough, in that peaceful, secluded glen, to put such things
-far out of mind. Kelpie’s free hours were full enough, as
-spring days became longer, with other things. Wee Mairi
-tagged along with her, a self-appointed guardian, and the
-glenspeople had learned to hide their hostility when Mairi
-was there. The twins were insatiably hungry for more
-stories—and so, for that matter, were the older young
-people. Books were rare and precious, and mostly devoted
-to serious and difficult subjects. And, as Ian generously
-remarked on a sunny afternoon by the loch, Kelpie was a
-master at telling tales.</p>
-
-<p>Alex grinned impishly. “She is that!” he agreed with a
-wicked twinkle in his eye and a double meaning to his
-voice which Kelpie chose to ignore.</p>
-
-<p>“Next time I will tell you about the <i lang="gd">sithiche</i> (fairies) of
-Loch Maree—<em>if</em> you are all very kind to me,” she said
-blandly and glanced impudently at Alex.</p>
-
-<p>She sat on alone by the loch for a little while after the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-others had left, thinking about things. How Alex had
-changed since she first met him! He was much nicer than
-she had thought. And she had begun to like his teasing
-and mockery, for it was all good-humored.... Or was it
-perhaps herself had changed? And if so—She rolled over
-to lie full-length on her face in the fragrant long grasses
-and pondered. Then, lazily, she stretched until her head
-was over the edge of the loch.</p>
-
-<p>What was her real self like? Had that changed? Could
-it?</p>
-
-<p>The bank at this point rose abruptly about two feet
-above the glassy surface of the water, with tough curling
-roots of heather overhanging the edge. Kelpie reached
-down skillfully, scooped up a handful of the cold water,
-and drank it from her palm before it could run through
-her fingers. The surface rippled slightly and returned to
-its mirror stillness, with sky, hills, and trees reflected so
-clearly that it would be hard to tell the reflection from the
-real. Or was one, perhaps, as real as the other?</p>
-
-<p>She stared down at her own face, still looking indecently
-bare with all the thick dark hair pulled back into plaits.
-Was that any less real—or more—than the scenes she saw
-in Mina’s crystal?</p>
-
-<p>And then it was no longer her own face she was seeing,
-but a town street and an ugly-tempered crowd surging
-down it. Not merely annoyed, that crowd, but murderous.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-Kelpie shivered a little, for she knew too well how bestial
-a mob could be. And this one had a victim, for there was
-savage satisfaction in the grim Lowland faces above their
-sober Covenanter garments, pressing closer and closer....
-And there was Ian! Whatever could he be doing in
-the Lowlands? Pushing through the crowd, he was; and
-Alex came after, shouting at him, his angular face all
-twisted with fury. And now they were closer, and Alex
-was catching up to Ian.... Alex was lifting his sword,
-and through the crowd Kelpie could see him bring it
-down savagely.... <i lang="gd">Dhé!</i> Ian had fallen, his dark head
-vanished in the throng! And Alex’s sword with blood on
-it!</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie jerked with horror, and a bit of dry heather
-plopped into the water—and the picture was gone. Nor
-did it return, though she waited, staring at the still water
-and brooding bitterly.</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Dhé!</i> That serpent Alex! She had never liked him from
-the beginning! And now he was going to turn on his foster
-brother, strike him down from behind, perhaps kill him—for
-the Sight never lied.</p>
-
-<p>She tried to tell herself that it didn’t matter to her, but
-it was too late. Ian had crept into her heart, and Wee
-Mairi, and the rest of them. Even Alex, deceitful scoundrel
-that he was, had somehow tricked her into liking him—for
-a while, anyway. But now she knew better. Och, she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-must try to warn Ian! Even if he could not prevent it, perhaps
-he could be on his guard, could put off the evil day
-of it, could duck in time to save his life.</p>
-
-<p>Dismayed, angry, resolute, Kelpie got to her feet,
-smoothed down the full folds of her blue dress, and started
-back up the loch.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">Now what, wondered Alex, had got under the skin of
-their wolf cub lately? For there was a new venom toward
-himself—and after he had been thinking her nearly tamed,
-too. Aye, a wolf cub: belligerent, cunning, snarling, biting,
-thieving, destructive—and yet innocent, as a wolf cub is
-innocent because it knows nothing else.</p>
-
-<p>But she had been changing. She had been learning
-trust and affection, even to play and tease. And now, suddenly,
-there was a new and deadly hatred smoldering at
-him from those ringed eyes. It was puzzling, it was, and
-rather less amusing than her old spitting indignation had
-been; and even though it could hardly be a tragedy to
-him, still it was disconcerting. Alex kept a wary eye on
-her, lest she should decide to take her <i lang="gd">sgian dhu</i> to his
-back.</p>
-
-<p>As for Kelpie, she found the business of warning Ian a
-bit harder than it had seemed. For one thing, it was none
-so easy to find him alone, for he and Alex were usually
-together and about their own affairs, while Kelpie had her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-tasks in the house. In the evenings the family sat together
-in the withdrawing room, which was not Kelpie’s place.
-The big warm kitchen, or her wee cot in Marsali’s room,
-was where she belonged, or—more often—away by herself
-outside, in the pale half-light of the long northern
-gloaming. For summer was drawing near, and darkness
-now merely brushed down late upon the world and, like
-a gull’s wing, quickly lifted.</p>
-
-<p>So she glared at Alex and did her tasks and kept her
-eyes and ears open and bided her time. And at last Alex
-went off for a few days to visit his brother in Ardochy.
-And the next evening Kelpie, on one of her rambles, saw
-Ian on the hill above her, quietly looking down over the
-glen.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie drew near, and then paused. Och, a braw lad
-he was! But how might she be approaching him best? It
-might be he wanted to be alone. Before she could decide,
-Ian saw her, smiled, beckoned, his face oddly blurred in
-the half-light that turned all things gray. She sat beside
-him and for a minute followed his gaze over the long
-shadowed cup of the glen, lit by the silver gleam of Loch
-nan Eilean.</p>
-
-<p>Finally Ian stirred and spoke. “I wish I might never
-need to leave it again,” he said wistfully.</p>
-
-<p>Did he love it so? Kelpie dimly sensed that he did; but
-she did not understand, for she herself had no roots to her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-heart, but only a wanderlust to her feet. “And must you,
-then?” she asked. Why could Ian not be doing as he
-pleased, since he was the heir to Glenfern?</p>
-
-<p>“Aye so,” he said, a bit more briskly. “For I must finish
-my schooling if I am to be a fit chieftain and leader to my
-people. However”—he brightened considerably—“I think
-we’ll not be able to return to Oxford for some time, with
-the war moving northward and becoming more serious,
-and Argyll endangering all the Highlands.”</p>
-
-<p>Now was the moment for her to warn him about Alex.
-But it was also a chance to ask about Argyll and put off
-the more difficult thing. “Tell me about Argyll!” she
-urged.</p>
-
-<p>Ian turned to look at her with friendly interest. “You’ve
-a good head on you, haven’t you, Kelpie? Mother says
-you’re quick to learn and that you speak English as well
-as Gaelic. Are you truly interested in national affairs,
-then?” Kelpie nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then,” began Ian, “you know who Argyll is, do
-you not? Mac Cailein Mor, Chief of Clan Campbell in the
-Highlands, and also head of the Covenant Army of the
-Lowlands. So he has that power added to the power of
-his own clan, and he uses it ill, Kelpie. He is a vicious man,
-cruel, ambitious, and vindictive.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie could not resist a gibe. “And is he not also a
-Campbell, and his clan at feud with yours?” she remarked.</p>
-
-<p>Ian flushed. Even in the dusk she could see it. “’Tis not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-that!” he protested. “I am not one to hate a man for his
-name, Kelpie! And in any case, my own uncle married a
-Campbell lass; and the son of Lochiel, our own clan chief,
-married Argyll’s sister, and we are anxious to be at peace.
-But Argyll, devil that he is, wishes to dictate his own
-terms entirely. Do you know what he has done, Kelpie?
-He has taken his nephew Ewen—Lochiel’s own grandson,
-who will be chief of the Camerons some day—and is keeping
-him at his own castle of Inverary. He says he wishes
-to see to his education—and I can guess what kind of
-education ’twill be—but do you see that Ewen is hostage
-for Lochiel’s actions? And if Lochiel dares to take the side
-of the King against Argyll—”</p>
-
-<p>“Mmmm,” said Kelpie, seeing.</p>
-
-<p>“Nor is it just our clan,” Ian went on, deep anger in his
-voice. “He was commissioned to secure the Highlands for
-the Covenant, which is bad enough, for we have not tried
-to inflict our politics or religion on them. But Argyll has
-used his commission and the Lowland army to settle his
-private grudges. He burned the great house of Airly, with
-no enemy there but a helpless woman. And he burned
-and ravaged the lands of MacDonald of Keppoch, and is
-even now laying waste the lands of Gordon of Huntly.
-They say he would make himself King Campbell, and a
-black day for Scotland if he should.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie remembered the face she had seen once in the
-crystal, which Mina had called Mac Cailein Mor, Marquis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-of Argyll. A cold, cruel face it had been, with twisted
-sneering mouth, a heavy and pendulous nose, and a squint
-in the crafty eyes of him, so that one couldn’t be just sure
-what he was looking at.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye,” she agreed suddenly. “He is a red-haired <i lang="gd">uruisg</i>.
-I have been seeing him helping with his own hands to
-fire the homes and burn people too.” She didn’t add that
-the people burned were accused of witchcraft, as this
-might not be a tactful thing to mention.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve seen that?” exclaimed Ian.</p>
-
-<p>“In the crystal, only,” confessed Kelpie. “I was also seeing
-him mounting the scaffold to be hanged,” she remembered
-with relish. “But,” she added regretfully, “he
-was looking much older then.”</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Dhé!</i>” exclaimed Ian, deeply impressed. “I did not
-know you were having the Second Sight, Kelpie.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye,” said Kelpie. And here was her opening. “Ian!”
-she blurted, quite forgetting to give him a respectful title.
-“You must not be trusting Alex MacDonald.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not trust Alex?” Ian turned a dumfounded face to
-hers. And then he laughed. “Och, Kelpie, there is no one
-in the world I trust better! We are sworn brothers, and if
-my life were to rest in the two hands of him, there is no
-place I would sooner have it.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you would lose it, then,” said Kelpie flatly. “For
-I had a Seeing, and his sword fell upon you from behind,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-and you fell. And there was anger on his face and blood
-upon his sword.”</p>
-
-<p>Ian’s face was a pale blob in the dusk, and she could not
-see it turn white—and yet she knew, somehow, that it
-did. For the Second Sight never lied.</p>
-
-<p>And in spite of that, Ian shook his head. “I cannot believe
-it, Kelpie,” he said quietly. “It is a mistake, for the
-sun would fall from the sky before Alex could be untrue.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie thrust an angry face, long eyes glittering, close
-to his. “You think I am lying, but I am not. I would have
-been warning you, even though it is of no profit to me,
-whatever. But it is a spell he has cast upon you! And,”
-she added bitterly, “you will be discovering it too late.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_7">7. The Return of Mina and Bogle</h2>
-
-<p>Summer was upon the Highlands. The serene curves of
-the hills glowed with a hundred shades of green and
-tawny and rose, all with a faintly unreal, spirit-of-opal
-quality, so that the distances looked no more solid than a
-rainbow.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie breathed the salt wind as she climbed higher
-above the glen, and stared hungrily at the distant hills.
-For she was beginning to feel restless. A wee glen was not
-space enough, and there were too many people, too much
-routine, and she must away to the hills to be alone. Here
-were only the mild shaggy cattle peering mournfully from
-behind long fringes of hair, and the hares and red deer,
-the hill larks and whaups and gulls, and an eagle—high
-and alone in the free air.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Her acute senses had been lulled by the months of
-security at Glenfern, and she was startled to see the bent,
-wiry figure of Mina rise unexpectedly from behind a
-clump of juniper.</p>
-
-<p>They looked at each other, and Kelpie’s expression
-could not possibly have been mistaken for delight. Mina
-took one good look at it, swung back her strong, scrawny
-arm, and aimed it at Kelpie.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed that Kelpie’s reactions as well as her senses
-had become rusty. She didn’t duck in time. And, since
-Mina had fully expected her to, the resounding smack
-startled and pained them both.</p>
-
-<p>Mina shook her stinging hand and glared at Kelpie as
-if the girl had done it on purpose. Kelpie, her head ringing,
-glared back. And Black Bogle, who had appeared as
-silently as his eerie namesake, shook with malicious laughter.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Amadain!</i>” grumbled Mina sourly. “Forgotten everything
-you ever knew! Fine-lady clothes and clean face,
-and hands that will have lost all their cunning—such as
-it was. Blind and deaf and slow as a sleeping snail. <i lang="gd">Amadain!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>“Sssss!” remarked Kelpie, looking and sounding like a
-wrathful snake. She had forgotten how ugly and mean
-and dirty Mina was. Och, how she hated her!</p>
-
-<p>Mina looked pleased. She enjoyed Kelpie’s impotent
-hatred. And Kelpie, knowing this, controlled her feelings<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-and hooded her eyes and made her sharp-jawed small
-mouth curl upward. She had been a fool to show her feelings
-at all at all!</p>
-
-<p>“Come away, then,” ordered Mina, suddenly becoming
-brisk. “You have kept us waiting long enough! Why weren’t
-you coming as soon as you got my message?”</p>
-
-<p>“What message?” asked Kelpie blankly. Mina’s eyes
-blazed with fury and humiliation. Bogle laughed aloud,
-and Kelpie knew that Mina had tried to send her a message
-by magic—and it hadn’t worked. Och, but she must
-say something quickly, or no telling what Mina might do!</p>
-
-<p>“It would be yon red-haired serpent down there,” she
-said improvising hastily. “He was no doubt setting up a
-spell to prevent your message from reaching me. Teach
-me to say spells, Mina,” she wheedled, “so that I may set
-one on him.”</p>
-
-<p>It worked. Mina’s pride was saved, and her wrath
-turned from Kelpie to Alex. “I will be cursing him myself,”
-she growled. “He is the same one who would not
-pay me enough when you were hurt, and who would not
-let you steal? Very well so! He will pay, and the others as
-well. We will go now and demand your wages before you
-leave.”</p>
-
-<p>Leave? Kelpie’s heart sank. Back to the old life of fear,
-hatred, beatings? Away from Wee Mairi and Ian and the
-companionship and teasing? She backed up a step and
-braced herself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“What for should I want to leave?” She stuck out her
-jaw rebelliously, and Mina slapped it.</p>
-
-<p>“Because I am saying so!” she snarled. “And because I
-will put an evil curse on you if you do not obey.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie prudently pulled in her smarting jaw and considered
-this. On one hand, Mina was not as powerful as
-Kelpie had thought, for she almost certainly could not
-read the crystal alone, and her magic message had failed
-to get through. But that was not to say she could not
-curse. Kelpie still had great faith in the power of Mina’s
-evil spells. And Mina’s curse would be even more disagreeable
-than her company. Kelpie brooded darkly over
-the unpleasant alternatives before her, almost inclined to
-risk the curse.</p>
-
-<p>“Why would you not want to come?” demanded Mina,
-and her cursing changed to wheedling. “And here I have
-been to the trouble of arranging for you to learn witchcraft
-at last, ungrateful wretch that you are, then! What,
-would you stay to be a slave to arrogant fools such as
-these? Stupid sheep, spending their lives shut in a wee
-glen?”</p>
-
-<p>“They do not, then,” muttered Kelpie mutinously. “Ian
-and Alex have been to school in England in a place called
-Oxford, and have seen the King and Montrose and know
-more than we about affairs. And they do not beat me, nor
-make me steal for them and then set the crowd on me.
-And I do not believe you plan to teach me witchcraft,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-whatever, for you are always promising it and never do
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>Mina’s face darkened, and she raised a scrawny, strong
-arm again, but Bogle loomed over her and drew her aside
-to speak for a moment in a voice like distant thunder.
-Kelpie watched apprehensively. When Bogle intervened,
-it was never for motives of kindness and charity.</p>
-
-<p>“Hah!” Mina cackled presently and turned back to
-Kelpie. “And what of the wee bittie lass we were seeing
-you playing with so tenderly this morning? Shall I put
-a curse on her, too? Aye, on all the glen I shall put the
-Evil Eye, so that they will all wither up and die horrible
-deaths!”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie’s defiance collapsed like a deflated bagpipe. Not
-Wee Mairi! She could not bear to risk harm for her bonnie
-bairn. But she must not let Mina know how vulnerable
-she was on this point, or she would be in slavery and Wee
-Mairi in danger forever more! Carefully keeping her face
-impassive, she shrugged indifferently. “Och, well, just
-do not be putting it on me,” she murmured, and noted
-that both Mina and Bogle looked disappointed. “And will
-you truly be teaching me witchcraft if I come?” she
-demanded, as if this were her only interest.</p>
-
-<p>“Have I not said so?” Mina growled. “Was it trying to
-drive a hard bargain you were, then? I should beat you
-for it! Come away down, now, for we have wasted too
-much time already.” And she led the way down the hill.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was the twins who first spotted the assorted trio approaching,
-and they began to shout excitedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Kelpie, is yon your Grannie Witchie? Father, Ian, come
-and see!” they yelled in full voice. And then, short kilts
-swinging, they raced up the slope to stare at Mina and
-Bogle with frank, fearless curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you truly a witch?” demanded Ronald, and, in
-spite of her gloom, Kelpie stifled a grin at the look on
-Mina’s face.</p>
-
-<p>The old woman drew herself up and glared at them.
-“Best not be asking that!” she warned in an ominous croak
-that should have completely cowed them, but didn’t.</p>
-
-<p>“Why not?” asked Ronald with great interest. “What
-will happen if we do? Do you not think, Donald, that she
-looks like a witch?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ou, aye,” declared Donald judiciously. “But we have
-not seen her casting any spells yet. Can you cast spells,
-Grannie Witchie?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie’s amusement changed to apprehension as the
-infuriated Mina spluttered speechlessly. It was probably
-only her speechlessness and the timely arrival of Glenfern
-that saved the twins from an awful fate. Mina gave them
-one last baleful glare—Kelpie fervently hoped it wasn’t
-the Evil Eye—and turned to the tall chieftain. Kelpie
-glanced at him, and at Ian, Eithne, and Alex, who arrived
-just then from down by the loch, and then stared sullenly
-at the ground. She dared not look straight at them, for if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-they were to read her eyes and guess how she felt, then
-they would refuse to let her go, and so Mina’s curse would
-be upon them. And now Kelpie found that her old misgivings
-were justified. She had recklessly given her affection
-and left herself vulnerable, so now she must suffer
-the consequences. Angrily she promised herself never to
-be so weak again.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then,” said Glenfern pleasantly at last. “And are
-you leaving us, Kelpie?” She jerked her head, not looking
-at him. “I am sorry to hear it,” he said gently, “for I think
-you were happy here, and we have come to like you
-well.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Kelpie!” Eithne protested, shrinking a little from
-Mina and Bogle. “Can you not stay?”</p>
-
-<p>“Och, you cannot go!” clamored the twins in outrage.
-“Who will be telling us stories now?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie scowled, chewed her lip, and wished herself a
-thousand miles away. And worse was to come, for a brief
-glance upward showed her that all of them, from Mina to
-the twins, were on the verge of guessing her true feelings.
-She tossed her head and gave a hard little laugh. “Och,
-I’m away,” she said airily, “for I’ve bided too long in one
-place.”</p>
-
-<p>Glenfern was looking at her keenly. “You are welcome
-to stay, you know,” he told her.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, to slave for you without pay!” whined Mina in
-her most put-upon voice. If she had been slow to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-attack, she made up for it now. “We have come to have
-her wages.”</p>
-
-<p>From under her lashes Kelpie saw the hurt on Eithne’s
-face, and something like pity on Ian’s. Only Alex wore a
-look of acid amusement that set Kelpie’s teeth on edge.
-And Glenfern was giving Mina the same stern look he
-used when the twins had been naughty.</p>
-
-<p>“I think you must be joking,” he said quietly. “We have
-treated this lass far better than ever you have done. We
-have fed her properly, clothed her in decent, clean garments,
-taught her, given her affection and a roof over her
-head and a bed under her. What have you ever given her
-save harm and neglect?”</p>
-
-<p>“She is ours!” Mina squealed angrily, but she must have
-seen that she would get nowhere, for she suddenly
-changed tactics. “Would you be wanting Mac Cailein
-Mor to hear things about you?” she hinted softly. “Things
-about how you are favoring King Charles, and what you
-think of the Covenant, and your own son associating with
-the King and bringing back messages from him, and from
-Montrose as well, perhaps?”</p>
-
-<p>There was only one way Mina could have learned these
-things. Everyone looked at Kelpie, who stuck out her chin
-and grinned brazenly. Ou, the wicked, careless tongue of
-her, to be telling Mina that! Ian and Eithne were looking
-as if she had slapped them. There was a smile on Alex’s
-lean face and scorn in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“And so you have not really changed at all,” he observed
-softly, and was surprised at the bitterness of his own disappointment.
-After all, what else had he expected? But
-his tongue went on scathingly. “Selfish, faithless, unscrupulous
-you are and always will be. You could never
-think of inconveniencing yourself for the good of another,
-could you, Kelpie?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not,” said Kelpie defiantly, but the sweet face
-of Wee Mairi was warm and mocking in her heart.</p>
-
-<p>“Let be, Alex.” Ian sighed. “She cannot help it. There
-was not enough time to change old habits.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor ever will be,” retorted Alex.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie hissed at him venomously. “Faithless yourself!”
-she spat. “Do not be forgetting what I told you, Ian!” And
-she turned away to Glenfern, who was laughing at Mina.</p>
-
-<p>“By all means go to Argyll,” he said cheerfully. “Tell
-him whatever you like. He knows well enough where our
-sympathies lie. But leave the lass behind you when you
-go, for I should not like her to be burned as a witch along
-with the two of you. And now, farewell. I am sorry,” he
-added, turning to Kelpie, “that you could not stay with us,
-poor lass. Remember that we wish you well.”</p>
-
-<p>That was really almost too much. Kelpie turned abruptly
-and started up the pass with Mina and Bogle, who knew
-when they were defeated. At least it was over, and she
-must just put it away out of her memory.</p>
-
-<p>But it was not quite over. Halfway up the hill a small<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-voice wailed after her. She turned to see Wee Mairi tugging
-at Eithne’s hand, one small arm stretched out and
-upward. “My Kelpie!” she shrilled. “Do not go away, my
-Kelpie!”</p>
-
-<p>Mina’s pale eyes were upon Kelpie, narrowed, watchful,
-suspicious. Kelpie set her jaw, hardened her face, and
-deliberately turned her back on the broken-hearted little
-figure below.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">The next few miles were blurred. Kelpie tramped mechanically
-behind Mina and Bogle, unseeing, trying to
-wipe three months out of her life and become the person
-she had been before. Och, she had been right to begin
-with! A feckless, foolish thing it was to care for anyone,
-and only hurt could come from it. From now on she
-would be hard as the granite sides of Ben Nevis, which
-now loomed ahead, snow still patching its sheer northern
-side. She would be what Alex thought her—and a pox
-on him, too. Nor would she even care that he would strike
-down that braw lad Ian, for Ian had had his warning,
-and it was his own fault if he was too stupid to heed it.</p>
-
-<p>Scowling, she kicked at an inoffensive clump of bluebells
-and deliberately stepped on a wild yellow iris. She
-would become a witch, then; not a “coven witch,” either.
-She had seen them—silly people, who made a great ceremony
-of selling their souls to the Devil and met in groups
-of thirteen, called covens, and held Black Mass, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-did a great deal of wild dancing. Mina said these were
-little more than playing at witchcraft and learned only a
-few simple spells. No, now, Kelpie would be a witch of
-the old sort, who needed no bargains with Satan, but who
-tapped a Power that was old before the beginnings of
-Christianity. A Power it was that could be used for either
-black or white magic, but Kelpie had seen little of the
-white, and black seemed much more congenial, especially
-in her present mood.</p>
-
-<p>She drifted into her old dream of what she would do
-one day to Mina and Bogle. Aye, and perhaps she would
-just add Alex as well. They were over the pass and heading
-south along the side of Loch Lochy before she came
-back to herself and began to wonder about the present.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is it we are going now?” she demanded, moving
-up to walk beside Mina, half off the narrow path. “When
-will you be teaching me witchcraft? What are you planning?”</p>
-
-<p>Mina cast a thoughtful eye at Kelpie’s blue dress, now
-kilted up through her belt for easier walking. “I think that
-would be fitting me,” she remarked casually. “We will
-be telling you what you will need to know when it is the
-right time for knowing it,” she added so mildly that Kelpie
-looked at her with dark suspicion.</p>
-
-<p>Falling behind once more, she began again to brood
-over her life. It consisted of being pushed from one situation
-into another. It was other folk who acted, and herself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-who reacted, who was acted upon. Was she, then, such a
-spineless creature? Was her whole life to be molded by
-others? Rebellion once more rose in her, but then subsided
-as she remembered the two-pronged stick that Mina held
-over her—nay, three-pronged, really. She could curse
-Kelpie, and she could curse Wee Mairi and Ian and the
-other folk of Glenfern, and only Mina could teach Kelpie
-witchcraft. And witchcraft, now, had become the only
-goal in her life, the only hope of escaping the hateful
-mastery of Mina and Bogle. Kelpie set her teeth, and the
-look on her face was neither pleasant nor attractive.</p>
-
-<p>Down to the tip of Loch Lochy and on down the river
-they plodded, past the home of Glenfern’s chief, Lochiel;
-and at last they made camp for the night in the old
-unfinished castle of Inverlochy. Roofless it was, and built
-four-square, with a round tower at each corner, and Kelpie
-narrowed her eyes thoughtfully as they went in. Mina
-and Bogle never looked for walls about them, except sometimes
-in the cold of winter. What was afoot?</p>
-
-<p>For the moment there was no time to wonder. Mina
-nodded brusquely at the river, which flowed just outside
-the arched stone entrance. “Gather us firewood,” she ordered,
-“and then guddle us some fish—if you have not
-forgotten how.” Her pale eyes rested again on Kelpie’s
-dress, and Bogle chuckled.</p>
-
-<p>An hour or so later, annoyed but not in the least astonished,
-Kelpie wiped her greasy fingers on the dirty rags<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-which now covered her, and glowered across the fire at
-Mina. The hag and the blue dress were more or less the
-same size, but of far different shapes. The dress sagged
-across the front of Mina’s hunched shoulders and strained
-ominously across the back, and was at once too long and
-too narrow in the waist, and the cuffs reached in vain for
-those long bony wrists. Kelpie had a mental picture of
-bright hazel eyes dancing in wicked amusement in an
-angular red-topped face. For once she could have appreciated
-Alex’s sense of humor, and her own white teeth
-showed momentarily in a matching grin.</p>
-
-<p>Mina glared at her suspiciously, and Kelpie hastily
-stopped grinning. <i lang="gd">Dhé!</i> Mina was almost as bad as Alex
-himself at seeing what she shouldn’t! And she mustn’t
-anger Mina too much—not yet! So she lowered her slanted
-eyes more or less submissively and waited.</p>
-
-<p>“Hah!” said Mina suddenly. “You think I am not knowing
-what you are thinking?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie devoutly hoped not. She had no desire to be
-turned into a toad or something equally unpleasant. Best
-to walk warily—neither too innocent nor too defiant.
-“I am wondering what you are about,” she retorted sullenly.
-“I have learned the things you were wanting me to,
-but you have not told me why, nor have you taught me
-any spells.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hah!” said Mina again. “First we will read the crystal.”</p>
-
-<p>And presently, under the ghost-light of the summer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-night, Kelpie sat again with her hand in Mina’s horny
-claw and gazed into the blank crystal ball. It remained
-still and empty. “I see myself,” invented Kelpie impudently.
-“It is in a place that I have never been, and I am
-wearing a blue dress—”</p>
-
-<p>Mina turned on her in sudden suspicion, and Kelpie
-prepared to duck. But they were distracted by a small
-flicker of light that came from an upper window of one of
-the castle towers. For an instant, fear gripped Kelpie.
-Was it an uncanny creature of some sort? Then she noticed
-that Bogle was nowhere in sight, and she chewed her lip
-thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>Sure enough, presently his shadowy figure emerged
-from the tower door. He came back to the fire and sat
-down without a word. But Kelpie thought she had seen
-him put something in his new leather sporran (recently
-stolen, without doubt), and there passed between him
-and Mina a long look and the tiniest of nods.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie pretended to notice nothing, but her mind was
-busy. It couldn’t have been magic he was up to, for Bogle
-did no magic except for ordinary curses. It must have been
-a message, then—a message left for him here, and they
-had known where to look for it. And that was why they
-camped in the castle instead of out in the open.</p>
-
-<p>Och, there was something in the air, indeed and indeed!
-Kelpie went to sleep wondering what it might be—and
-how she might be turning it to her own advantage.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_8">8. A Task for Kelpie</h2>
-
-<p>From Inverlochy Castle they headed southeast, around
-the tip of Loch Leven and into the lands of the Stewarts
-of Glencoe. Now they definitely turned southward.
-Kelpie frowned.</p>
-
-<p>“Will we be going into Campbell country, then?” she
-asked, faintly alarmed. For the last time they had ventured
-into Argyll’s lands there had been an all too exciting witch
-hunt from which they had barely escaped, so it must be
-an important matter indeed that would bring Mina and
-Bogle back again into danger.</p>
-
-<p>Mina just grunted disagreeably, but by the next day
-Kelpie’s question was answered, for they reached Loch
-Etive, which was well into Campbell land. Mina glanced
-around nervously, and Kelpie again wondered where they
-were going, and why. Bogle stood for a moment, staring
-down the loch, then turned and purposefully led the way<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-to the precise spot where the River Etive entered the
-northernmost tip. Clearly he knew exactly where he was
-going. And then Kelpie saw what must be the reason for
-this journey. A man sat waiting for them in a copse of
-alder near the river, looking oddly out of place in the
-sober gray breeches of a Lowlander.</p>
-
-<p>“Aweel,” he said and looked at them. Kelpie’s sharp
-eyes took in every detail of the stocky long-armed figure,
-with sandy hair cropped to its ears, and sandy eyebrows
-looking too thin for the broad face. She did not like what
-she saw, and even less what she felt. For there was no
-expression at all on the Lowlander’s face. His eyes were
-like cold pebbles, and there was a malignance about him
-that made her shrink inside.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly Kelpie knew that he must be a warlock. Mina
-and Bogle would not be merely working with him; they
-were under his orders. Probably it was he who was behind
-Mina’s interest in politics, Kelpie’s long stay at Glenfern,
-this hurried trip. Och, it was a powerful and evil man,
-this, and she would do well to fear him.</p>
-
-<p>The small opaque eyes studied her for a moment and
-then turned to Mina, who looked small and shrunken
-before them. “Is yon the lass?” Their owner demanded in
-the burred English of Glasgow.</p>
-
-<p>Mina nodded, and the eyes turned back to Kelpie.
-“Come here!” he commanded.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie had a passionate desire to assert her own will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-and refuse. But it would be daft to try to challenge his
-power now—and especially with Mina and Bogle watching
-her. Reluctantly, her own eyes smoldering with anger
-and foreboding, she went and stood before him, and he
-seemed to read her thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>“So, ye’d like tae be a witch,” he said, his voice half a
-sneer, half a caress. “Tae hae sich power, ye maun learn
-tae obey. Obey! Ye didna ken that, eh? Weel—ailbins ye
-can prove yersel’ the noo, and earn the powers ye’re
-wanting.” He turned to Mina again. “Hae ye told her?”</p>
-
-<p>Mina shook her head humbly. “Never a word.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good. She’ll hear it the noo,” returned the Lowlander.
-He turned back to Kelpie, whose small face regarded him
-with wary intensity. His face became genial and fatherly.
-“Ye’re a lucky lass,” he began, “tae hae us a’ so concerned
-wi’ yer ain guid.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie laughed aloud, and there was genuine amusement
-as well as derision in her laughter. Did they think
-her a bairn, and daft as well?</p>
-
-<p>At once the Lowlander became brisk and businesslike.
-Very well, then, he conceded, perhaps it was not merely
-her own good they were after. But she would profit greatly.
-Who, he demanded, was her worst enemy?</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie prudently did not name Mina and Bogle. Instead,
-she remembered Mina’s deep interest of late and made a
-shrewd guess at the answer he expected. “Mac Cailein
-Mor?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Aye, Argyll,” he said approvingly and went on to point
-out why. The Kirk of the Covenant was reaching farther
-and farther into the Highlands now, with its persecution
-of honest witches, and even of stupid old folk who were
-not witches at all, for that matter. And who was head of
-the Covenant? Who was spearhead of the persecutions,
-the pricking and torture and burnings? Argyll. If he was
-not stopped, there would be no safe place in all Scotland
-for such as they.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie nodded and found part of her mind thinking
-that on this one point only—Argyll and the Covenant—did
-her world and that of Glenfern agree.</p>
-
-<p>Very well, then, the Lowlander continued. They must
-take steps to destroy Argyll. And what better thing than
-a hex? A wee image of him, in clay or wax, they would
-make. And then they would stick pins in it, roast it, freeze
-it, pour poison over it, and, by the black powers of witchcraft,
-all these things would happen to Mac Cailein Mor
-himself, until at last he would die in great pain.</p>
-
-<p>Again Kelpie nodded warily. And how did she enter
-into all this, at all?</p>
-
-<p>She found out soon enough. In order to make a really
-effective hex on Argyll, something from himself was
-needed to mold into the wax figure—hair or fingernail
-clippings, preferably. And who was to obtain them? Why,
-Kelpie, of course.</p>
-
-<p>Now it was clear why she had been left at Glenfern to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-learn the ways of gentry and how to be a servant. She
-would hire herself as housemaid at Inverary Castle and,
-as soon as she managed to get the hair or fingernail clippings,
-just come away back here with them. And as a
-reward she would be taught all she wished to know about
-spells, potions, curses—even the Evil Eye itself.</p>
-
-<p>As easy as that!</p>
-
-<p>They were making her their tool again, of course, to
-do what they dared not do themselves. If she were caught,
-her life would not be worth a farthing. Still—Kelpie
-thought quickly behind narrowed eyes and an impassive
-face. It was a chance to get away from Mina and Bogle
-and perhaps take a hand in managing her own life. Once
-away in Inverary, she could decide whether or not to carry
-out the errand. Perhaps she would prefer Mac Cailein Mor
-to Mina and just stay for a while. Or perhaps.... Well,
-she would see.</p>
-
-<p>She listened with great docility as they explained how
-she could get in touch with them once she had completed
-her task. She even nodded when the Lowlander suggested
-blandly that it might just be safest to send the hair—or
-half of it—on to them by the messenger they would tell
-her of, and then she herself could be bringing the rest
-later. Kelpie kept a sneer from crossing her face. If they
-thought her so witless as that, let them, then! But if and
-when she came to them, it would be with the hair hidden<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-in a safe place, and they having to fulfill their part of the
-bargain before they saw it.</p>
-
-<p>The Lowlander was very pleased with her, and Kelpie
-went to bed very pleased with herself. But she awoke near
-dawn with the sense of something bothering her.</p>
-
-<p>The sky was a vast aching void, neither black nor light.
-The world was a great shadow. Kelpie crept silently away
-from the camp and over the crest of the nearest rise, still
-wrapped in the old woolen plaidie which served as cloak
-and blanket. She seated herself against the thickness of a
-rhododendron, so that she was lost in the black shadows
-of its great leaves and blossoms. Then she stared down
-along the long, steely sheet of Loch Etive and began to
-think.</p>
-
-<p>Obey, the Lowlander had said—and clearly Mina and
-Bogle were obeying him. But Kelpie had thought that to
-be a witch was to be free, to have power to command
-others, never to <em>be</em> commanded again by anyone.</p>
-
-<p>Was it not so, after all? Did the Lowlander, in turn,
-obey someone—or Something? For an instant Kelpie
-sensed something infinitely dangerous and horrible. Was
-Satan merely another name for those ancient Dark Powers?
-And was the price for invoking them to be a slave
-to them? She shuddered, and cold droplets of sweat broke
-out on her short upper lip.</p>
-
-<p>Then she pulled herself together. She must not give in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-to foolish worries. The Lowlander was a fearsome man,
-but witchcraft was the only way to be free of Mina, and
-when she had learned it she need fear neither of them any
-longer.</p>
-
-<p>All the same, the first seed of doubt had taken root, and
-it no longer seemed quite so easy to become the most
-powerful witch in Scotland. It was a rather subdued
-Kelpie who meekly cooked the fish and oatcakes for breakfast,
-bade the Lowlander farewell, and followed Bogle and
-Mina on to Loch Awe.</p>
-
-<p>At a ruined old shieling hut by the loch they stopped
-and waited for a day, until there came a round-faced
-young woman with a wealth of brown hair and a slate-colored
-dress kilted up over a striped petticoat. She seemed
-an unlikely person to be working with witches and warlocks,
-for her bright-cheeked smile was quite artless.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Dhia dhuit!</i>” She beamed. “Is this the lass who will be
-fetching the hair to hex Mac Cailein Mor, may the demons
-fly away with him? I am Janet Campbell, who will take
-you to Inverary. I will call you Sheena at once,” she added
-chattily, “so you can get used to it, for Mrs. MacKellar
-would never be hiring a lass named for a kelpie.” She
-chuckled cheerfully.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie gave her an appraising look from under her thick
-black lashes, but Janet didn’t seem in the least put out.
-“I could not be doing the task myself,” she explained, “for
-I have my work, and no reason to be going into the castle.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-And,” she added forthrightly, “I am not brave or clever
-enough. But I will be your messenger, Sheena, when you
-need me.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie, more and more resentful of being used by
-others, nodded sullenly. But Janet’s next words cheered
-her considerably.</p>
-
-<p>“She cannot be asking for work in such rags,” pointed
-out that young woman matter-of-factly. “They would
-know her for a gypsy at once, and Mac Cailein Mor has
-a fearful hatred of such. Best be giving her your blue
-dress to wear, Mina.”</p>
-
-<p>Bogle chuckled, and Kelpie hid her satisfaction behind
-a blank face. Mina snarled and gave in. The string of
-epithets she flung at Kelpie along with the dress hardly
-amounted to an objection at all, and Kelpie’s earlier misgivings
-rose again briefly. If even the formidable Mina
-was so meekly obeying, then what power this Lowlander
-must have!</p>
-
-<p>She was still brooding on this as she and Janet set out
-on the last bit of the journey, her cheek still stinging from
-Mina’s farewell cuff. On down Loch Awe, and to the
-wild steepness of Glen Aray, and along that gash in the
-hills toward Loch Fyne, Janet led the way sturdily enough,
-although Kelpie’s wiry legs could have gone much faster.
-Part of the time Janet left the thin path altogether and
-threaded her way along the slopes, among great clumps
-of brilliant pink rhododendron, groves of oak and hazel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-and rowan, patches of lavender-blooming heath and the
-mystic white bog-cotton.</p>
-
-<p>“Best not to risk meeting anyone,” she remarked with
-a trace of nervousness. “I dare not be seen with you, in
-case....”</p>
-
-<p>She left the sentence unfinished and went on in a new
-and brisk voice. “Now I will be giving you your story to
-tell the housekeeper when you ask for work. You are
-Sheena Campbell, daughter to Sorcha and Seumas, who
-lived in the old shieling hut where we met on Loch Awe.
-When they died, you went in service with MacIntyre of
-Craignish, but now, with their daughter wedded and
-away, there is no need for you. So you have come to Inverary,
-to your own clan chief, to see is there a place for
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>For the next two hours she fed Kelpie the details of her
-fictional life and made her repeat them over and over,
-until Kelpie almost felt that she was two people at once.</p>
-
-<p>“Och, you’re glib, just!” said Janet at last, her round
-face admiring. “I’m almost believing you myself. ’Tis a
-clever mind you have, and a canny tongue.” She stopped
-and turned around to survey Kelpie’s face searchingly.
-“Aye,” she went on, “and your face, though it is not bonnie,
-just, is a face to beguile the lads. Have you a braw laddie
-who loves you, Sheena?”</p>
-
-<p>Four months ago Kelpie would have jeered at her in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-wonder and scorn. What had the lass of Mina and Bogle
-to do with love, or lads either—save to sell love-charms
-to the foolish? But though there had been no talk or
-thought of romance at Glenfern (except on one teasing
-afternoon), some sleeping thing in Kelpie had, perhaps,
-begun to stir. The face of Ian leaped into her mind, with
-the fine dark eyes of him, and the sensitive mouth curving
-downward and then up; and then she felt the strange,
-warm-faced sensation of her first blush—and she felt again
-the pain of her departure from Glenfern.</p>
-
-<p>“No!” She spat so violently that Janet raised her eyebrows
-and gave Kelpie another sharp glance before she
-turned to walk on.</p>
-
-<p>“A pity, that,” she observed mildly. “And a great waste,”
-she added presently, with a catch to her voice. “Had I
-your face and tongue, I would not be in the service of
-witchcraft, perhaps.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie kilted up her blue dress a bit higher and came
-even with Janet so that she could see her face. “Why are
-you?” she demanded curiously. “I think you could never
-be a witch.”</p>
-
-<p>“Och, no!” agreed Janet instantly. “At first I was only
-wanting a wee bit of a love potion to win the heart of the
-lad I loved. But before it could start to work at all, Mac
-Cailein Mor took him into the army and off to raid the
-MacDonalds. Och, my braw Angus.” She whimpered.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“He was killed?” Kelpie asked, and tried to push down
-the sympathy in her voice. She had promised herself not
-to care for anyone again, but only for herself.</p>
-
-<p>“It was Mac Cailein Mor had him shot,” said Janet
-tonelessly. “He tried to save an old woman from the house
-they were burning. And for that I will help the Devil himself
-to destroy Mac Cailein Mor, my chief though he be.
-I am afraid of yon Lowlander, for he is evil, but I hate Mac
-Cailein Mor more than I fear the Lowlander.</p>
-
-<p>“You must be very canny, Sheena! If you are caught—”
-She shuddered. “Have you a <i lang="gd">sgian dhu</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie nodded and drew the small sheathed knife from
-inside her dress. Janet looked at it somberly. “If you’re
-caught, you’d do well to use it on yourself. ’Twould save
-you torment and burning, more than likely, and keep you
-from betraying the rest of us. You’ll say no word, ever,
-about me, Sheena? Pretend you have never seen or heard
-of me! Promise, Sheena!”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie looked at her, and Janet’s eyes were humble and
-pleading. “I know I am a coward,” Janet whispered, “but
-I cannot help it. I could not bear the pain, and I would
-not dare to kill myself—but you would, for you are brave.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie looked at her <i lang="gd">sgian dhu</i> reflectively. It was the
-finest one she had ever had, the one stolen last spring in
-Inverness. The wee flat scabbard was darkly carved, and
-the four-inch blade, when she drew it out, winked sharply<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-in the sun. Would she use it on herself? she wondered.
-Did she dare?</p>
-
-<p>The beauty of the Highlands shimmered around her in
-pure, clear colors never quite the same from one instant
-to the next. The sky was infinite and tender; the sun beat
-warmly on her head; the air was delight to breathe. The
-world was good—except for the people in it, defiling it
-with hate and greed. It would be a pity to die, a waste of
-living. She found it very difficult to imagine.</p>
-
-<p>She looked again at the gleaming edge of the <i lang="gd">sgian dhu</i>,
-frowning a little. Dare? Yes, she thought she would dare,
-if it was to escape torture and burning. That would not
-take much courage. On the contrary, it would be the easy
-way—and she found that she did not like the taste of the
-idea. A feeling within her protested that suicide was
-shabby, debasing, a cheating of oneself. But Kelpie, who
-had never been taught such things as morals and integrity,
-could find no words and no reasons for this feeling. She
-shrugged and put the <i lang="gd">sgian dhu</i> back. Time enough to
-think about it if the occasion came up.</p>
-
-<p>Janet had been watching her with round eyes, guessing
-a little of her thought. She shivered slightly. “You are very
-brave,” and said again. “I think you will be getting away
-with the hair. And I am sure that whatever is happening
-at all, you will not speak any names.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie fell back a step or two. She looked thoughtfully<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-on a golden patch of gorse blanketing the hillside ahead,
-and her smile was very pointed. No, she would not betray
-Janet—not, she reminded herself, because she was
-softhearted, but only because it would not help herself.
-But—if she was so unlucky as to be caught, which she
-did not at all intend to be—she would be very happy
-indeed to tell Mac Cailein Mor all about Mina, Bogle, and
-the Lowlander.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_9">9. Inverary Castle</h2>
-
-<p>Loch Fyne stretched long and narrow between its hills—as
-what Highland loch did not? Glen Aray opened
-out into a meadow there, where the river entered the
-loch, and from the top of her hill Kelpie had a fine and
-leisurely view. There was the town of Inverary on the far
-side, nestled right on the loch. And on this side, almost
-below her, rose the massive stone bulk and towers of
-Inverary Castle, home of Mac Cailein Mor.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie wriggled a little deeper into her nest of tall
-harebells and broom and stared down at it with interest.
-She had time to wait and think. Janet had braided the
-black hair neatly for her, used the hem of her own dress
-to wash Kelpie’s grimy pointed face, and then hurried on
-to the head of the loch. From there she would return to
-the village as if from her own home. And Kelpie was to
-bide here, out of sight, until the next day, and then come
-down from the glen. Kelpie had agreed willingly enough,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-not for Janet’s sake, but for one more night under the
-free sky.</p>
-
-<p>She glowered at the brooding gray castle, for it was just
-occurring to her that it would be much more like a prison
-than Glenfern. And would they allow her to be out and
-away in the hills when her tasks were done, as she had
-done at Glenfern? She doubted it. Och, it was a great
-sacrifice she was making for those who had sent her, and
-she must see that her reward was as great. And then....
-She drifted into her favorite daydream.</p>
-
-<p>In the long white twilight she backed down the hill
-until she found a tarn sheltered by birch, and settled herself
-for the night. The Dancers were absent tonight, and
-the sky a pale shadowed silver in which only the largest
-stars flickered feebly, for it was midsummer. Then the
-moon came over the crest of the hill, and there were no
-more stars, and the tarn became a pool of cold light.
-Deliberately Kelpie leaned over the bank and stared into
-the tarn.</p>
-
-<p>The reflected brilliance of moonlight glowed, closed in
-upon itself, became a silver point, and then in its place
-there was a strange land—a place with giant forests, dark
-and wild, and a crude house made of logs in a rough
-clearing. She tossed her head with annoyance. What was
-this to her? What of her future, her career as a witch?
-What of destruction of those she hated? What of her
-enemies?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The tarn obeyed, as if with a malicious will of its own,
-and she saw Argyll’s face, the eyes coldly burning, the
-mouth twisted in anger, staring straight at her, and in her
-mind’s ear Kelpie heard the word “witch.”</p>
-
-<p>She threw herself backward and sat with beating heart
-for several moments after the water stood clear and blank.
-Was she fey, then? Was it her own doom she was seeing?
-Och, no, perhaps not. For she had not seen herself, and
-surely Mac Cailein Mor had looked so to many a person
-accused of witchcraft. She had asked to see her enemy,
-and the picture was telling her, just, that here was a
-dangerous enemy—a warning to be canny, that was all.
-She curled up comfortably in a patch of rank grass free
-of nettles, and slept.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">In the thin light of morning she smoothed back her hair
-and washed her face in the cold, peaty water of the tarn.
-Then, wary but confident, she made her way back to the
-glen and along the river to the castle.</p>
-
-<p>As she approached the massive stone gateway, Kelpie
-put on the proper face and attitude for this occasion as
-easily as Eithne might have put on a different frock. The
-task was not so easy, really, for there was little that could
-be done about the long slanted eyes and brows or the
-pointed jaw. But the severely braided hair helped, and by
-tucking in her lower lip and drooping the corners she
-added a helpless and wistful note. She pulled her chin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-down and back and pressed her elbows to her sides for a
-look of brave apprehension, and then she changed her
-free, fawnlike walk for a most sober one.</p>
-
-<p>Through the gate she stepped into a subdued world of
-drab colors. Her blue dress looked insolently bright beside
-the grays and blacks of the other women in the courtyard.
-Only the tartan—that proud symbol of the Highlander—had
-failed to be extinguished by the decree of the Covenant
-and Kirk. And even the tartans, being colored with
-vegetable dye, were of muted shades.</p>
-
-<p>A man leading a horse stopped and regarded her with
-little approval. “What is it that you are wanting?” he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Could I be seeing Mrs. MacKellar, the housekeeper?”
-asked Kelpie, her eyes lowered modestly.</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her for a moment and then called over
-his shoulder, “Siubhan, the lass is wanting Mrs. MacKellar.
-Take her away up to the door.” And he went on about his
-business.</p>
-
-<p>A sad-faced woman put down her basket of laundry,
-regarded Kelpie without curiosity, and jerked her head.
-Kelpie followed with great meekness and waited obediently
-at the castle door until Siubhan had gone inside and
-reappeared with a tall, gaunt woman in black.</p>
-
-<p>Once again there was the disapproving look. “And who
-may you be?”</p>
-
-<p>“I be Sheena Campbell.” Kelpie launched into her story,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-not too glibly, with downcast eyes and humble voice.
-“And it’s hoping I am to serve Mac Cailein Mor,” she
-finished earnestly.</p>
-
-<p>“Mmmm,” commented Mrs. MacKellar. “We’ve lasses
-aplenty in Inverary Village.”</p>
-
-<p>“Och,” protested Kelpie, “but ’tis experience I’ve had!
-And,” she added pitifully, “they will be having homes, and
-I with nowhere to turn.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. MacKellar softened, but only slightly. “To tell
-the truth,” she said bluntly, “there is something—I’m not
-altogether liking the look of you! How am I knowing you
-are what you say?”</p>
-
-<p>“But and whyever else would I be coming to Mac Cailein
-Mor?” demanded Kelpie artlessly.</p>
-
-<p>“Mmmm, that will be the question,” retorted Mrs. MacKellar.
-“No, now, I’m thinking—”</p>
-
-<p>What she thought was never said, for from the corner
-of her eye Kelpie saw a tall figure just passing the foot of
-the stairs—not Argyll, but his tallness, his long face, red
-hair, and manner of dress suggested that he must be
-Argyll’s son. Kelpie took a chance.</p>
-
-<p>She turned away blindly from the imminent refusal,
-carefully stumbled a bit, and tumbled herself neatly
-down the steps to land in a pathetic heap in front of the
-startled young man.</p>
-
-<p>“My sorrow!” he ejaculated.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie swiftly decided against being injured, as this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-might prove inconvenient. So she gave a small scared
-glance upward at the faint frown above her and shrank
-back against the wall. “Och, your pardon!” she whispered.
-“Please do not be beating me!”</p>
-
-<p>The young man—she was quite sure now that he must
-be Lord Lorne, son of Argyll—gave a short laugh. “Whatever
-you may have heard, I am no beater of bairns.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie drooped her lip at him. “Sir, I would not mind
-a beating, if only I could be staying here to work for Mac
-Cailein Mor.”</p>
-
-<p>“What is this? Who is she?” Lord Lorne switched to
-English, and Mrs. MacKellar replied in the same tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“She iss saying her name iss Sheena Campbell from
-Loch Awe, and that she iss an orphan who hass peen
-working in the home of MacIntyre of Craignish who iss
-not needing her any more.” Mrs. MacKellar’s English,
-sibilant with the soft Gaelic sounds, was really not nearly
-as good as Kelpie’s—but Kelpie was careful to keep her
-face blank, as if she did not understand. “But sir,” went
-on the housekeeper, “I am not liking the look of her whateffer.
-Her eyes—”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Lorne bent and looked at them. Kelpie tried to
-make them wide and pleading.</p>
-
-<p>“Oddly ringed, aren’t they?” he observed. “Well, she
-can’t help that. You could use her, I think. Why not try
-her out?” And he went on to wherever he had been going.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Seadh.</i>” Mrs. MacKellar shrugged and washed her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-hands of the decision. “You can be staying a bit, then,
-until I see can you do the work. We will see does Peigi
-have an old dress you can be wearing, of a proper color.
-You’re of the Kirk, are you no?” she demanded suddenly,
-turning to cast a suspicious eye on the blue of Kelpie’s
-dress.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie wasn’t quite sure what that meant, and, even
-with Janet’s tutoring, she dared not bluff too far. She
-took an instant to think as she rose slowly to her feet.
-“I am wanting to be a better Christian,” she said, temporizing,
-with an earnest face. “And that is one reason I was
-coming here, for the house of Mac Cailein Mor is surely
-the most godly of all.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well—” Mrs. MacKellar looked somewhat appeased.
-“Come away in, then.” And Kelpie came.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">Life in Inverary Castle was quite different from life at
-Glenfern, even though Kelpie’s duties were similar. There
-was a coldness here—and not only physical, although the
-castle was chill enough, with draughts constantly blowing
-down the halls and pushing out against the wall tapestries.
-But the chill of spirit was even more depressing. Laughter
-was near sacrilege, and a smile darkly suspect. Dancing
-simply didn’t exist, and singing was confined to dour
-hymns regarding hellfire and damnation. If Kelpie had
-ever chafed at the restrictions of Glenfern, she now realized
-what a free and happy life that had been. Och, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-people could live like this! Worse, that they seemed to
-approve it! One could hardly say they <em>liked</em> anything.</p>
-
-<p>And here Kelpie heard the other viewpoint regarding
-Mac Cailein Mor. Everyone seemed to fear him, even his
-rather mousy wife and sullen son. But they also saw him
-(except possibly Lord Lorne) as the Right Hand of God,
-fighting the battles of righteousness against such enemies
-of Heaven as witches, King Charles, Papists, Anglicans,
-everyone else who was not of the Covenant, and, most
-particularly, Lord Graham of Montrose, who was supposedly
-leading the King’s army in Scotland. But no one
-seemed to know where Montrose was now, at all. He had
-started north to raise an army for the king and then vanished
-altogether, and it was to be fondly hoped that the
-Devil had snatched him away to Hell where he belonged.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie listened and said nothing. She didn’t like what
-she heard and began to hate Argyll on her own account.
-Indeed and it was true that he would take all freedom
-from all people if he could. Kelpie cared little enough
-about anyone else, she told herself, but her own freedom
-mattered more than anything at all, and she began to feel
-a personal enthusiasm for her task here. A hex was what
-he deserved, and she hoped that the Lowlander would
-make it a fine horrible one indeed.</p>
-
-<p>It was lucky, she discovered, that himself was home at
-all now, for he spent much of his time these days heading
-his Covenant army, raiding the Highlands, and occasionally<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-daring a small skirmish with other enemies. (Kelpie
-received the impression that he was not, perhaps, the
-boldest and most audacious leader when it came to fighting.)
-But now he was home, as no doubt the Lowlander
-had known.</p>
-
-<p>Still, three bleak weeks had passed, and she still had
-never had a chance to lay her hands on any bit of his
-person or even come near his private rooms. Mrs. MacKellar
-kept a watchful eye out, and Kelpie’s duties were
-confined to all wings of the castle but that of Mac Cailein
-Mor. And so she watched and waited through June, tense,
-wary, inwardly chafing.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_10">10. A Bit of Hair</h2>
-
-<p>It was an impossible errand they had sent her on! Kelpie
-realized it slowly, angrily. A bit of Argyll’s hair, indeed
-and indeed! Nobody at all would be so feckless as to
-leave a bit of his hair lying about, convenient to the hand
-of any witch who happened to be passing. And how much
-less Mac Cailein Mor, who was thrice as crafty, ten times
-as suspicious, and a thousand times more hated than most
-folk? Och, no; for him such carelessness would be altogether
-impossible. It was certain that he would stand over
-his barber while every last hair or fingernail clipping was
-safely burned. The best she could hope for was a bit of
-his personal belongings, which would be much less effective;
-and whatever Mina and the Lowlander would say
-she did not know. No doubt they would make an excuse
-to refuse to teach her spells, after all.</p>
-
-<p>And so she seethed under the joyless Covenant mask<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-which was becoming harder and harder to wear. How she
-longed for the freedom of the open! Her legs ached with
-the longing to run and leap and dance upon the hills, and
-her face ached with the need to laugh. And yet she stayed
-on, hoping for some miracle, reflecting sourly that Mrs.
-MacKellar and Argyll were very little improvement over
-Mina and Bogle.</p>
-
-<p>It was in mid-July that it happened, during morning
-prayer.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie knelt with the rest of the household on the cold
-stone floor in grim endurance, for this long, twice-daily
-torment was nearly unbearable for an active young gypsy.</p>
-
-<p>Her place was in the very back, among the meanest of
-the servants. Ahead, the bowed backs graduated in rank,
-with Mrs. MacKellar far up front, just behind meek Lady
-Argyll, Lord Lorne, and Ewen Cameron, whose red kilt
-blazed sharply alien amid all the blue and green of the
-Campbell tartan. And before them all stood Mac Cailein
-Mor’s long, stooped figure, telling of the anger, jealousy,
-cruelty of a God who could surely have nothing to do
-with the opal world outside. With cold satisfaction and
-in grim detail he described God’s will (which seemed indistinguishable
-from Argyll’s will); and his pale eyes were
-most disconcerting, for if one seemed fixed upon Siubhan
-or Peigi, the other seemed to stare straight at Kelpie, and
-who was to know what himself was really looking at,
-whatever?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Behold, the day of Jehovah cometh, cruel, with wrath
-and fierce anger; to make the land a desolation, and to
-destroy the sinners thereof out of it,” said Argyll. “He shall
-destroy the minions of Satan, those evildoers who are not
-of the Kirk, who blasphemously question the Covenant.
-For all those who are not with the Covenant are against
-the Lord and vile in His sight. They shall burn forever
-in Hell, and above all shall burn all witches and that
-servant of the Devil, Montrose. They shall be tormented—”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie felt the presence of the messenger in the open
-door behind her, but dared not turn to look. She saw Argyll’s
-eye flicker briefly in that direction and noticed the slight
-pause before he went coldly on with his orders to and
-from God. And something inside Kelpie stirred, and she
-knew that something was about to happen which would
-be important to her.</p>
-
-<p>Dropping her dark head over clasped hands in an attitude
-of great reverence, she tried to think what it could
-be. There was nothing she had done. Unless—Had Ewen
-Cameron said something about yesterday?</p>
-
-<p>For yesterday Kelpie had found her first opportunity
-to get away over to the wing which held the chambers of
-Mac Cailein Mor and his family. She had actually reached
-his door, and as she hesitated there, heart beating quickly,
-another door nearby had opened, and through it came
-a lad of about fifteen.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie had not needed to look at the oddness of a Cameron<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-tartan in the Campbell stronghold to know that this
-was Ewen, the grandson of Lochiel. Ian had told her
-about him, and she had seen him now and again about the
-castle. And Peigi had told her proudly how fine it was that
-Mac Cailein Mor was taking on himself the education of
-his nephew, for fear it should be neglected or his own
-family should teach him to believe the wrong things.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie had hidden a cynical smile at the time, but now,
-when the grave, clear-eyed lad stood regarding her in the
-hall, she wondered briefly how much this “education”
-would really mean. For he had about him the air of one
-with a mind of his own.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be Sheena, will you not?” he asked as Kelpie
-belatedly made a stiff bob. She nodded. “Best not to linger
-here,” he went on. “If my uncle should see you—”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye,” Kelpie had murmured, and slipped away back
-to her own territory with the odd feeling that he had seen
-through her mask—not, perhaps, that he knew exactly
-what was under it, but that he knew she was alien to this
-world of Inverary.</p>
-
-<p>Could he have said anything, just? Kelpie wondered as
-she shifted her knees ever so slightly on the painfully hard
-stone. The thing inside said no. He was another of those
-strange people, like Ian and Eithne, who seemed not to
-hate anyone or even wish them ill.</p>
-
-<p>But still, something was about to happen, and she must
-find out as soon as ever she could. When prayers were over,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-and the household rose and respectfully made way for
-himself to go out first, it was easy enough for her to slip
-nearest the door, for she had had a wealth of experience
-at picking pockets and melting through crowds. And so
-she saw the travel-weary messenger waiting outside, and
-heard the news when Argyll did.</p>
-
-<p>“Antrim of Colonsay and his clan of Irish MacDonalds
-have landed at Ardnaburchen and taken the castle of
-Mingary, and will even now be taking the keep of Lochaline,
-your Lordship!”</p>
-
-<p>The Marquis of Argyll said something under his breath,
-and the freckles suddenly stood out under the red hair
-that Kelpie coveted. “May the Devil take his impudence!”
-he said aloud, and there was no doubt that he meant it
-literally.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie tried to remember something she had heard at
-Glenfern. Antrim—Colkitto, they called him—was chief
-of a branch of MacDonalds that the Campbells had driven
-westward, over the islands, and at last to Ireland. And now,
-it seemed, he had decided to bring his clan back to Scotland
-to fight the Campbells and perhaps take back some
-land.</p>
-
-<p>“Have messengers ready to ride,” Argyll said viciously
-to his son. “I’ll have the army up and wipe him out once
-and for all!” By this time the rest of the household had
-filtered out into the hall, and it didn’t seem to matter if<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-they all heard or no. But then, there’d be no keeping this
-kind of news secret, whatever.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie clenched her fists. We? Then would Mac Cailein
-Mor be away with the army himself?</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t there an English Parliament garrison at Carlisle?”
-ventured Lord Lorne in English. “Why not send to them to
-take warships up the coast? If they captured Antrim’s
-ships, there’d be no retreat for him.”</p>
-
-<p>Argyll nodded brusquely and strode off toward his
-chambers to write the necessary letters—taking his hair
-with him, of course. “Get my things ready to ride,” he ordered
-one of his retainers, thus destroying Kelpie’s last
-hope.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Dhé!</i>” she muttered, without changing the blank and
-sober expression considered suitable for God-fearing
-people. Whatever could she be doing now, at all, with him
-away?</p>
-
-<p>Impulsively, she slipped out of the hall before Mrs.
-MacKellar or Peigi should see her, and made her way to
-the tower next to Argyll’s wing. There she hid her thin
-self partway up the steep, twisting stairs, where with one
-eye she could see his door, and waited. Not that he would
-be likely to be trimming his hair or fingernails now, but
-perhaps in the flurry of his leaving she could just slip in
-and lay hold of some wee personal item to be used instead,
-and it the best she could do.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was a full half-hour before Argyll’s door opened.
-Kelpie glimpsed the full tartan folds of his belted plaid
-and then pressed herself out of sight as the halting steps
-assured her that it was indeed Mac Cailein Mor.</p>
-
-<p>She waited until they had passed down the hall and out
-of hearing, and then slipped out of the tower and across
-to the massive oaken door. She paused an instant, hand
-lifted to open the door, but it was almost certain there
-could be no one else in there, for the entire household
-had been at morning prayer, and no one else had gone
-in. The door opened heavily, with never a creak, and
-closed firmly behind her.</p>
-
-<p>Here must be his Lordship’s private withdrawing room.
-Kelpie had never seen such a room, and she glanced
-around with interest. The clan crest, a boar’s head, was
-carved over the large stone fireplace and on the back of
-the high oaken settle that stood at one wall. A bulky armchair
-with a triangular seat going to a point in back stood
-by a long table on which quills, ink, sand, and paper still
-stood. But there was nothing personal. His bedroom must
-be on through that other door.</p>
-
-<p>She darted across the room silently, opened the door,
-and saw an enormous four-post bedstead of inlaid walnut—a
-fine piece indeed, she thought cynically, for an unworldly
-Covenanter! No less than three great-chests doubtless
-held his clothing and perhaps Lady Argyll’s—but
-clothing would be too bulky for Kelpie’s needs. A plaid-brooch<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-might just do nicely, though, and they should be
-in a cupboard, perhaps, or a wee box somewhere.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie began investigating. And then she nearly yelped
-with triumph. A brush! A brush in which were tangled
-several long strands of red hair! Och, and he <em>had</em> been
-careless, then, perhaps with being upset from the news of
-Antrim. Och, the fine luck of it! Chuckling, she pulled
-them loose, looked around for something to wrap them in—and
-saw the bedroom door swing inexorably open.</p>
-
-<p>There he stood, Mac Cailein Mor, one eye regarding her
-balefully, the other apparently fixed on the wall behind;
-and the thin lips were pitiless. For once Kelpie’s quick
-mind and glib tongue failed her altogether, and she just
-stood there while he crossed the room in three strides
-and seized her wrist.</p>
-
-<p>“A thief, is it?” he rasped.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie found her wits. “Och, no, your worship!” she
-cried. “I know it’s no right I have to be coming here, but
-it’s the fine and godly man you are, and leaving now, and
-I just wanting to see—”</p>
-
-<p>He pried her hand roughly open, and the damning
-evidence of the hairs lay exposed on her palm.</p>
-
-<p>“A witch!” he said with savage glee. “A witch in my own
-household. Ah, the Devil is trying hard to destroy me, for
-I do the work of the Lord. Blessed are those who are
-persecuted for Thy name’s sake. Spawn of Satan, do you
-know what we do with witches?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Witches?” faltered Kelpie with desperate innocence,
-though she knew by now that pretense was hopeless. Far
-less evidence than this would have been fatal, and even
-with a much less suspicious man than Mac Cailein Mor.
-Sudden hot anger almost drove out her terror for an instant—not
-so much at Argyll as at Mina and Bogle and the
-Lowlander, who had so callously sent her on this errand.
-They had surely known how slim her chances were, and
-that she would almost certainly be caught and burned.
-And they would never have taught her the Evil Eye, even
-had she been successful. She had been their tool and
-cat’s-paw, and she cursed herself for being such a fool.
-Och, she would see to it before she died that Argyll knew
-their names and the meeting place.</p>
-
-<p>She didn’t once think of the <i lang="gd">sgian dhu</i> that rested within
-the bodice of her sober gray dress.</p>
-
-<p>Mac Cailein Mor was dragging her out of the room,
-baying for his servants, the dangerous hairs safely in his
-own hand. Kelpie submitted passively because it would
-do no good at all to struggle. Her mind darted here and
-there, like a moth in a glass ball, finding no way out at
-all.</p>
-
-<p>And now all the household was running, and two husky
-men took her from Argyll and hustled her brutally through
-the castle and out to the courtyard, while Argyll sputtered
-his tale to his son between bellows for Mrs. MacKellar.</p>
-
-<p>“Was it you hired her?” he demanded ominously of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-cringing housekeeper. “Could you not see the eyes of her,
-the teeth, the brows? Or was it yourself plotting against
-me too? Are the minions of Satan filling my own home?”
-He was working himself into a fine frenzy, and even
-through her terror Kelpie found time to wonder briefly at
-the idiotic honesty of Lorne, who spoke up then.</p>
-
-<p>“’Twas my fault, Father. Mrs. MacKellar didn’t like
-the look of the lass when she came to ask for employment,
-and I was fool enough to feel sorry for her, and I said to
-take her in.” He met his sire’s black glare straight. “’Twas
-stupid,” he said firmly, “but no plot against you by any
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>“The Devil addled your wits, then,” retorted Argyll, not
-to be deprived of his martyrdom. “Could you not see the
-ringed eyes of her? No, do not look into them! She’ll cast
-a spell!” He glared at Lorne, and then, dourly, at Ewen
-Cameron, who stood near with an expressionless face.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie was again fervently wishing that she <em>could</em> cast
-a spell! Och, the plague she would be putting on the lot
-of them, and himself in particular! Since she couldn’t, she
-tucked in her lower lip, lowered the offensive eyes, hung
-meekly in the painful grip on her arms, and made one
-last hopeless try for her life.</p>
-
-<p>“What was it I was doing wrong?” she whimpered. “It
-was nothing valuable I was taking, but only a wee bit
-token to protect me from the Devil whilst yourself was
-away.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was no use at all. Everyone knew what hairs were
-used for, even children.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall we burn her now, Mac Cailein Mor?” asked one
-of the men. Kelpie’s heart thudded sickly. But Argyll
-brooded.</p>
-
-<p>“No time now,” he said reluctantly. “I’ll be wanting to
-test her for witch marks and get a full confession and the
-names of her accomplices. And there’s Antrim to deal with
-first.” He looked frustrated at having to delay, and Kelpie
-realized that here was a man who enjoyed cruelty for its
-own sake. She shuddered.</p>
-
-<p>“Put her in the dungeon,” ordered Argyll, “the wee cell
-at the bottom, and with no blanket. And let no one open
-the door or speak to her until I return. Put bread and water
-through the grate, but nothing else. Is everything ready,
-Buchanan? My horse, then.”</p>
-
-<p>He turned away, and Kelpie drew a small shaky breath.
-A wee respite, then, and perhaps a chance to escape altogether
-from the torture and burning, if they didn’t search
-her and take away the <i lang="gd">sgian dhu</i>—and if she made up her
-mind to use it.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_11">11. Argyll’s Dungeon</h2>
-
-<p>The cell was tiny, damp, cold, and inconceivably
-black. Within ten minutes after the solid door thudded
-behind her, Kelpie was cowering on the floor. Even an
-ordinary roof was oppressive to her, and this—Ou, the
-dark and the smallness were almost tangible things that
-seemed to press down and in on her, smothering and
-squashing! It was even hard to breathe, just with the
-thinking of it.</p>
-
-<p>By the time half an hour had passed, it was all she could
-do not to shriek wildly and beat her head against the stone.
-She gritted her teeth, sensing that self-control was her
-only hold on sanity. How could mere darkness hurt the
-eyes so? Kelpie began fingering her <i lang="gd">sgian dhu</i> longingly.
-It was escape, escape from this torment and that to follow.
-She had no great fear of death, in spite of all she had
-heard of Hell, for at worst it was almost certain to be interesting.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And yet, the thing inside would not let her use the wee
-sharp dagger that nestled so temptingly in her hand. It
-gave no reason, except that this was a mean and shabby
-way to die.</p>
-
-<p>For nearly the first time in her memory, Kelpie cried.
-On and on she sobbed, for as space was closing in on her,
-time was stretched into a long and empty void, and she
-was alone in chaos and terror.</p>
-
-<p>Once she thought that perhaps if she did kill herself
-now, her Hell would be an eternity of this, and she shuddered
-at the thought. Argyll’s God might just do such a
-thing, and Satan’s fire was surely to be preferred—but
-which of them would be having the decision, at all? Her
-thoughts blurred off into confusion.</p>
-
-<p>Some time later a grate in the door opened, a hand
-pushed a bit of bread through the pale oblong, and it
-clanged shut again. Kelpie roused herself to explore the
-spot with her long, sensitive fingers but found it small and
-solidly bolted. She took a few halfhearted bites of bread
-and lapsed again into a shivering huddle.</p>
-
-<p>After more time she drifted up from a semi-sleep to
-hear another sound at the door. Was it the next day, then,
-and time for more bread?</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Dhé!</i> The door was opening, when Mac Cailein Mor had
-ordered against it! Was he back, then? She shrank against
-the wall as an oblong of gray spread like a shaft of light
-into the thick black of the cell.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Sheena?”</p>
-
-<p>It was Ewen Cameron! She knew the voice of him!</p>
-
-<p>“Sheena, are you awake?”</p>
-
-<p>With a small gasp, Kelpie was at the door. “Och, it’s
-near dead I am! Will you no let me free? You wouldn’t
-see me burned, an innocent wee lass, and put to torment
-before it? I’ll—”</p>
-
-<p>“Hist!” There was a hint of strain in his voice, with a
-thread of humor around it. “And what were you thinking
-I came for? ’Tis quite likely you <em>are</em> a witch,” he added
-ruefully, “but for all that, I cannot abide cruelty. Come
-away, then, and like a mouse.”</p>
-
-<p>Gasping with relief, Kelpie was out of the door before
-he had finished speaking. He groped to find her face in
-the dark that was to her almost light. “Wait, now. I must
-be bolting the door again. I cannot see.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie moved beside him and helped. “Follow me,” he
-said when it was done. “I can put you outside the walls,
-and then ’tis up to you.”</p>
-
-<p>It was all she asked. Scarcely able to believe her good
-fortune, she followed him through a dark, narrow labyrinth
-of stone corridors, most of them damp with being underground.
-Twice he unlocked doors for them to pass through,
-and finally they crept on hands and knees through a tunnel
-quite as black as her cell had been. It twisted on and on,
-and finally upward.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis an escape route in case of siege by an enemy,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-Ewen explained over his shoulder. “None but the family is
-supposed to know of it, and even they have nearly forgotten
-it, because for the last hundred years Clan Campbell has
-been too strong to be attacked in its own stronghold. Instead,
-it is they who attack other clans.”</p>
-
-<p>The narrow tunnel picked up the faint note of anger in
-his voice, magnified and echoed it. Kelpie, engrossed
-though she was in her own important affairs, suddenly
-wondered how it felt to be fostered by a wicked uncle
-who was, in addition, enemy to one’s own clan, and to know
-you were being used as a hostage to control the actions
-of your own grandfather, your own people. It was the first
-time Kelpie had seriously tried to put herself into the
-mind of another person, and it felt most peculiar and disturbing.</p>
-
-<p>“What if real war is coming to the Highlands?” she
-demanded. “Will Lochiel dare call out the Camerons
-to fight against your uncle and the Covenant, or—”</p>
-
-<p>There was a brief silence in which their small scufflings
-seemed to shout aloud. Then: “Grandfather will dare to
-do what is right,” said Ewen tersely.</p>
-
-<p>Another silence, and then his low voice reached back to
-her again, strongly earnest. “There are things more important
-than safety, Sheena. I wonder if you know about
-them. Was it for a principle you were wanting to put a
-hex on my uncle, or for something else?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie didn’t answer this, for the simple reason that she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-was not at all sure what a principle was. Unless—Could
-it have anything to do with not using the <i lang="gd">sgian dhu</i> on
-herself when it seemed much easier to do so? Or had she
-not used it because the thing inside her had known that
-she was going to be rescued? Och, it was much too confusing
-to bother with now, for she could at last see a pale
-blob of night sky ahead.</p>
-
-<p>They emerged in a shallow cave on the hill above Inverary,
-not far from where Kelpie had first looked down
-upon the castle.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said Ewen, “be away out of Campbell territory
-as quickly as ever you can! Away around the tip of Loch
-Fyne, and then east is best, but be canny. You’ll not be
-safe with the MacFarlanes, either, but the Stewarts of
-Balquidder are hostile to the Campbell, and the MacGregors
-and MacNabs, and they are past Loch Lomond.
-Best to skulk low during the day, for you’ll not get so far
-this night—though I’m hoping you’ll not be found missing
-until Uncle Archibald is returned and the cell door
-opened.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie nodded. The weight of horror was lifting (though
-she would never quite forget it), and she began to feel
-quite cocky again. Fine she was now, for who knew more
-about skulking and wariness in the hills? And yet through
-her cockiness crept an odd curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>“Will <em>he</em> be finding out ’twas you who freed me?”</p>
-
-<p>“I think not,” said Ewen, and there was laughter in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-lilt of his voice. “No one is thinking I know about the
-secret tunnel, and they will probably believe you escaped
-by witchcraft. Be careful, Sheena, the next time you’re
-wanting to hex someone,” he added and vanished back
-into the tunnel.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie stared down the blackness after him and shook
-her head wonderingly. He was another daft one, to take
-a risk for someone else, and with no profit to himself whatever!
-But she was grateful, for all that. She owed much
-to his daftness.</p>
-
-<p>She left the cave, lifted her face to the infinite space
-of the open sky, and breathed deeply of the free air. The
-moonlit side of the hill was ghostlike, a pale glow without
-depth. The dark side was a soft, deep purple-black. Patches
-of glimmering mist rose from the loch, and there was a
-line of it behind the western hills. Kelpie laughed aloud
-and headed northeast.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">Thick gray mist poured over the hills from the west,
-covering the world with a layer of wetness. A curlew gave
-its eerie call, the whaups shrilled, and presently it began
-to rain. Kelpie shivered a little, even though the gray
-wool dress was the warmest she had ever owned. She
-had got soft, then, living in houses. She must steal a plaidie
-somewhere—preferably one of plain color, or a black and
-white shepherd’s tartan. Wearing the tartan of a clan
-could get her into trouble.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>By the time it was really light, she had passed the tip
-of Loch Fyne. She rested for a while, but it was cold sitting
-still, she was getting more and more hungry, and as there
-was little enough chance of being seen through the thickness
-of the mist she went on again. Once out of Campbell
-country she might risk stealing as well as begging, but she
-must be careful about telling fortunes or selling charms,
-for she would be getting near the Lowlands, where the
-arm of the Kirk was long and strong and people were
-narrow-minded about such activities. And Kelpie very
-much wanted to avoid any more trouble of that sort.</p>
-
-<p>She waded through the dripping tangle of heather and
-bracken and wondered what to do next. She was free of
-Mina and Bogle—unless they found her again. Did she
-dare return to Glenfern, having left the way she had? No,
-for they no longer trusted her, and Alex was now her
-enemy. Moreover, if Mina ever found out, she would put
-a curse on Wee Mairi. It seemed she must give up her hopes
-of learning witchcraft from Mina, and any other witches
-who still lived in Covenant territory would be very canny
-and quiet indeed. She might try the Highlands, but there
-was a problem too, for in order to get there without recrossing
-Campbell territory, she must go far east and then
-north and through another danger zone, where there had
-been fighting and trouble since spring. And even in the
-Highlands there was danger of meeting Mina and Bogle,
-and further danger that Alex might have set all the Camerons<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-and MacDonalds against her, as he had threatened.</p>
-
-<p><i lang="gd">Dhé!</i> Indeed and it was a braw mess she had got herself
-into! She cursed the Lowlander, Mina, Bogle, Mac Cailein
-Mor, the Kirk, and Alex, with fine impartial vigor and in
-two languages. Then, for good measure, she added Antrim
-(for forcing her hand too soon), the King (for his general
-fecklessness), all religious bodies, God, the Devil, and
-people in general.</p>
-
-<p>When she had finished she felt no better, either mentally
-or physically. She had now traveled some twenty miles
-over thickly brushed and wooded hills, on an empty
-stomach, after a shattering experience, and even Kelpie’s
-wiry toughness had its limits. Had she reached friendly
-territory yet? How was she to know without seeing a clan
-tartan that would tell her? Well, surely she was for the
-moment way ahead of any possible alarm out for her.
-She must have food, and there was a shieling hut below.</p>
-
-<p>She sat down in the drenched heather and absently regarded
-a small twig of ling, already in bloom a month
-ahead of the ordinary heather. The tiny lantern-shaped
-blossoms were larger and pinker than heather too, not
-quite as charming, perhaps, but still tiny perfect things.
-Plants were nicer than people, if less exciting. She stared
-at it while she thought up two stories; one to use on a
-Campbell or a MacFarlane, the other for Stewart or
-MacNab. Then she stood up, brushed the wet from her
-skirts, and started slowly down the hill.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>An old woman stepped out of the low hut to empty a
-pail of water, and there was no mistaking the light and
-dark reds crossed with green on her plaidie. It was MacNab.
-Her husband, no doubt, would be out in the hills with the
-sheep or cattle. Fine, that. Women living alone in the hills
-were rather more likely to be sympathetic and motherly
-toward a forlorn wee lass than men. (On the other hand,
-women of the Kirk towns were like to be dourly suspicious
-and hating.)</p>
-
-<p>The old woman started to go back inside and then
-caught a glimpse of Kelpie, who stumbled a bit because
-she was hungry and tired—and because it was her general
-policy.</p>
-
-<p>“Whoever is it, then?” The Highland lilt of the Gaelic
-was less marked here, near the Lowlands, and the voice
-cracked slightly with age—and yet there was in it a note
-like a bell.</p>
-
-<p>“Och, forgive me, just.” Kelpie’s voice was faint, and
-she swayed slightly. “I am weary and hungry, and could
-you be sparing just a crust?”</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Seadh</i>, the little love!” Mrs. MacNab was all sympathy.
-“Come away in, then, and I’ve a fine pot of oatmeal on
-the fire. Whatever will you be doing all alone and in the
-hills?” She looked at Kelpie with wise old eyes as they
-entered the dark shieling, and frowned in puzzlement.
-“From your dress you would be a lass from a Covenant
-home, but your face is giving it the lie.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Kelpie instantly revised her story in the brief time it
-took to step through the low doorway under its bristling
-roof of rye thatch. She stood meekly on the earthen floor
-under the smoke-blackened rafters and noted at a glance
-that these folk were better off than some, for there was a
-real bedstead in the corner instead of a pile of heather and
-bracken, and four three-legged creepie-stools.</p>
-
-<p>“Eat now,” invited her hostess, handing her a big bowl
-of oatmeal from the iron pot over the fire. “And there are
-bannocks here, and milk. And then perhaps you will tell
-me about yourself, little one, for I confess I’ve a fine curiosity,
-and strangers are none so common here.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie made use of the respite to ask some questions
-and get her bearings, in between ravenous mouthfuls of
-food. “Be ye Covenant here?” she ventured around half
-a bannock.</p>
-
-<p>“Och, and can you no see my tartan?” demanded Mrs.
-MacNab. “We MacNabs are loyal to our own Stewart
-King, foolish darling. Why, then, are you of the Kirk?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie shook her head vigorously. “Not I! ’Tis a prisoner
-of the Campbells I’ve been. They wanted me to be of the
-Covenant and refused to tell me who my parents are, at
-all. And so I have run away—”</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Dhé!</i>” interrupted Mrs. MacNab with wide eyes. This
-was the most exciting thing that had happened in the
-braes of Balquidder this many a year. She was ready to
-believe anything of the hated Campbells. “Oh, my dear!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-Is it that they were stealing you, then? Tell me all about
-it, heart’s love, every bit!”</p>
-
-<p>And so, replete and comfortable, warm and very nearly
-dry, Kelpie spun a wonderful long tale of truth and fiction
-mixed. The lonely old woman eagerly drank it in, with
-exclamations of indignation and sympathy. When Callum
-MacNab, looking like a twisted and weatherworn pine,
-came in at dusk, he had to hear it all over again, and by
-this time Kelpie had thought up a few more interesting
-details. She fairly basked in their attention and tenderness,
-while the old couple glowed with kindness and the rare
-treat of company and news. And so, with one thing and
-another, Kelpie spent the night and the next day with
-them.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_12">12. Meeting at Pitlochry</h2>
-
-<p>“’Tis sorry I am to see you away, wee dark love, but
-you must be putting more distance between yourself
-and the Campbells. And you must be searching for
-your own true family. To think of it! And you say Mac
-Cailein Mor was telling you himself that ’twas from a chief
-he stole you?”</p>
-
-<p>“And I but a bairn,” agreed Kelpie firmly. Having Callum
-and Alsoon believe her tale so readily almost made
-her believe it herself—and, after all, might not some of it
-be true? She tucked the little bundle of oatmeal and scones
-into her belt, and hugged the rough warmth of her new
-plaidie about her shoulders, pleased that it was the neutral
-black and white of the shepherd’s tartan and would not
-associate her with any particular clan.</p>
-
-<p>Luck was with her again, she reflected, that she had
-found these kind and simple people, willing to give her
-the food from their mouths and the clothes from their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-backs—much simpler, if less exciting, than stealing. It
-made her feel odd to be <em>given</em> things this way. Perhaps if
-all folk were like these, or like Ian and his family, there
-would be no need to steal. Warm with a novel sense of
-gratitude, she was careful not to take anything from Callum
-and Alsoon that they had not given her.</p>
-
-<p>They stood just outside the low doorway in the brightness
-of the summer evening. The rain had become mere
-clouds glowing to the northwest, where the sun would
-soon dip briefly below the hills. The old couple regarded
-her anxiously, not at all happy to see her set off in the
-white gloaming.</p>
-
-<p>“Look you, now,” repeated Callum, “you must be going
-south and east for a bit, through Drummond and Stewart
-country, and then north through Murrays and Menzies,
-and when you reach Pitlochry, just be finding the home
-of my daughter Meg, at the tanning shop next the Tey
-River, and tell them I sent you, and they will care for you
-until you are away again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, then,” murmured Kelpie, anxious to be gone. She
-had heard these directions at least twice before, and in
-any case she knew the country far better than she dared
-to let Callum know.</p>
-
-<p>“Haste ye back,” they said, and this Highland phrase
-was never used unless truly meant. No one had ever said
-it to Kelpie before. She caught her breath, turned her head
-away, and hurried off.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Traveling, she found, was easier without Mina and
-Bogle than with them, in one way. For folks had only to
-take one look at those two to know the worst. But Kelpie,
-as long as she kept her eyes lowered and her lip tucked
-demurely in, looked quite innocent, so that, even on the
-edge of the thrifty and Kirk-trained Lowlands, people
-were usually willing to give her food—and when they
-didn’t, Kelpie simply helped herself.</p>
-
-<p>Now and then she picked up rumors about what was
-going on in the Highlands, particularly concerning Argyll,
-who was, it appeared, still away in the west, chasing an
-elusive Antrim.</p>
-
-<p>As nearly as Kelpie could make out from bits here and
-there, Argyll had chased Antrim back to Ardnamurchen,
-where the latter had left his ships. But the ships had been
-spirited away by the English, just as Lorne had suggested,
-and since then the two forces had been playing catch-me-if-you-can
-all over the Highlands, with Antrim trying to
-rouse the clans against Argyll, the clans either afraid or
-quarreling among themselves, while Argyll tried to catch
-Antrim’s small army before it should become a larger
-army.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye,” said an old man, chuckling, in a voice not meant
-to be overheard. “Argyll will never be fighting a battle
-against more than half his number if he can avoid it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dinna mock him!” whispered another. “Ye’ll no be
-wanting yon wild foreign Hielanders crossing the mountains<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-wi’ their wicked screechin’ pipes and attacking us,
-will ye?”</p>
-
-<p>“Dinna fret, they’ll no come. ’Tis too busy they are wi’
-their own heathen fighting; Papists, the lot o’ them.”</p>
-
-<p>“They might, if Montrose could stir them up tae fight
-for the King against the Covenant.”</p>
-
-<p>“They would never do that. He’s a Graham from the
-East Coast, and those savages in the West would never stir
-a foot for any but their own chiefs. Anyway, they say
-Montrose is vanished altogether, and no doubt dead.”</p>
-
-<p>They both bent lowering gray brows when they saw the
-shamelessly eavesdropping Kelpie. She scurried away hastily,
-lest they think her a spy.</p>
-
-<p>She wandered on, begging, stealing, and listening, until
-she came at last to Pitlochry.</p>
-
-<p>There seemed a braw lot of people in the narrow streets
-of the town, and, surprisingly, many of them seemed to be
-wearing Gordon or MacDonald tartans. Whatever were
-those clans doing here? And those two young men striding
-along the street toward her.... “<i lang="gd">Dhé!</i>” said Kelpie, and
-they all stopped short.</p>
-
-<p>They stared at one another with mixed feelings. “Why,
-whatever will ye be doing here, at all?” demanded Kelpie
-with astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>Alex recovered his wits first. “Why,” he said with the
-old mocking grin, “we were missing you and your bonnie
-friends so badly that we had to come away to look for ye.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Sssss!” remarked Kelpie, concealing her pleasure at the
-old bantering and reminding herself that Alex was a treacherous
-enemy. Moreover, she was never again going to permit
-herself the dangerous luxury of caring for anyone at
-all. Having told herself this, she turned to look at Ian with
-delight. A braw lad! Did he carry a grudge against her?
-she wondered anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>“And are you all right, Kelpie?” he asked kindly. “Mina
-and Bogle are treating you well?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sssss,” she said again. “They are wicked <i lang="gd">uruisgean</i>, and
-I have left them this long time ago. I did not want to be
-leaving Glenfern whatever,” she added hopefully.</p>
-
-<p>Ian looked pleased, but Alex laughed. “Aye, it was a
-good enough life you were leading there, after all. But you
-seem to be doing well enough for yourself the now. Where
-were you stealing the gey sober gown and plaidie?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was not stealing them whatever!” Kelpie was outraged
-more by his manner than by his words.</p>
-
-<p>“But you would be saying the same thing even if you
-had,” encouraged Alex with a straight face.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie’s lips began to curve upward as she remembered
-the teasing at the loch-side at Glenfern. She tried to frown,
-for it was not right to be teasing with Alex when they were
-no longer friends. But she could not help it. “Of course,”
-she agreed cheekily and grinned.</p>
-
-<p>“Och, the wicked wee lass!” Alex chuckled. “She’ll never
-change!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“No, now, but she has changed!” Ian objected. “She
-could not laugh at herself when first she came to Glenfern.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you sure ’tis herself she’s laughing at?” gibed Alex.
-“Or is it ourselves, just, for being ready to forgive her so
-easily—and after she was breaking the ancient code of
-hospitality.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was not my fault!” protested Kelpie. “Mina was
-threatening to put a curse on you all if I did not come with
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Och, how tender you are of our welfare!” said Alex
-derisively. “And that, I suppose, is why you were so quick
-to tell her all about how Ian and I met the King and
-Montrose in Oxford?”</p>
-
-<p>There was no use trying to explain, for he would never
-believe her—not that she cared a groat what Alex MacDonald
-thought, anyway. Perhaps she would be able to
-tell Ian about it some day, with Alex not around. An idea
-was growing in her mind. After glowering at Alex, she
-turned to Ian and looked up at him meltingly through long
-lashes. She had never before set out to beguile a lad, but
-Janet had put the thought in her head, and she might as
-well try now and see could she do it. Some deep instinct
-awoke, so that she seemed to know just how to go about it.
-“And what is it you are doing so far from Glenfern?” she
-asked softly.</p>
-
-<p>Was it her fancy that Ian’s smile seemed a wee bit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-warmer than usual? “Why,” he said, “we are with Colkitto’s
-army, up at Blair Atholl, and—”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie forgot about beguiling him. “Colkitto!” she
-yelped. “You mean Antrim?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, ’tis what we call him; Alistair MacDonald, Earl
-of Antrim, who has—”</p>
-
-<p>“Fine I know that!” interrupted Kelpie. “But where will
-Mac Cailein Mor be, then? On your tail?” There was alarm
-in her voice, and both lads regarded her curiously.</p>
-
-<p>“Na, na,” Ian said soothingly. “He’s away back to his
-own country, raising a larger army, no doubt, since some
-five hundred Gordons have joined us. Are you afraid of
-him, Kelpie? And what are you doing here, and where are
-you living?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie looked wistful. “I am all alone, and nowhere to
-five.” She sighed and then smiled up at him brightly. “It
-is in my mind to come along with you,” she announced.</p>
-
-<p>Alex laughed. Unprincipled little thing though she was,
-he did enjoy her shameless, incorrigible audacity! The
-workings of her mind fascinated him, and even though he
-could see through her so easily, he could never remain
-angry for long.</p>
-
-<p>Ian looked thoughtful. “Well, and why not? We’ve
-nearly as many women and bairns as we have men, for
-Colkitto brought the whole of his clan over with him to
-take back their land from the Campbells. And Lachlan
-brought his wife Maeve along to be cooking and nursing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-and caring for us, for she does not trust Lachlan to do it
-properly. You’d be far safer than wandering alone. What
-about it, Alex?”</p>
-
-<p>Alex shrugged and lifted a red eyebrow. “Ou, I’ve no
-doubt at all that she can look after herself,” he observed
-dryly. “But I’ve no objection; only, Ian <i lang="gd">avic</i>, let us not be
-trusting her as far as tomorrow, for there is no loyalty in
-her.”</p>
-
-<p>The lazy mockery of his voice had a whiplash in it, and
-Kelpie flinched, unexpectedly hurt by it. She lashed back,
-remembering the scene in Loch nan Eilean.</p>
-
-<p>“You!” she fumed. “You, to be talking of loyalty, who
-would strike down a friend from behind!”</p>
-
-<p>Alex gaped. It was the first time she had ever caught
-him out of countenance, and it gave her great satisfaction.
-Ian looked distressed. “Och, now!” he protested hastily.
-“Let you both be saving your fighting for the Covenant
-armies. Come away back to the camp, now, and we’ll talk
-as we go.”</p>
-
-<p>They started back, out of Pitlochry and over the narrow
-road lined with tall blooming thistles. The heather, just
-preparing to bloom, glowed rustily under the patchy sunlight.
-Alex strode along frowning, still smarting and dumfounded
-over the outrageous flank attack. What could she
-have meant by it, the wee witch? She had seemed genuinely
-indignant, too. For once she was not acting; Alex
-had been matching wits with her long enough to be sure<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-of that. Then what under the great heavens could he have
-done to draw such a denunciation, such withering scorn
-from an unprincipled gypsy lass who would doubtless
-betray her own grandmother for a bit of copper? It made
-no sense whatever. And although Alex reminded himself
-that the opinion of a wee witch could scarcely matter, he
-found that it rankled. “<i lang="gd">Dhiaoul!</i>” he muttered under his
-breath and knit his brows in annoyance, leaving most of
-the conversation to Ian.</p>
-
-<p>“And why is it you’re so concerned over Mac Cailein
-Mor, Kelpie?” Ian asked. “Have you been studying more
-politics since you left Glenfern?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie hedged. “Is it likely I’d be wanting to run into
-the head of the Covenant army, and him death on gypsies
-and all who do not belong to the Kirk? No, now”—she
-shifted the subject—“tell me what has been happening,
-and why Colkitto has his army at Blair Atholl.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, so.” Ian thought for a minute, his sensitive profile
-clear and grave against the mauve and russet and olive of
-the August hills. Kelpie tilted her own face to look at him
-as she kept easy pace while Alex walked, brooding silently,
-behind.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you know,” began Ian, “that Colkitto brought over
-his whole clan to fight for the King against Argyll and the
-Covenant, and perhaps take back some of the MacDonald
-land from the Campbells?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Fine, that!” murmured Kelpie, remembering that day
-at Inverary. “And Argyll away after him all over the Highlands.”</p>
-
-<p>Ian nodded. “And the English burned Antrim’s ships, so
-that he must stay here, will he, nil he. So he has been trying
-to get the other Highland clans to join him. He’s not
-had much luck, for some of the clans fear the Campbells
-too much, and some others have decided that they hate
-the MacDonalds even more than the Covenant—for the
-moment, at any rate. Lochiel doesn’t dare call out our
-clan yet, with Ewen still in Argyll’s hands, and—more
-important—with Argyll’s army so near to Lochaber. Can
-you imagine what would be happening to our women and
-children at Lochaber if Lochiel took the men away to fight
-the Covenant?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie could imagine, easily. Her blood ran cold at the
-thought of Wee Mairi in danger, and she nodded soberly.</p>
-
-<p>“Some of us Camerons have come along anyway, and so
-have some five hundred Gordons who are wanting revenge
-against Argyll,” continued Ian. “But most on this side of the
-mountains think we Western Highlanders are a band of
-wild savages, like the Red Indians of America. And even
-Stewart of Atholl—although he hates Argyll and the Covenant—will
-have nothing to do with the Irish MacDonalds.
-So—” He grinned at Kelpie mischievously. “We have
-just borrowed Atholl’s castle from him, and now we sit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-and wait.” He sobered again. “I do not know what we will
-do next. There is a rumor that Graham of Montrose is still
-alive, and perhaps he is our hope. But to tell the truth,
-things do not look very good, and the Covenant armies
-will not sit still forever.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie’s lip lifted in sudden anger. “Och, ye will be
-losing this war, just!” she predicted despairingly. “For
-yourselves, and for the folk like me who want only to be
-left alone. You cannot get together even to save your own
-lives, but must always be quarreling clan against clan, and
-so ye will lose!”</p>
-
-<p>Ian looked depressed, but Alex came out of his black
-reverie with a laugh. “Listen to her, just!” he taunted. “The
-lone lass who lives for herself and no other will be giving
-us a lesson on cooperation! But even though you don’t
-practice what you preach,” he added somberly, “you’re
-right.”</p>
-
-<p>A puffy cloud blew over the sun, darkening the bright
-hills, and the thistles waved in a sudden sharp breeze.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">The small army was spread over the hill and moor near
-Blair Atholl, looking somewhat dispirited. Some men were
-hopefully cleaning their gear, polishing the huge two-handed
-claymores and battle axes which struck such terror
-into Lowland hearts. Others just sat, or wandered, or gambled,
-or talked. Women were busy gossiping, sewing, cooking,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-arguing; but one tall, gaunt woman brooded alone.
-Children ran about playing tag or hanging about the men.
-A ragged, motley crowd it was, but fierce-looking enough,
-no doubt, to folk on this side of the mountains. Kelpie
-frowned suddenly. The whole scene looked familiar.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve set up our wee camp spot over yon, just near
-those rowan trees,” said Ian, pointing to a spot partway
-up the hill. But before they were halfway there a flurry
-of excitement near the edge of the moor turned into an
-uproar. Men began shouting, running. A single shot was
-fired, and then several more.</p>
-
-<p>“It couldn’t be an attack!” Ian frowned, staring across
-the moor, “but what is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis he!” shouted Alex. “’Tis Graham of Montrose!
-Look you there!”</p>
-
-<p>“The King’s Lieutenant!” “He’s come!” “My Lord of
-Montrose!” The words were being shouted back and forth,
-and the sound swelled into a thunder of cheers. Kelpie
-found herself running with the lads toward the center of
-the excitement.</p>
-
-<p>As nearly as she could see through the crowd, the Lord
-of Montrose seemed to be a slight young man in groom’s
-clothing, with brown hair and a bunch of oats stuck in his
-bonnet. <i lang="gd">Dhé!</i> She had seen him before! And now from the
-wooded hill a red-bearded giant in the MacDonald tartan—Antrim—rushed
-down to clasp the hand of the slight<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-young man, and Kelpie remembered. She had seen it in
-the crystal, that first morning at Glenfern.</p>
-
-<p>And so now they had come together, Antrim and Montrose,
-totally different and yet fighting for the King’s cause.
-What would be the outcome?</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_13">13. The Hexing of Alex</h2>
-
-<p>The immediate effect of Montrose’s arrival was that of
-a most powerful magic charm. It could not have been
-more telling had he come with a full army at his back
-instead of just one man, his cousin Patrick. The King’s
-standard was raised then and there on the hillside and
-saluted with a flourish of trumpets, and cheers, and triumphantly
-skirling bagpipes. And some of the clans who
-had been hovering about waiting to attack the Irish Highlander
-Antrim now came to join the King’s Lieutenant,
-Montrose—including Stewart of Atholl.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie decided to stay for a while. Things looked interesting.
-She was safer here than wandering alone. Besides,
-she liked Ian’s company, even if it meant putting up with
-Alex. She even thought that she just might persuade Ian
-to guard himself against his precious foster brother, though
-she had not much hope of this, Ian being so stubbornly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-trustful. Besides, since she had “seen” the thing in the loch,
-it would surely happen, and there was nothing she could
-do to stop it.</p>
-
-<p>For a while, staying with the army meant simply staying
-right there where it was. Nothing much seemed to be
-happening. Clans—or, more often, bits of them—drifted
-in. Kelpie roamed where she liked, usually with the lads
-and their watchful <i lang="gd">ghillie</i>, Lachlan, exchanging insults
-with Alex and hostile silence with Lachlan and his wife
-Maeve, who had no use for her whatever and made no
-secret of it.</p>
-
-<p>She also spent some of her time gazing speculatively
-at the tall, gaunt woman whom she had noticed the first
-day she arrived. The woman would stare for hours into
-space, a black, brooding look on her face, her hands
-twisting together as if she were wringing someone’s neck—or
-perhaps casting a new kind of spell. A bulky Gordon
-plaidie covered her broad shoulders, and, though she was
-not old, there was the beginning of gray at her dark temples,
-and there were strong, grim lines along her mouth.
-Her eyes were deep-set and a little alarming, and Kelpie
-wondered whether she might be a witch. She looked it.
-Perhaps she had been tortured by witch-hunters and had
-somehow escaped? Kelpie considered approaching her
-about learning the Evil Eye, but the woman’s fierceness
-made her hesitate. She might get a curse put on herself for
-her boldness, and she could do fine without <em>that</em>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The coppery hills began to turn purple with the blooming
-of the heather. It rained. No more was heard of Argyll,
-but there were rumors that the enemy commander, Lord
-Elcho, was in Perth with an army of seven thousand and
-looking with considerable interest toward Blair Atholl.
-“And we with only two thousand men,” commented Alex
-cheerfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Ou, aye,” agreed Ian with a grin. “But just think of our
-fine store of weapons!” Lachlan looked sour, and Kelpie
-raised a derisive eyebrow.</p>
-
-<p>“Artillery?” mused Alex. “None.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cavalry—three old horses, one of them lame,” chanted
-Ian.</p>
-
-<p>“Guns—some old-fashioned matchlocks, and all the ammunition
-we could be needing to shoot a third of them for
-one round each.”</p>
-
-<p>“And then,” finished Ian in triumph, “just in case we’re
-needing them, there’s a few swords, claymores, and battleaxes—not
-to mention the <i lang="gd">sgian dhu</i>” he added, reaching
-down to tap the wee dirk where it nestled in his stocking,
-just on the outside of his right knee.</p>
-
-<p>“And”—Alex chuckled with ironic optimism—“Montrose
-has been saying that the enemy has plenty of
-weapons, and those of us without can just help ourselves
-once the fighting has started.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie looked at them. There was, she felt, a definite
-limit to the things a body should be joking about. She said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-so. And Lachlan, who felt personally responsible for the
-safety of Ian and Alex, for once agreed with her.</p>
-
-<p>And now came Maeve, whose loyalty was all toward
-Mac ’ic Ian, heir to Glenfern (for Master Alex, although
-a foster son, was not actually a Cameron at all). Her orange
-hair gleamed even in the cloud-filtered sun, and she
-addressed herself to Ian.</p>
-
-<p>“Food will be ready,” she said and crossed herself as
-she looked at Kelpie. As they all started toward the rowan
-tree they called home, she added, half under her breath,
-“Herself eats enough, whatever, but will never be doing
-any cooking.”</p>
-
-<p>“You were not liking my cooking,” observed Kelpie complacently.
-It was no accident that the one meal she had
-produced, at Alex’ insistence, had been perfectly awful.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Dhé</i>, no!” Ian agreed, laughing. “You said she was trying
-to poison us, Maeve. You’d not be wanting to try that
-again, would you?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis gey queer,” retorted Maeve, “for a gypsy not to
-be able to cook over an open fire.”</p>
-
-<p>Ian looked at Kelpie, his keen mind as usual fighting
-with his desire to believe the best of people. Alex began to
-laugh. “Och!” he exclaimed ruefully. “And I the one who
-was never going to be fooled by her again!”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie saw an opening. “Gypsy taste will be different
-from yours,” she announced blandly. “When I was first
-stolen, it was a dreadful time I had getting used to gypsy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-food! It was nearly starving I was, for a while.” Her blue
-ringed eyes widened with the picture of a poor wee bairn
-pining away with hunger.</p>
-
-<p>Lachlan snorted.</p>
-
-<p>“Ou, the pity of it!” said Alex mournfully, his angular
-face looking almost tender. “And you used to royal food,
-and all. I’ve wondered, just, whether ’tis yourself was the
-princess stolen from our King and Queen all those long
-years ago when they visited the Highlands.”</p>
-
-<p>For a minute Kelpie was fooled. Her eyes were a smoky
-blue blaze as visions of royal grandeur hurtled through
-her mind. Of course! Why not?</p>
-
-<p>“For shame, Alex,” said Ian reproachfully. “She’s nearly
-believing it.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie jerked out of her dream and hissed venomously
-at Alex, who chuckled impenitently and wondered how
-she would try to get even this time.</p>
-
-<p>The next day Kelpie went down to the burn, where she
-had noticed that the soil had a sticky, claylike quality.
-There she sat for some time, screened by broom and high
-bracken, and slowly shaped a small clay figure—not that
-it looked much like Alex, she being no artist. In fact, she
-admitted, a body could barely tell that it was supposed to
-be human at all. But perhaps the intent was the main
-thing. If only she could get hold of a bit of his hair or a
-fingernail—but Kelpie had had enough of hair-stealing for
-a while, particularly red hair. Anyway, Alex was much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-too canny. She had never yet managed to steal anything
-from him without being caught. No, she would just have to
-be trying her hex without it.</p>
-
-<p>There were brambles conveniently near. Kelpie picked
-a long thorn, regarded her clay figure thoughtfully, and
-then plunged the thorn deep into the area where the
-stomach might be expected to be.</p>
-
-<p>Then she wrapped up the hex figure, went back to the
-rowan tree, and began to watch Alex hopefully.</p>
-
-<p>Two days passed, but if he had any pains in his stomach,
-he concealed them very well. Kelpie added a second thorn
-to the figure, this time in the head, and again waited. By
-rights, his brains ought to start melting away, but she must
-not be doing it right, for Alex’s brains remained as uncomfortably
-keen as ever. He didn’t even get a headache.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie began looking wistfully at the tall, gaunt woman
-again. If she <em>was</em> a witch, she could undoubtedly help.
-And yet—Kelpie noticed that the men of the army did not
-treat her at all as a witch. Far from shunning her, they
-went out of their way to be kind, to bring her choice bits
-of food, to talk to her. Once again Kelpie decided not to
-risk trouble. She would manage her own hex, impotent as
-it seemed to be.</p>
-
-<p>In disgust, she took it out again, plunged thorns all
-over it, rubbed it with nettles, burned it, and then watched
-again. After five days Alex did twist his wrist slightly, but
-somehow Kelpie failed to feel much satisfaction. She was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-quite sure that she had never put a thorn in the left wrist.
-So she gave up trying to hex him. Either she didn’t have
-the power at all, or else—which seemed quite possible—Alex
-had a greater power.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Graham of Montrose had a great power too. Kelpie
-found herself more and more interested in him. The look
-of him was not that of a strong leader at all. Slight, he was,
-with gentle dark gray eyes and a quiet and courteous air
-that hardly seemed to belong in an army at all, much less
-at the head of one. Now, Antrim looked like a leader indeed,
-massive red giant that he was, with a great roar of
-a voice. Yet there was no doubt that Montrose was the
-heart and soul of the army. Everyone, even Antrim, listened
-to him with respect amounting almost to worship,
-and everyone said that he had a genius for warfare.</p>
-
-<p>Was it magic? Quite likely, Kelpie thought. She took to
-watching and listening whenever he was among the men.
-But she never saw him make any magic signs, and his
-words were about such things as honor and loyalty and
-why he was fighting for the King. Ian had said Montrose
-wanted no power for himself, but only for right to be done,
-but Ian was gullible. Skeptical, Kelpie kept her ears open.</p>
-
-<p>“Loyalty is the great thing,” Montrose remarked one
-day, sitting at ease in a misty drizzle, kilted Highlanders
-all around him. They listened with eagerness and respect,
-but Kelpie, at the edge of the group, narrowed her eyes
-mistrustfully.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Loyalty to your clan and your King, to an ideal, to a
-friend, to a thing you believe,” he went on. “This is integrity;
-and it is loyalty also to yourself.” Kelpie frowned. It
-was only loyalty to oneself that paid. She had found that
-out. Montrose was like Ian, then, too generous and trusting.
-They would both suffer for it, no doubt, unless they
-learned to care only for their own welfare.</p>
-
-<p>“You see,” said Montrose, “King Charles is a Stewart,
-and so we have a double loyalty to him—as our King, and
-as a Stewart and a Highlander. The English Parliament
-and the Scottish Covenant wish to rule the King and all
-of us as well. I think I need not tell you that.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a growl from the group. “Aye, Mac Cailein
-Mor would be King Campbell with the help of the Covenanters!”
-“A plague on the lot of them!”</p>
-
-<p>“And so,” urged Montrose, “we must put aside lesser
-loyalties and quarrels amongst our own clans, and stand
-together.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye!” shouted the men, but Kelpie privately thought
-that Montrose’s magic would fail at this point. Who ever
-knew a Highlander to give up his clan feuds for anything
-at all—except a greater clan feud?</p>
-
-<p>She did learn one thing about Montrose. He used different
-words with different kinds of people—just as she
-herself did, in a way. She was eavesdropping one evening
-as he sat by his campfire with Antrim and Patrick Graham<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-of Inchbrakie, and his words to them were less simple and
-certain than those to the untaught clansmen.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” he said, “I do not fight for what people call the
-Divine Right of Kings. I don’t believe there is such a thing,
-Alistair. A king must be subject to the laws of God, nature,
-and the country that he rules. But as long as he stays
-within those laws, then he should <em>be</em> the ruler.”</p>
-
-<p>“And if he doesn’t?” It was Patrick Graham, called
-“Black Pate.”</p>
-
-<p>The youthful face looked troubled in the firelight. “It’s
-true King Charles hasn’t always obeyed the rules,” murmured
-Montrose. “That is why I supported the Covenant
-at first. But then I saw the greater danger we courted. If
-a group of subjects takes over the king’s power, they may
-become a far worse tyrant than ever a king could be, and
-that is what happened. You see yourselves how the Covenant
-oppresses the people; and I think those who are
-fighting for the Parliament in this war may find that
-they’ve used their own blood and their own fortunes to
-buy vultures and tigers to rule over them. To tell you the
-truth, my friends, I don’t know the right way to handle a
-king who abuses his power, but I do know that this is
-the wrong way. Perhaps there should be some limit set
-to the amount of power that one man or group can have.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie chewed her lip thoughtfully. Och, now, and
-there was a good idea. She could think of several such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-whose power should be limited to nothing at all. She
-would begin with Argyll and the Covenant, and go on to
-the Lowlander and Mina and Bogle. But how would one
-set about arranging this?</p>
-
-<p>In her preoccupation, Kelpie forgot that she was hiding
-and carelessly shifted her position so that a twig cracked.
-A small twig it was, and most folk would never have
-noticed, but these men were well schooled in danger.
-Three heads turned as one, and an instant later Antrim’s
-huge hand was plucking her from her hiding place as he
-would a puppy.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Dhé!</i>” He chortled, holding her up in the orange light
-of the fire and looking her over with interest. “Here’s a
-fine dangerous enemy in our midst.”</p>
-
-<p>“Och, indeed and I am not!” protested Kelpie as well
-as she could. She tucked in her lip and looked pathetically
-at Montrose. “Do not be letting him hurt me, your Lordship!”
-she begged in English. “’Tis only a poor, wee, harmless—”</p>
-
-<p>“Let her down, Alistair,” suggested Montrose gently,
-“and perhaps she can tell us what she was doing there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Spying for Argyll, perhaps?” suggested Patrick narrowly,
-looking at her gray dress.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie’s indignation was genuine. “That <i lang="gd">nathrach</i>!” She
-sputtered earnestly and went on to curse him vigorously.
-“He is a <i lang="gd">droch-inntinneach uruisg</i> and a red-haired devil
-with a black heart in him!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Montrose, who knew little Gaelic, looked interested.
-“What was that?” he inquired, and Antrim chuckled.</p>
-
-<p>“She called him a serpent and an evil-minded monster,”
-he translated. “And I’m thinking she meant it, too! Well,
-then, why <em>were</em> you skulking there, lass?”</p>
-
-<p>Once again Kelpie found semi-truth to be the most
-effective answer. “Och,” she whispered, ducking her head
-shyly. “I was wanting to see himself, and to be hearing
-him talk, for the singing tongue in his mouth.” From
-beneath lowered lids she observed that their faces were
-amused and tolerant.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, and so you’ve heard him,” said Antrim, not unkindly.
-“Away with you, then, and don’t be doing it again.
-Next time you might just be getting a claymore instead
-of a question.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie left meekly enough, relieved to get off so easily.
-But none of her questions was really answered. She had
-wanted to learn the source of Montrose’s power, and
-whether or no it was from magic, and if and how she
-could learn it. For although it was just possible that Montrose
-could destroy his archenemy, Argyll, which would
-be a fine thing indeed, Kelpie felt that Mina and Bogle and
-the Lowlander were another matter, and up to her. For
-sooner or later she was almost sure to run into them again,
-and when that day came she was going to need a great
-deal of magic power indeed!</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_14">14. The Battle of Tippermuir</h2>
-
-<p>At last word went round that the army was to move,
-but not, as Kelpie had expected, away from the danger
-of Perth and Lord Elcho’s great army. Quite the contrary.
-They were, it seemed, going to take Perth.</p>
-
-<p>Recklessness and practical caution fought within Kelpie.
-A fine, daft, gallant, and suicidal idea it seemed to her. If
-she had any sense in the head of her, she would take her
-leave now and head for safety. But she decided, instead,
-to go along but to stay with the women and children
-well behind the lines, once the fighting started, and then
-take to the hills when the battle was lost.</p>
-
-<p>The small, poorly equipped army gathered itself together
-and started south to the sound of pipes playing
-valiantly. They had got no farther than the hill of Buchanty
-when they ran into one of the enemy forces which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-had been surrounding them all the time. A full five hundred
-bowmen it must be, and Kelpie looked around hastily
-for something to hide under.</p>
-
-<p>But she had reckoned without Montrose. He and Antrim
-rode to meet the two leaders of the bowmen, and they
-talked. And, sometime during the talking, Montrose cast
-his spell, for presently the two forces spread out over the
-purple masses of blooming heather and ate together, the
-leaders still talking over wine and food.</p>
-
-<p>And then one of the enemy leaders sprang to his feet,
-and Kelpie could hear his words clearly. “You’re wrong!”
-he shouted. “’Tis not two thousand men ye have, but two
-thousand and five hundred! For we’ll never be fighting
-against Montrose!”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie shook her head wonderingly. Why on earth did
-Montrose fight at all, if he could do this? Or did Argyll
-and others have some kind of counter-magic? Kelpie began
-to feel newly discouraged about her own prospects
-for magical powers, with so much competition about.</p>
-
-<p>The newly expanded army moved on again, undisturbed
-by the news that, in addition to his seven thousand
-infantry, Lord Elcho also had some eight hundred cavalry
-and nine pieces of heavy artillery. The Highlanders, like
-Kelpie, put their faith in the magic of Montrose. With him
-to lead them, no force on earth could beat them.</p>
-
-<p>They spent the night on the moor of Fowlis, and early
-in the morning were away down the Small Glen, and on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-to Tippermuir. There stood the walled town of Perth,
-some three miles away. And between stood the Covenant
-army, spread wide, waiting to catch Montrose’s impudent
-small army between its fierce jaws.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie looked at it with awe, and some of her assurance
-left her. Surely, now, Montrose was stretching his powers
-too far! Lord Elcho would be wiping them out as easily
-as Antrim might knock down herself. There they stood, six
-deep, every man protected by corselet and an iron headpiece,
-and the most of them armed with muskets, against
-one-third the number of Highlanders, who wore only ragged
-kilts and rawhide brogans and had claymores and
-bows and arrows, or no weapons at all. It was a sad contrast.</p>
-
-<p>The citizens of Perth seemed to regard the coming battle
-as a fine new kind of Sabbath sport, for they had turned
-out in great numbers to watch the fun. Kelpie shoved
-through the palpitating crowd of women and children,
-now well behind the army, until she reached a spot on
-high ground which gave her both a good view and a
-quick escape route for when she needed it. And she expected
-to need it. She hoped that Ian might escape the
-slaughter somehow, but she was going to be quite sure
-that <em>she</em> did.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">Ian, who had an even better view in his spot in the
-front row of the battle line, was not feeling very optimistic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-himself. He looked with resignation over the flaunting
-blue banners of the Covenant ranks bearing the motto:
-<em>For Christ’s Crown and Covenant</em>—and then back to the
-one brave royal banner—three golden leopards on a red
-background—floating above the Highland rabble. The
-breeze rippled its folds and shivered across the purpled
-moors. It seemed too fine a day for men to die.</p>
-
-<p>Alex turned from chaffing his cousins among the small
-band of Keppoch MacDonalds and looked at Ian. There
-was a touch of pallor beneath the sunburn of his angular
-face, but his eyes were bright.</p>
-
-<p>“And are you frightened, Ian?” he asked with a crooked
-grin.</p>
-
-<p>“As ever was!” retorted Ian forthrightly, and Alex
-chuckled.</p>
-
-<p>“And I too,” he agreed. “My cousin Archie has just been
-saying it’s only a fool does not fear danger—in which
-case, I’m a wise man indeed!”</p>
-
-<p>Ian looked around him. Most of the ordinary clansmen
-seemed not much worried. There was an almost supernatural
-faith in Montrose, that he would bring victory at
-any odds. And Antrim—the magnificent Colkitto—strode
-down the line with confidence in every inch of him. His
-legs were pillars beneath the MacDonald kilt he wore, and
-they were matched by the size of his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>“I think <em>he</em> isn’t afraid,” observed Ian.</p>
-
-<p>Alex nodded agreement. “Montrose is worried, though,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-he murmured. “You can see it behind his eyes. What is
-happening now?” For one of Montrose’s officers was going
-toward Lord Elcho, waving a white flag of truce.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s Ranald,” said Archie. “He’ll know. Ranald learns
-everything.” If Archie was frightened, one would never
-know it. His black eyes sparkled wickedly from under his
-thick black hair, and he turned eagerly to make room for
-another Keppoch cousin. “What is it Ranald, <i lang="gd">avic</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“An envoy of courtesy,” reported Ranald, shaking his
-fair head wonderingly. “Montrose has sent to ask is it
-against their principles to fight on the Sabbath, and would
-they rather wait for tomorrow. Only Montrose would
-think to make such a gesture!”</p>
-
-<p>Archie, who seemed to have a low opinion of Covenant
-principles, shook his head disapprovingly. Alex opened
-his mouth for a jesting remark, and forgot to close it again.
-For, incredibly, outrageously, the envoy was being taken
-prisoner! He was seized, bound, hustled off through the
-Covenant ranks.</p>
-
-<p>Incredulous anger rippled through the Highland army.
-Ian stood aghast. “He couldn’t!” he whispered. “He
-<em>couldn’t</em> violate a flag of truce!” And for once even the
-more cynical Alex shared Ian’s feelings.</p>
-
-<p>Oddly, Kelpie’s face came to Alex at that moment. Her
-narrow, slant-eyed, impudent face would be wondering
-what was so awful about violating a white flag. Was it any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-worse than killing a man in battle? And the envoy wasn’t
-even dead—yet, anyway. To his disgust, Alex found himself,
-in his own mind, trying to explain it to her. “<i lang="gd">Dhiaoul!</i>”
-he muttered and turned his attention to the matters at
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>It was quite possible that Lord Elcho had done himself
-an ill service, for a flame of Celtic rage had engulfed the
-Highland army. Alex found that he had shifted forward
-an inch or two without knowing it, and the rest of the
-army with him. Those without weapons had picked up
-stones. For a moment it seemed that they would all break
-into a wild charge, but Montrose achieved the minor miracle
-of holding them back. “Wait!” said his outflung arm.
-“Wait!” boomed Antrim. “Be patient a wee while, men of
-my heart, and we soon will be giving them cold steel
-for it.”</p>
-
-<p>And they waited, only inching forward a toe at a time,
-as the Covenant army moved closer, until not a hundred
-paces separated them. A long wait it seemed, long enough
-for all the army to hear Lord Elcho’s answer to the message
-of the unfortunate envoy. “The Lord’s Day,” he had
-said, “is fit for the Lord’s work of exterminating the barbarous
-Irish and Highlanders.”</p>
-
-<p>“When we charge,” muttered Archie, who had been in
-battles before, “keep just one thing in mind. Choose your
-enemy and kill him, and then a second man if you can.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Very well so,” agreed Alex mildly. “And what will I
-do with my third man?” He was pleased that his voice
-had just the nonchalance he wanted for it.</p>
-
-<p>Ian’s was equally cool. “Just be leaving him to me,” he
-said. “I’ll have had my three by then.”</p>
-
-<p>Another inch forward, and the Covenanters closer yet,
-and still no signal to charge. And now came the Covenant
-battle cry for the day. “Jesus and no quarter!” they yelled,
-and Ian shuddered at the blasphemy.</p>
-
-<p>And then suddenly came a shrill wild skirl from the
-gaunt woman at the back of the battle. A voice lifted and
-pealed savagely. “Wolves of the North! Let the fangs bite!”</p>
-
-<p>And the signal was given, and as they rushed forward
-Ian’s voice answered with his own clan battle cry. “Sons
-of the dogs, come hither, come hither, and ye shall have
-flesh!”</p>
-
-<p>“God and St. Andrew!” answered the Keppoch MacDonalds,
-and the air was thick with the wailing menace
-of pipes and clan cries, until the pipers abandoned their
-pipes for the claymores, and the slogans became scattered
-and mixed with mere yells.</p>
-
-<p>Neither Alex nor Ian remembered the rest clearly—only
-a wall of armed men ahead, and then the smashing,
-tearing impact of battle. There was Archie’s fighting
-laughter, and the blazing red beard of Antrim ... someone
-yelling “A Gordon, a Gordon!” the whole of the fight.
-And then there was no wall of armored men, but only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
-fleeing backs, and the charge went on and on—until they
-were at the gates of Perth.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">When Kelpie reached Perth, some time later (and a
-messy three miles it was too, littered with Covenant casualties),
-she fully expected to find it being thoroughly
-sacked and looted, and to be in time to pick up a few wee
-things herself. It was just for this that she had managed to
-get slightly ahead of the rest of the women and children.</p>
-
-<p>But there was unexpected quiet and order. Kelpie
-paused inside the gate, frowning. A few citizens peered
-fearfully from windows, waiting for the worst, but the
-worst did not seem to be happening. Instead, Highlanders
-stood about, glaring at the frightened heads and at a
-shouting preacher on the near corner, and looking disgruntled.</p>
-
-<p>“He shall rain snares upon the sinners,” screamed the
-preacher, “and fire and brimstone and storms of wind shall
-be the portion of their cup!”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie joined a group of ragged Highlanders who were
-standing there listening. “<em>Now</em> will he remember their
-iniquity and visit their sins!” the preacher was suggesting
-hopefully. “I will consume them by the sword, and by the
-famine, and by the pestilence! I will pour their wickedness
-upon them!”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it ourselves he means?” asked Kelpie of the nearest
-Highlander.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He nodded, looking disgusted. “And we not even allowed
-to feed his words back to him,” he growled. “And,”
-he added regretfully, “I am thinking that the fine coat of
-him would be fitting me, whatever.”</p>
-
-<p>“But why? Why not be silencing him and taking it?”
-demanded Kelpie. He shrugged, looking aggressive. Montrose,
-it seemed, had ordered no sacking, no looting, no
-harm to the citizens.</p>
-
-<p>Several Highlanders turned from the preacher, who was
-now informing them that they were to be cast forth from
-the land, and chimed in. An unheard-of thing, that! And
-they half-starved and in rags, and counting on food, clothing,
-and a fine wee bit of loot from these overfed, psalm-singing
-heathen hypocrites! And what was Montrose
-about, then, to be depriving them of their just reward?
-And yet, not a man suggested disobeying.</p>
-
-<p>The preacher, a gaunt, long-faced man in a fine black
-coat, was working himself up into a fine passion of Covenanter
-Christianity. “They shall die grievous deaths,”
-he announced. “They shall not be lamented, neither shall
-they be buried; they shall be as dung upon the face of
-the earth.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it his own friends he’s speaking of?” came Alex’s
-mocking voice. “’Tis a fine burial service you’re preaching,
-my friend, but shouldn’t you be helping to dig the graves
-first?”</p>
-
-<p>The preacher stopped, glared, and began to launch forth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-with more Bible verses. But the Highlanders had got the
-idea.</p>
-
-<p>“Now then,” one of them called, chortling. “’Twould be
-no harm to the bonnie man if we just see to it that he
-helps bury his friends, now, would it? Come away out,
-now, and be useful!” And in a moment the preacher was
-being propelled firmly out of the gate, protesting loudly
-that yon muckle redshanks were gang to murther him.
-Alex and Ian, Archie and Ranald were left, grinning after
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie spared them no more than a glance and then
-returned to her grievance. No looting! And she had been
-wanting a nice silver belt and perhaps a silken purse.</p>
-
-<p>Disgustingly, Ian and Alex agreed with Montrose. “’Tis
-a barbaric practice, sacking cities,” said Ian with quiet
-intensity. “Why should soldiers war on civilians, especially
-women and bairns? If there were more leaders with the
-principles of Montrose, war would be less evil than it is.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no use one army stopping, and the others going
-on doing it,” argued Kelpie.</p>
-
-<p>“Someone must be stopping first,” Alex pointed out.
-Odd how he kept trying to explain principles to this little
-witch, who could no more understand them than could
-his cousin Cecily’s wee and wicked yellow kitten. “If Montrose
-shows mercy, perhaps the Covenanters will do the
-same.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie sneered audibly, and Archie made a rude noise.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-Alex shrugged. “To be more practical,” he pointed out,
-“perhaps Montrose is hoping that these towns near his
-own home may be turned to our side if we treat them
-well.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think he would do so anyway,” insisted Ian, “’Tis a
-point of integrity, Kelpie.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie looked blank, and Alex laughed. “Do not be
-trying to explain integrity to <em>her</em>, Ian!” he pleaded. “Begin
-first on a creature with more capacity—like Cecily’s kitten,
-for example—and then Dubh, perhaps, and after that you
-might be working up to a kelpie.”</p>
-
-<p>At the mention of Cecily, Ian saw in his mind a heart-shaped,
-mischievous face in a halo of tawny hair. And
-then he put it away from him, for Alex had said fifty times
-that he was going to marry his cousin one day; and if
-his foster brother wanted Cecily, then she was not for
-Ian to think of. So he thought instead of Kelpie, who was
-tossing her black head scornfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, whatever integrity is,” she announced, “this is
-daft. For,” she predicted with gloomy relish, “all the towns
-around will be thinking they may do as they please, with
-no fear of punishment. Just wait you now, they’ll be shouting
-more loudly and burning more witches than ever
-before.”</p>
-
-<p>Surprisingly, Alex nodded. It was Ian who was about to
-argue. But at this moment Lachlan and Maeve arrived,
-shouting that at last they had found Mac ’ic Ian, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-would he be coming away this minute to have his sore
-wound tended.</p>
-
-<p>Ian laughed, faintly embarrassed, and began to protest.
-And Kelpie, with a pang of concern, noticed for the first
-time that his plaidie was wrapped oddly about his left arm
-and that a stain of red was creeping along the sleeve
-beneath it.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Dhé!</i>” she cried. “It may be only a wee bit cut as you
-say, Ian, but yon orange-top”—she glared at Maeve—“has
-not the sense to be tending it for you, and it will
-surely mortify if you let her. I,” she announced firmly, “will
-bind it myself, with bread mold and cobwebs on the cut,
-and a wee charm or two over it, and ’twill heal overnight,
-for I know about such matters.”</p>
-
-<p>Maeve promptly screamed that the wicked little witch
-would poison Mac ’ic Ian only over her dead body. Kelpie
-retorted that it was a fine idea, that last. Ranald said that
-he had known mold and cobwebs to work very well.
-Archie’s black eyes sparkled with amusement, and it fell
-upon Alex to arbitrate.</p>
-
-<p>Firmly, with the masterful air that Kelpie usually resented
-hotly, he declared in favor of her bread mold but
-against her charms. He pacified Maeve by allowing her
-to supervise and to put the sign of the cross upon Ian’s
-arm. And because both Maeve and Kelpie were genuinely
-concerned over Ian’s welfare a truce of sorts was declared—for
-the moment.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_15">15. Witch Hunt</h2>
-
-<p>An uneasy peace brooded over the whole of Perth the
-next day. Not only the citizens but also their Gaelic
-conquerors tended to feel slightly abused, and they spent
-the morning glooming at one another. By noon the high
-Celtic spirits had risen again in the conquerors, and a
-spirit of mischief took over. They released prisoners from
-stocks and jails (most of them guilty of such crimes as
-failing to attend kirk), and some of the Irish MacDonalds
-began preaching back at the dour, hell-spouting Calvinist
-preachers.</p>
-
-<p>But this palled too, and presently a group of young and
-adventurous Highlanders decided just to go out and have
-a wee look round the neighboring countryside. Archie and
-Ranald came hunting Alex and Ian, who were delighted.
-Lachlan firmly attached himself to the party, with strict<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-orders from Maeve not to be letting Mac ’ic Ian do anything
-to start his cut bleeding afresh.</p>
-
-<p>At this point Kelpie announced that she would just go
-too. Ranald looked at her dubiously, but Archie laughed.
-“And why ever not?” he demanded. “The women do full
-share of work, what with cooking and nursing, and should
-have a bit of fun when they can. Will you come too,
-Maeve?”</p>
-
-<p>Maeve hesitated, glared at Kelpie, and declined. And
-the party, some dozen or fifteen altogether, set off.</p>
-
-<p>“Is Kelpie your true name?” demanded Archie as they
-started west across the sweep of moor. He grinned at her
-engagingly. “It wouldn’t be every day a body could have
-a kelpie as mascot. Tell me,” he asked, “have I seen you
-turn a soft eye upon Ian? Could you not be giving him a
-wee love potion?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie smiled enigmatically and declined to answer. But
-she turned the idea over in her mind.</p>
-
-<p>It was a lovely day, this second of September. The
-birches were beginning to yellow and the bracken to turn
-rusty underneath. Rowan trees flaunted clumps of brilliant
-red-orange berries in the sun; and only now and again
-did a cloud shadow glide silently over the rosy-heathered
-swelling ground, patching it with somber purple. Kelpie
-tied her plaidie around her waist, for she would not be
-needing it until the chill of evening.</p>
-
-<p>They walked on, with the long, tireless Highland stride,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-chattering and laughing with the upsurge of spirits that
-was a normal reaction from the fear and triumph of yesterday.</p>
-
-<p>“And did you get your dozen men, Alex?” inquired the
-fair-haired Ranald. “I saw you once cutting down an armored
-musketeer twice your size, and glad I was to be
-fighting with and not against you.”</p>
-
-<p>Alex’s red brows slanted upward. “<i lang="gd">Dhé!</i>” he said. “I was
-so frighted I just held out my sword, and it seems the
-enemy was obliging enough to run into it. ’Twas Ian was
-the braw fighter, and none better in Scotland. It was he
-saved me more than once.”</p>
-
-<p>“Only so that you could be saving me, Alex <i lang="gd">avic</i>,” retorted
-Ian, “and Lachlan saving the both of us,” he added.
-“Besides, it was I was so scared I could only think to run
-away.”</p>
-
-<p>“And since you were headed for Perth, already, the only
-thing to do was just cut your way through the face of the
-enemy,” finished Archie with bland seriousness.</p>
-
-<p>Ian nodded gravely. “That was the way of it. I was too
-frightened to think of turning around.”</p>
-
-<p>And so they went on, with the same old bantering
-Kelpie had heard so often at Glenfern, and each of them
-claiming to have been more frightened than any of the
-rest. Kelpie listened with an odd feeling of contentment.
-This brotherhood, this easy straight-faced teasing which
-was an unspoken love between friends, was a warm and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-joyous thing to hear—for all that it was dangerous to
-have it. There was wistfulness in her heart as she walked
-silently among the cheerful group, and a shadow on her
-face.</p>
-
-<p>Presently they came to a river and a small gray town
-on the near side. “I doubt they’ll love us there,” predicted
-a tall lad in Duncan kilt, “but perhaps their good Lowland
-sense of business will make them willing to sell us a pint
-or two of ale—or even good <i lang="gd">uisghebaugh</i>, if there is such
-a thing outside of the Highlands.”</p>
-
-<p>It was a popular suggestion, and the long Highland
-strides became even longer, so that Kelpie—though she
-denied it—had to stretch her own to keep up. As they
-drew near the cluster of stone houses with the somber
-square kirk in the center, she frowned a little. A dour,
-gloomy place it was! Not that it looked different, really,
-from other towns, but there was a bad feel to it. None of
-the others seemed to notice, but Kelpie’s bones were wary.</p>
-
-<p>There seemed to be very few people about. Perhaps
-most of them had seen the Highlanders coming and gone
-inside. The few folk they did meet cast looks of hate at
-the kilted barbarians—which the barbarians, secure in the
-safety of numbers and reputation, found rather amusing.</p>
-
-<p>An innkeeper sourly sold them ale, with black looks
-thrown in for good measure. “Och, wouldn’t he like to
-poison it, just!” said Alex in Gaelic as Kelpie refused the
-ale Ian offered her. It might not actually be poisoned, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-it could have an evil spell on it, all the same. She said so.</p>
-
-<p>“If your spells haven’t worked, I doubt anyone’s could!”
-Alex taunted her. “For you’ve tried hard enough, haven’t
-you?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie glowered from under her thick lashes. Had he
-seen her, then, all that while at Blair Atholl? Or was it
-just his evil way of always knowing what she was thinking?
-She had begun to feel a trifle more friendly since
-learning that he had saved Ian yesterday instead of cutting
-him down. But once again Alex was taking the offensive.</p>
-
-<p>Alex had known what she was about at Blair Atholl, and
-it had amused him, in a way—once he was sure her spells
-were impotent. But just now, for some reason, all her
-hatred for him was rankling, and he was in the mood to
-goad her a bit for her irritating ways—although he was
-not at all sure why she got under his skin so easily. So he
-deliberately treated her to his most satirical grin. “And
-didn’t your hex work at all, poor lass?” he inquired sympathetically.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie started to hiss at him, but Ian was looking at her
-oddly. He would not take it kindly that she had tried to
-hex his foster brother, even though it was himself she was
-trying to protect. And she wanted to keep Ian’s good will.</p>
-
-<p>Her lip drooped. “Always and always you will be thinking
-evil of me, Alex MacDonald!” she lamented. “You will
-be trying to make everyone hate me, and never giving me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-the chance at all to be better, no matter how I might try.”</p>
-
-<p>The other lads were listening to all this with great interest,
-and they now regarded Alex with severity, and
-Kelpie with sympathy. But it was Ian’s sympathy she
-wanted—and got.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis true enough, Alex,” he said accusingly. “You’ve
-ever thought the worst of the poor lass, and her only sin
-is in being what she was taught to be. How could she
-ever change with you condemning her in advance?”</p>
-
-<p>A rare blaze of rage swept over Alex. “<i lang="gd">Dhiaoul!</i> ’Tis a
-fool you are, Ian!” And suddenly he was quarreling—it
-was incredible—with his foster brother, dearer than kin,
-and over a young rogue of a gypsy lass not worth a hair
-on Ian’s head! And yet the quarrel went on and on.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie had never seen them angry at each other before,
-and she was frightened. It was the town had done it! The
-town was filled with hate and malice and had put a spell
-on them all! And she, who should be pleased at seeing
-Ian turn from Alex, found that she couldn’t enjoy it. She
-couldn’t even bear to listen. She slipped out of the tavern
-with their angry words drifting after her.</p>
-
-<p>The streets were no longer empty. A crowd was streaming
-out of the four-square meeting house and along toward
-the town square, and it was the sort of crowd she knew
-all too well. Their faces held a savage and bloodthirsty
-fanaticism, and this was not a mob looking for a victim,
-but one which had found one. It was someone, no doubt,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-who had committed the sin of breaking the Sabbath, or
-dancing, or perhaps chancing to glance at a neighbor’s
-cow before it fell ill. Och, it was a witch trial they had
-been having! No knowing was it a real witch or not, nor
-would it matter; for to be accused was to be condemned.</p>
-
-<p>“Burn them!” the crowd growled as it surged past the
-tavern. Kelpie should have ducked back inside, but her
-curiosity was too great. And despite her vow to be hard-hearted
-there was a flicker in her of pity. The victims were
-coming now, being roughly hustled along toward the
-square. The crowd swept Kelpie along, not noticing one
-more gray gown among so many others.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie squeezed through a gap between a stout man
-and a bony woman, and as it closed behind her she found
-herself almost pushed against the victims, her eyes staring
-straight into theirs—and their eyes were as filled with
-hatred as those of the crowd.</p>
-
-<p>Mina and Bogle!</p>
-
-<p>Panic gripped her heart. Frantically she tried to back
-up, to melt back into the crowd. But there was no gap
-now, only a wall of townsmen at her back. And it was
-too late. Mina’s shrill screech cut the other sounds.</p>
-
-<p>“There she is! The kelpie who led us into witchcraft!
-In the gray dress! There! Look at the ringed eyes of her!”</p>
-
-<p>“She’ll be putting the Evil Eye on ye all” croaked Bogle
-venomously.</p>
-
-<p>Sick fear and revulsion were in Kelpie as her quick eyes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-swept around—vainly—for an avenue of escape. They
-were not accusing her to save themselves, which would
-have been logical, but in sheer malice. That she might
-have done the same didn’t occur to her, for there was no
-time for thinking. The crowd was responding with a new
-roar, seeking more blood, turning to find its new victim.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie looked instinctively for a scapegoat, another gray
-dress to point out—but again, too late. Hands grabbed
-her. She wrenched free with a twist, only to be grasped
-by more hands, caught beyond hope of escape.</p>
-
-<p>“Alex!” screamed Kelpie. “Ian! Help!” And she lifted
-her voice in the Cameron war rant, hoping that the familiar
-words might reach Ian. “<i lang="gd">Chlanna non can, thigibh
-a so</i>—” A blow on the head cut it short, and she thought
-with bitterness that it could not matter. How could they
-hear her so far away, and over the crowd, and when they
-were themselves quarreling in the tavern, and herself
-being carried farther away every minute?</p>
-
-<p>“Ye’ll not be taking a witch’s word!” she cried out. “I
-am of the Kirk, and have been servant to Argyll himself!”</p>
-
-<p>One or two of the nearest people hesitated doubtfully,
-for Argyll was a name to conjure with. But Mina dashed
-Kelpie’s faint chance. “Aye!” she shrieked. “To be getting
-a bit of his hair for a hex! Look at her eyes, just!”</p>
-
-<p>She was doomed, then. “Sons of the dogs!” she yelled
-once more, with despair in voice and heart. And then she
-was being shoved along with Mina and Bogle.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Chlanna non can, thigibh a so’s gheibh sibh feoil!</i>” It
-was Ian’s voice. A wedge began to cut itself into the
-crowd from behind, a bright blade gleaming, and Ian’s
-wild face at the back of the sword.</p>
-
-<p>And then another voice, that of Alex. “<em>Ian!</em>” it roared,
-and another wedge appeared behind the first. And now
-figures in MacDonald and Duncan bonnets cut a swathe,
-more swords gleamed, voices roared happily with the
-joy of battle.</p>
-
-<p>But Alex was coming after Ian, and a black rage on
-his face, and his voice bellowing Ian’s name. He was angry
-still, then, and the more so because Ian was trying to save
-her! Kelpie’s feet were set against the cobblestones of the
-street, her body twisted to see behind. And now the hold
-on her was loosening as the witch-burners began to take
-alarm. But oh, would Ian be in time? Would Alex stop
-him?</p>
-
-<p>Ian had nearly reached her. The crowd, mostly unarmed,
-swirled and shoved in disorganized fury. They
-turned from their victims now, and two or three dirks
-were flashed. The MacDonalds were gleefully wreaking
-havoc somewhere behind, but Alex had caught up with
-Ian now, and his face was fearful to look on. Ian’s back
-was to Alex, his attention on dealing with those dirks still
-separating him from Kelpie. Kelpie could not see his
-hands, for the shoulders and heads in the way, but his
-face was grim, intent. “Hold on, Kelpie!” he shouted.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“<em>Ian!</em>” roared Alex again, and his sword rose—rose and
-then fell with a furious slash. And Ian was down, and his
-dark head had vanished in the crowd.</p>
-
-<p>It was just as she had seen it in the loch! For an instant
-Kelpie felt nothing at all but a terrible cold emptiness,
-and then grief was in her very bones, and a small cry of
-anguish on her lips. She made a move toward the swarming,
-fighting spot where Ian had vanished. There was one
-brief glimpse of Alex, raging like one gone mad, and then
-the MacDonalds were there, making a havoc that sent
-townspeople screaming for safety. And somewhere, being
-trampled beneath, was the body of Ian, and perhaps she
-could reach him and help....</p>
-
-<p>And then she hesitated. Alex would be wanting to kill
-her too! And now was her chance to be away and safe
-from him. And after all, what good could she be to Ian?
-For either he was dead and past help, or, if not, there
-were the MacDonalds to care for him, and Maeve back at
-Perth.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie hesitated a moment longer, then she reverted to
-old habits and saved herself. She slipped like a hunted
-wildcat through the crowd, which now had other things
-on its mind than stopping her. She was out of it, around
-a corner, through the narrow streets in a swift streak of
-gray. The clamor grew muffled and scattered. She tore
-across the stone bridge and the moor and along a glen
-and over a hill. She ran until she could no longer breathe,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-and then crawled into a thick patch of broom and lay
-gasping and sobbing.</p>
-
-<p>She must not think! She could not bear to think. Alex
-had really done it, then! The thing inside her had never
-really believed he would, and that was the thing now
-keening in black anguish that he could have done it.</p>
-
-<p>And Ian! Was he dead, then? Dead trying to save herself,
-who had then fled without a backward look?</p>
-
-<p>But it was only sense to have saved herself! It was
-what Ian had been trying to do, to save <em>her</em>, and wouldn’t
-he have wished it? Why should it be the weight of a stone
-on her? Ian would have wished it, she told herself. And
-then she rolled over on her face and was violently sick.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">How long had she been walking? And to where? It was
-just away from the town she had been going, and she was
-now far away, for she had spent more than one night
-in the heather. And yet she could not get away from the
-beating blackness in her mind.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie sank down in the drenched heather and discovered
-with vague surprise that rain was pouring steadily
-from a dreary sky. She looked wearily around and saw
-nothing but hills and heath closed in mist. She was wet as
-a water horse, and when had she last eaten?</p>
-
-<p>What was she to do now? And where was she going?
-She didn’t care much. It would be nice just to lie down<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-and not be waking at all at all. But some inner vitality
-would never let her do that. She sighed. She must be finding
-food, then, and learning where she was. For all she
-knew, she might be back in Campbell country—and that
-thought roused her just a little.</p>
-
-<p>She dragged herself to her feet and tramped on again.
-The glen ended in a long loch, so large that both ends
-were out of sight around the curves of the hills. Kelpie sat
-down again and thought, slowly, because she could not
-seem to think very well. There were not so many lochs of
-this size. She did not think she could have got so far as
-Loch Rannoch, and this seemed too long for Loch Earn
-and not wide enough for Loch Lomond. It must be that
-it was Loch Tay, and if this were so, then she might well
-be in Campbell country.</p>
-
-<p>If only the sun would come out! If only there were
-some place that she could go and rest and hide away from
-the world and her thoughts....</p>
-
-<p>And then she remembered the braes of Balquidder and
-two kind and lonely old folk who had said, “Haste ye
-back.”</p>
-
-<p>At this point Kelpie’s instinct and gypsy training took
-over. Without stopping to wonder was she right or no,
-she turned to the left and trudged along the southern
-bank of the loch. She found berries and roots to eat. She
-lay down in the wet heather and slept, her plaidie around<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-her, when she could go no farther. And then she awoke
-and went on. To the end of the loch she went, and down a
-glen, and around a mountain.</p>
-
-<p>And late on a drizzly afternoon old Alsoon MacNab
-heard a faint scratch at her door and opened it to find
-her own plaidie back—wrapped round a morsel of wretched
-humanity that for once was not shamming in the least.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_16">16. Morag Mhor</h2>
-
-<p>It was pleasant to be cared for, pleasant and strange.
-Kelpie lay for several days on the pile of springy
-heather which served for her bed. At first she just slept
-and awoke to eat and sleep again. But then she began
-lying awake, her eyes on the smoky fire, or on the mortarless
-stone walls that leaned a little inward against the
-black rafters and thatched roof. Alsoon was always busy,
-cooking or sweeping the earthen floor with a besom broom
-or weaving or knitting, one eye always on her patient.</p>
-
-<p>And why should they take her in and care for her so,
-when they had nothing to gain by it? Glenfern had done
-the same thing—no, best not to think of Glenfern, for that
-was too painful. She must learn to wall off those memories
-from her feelings, so that they would become like a witch-spot
-on the body, a spot that could feel no pain even
-though a pin was stuck in to the head. Kelpie had no
-witch-spots, though Mina did. But then, Kelpie was not a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-witch, and what was more, she never would be, however
-hard she might try!</p>
-
-<p>The knowledge crept upon her stealthily, while she was
-still too weak and drained to resist it. She had no power at
-all. None of her spells had ever worked. And Mina had lied
-about teaching her the Evil Eye. It came to her with bitter
-clarity that the Evil Eye was a thing one must be born
-with; it could never be learned. All Kelpie had was the
-Second Sight, and many Highlanders had that.</p>
-
-<p>She received the knowledge with a strange kind of indifference.
-Later, when she wasn’t so tired, she would no
-doubt feel a savage sense of loss. But she could not think
-about it now—not yet.</p>
-
-<p>Alsoon was bringing her some broth now and crooning
-to her wee dark love to drink it and sleep. Callum must
-have tramped far over the hills to find a deer to make it,
-and they knew very well that she could never pay for it
-at all, and they would be hurt even if she offered payment.
-Highland hospitality was a warm, strong thing with rules
-to it. It made a grace between host and guest and a bond
-not to harm each other. This was why Alex had been so
-angry at the way she left Glenfern, and Eithne so hurt,
-and—and Ian—</p>
-
-<p>She wrenched her mind from the thought of Ian, drank
-her broth, and drifted back to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>When she was on her feet again, Kelpie was strangely
-content just to stay where she was. It seemed to her that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-her life had been violently wrenched apart, and she hardly
-knew how to begin putting it back together again. She
-needed time to think. Kelpie had always found the world
-full and interesting, however cruel. She played a game.
-She avoided the cruelty when she could, and bore it if
-she must, and fought back when she had the chance. She
-adapted herself to each new situation that came along,
-and had quite enjoyed—on the whole—the glimpses of
-various new worlds that the last few months had offered.</p>
-
-<p>But now she seemed to be cast out of every world she
-knew, for she could never go back to Glenfern, or to Mina
-and Bogle (even if she would), or to Campbell country.
-Worse, she did not even know what she wanted, now that
-the power of witchcraft was denied her. The old gypsy
-life no longer seemed attractive. New ideas had been
-planted in her mind, and she had found herself groping
-restlessly for something she could not name.</p>
-
-<p>To keep her mind and hands busy, she began to help
-Alsoon and Callum with the various chores, and took an
-unexpected pleasure in them. For once, walls seemed not
-a trap but a warm, safe shelter from the early frost and
-biting wind outside, and from the world in general.</p>
-
-<p>And so the autumn passed, and it was the dark of the
-year, with only a few brief hours of daylight and long gray
-dusks. In that remote glen they heard little of the outside
-world. It wasn’t until she had been there for two months
-that a neighbor from over the hill came that way in search<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-of stray cattle and stopped in to pass on the news that
-his brother had heard from someone’s cousin who had
-been away in to a town.</p>
-
-<p>Montrose had taken his army north to Aberdeen, and
-this time he had let his men sack the city. “It was because
-they had shot a wee drummer boy,” explained the neighbor.
-“The lad was just along with the envoy, asking them
-would they like to send their women and bairns to safety.
-And Graham was so angry at it that he took the town and
-turned his army loose on it, but they say he was sorry
-after.”</p>
-
-<p>And then, it seemed, the old game of tag had started
-again, with Argyll panting after Montrose all the way
-from Bog o’ Gight to Badenoch, Tumnel to Strathbogie,
-devastating lands as he went, and slaughtering people if
-he even suspected them of royalist sympathies.</p>
-
-<p>When Kelpie awoke the next morning, she saw the
-white light of the first snow coming through the cracks
-in the shutters, and her first, unbidden thought was: did
-Ian lie somewhere beneath that blanket? Had Alex been
-punished for killing him? Where was Montrose now, and
-what was happening in Scotland? It was the beginning of
-a new restlessness and a growing desire to learn whether
-Ian was dead, and perhaps even to take vengeance herself
-on Alex, if no one else had done it already. Even without
-magic powers, she reflected with narrowed eyes, she
-could still use her wee <i lang="gd">sgian dhu</i>!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The dark, smoky shieling became too cramped for such
-thoughts, and, in spite of the cold, Kelpie took to making
-long walks over the braes and around the foot of Ben
-More. Alsoon looked at her wisely. If she guessed that
-confusing thoughts were disturbing the young waif, she
-said nothing but merely finished whatever task Kelpie
-might have left undone when the restlessness was upon
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“Och, and you’ll be away again one day,” predicted old
-Callum mildly one crisp afternoon when Kelpie paused at
-the sheep pen where he was working. “’Tis the wanderlust
-you have in your feet—but are you not also wanting somewhere
-to call home?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie had never thought of the matter. She did so now.
-What <em>was</em> a home? For Ian it had been Glenfern, where
-his heart stayed wherever the rest of him might be. But
-for Kelpie, Glenfern was not just a place; it was a feeling
-and it was people. It was Wee Mairi’s bonnie face and
-confiding smile; and the twins crowding close, bright-eyed,
-to demand more stories; and Eithne’s quick sympathy;
-and laughter beside the loch. It was teasing and
-love and trust among them all, and her own heart given
-recklessly against her better judgement.</p>
-
-<p>No, home was not a place but a feeling—a deceitful
-feeling, she remembered bitterly. She had endangered
-Wee Mairi by her very affection, and Ian had trusted too
-much.... And Kelpie thought again that if Glenfern<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-had not settled the score with Alex, she herself might do it
-one day. She thought of Mina and Bogle too, and hoped
-fiercely that they had not escaped.</p>
-
-<p>There was more heavy snow the next week, and now
-this was nearly the longest time she had ever spent in one
-place—except for Glenfern, and Glenfern had been much
-more lively. She longed more and more for excitement, for
-adventure, aye, even for danger, for these were the spice
-of life. And so she stiffened with anticipation on the morning
-that wee Angus MacNab came racing over the hill
-toward the shieling hut. Important news was in his every
-movement.</p>
-
-<p>“Och, Callum, and have you seen it?” he demanded in
-a shrill shout. “Montrose himself it is, and his army, just
-yon over the braes on the edge of Campbell land. It is
-said they will be going to harry Mac Cailein Mor in his
-own castle!”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie had been standing over near the sheep pen, very
-still, watching the small lad come. A too large kilt flapped
-about his knobbly knees, and himself and his long shadow
-and his twisting track were all dark against the white of
-the snow. To her left was the black of the shieling hut,
-smoke rising vaguely against the pearl-blue of the sky, and
-Callum standing by the door. Everything seemed to stop
-in time for just an instant, while something inside Kelpie
-awoke, stretched, looked around, and made a decision.</p>
-
-<p>She didn’t ask herself any questions then, but turned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-in her tracks and walked back to the hut, where Callum
-and Alsoon were greeting the lad and asking for more
-details.</p>
-
-<p>“And where are they?” she demanded.</p>
-
-<p>Angus waved a skinny arm toward the north. “Yon, near
-Loch Tay. The clan is called out and will be joining there.
-I wish I could be going!”</p>
-
-<p>Sudden reasonless elation filled Kelpie. She wrapped
-her plaidie more firmly about her shoulders and looked at
-Callum and Alsoon. “I’m away,” she announced.</p>
-
-<p>“Och, no, heart’s darling!” protested Alsoon. “Not into
-Campbell lands, and in midwinter! Bide with us a wee
-while longer, until spring.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m away,” repeated Kelpie, a little sharply, as she
-realized that once again she was in danger of giving her
-heart. “And what harm from cold or Campbells when the
-army and all the women and bairns are along? I cannot
-bide longer, for my feet have the urge in them.” And she
-tossed her dark head like a young Highland pony, so that
-the thick braids—well tended by Alsoon—leaped over her
-shoulders and beat against her waist, as if impatient.</p>
-
-<p>Alsoon sighed. “Well, then, and you must go if you must.
-But come away in first, my light, and I’ll be giving you
-food to take along. Dried venison there is, and fresh bannocks,
-and oatcakes. And here are the new skin brogans
-that Callum has finished for you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Haste ye back, white love,” she added at last as Kelpie<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-took the food and put on the shoes and stood looking at
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye,” said Kelpie, and her heart was torn. The MacNabs
-gave and asked no return but to be able to give
-more. “You’ve been kind, and I not deserving it,” she
-murmured, and then clenched her fists and walked quickly
-out of the low doorway, lest she be caught up in folly
-again.</p>
-
-<p>Halfway up the hill she paused, stared back at the long,
-low shieling hut, and then waved at the two old people
-standing there. Tears stung her eyelids for a moment, and
-impulsively she crooked her forefinger, calling down a
-blessing upon them.</p>
-
-<p>Five minutes later she had shaken off her sadness. She
-lifted her head and breathed the air of new adventure.
-The hills had been calling this long while, calling through
-the spell of black depression that was on her. But the spell
-was broken now, and she was answering the call.</p>
-
-<p>At the top of the hill she was seized by fresh exuberance.
-Curving her arms upward like a stag’s antlers, she broke
-into the light, wild leaps of a dance that the Highland
-men did around the campfire or at friendly gatherings,
-and then laughed aloud at her own impertinence—she, a
-lass, to be doing a man’s dance, and doing it well too.
-The dance took on a distinctly mocking and impudent
-quality.</p>
-
-<p>From the top of the next hill she looked down on Montrose’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-army, which had made camp by the loch. From
-the mouth of the glen, the MacNabs were arriving, great-kilts
-swinging about their bare, strong knees, and the top
-halves of the kilts wrapped round massive shoulders.
-Kelpie surveyed the scene for a moment before going
-down, counting tartans. MacDonalds were still most
-plentiful, with Gordons, MacPhersons, Stewarts—but she
-saw no Cameron tartans.</p>
-
-<p>She also saw no children, and only a small scattering of
-women. Where were they all, then? Frowning a little, she
-went down, over the snowy hillside, to the camp.</p>
-
-<p>“Whist, lass, and what is it you’re wanting?” It was a
-bearded Irish MacDonald. “The time for sweethearts’
-farewells is past, and we off to raid and harry the Campbells
-in their lair.” The beard split in a grin of vengeful
-glee.</p>
-
-<p>“It is I that am coming with you,” announced Kelpie
-cheekily. “Where are all the women and bairns?”</p>
-
-<p>He stared. “Back at Blair Castle, the most of them, safe
-in Stewart country. It is only a few of the strongest, and
-they with no children, that we have brought. ’Tis no adventure
-for you, lassie. Be away back home.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am strong, and with no bairns,” argued Kelpie. “And
-I’m frightened to travel alone.” She looked helpless and
-pleading. “I have no home, and I’d like well to raid the
-Campbells. Can I not be coming?”</p>
-
-<p>He grinned sympathetically. “Och, well—we’ve a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-bloody enough work to do, and might even use an extra
-nurse once or twice. Go find Morag Mhor, then, who is
-head of the women.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie recognized Morag Mhor as soon as she saw her—the
-tall, gaunt woman she had noticed at Blair Atholl,
-who well deserved the title of “great” Morag. Ragged
-woolen skirts were kilted up over a bright red petticoat,
-showing ankles as sturdy as a man’s. The worn Gordon
-plaidie had fallen back from her head, and her face was
-more alive than it had been at Blair Atholl, but as fierce
-as ever. When Kelpie found her, she was berating a red-faced
-MacGregor at least two inches shorter than she,
-who clearly had no fight left in him.</p>
-
-<p>“And don’t be crossing my path again until I feel forgiving,
-or I’ll box the other ear!” she finished briskly and
-then turned to look at Kelpie. “Gypsy!” she said, crossing
-brawny arms on her breast.</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed and no!” protested Kelpie with great promptness.
-“Only a poor lost lass, and away from home—”</p>
-
-<p>Morag Mhor laughed loudly. “Gypsy!” she repeated,
-pointing a long forefinger.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie regarded her warily and trimmed her tale. “The
-gypsies were stealing me when I was a bairn,” she conceded,
-not expecting to be believed.</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, then,” agreed Morag Mhor surprisingly. “Because
-of the ringed eyes of you, I think. You’ll have the Second
-Sight. Are you a witch?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Are you?” countered Kelpie, remembering with a pang
-that she herself was not and never could be.</p>
-
-<p>Morag shrugged wide shoulders. “I have a healing
-power. But I’m not belonging to any coven of daft folk
-who hold Black Mass and dance their silly feet off at midnights.
-My power is in what I’m doing, not what I’m
-saying.” Her lined face drew down fiercely. “I’ll be helping
-to put the curse of deeds on the Campbells this week.
-They passed my happy wee home in Gordon country and
-left behind a blackened stone—and I arriving back from
-over the hill to find the thatch still smoldering, and my
-man dead, and my son beside him, and the lad not yet ten!
-I have thirsted for Campbell blood ever since, and I shall
-drink deep.”</p>
-
-<p>She stopped, staring into the white distance with eyes
-that were of burning stone. Kelpie reflected that she would
-not like to have this woman for an enemy. Best to go
-canny.</p>
-
-<p>“I was prisoner of Mac Cailein Mor,” she volunteered.
-“He would have burned me, but I escaped.”</p>
-
-<p>“Och, then, and you’re another who hates him!” Morag’s
-eyes returned from unpleasant places. “Stay along with
-me, then, gypsy lass. We’ll see revenge together, and no
-man nor devil will harm you whilst I am near.” And Kelpie
-believed her.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_17">17. The Road to Inverary</h2>
-
-<p>They had slept on the border of Campbell country,
-after feeding on Campbell cattle collected by some
-twenty or thirty Highlanders. Their tightly woven woolen
-plaids had helped to keep out the cold, and so had the
-fires scattered along the glen. But Kelpie was glad enough
-of the red wool hose that Alsoon had knitted for her, and
-of the warm bulk of Morag beside her.</p>
-
-<p>Now they were heading up Strath Fuile, and the warm-hearted
-comradeship of the Highlanders became a savage
-expectation, for here at last was the great enemy ahead.
-Montrose might talk all he liked of getting to the border
-to aid the King in England—but a score or two must be
-settled first. Montrose had had to compromise; otherwise
-too many of his army would have just slipped away home,
-taking with them as many stolen cattle as possible.</p>
-
-<p>Now an advance party had gone ahead of the main<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-army to find cattle before the owners could be warned
-and drive them off to hide in the hills. And Morag Mhor,
-with a dark and unpleasant grin, had attached herself and
-Kelpie to them. The men, knowing of her murdered husband
-and child, let her join them, with a grim jest or two
-about the fate of any Campbells unlucky enough to run
-into her.</p>
-
-<p>They rounded a curve in the river, and there before
-them was a long, low shieling hut with two children playing
-out in front and a handful of cattle scattered up the
-hill behind. Morag saw the hut first and was off toward it
-with a flash of red petticoat. Kelpie wished suddenly that
-she had stayed with the rest of the women, but she hurtled
-after Morag simply because it didn’t occur to her to do
-anything else. Now the men had seen it too, and a menacing
-yell rose from thirty throats as some of them raced
-around after the cattle, and the rest—mostly Irish MacDonalds—followed
-Morag and Kelpie toward the hut.</p>
-
-<p>Even as she was running, the thing inside Kelpie felt
-sick at what was to come. Campbells they were, certainly,
-but what fault had the bairns committed? Montrose would
-be angry, surely, with his scruples about making war on
-the innocent. Now the children had seen them and were
-running toward the house, screaming with terror. An
-ashen-faced woman gathered them to her and then paused
-in the doorway, uncertain whether to run inside or away
-into the hills. Kelpie could almost taste the fear in her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Then Kelpie’s foot hit something soft and yielding. She
-tripped and flew head first into a patch of wet snow. There
-was a wail of pain and—the cry of a small child.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie raised her head from the snow in time to see
-Morag stop, whirl, and race back toward Kelpie and the
-child. Was she going to begin her revenge by killing the
-bairn?</p>
-
-<p>“Is it hurt that you are?” roared Morag, but she was
-not speaking to Kelpie. She picked up the crying child
-and stood, her gaunt face twisted with the conflict of
-feelings going on in her. Then she turned to Kelpie, with
-the Irish MacDonalds only a few yards from them. “Come
-on!” she ordered and raced with the child toward the hut
-and the cowering woman.</p>
-
-<p>Bewildered, Kelpie scrambled up and followed, just
-barely ahead of the men. Morag thrust the baby into its
-mother’s arms, whirled, and drew her <i lang="gd">sgian dhu</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll not be touching them, whatever!” she bellowed
-at the astonished giant who led the pack. “Back, or I’ll
-skewer you, Rab MacDonald! Am I not a woman and
-mother myself? A plague on men and war! Back, I say!”</p>
-
-<p>She was terrifying; her avenging fury turned to defense
-of her prey. It was altogether too much for the Highlanders.
-They stood and stared, a full dozen of them in a
-semicircle before her.</p>
-
-<p>“Fine brave soldiers ye are!” jeered Morag. “Are ye no
-afraid to be attacking such dangerous foes? Here’s the wee<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-bairn, now. Will one of you not challenge him to fair
-combat?”</p>
-
-<p>They shuffled their feet, quite taken aback. The madness
-that Morag herself had kindled in them trickled out,
-to be replaced by the Highland sense of the ridiculous.
-One of them chuckled, and then several others began to
-roar with laughter. “And is this your own vengeance,
-Morag Mhor?” they hooted. “I will be remembering this
-the next time you are clouting me on the ear and send for
-a bairn to protect me,” added the giant called Rab.</p>
-
-<p>Morag Mhor seemed not to care about the teasing. She
-stood guard over the grateful little family while the cattle
-were caught and while the rest of the army arrived on
-the scene. And, with the backing of Montrose, she defied
-those who wanted to burn the house.</p>
-
-<p>“I can do no more for ye,” she told the Campbell woman
-when the army and its captured cattle had started on
-once again. “You have your bairns and your home—although
-your Campbell army left me neither, nor husband.
-I intended to do the same to you, but I could not, for I
-saw myself in you, and it came to me that a woman’s place
-is to give life, not to take it. It comes to me, too, that men
-are a senseless lot with all their useless killing, and perhaps
-we mothers should be raising our sons to different ideas.”</p>
-
-<p>And then she turned abruptly and headed in long strides
-back to the Highland army, not waiting for the stammered
-words of thanks.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Kelpie trailed along at her heels, saying nothing but
-thinking a good deal.</p>
-
-<p>And so it went, along to Tyndrum and up Glenorchy.
-Morag Mhor vehemently defended every woman and
-child they found, against the threats and wild arguments
-of the Highland soldiers. It didn’t take Kelpie long to
-discover that all this was a great act put on by the Highlanders
-for Morag’s benefit, and it was a surprise to her
-that a woman as shrewd as Morag didn’t know it too. But
-she never guessed.</p>
-
-<p>“I know you for the braw liar you are,” remarked Kelpie
-saucily to Rab one morning over their beef-and-oatmeal
-breakfast. “You will be teasing her every time, and you as
-softhearted as herself.”</p>
-
-<p>“As ever was,” agreed Rab, rolling a dark eye at her.
-“But do not be telling Morag, whatever, for it is not just
-teasing. With the grief of her, she is needing something to
-fight, but she is happier to be fighting us to save bairns
-than the other way around.”</p>
-
-<p>Although the campaign through Campbell territory was
-less bloodthirsty than Kelpie had expected, still it was not
-pretty. Men of fighting age found little mercy, few cattle
-escaped the voracious appetite of the army, and more than
-a few barns and thatch roofs went up in smoke behind it.</p>
-
-<p>Blazing fires and roasted meat were good at night, after
-long and cold marches. Since there were so few women to
-do the cooking, the men helped too, with good will and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-bantering. Kelpie poked at a haunch of beef one chill but
-clear evening, thinking to herself that they were going a
-long way round to Argyll at Inverary, in a huge triangle
-to north and west. Surely by now Argyll would have received
-word of this invasion! Kelpie wondered what he
-would be doing about it. The obvious thing would be to
-come away after them, and she looked apprehensively
-toward the purple-black hills that surrounded the orange
-firelight.</p>
-
-<p>“Is there food for a starving—Why, ’tis the water
-witch!” Kelpie turned to face Archie MacDonald, whose
-black eyes were sparkling with curiosity. They stared at
-each other.</p>
-
-<p>“And where did you vanish to that day?” he demanded.
-“A braw lot of trouble and grief you caused! If you’ve the
-power to vanish into thin air, you might have been doing
-it before Ian Cameron was cut down trying to save you.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie winced. “Was he killed entirely?” she asked,
-her heart pounding for fear of the answer.</p>
-
-<p>“Na, na, not entirely. But a nasty wound it was. Still,
-he survived it, although he had to go back to Glenfern,
-and no more fighting for the time.” Kelpie saw again in
-her mind the savage downward sweep of Alex’s broadsword
-and had to push aside the tumult of feelings that it
-brought. But—Ian was not dead! Alex had not killed him!</p>
-
-<p>“And Alex MacDonald?” she demanded balefully.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s—away,” said Archie, and it was clear that he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-going to say no more. But then, he was Alex’s cousin and
-not likely to want to speak of it. At least Kelpie knew now
-that Alex had not been hanged, and she thought again that
-she might be the one to avenge Ian some day. For she
-doubted that, even now, Ian himself would raise a hand
-against Alex. She looked right through Archie, and her
-slanted blue eyes held no very pleasant expression.</p>
-
-<p>The meat was done now and being divided. Archie
-pulled his <i lang="gd">sgian dhu</i> from his stocking, vanished briefly
-into the crowd of hungry men, and emerged with a smoking
-hunk for Kelpie in one hand and one for himself in
-the other. She bit into the meat hungrily and then looked
-up to find the deep black eyes still fixed on her, and a
-question in them.</p>
-
-<p>“That day,” he began, with an uncertain note in his
-voice, “were you sending a call in the mind to Alex before
-you gave the Cameron rant with your voice?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie looked as blank as she felt. “I don’t understand
-you whatever!” she said warily.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” he began, and frowned a little, “there we were
-in the tavern, with Alex and Ian in a fury at each other,
-and none of us even hearing the sounds outside. It was a
-braw quarrel, with Ian gone white with the anger in him,
-and Alex the color of a rowan berry. And then Alex was
-stopping in mid-word, with an intent, listening look on the
-face of him, and looking round. And it was because of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-silence that an instant later we were hearing the Cameron
-rant, and Ian shouting ‘’Tis Kelpie in trouble!’”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie shook her head blankly. “And what then?” was
-all she said.</p>
-
-<p>Archie shrugged. “Why, then, Ian forgot the quarrel and
-was away out the door, and Alex after him with drawn
-sword, and the rest of us collected our wits and followed,
-not knowing if Alex’s black fury was still for Ian, or for
-the witch-hunters. His face was a fearful thing to see, and
-I’m hoping I never meet the like in battle, for ’twould be
-the end of me. But you know the rest better than I. How
-was it, Kelpie, that Alex heard you even through the quarrel,
-and before the rest of us?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” said Kelpie absently, her mind on another
-question altogether. For the thing she had suspected
-was clear. It was herself had helped bring about the scene
-in the loch, and hatred of her had caused Alex to strike
-down his foster brother. It was the only possible explanation,
-and there was a sore hurt in the thought of it. How
-could Alex have hated her that much, who had never
-seemed to hate her at all, but only scorn her? Her short
-upper lip curled. Och, he would pay for it, just! Even
-though Kelpie could no longer hope for witchcraft to help
-her, he would pay for it.</p>
-
-<p>Archie looked at her uneasily. There was a look about
-her not quite canny, and it was occurring to him that folk<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-called after water witches, who could communicate without
-the voice, might not be a braw choice for companionship,
-so he brought her another hunk of meat—to avoid
-offending her—and melted hastily into the crowd of soldiers.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">The army passed the very spot near Loch Awe where
-Kelpie had first seen Janet Campbell that June day six
-months ago. And then they were heading at last toward
-Inverary, through the steep wilds of Glen Aray where she
-and Janet had gone. And what had been happening to
-Janet all this time? she wondered. Not that she really
-cared, she tried to tell herself, except that Janet was a
-harmless soul and not deserving to be harmed by either
-Mac Cailein Mor or his enemies.</p>
-
-<p>There was no detour to the top of the hill this time.
-Straight down the glen the army came, pipes shrieking
-in ominous triumph. It was a braw sound indeed, a wild
-song that set the blood running with joyful madness—or
-the blood of Montrose’s army, at any rate. Kelpie wondered
-briefly how it sounded to the ears in Inverary. Along
-the river they marched, half running now, and erupted
-into the valley, the town of Inverary seeming to cower
-ahead on its point of land, and the castle—so familiar to
-Kelpie—to the left.</p>
-
-<p>Morag Mhor was with the men heading for the village,
-loudly daring them to lay a finger on woman or child, her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-voice rising as they insisted, grinning, that this time every
-wee babe would be slaughtered, just. For once, this game
-had no interest for Kelpie, and she headed straight for the
-castle. If Mac Cailein Mor was captured, she wanted to
-be there to gloat.</p>
-
-<p>Everywhere there was clear evidence of surprise and
-panic. The town and castle, unaware of the approaching
-invasion, had been celebrating the Christmas season—in
-their sober Puritan way, of course, with longer and more
-frequent sermons. Kelpie’s lip curled with scorn for a
-chief so feckless as not to know what was happening in his
-own country—or else so sure of his invulnerability that he
-took no precautions. Och, she could hardly wait to see him
-taken prisoner! Her small white teeth fairly glittered in
-her smile.</p>
-
-<p>She had just reached the castle wall when a shout of
-dismay and fury broke out. Kelpie rushed to a high knoll
-where she could see. Men were pointing to the small
-bay. A fishing boat was hastily heading out into the
-loch.</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis himself is running away!” And Kelpie hardly
-needed a second glance to confirm it. Her keen eyes
-picked out two red heads, the short bulk of Lady Argyll,
-the patch of Cameron tartan that was Ewen.</p>
-
-<p>“Ssss!” said Kelpie in savage regret.</p>
-
-<p>The pipes lifted a wild wail of derision. “Oh, the great
-Argyll!” someone yelled. “Brave General Campbell! What,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-will you be away off, Mac Cailein Mor, and us just come
-to visit?”</p>
-
-<p>Montrose wasted no time fuming over what couldn’t be
-helped, although he must have been bitterly disappointed.
-The capture of Argyll this day might have changed history—although
-he had not the Second Sight to tell him how
-much. Even Kelpie did not know, for the crystal had not
-yet showed her the scene to come later, when Montrose
-himself calmly mounted the scaffold.</p>
-
-<p>His face was calm now as he gave orders to set about
-taking the castle abandoned by its owner. It wasn’t as
-difficult as it might have been. One couldn’t expect inspired
-defense from the men who had been left behind
-while their leader fled. And once Montrose’s men were in
-full possession, Kelpie entered the castle through those
-massive gates she had passed through before—but this
-time with an arrogant sway to her slim body.</p>
-
-<p>She wasted no time with the fine white bread and wine
-that had been discovered, nor even with the miserable
-figure of Mrs. MacKellar huddled on a chair in the hall.
-She knew where she was going, and she wanted to be
-the first one there.</p>
-
-<p>Argyll’s apartments were deserted. She walked boldly
-through the massive oaken doors, on into the inner chamber.
-There was a fine large cairngorm brooch on the table,
-mounted in silver, bigger than her fist. Fine, that! She
-looked around. What else?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A thought struck her. The next chamber must be that of
-Lady Argyll. In she went, and in a moment was kneeling
-beside a chest of fine gowns. A pity there were none of
-bright colors. Kelpie had always wanted a gown of flame-red
-velvet, but of course such a thing would never be
-found in a Covenant household. Still, there was one of
-moss-green, and the softest, finest wool she had ever seen,
-and not so <em>very</em> much too big, provided she belted it
-tightly about the waist. And she laughed with joy. Here
-was the fine silver belt she had always wanted.</p>
-
-<p>Next she pulled out a lovely cloak the color of juniper—and
-she must have it, although it was lined with Campbell
-tartan—and a silken purse, a linen kerchief, and several
-baubles. She tried on a pair of square-toed leather shoes
-with silver buckles, but they hurt her feet sorely, so she
-kicked them off and went back into Argyll’s room for a
-silver snuff box she had seen there.</p>
-
-<p>And as she stood, green gown bunched about her waist
-under untidy thick braids (uncombed since leaving Alsoon),
-the cairngorm in one hand and the snuff box in
-the other, the outer door opened.</p>
-
-<p>For an instant memory played tricks on her and she
-thought that it was Mac Cailein Mor finding her there
-with the hairs in her hand, and blind panic was on her.
-Then it cleared as a voice spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Dhé!</i>” boomed Antrim. “And whom have we here?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis the eavesdropping lass from last summer,”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-answered Montrose, standing still, taking in every detail.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie looked back at him fearlessly. He was amused,
-she could tell. And besides, did not his scruples prevent
-him from harming women or children, even enemy ones,
-and she no enemy?</p>
-
-<p>“I see you’ve wasted no time,” he observed mildly.
-“How is it you’re here ahead even of your army commander?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was knowing the way and wanting to be first,” explained
-Kelpie artlessly. She waved her loot at him with
-great pride in her cleverness.</p>
-
-<p>He looked at it, and at her. The corners of his mouth
-moved slightly. “That would be Argyll’s cairngorm, I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p>She nodded, regarding it happily. Then something occurred
-to her, and she glanced up at him dubiously from
-under her thick lashes. Perhaps it might be wise to sacrifice
-material gain—if necessary—for policy.</p>
-
-<p>“Were you wanting it yourself?” she asked reluctantly.
-“I will give it to you, if you like. There’s another nearly
-as good in yon box,” she added, “and this a wee bit heavy
-for a lass to be wearing.”</p>
-
-<p>Montrose laughed. “No, I don’t want Argyll’s brooch,”
-he assured her, to her relief. Then he looked at her seriously.
-“I don’t suppose it’s ever occurred to you,” he suggested,
-“that stealing could be a bad thing?”</p>
-
-<p>“Och, aye!” exclaimed Kelpie earnestly, “You must be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-very canny at it, my Lord, and lucky, too. For ’tis a bad
-thing indeed and indeed to be caught! But Mac Cailein
-Mor’s away in his wee boat, and no danger now.”</p>
-
-<p>This time it was Antrim who boomed with laughter, and
-Kelpie looked at him resentfully. Clearly he had had no
-experience at getting caught, or he would never be laughing
-at such a serious matter.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t mean quite that, although I’m sure it must be
-true,” explained Montrose gently, and the corners of his
-mouth were jiggling again. “I mean, did you never think
-that it might be wrong to steal, whether you were caught
-at it or no?”</p>
-
-<p>“Och, no!” said Kelpie, wide-eyed. “But then, perhaps
-’tis different for you,” she added kindly. “Being a chief and
-lord and all, you will be able to get things without stealing
-them, and I doubt you’re ever hungry, whatever.”</p>
-
-<p>Montrose sighed. “Aye,” he agreed, seeming sad for
-some reason. “’Tis different for me. You’d best run along
-now, though.” And he turned to look after her as she left
-the room.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie went back to the other wing, picked up an item
-or two from Mrs. MacKellar’s room, and then stood still
-for a minute, frowning at nothing at all. Why did people
-persist in making her think about new and uncomfortable
-ideas? A few months ago she would have been genuinely
-puzzled by the notion that it might be wrong to steal, even
-though a body was not caught at it. But now, even though<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-she had pretended not to know what Montrose meant, the
-idea wasn’t really as startling as it would once have been.
-It was the sort of thing the folks at Glenfern might have
-said, or Ewen Cameron, or even Alsoon and Callum. It
-undoubtedly had to do with the integrity thing Alex and
-Ian talked of, and all of them wanting her to apply it to
-herself. Why should she? Mina and Bogle had taught her
-that anything was right if one got away with it—but then,
-Mina and Bogle were evil, and perhaps everything they
-said was wrong.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie sighed. On the other hand, Alex talked about
-those ideas, and he was evil too. So what was a lass to
-think, at all?</p>
-
-<p>She wandered down into the main hall, which was still
-a chaos of triumphant men. But she was so engrossed in
-her problem of right and wrong that she quite forgot to
-taunt the dejected and weeping Mrs. MacKellar. In any
-case, it no longer seemed necessary. After all, the housekeeper
-had been loyal to her chief, and it the only safe
-thing to do—but would it not be safer now for her to side
-with the royalist victors?</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie frowned at the red-eyed and unlovely figure of
-Mrs. MacKellar, for in it there was something undefeated
-and almost gallant. No, Mrs. MacKellar would never
-change sides, but would stay loyal to Mac Cailein Mor,
-even though he was not worthy of it. Why? Did she fear
-that he would come back? Or was this something like not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-stealing, that a body did even against his own interest?
-Was that what integrity was? But what good was it? As
-far as Kelpie could see, it was more likely to be a nuisance
-than an asset.</p>
-
-<p>She wandered over to one of the deep-set windows and
-stared out, unseeing, her whole attention focused on her
-thoughts. The folk at Glenfern, like Mrs. MacKellar, would
-remain loyal for always to a person or ideal. This was part
-of the thing about them which she had sensed from the
-first—the daftness, the difference. True they would be,
-whether or not it was profitable or safe, aye, though it
-cost them their lives—all but Alex. And it was this, perhaps,
-that had shocked her so. For Alex, surely, would
-never change sides but would be true to an ideal—and
-how was it, then, that he could betray a friend?</p>
-
-<p>She leaned her forehead against one of the thick diamond-shaped
-panes, dimming it even more with her
-breath, and remembered that Montrose had talked of such
-things back at Blair Atholl. But neither he nor anyone
-else had ever explained to Kelpie why this way of acting
-was desirable. Was it possible that there was some strange
-kind of happiness in it? Did they have things inside which
-would make them uncomfortable if they acted otherwise?</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie stopped trying to understand, for she found
-that there was an argument going on within her. The thing
-inside her was saying that this was a fine and proud way
-to be, but her common sense told her that it was not at all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-practical, and had she not vowed to think of herself first,
-last, and always? And surely if it was a choice between her
-own safety and any other thing (and she forced the
-thought of Wee Mairi from her mind), surely it would be
-only sensible to look out for herself, as ever was!</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_18">18. The Black Sail</h2>
-
-<p>Kelpie awoke from a dream in which she was trudging
-along beside a loch against blinding rain. She blinked
-a little as she remembered that she was back at Inverlochy
-Castle—the same place she and Mina and Bogle had
-spent the first night after leaving Glenfern. She shivered a
-little, partly at the memory of Mina and Bogle, and partly
-from cold. Hugging the stolen cloak and her old plaidie
-about her, she hurried down the tower stairs and out to
-the central court, where Morag Mhor and the other women
-were preparing breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>“Slugabed!” Morag greeted her, and Kelpie grinned
-cheekily, knowing all about Morag’s pretended fierceness
-by now. There were more men than ever to feed, since the
-Glencoe MacDonalds and the Stewarts of Appin had
-joined, and Kelpie was glad that they were in friendly
-Cameron country, where it was safe to build fires and they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-could have hot porridge. She had got heartily tired of a
-diet of oatmeal mixed with cold water. She looked thoughtfully
-up at Ben Nevis, which looked larger and more lowering
-under its quilt of snow than in the green and tawny
-blanket of summer, and realized suddenly that she had
-had enough of army life.</p>
-
-<p>Rab paused by the fire to sniff the oatmeal hungrily and
-announce that he thought he would just go out and lift
-some cattle for breakfast. He chucked Morag Mhor under
-the chin as he said it, and received a sound clout on the
-ear as a reward. “Ouch!” he exclaimed, making a great
-show of nursing his ear. “You will ever be bullying me,
-Morag <i lang="gd">avic</i>, and I a poor helpless man at your mercy.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie giggled, and Morag shook her fist at the other
-ear. “This is the day we go to ask Lochiel and the Camerons
-to join us, and you would be lifting their cattle!
-<i lang="gd">Amadan!</i>”</p>
-
-<p>Rab began explaining that they didn’t really need the
-Camerons at all, but Kelpie stopped listening, for she was
-thinking that this would be a good time indeed to leave
-the army. She had had enough of battles. Just a few miles
-up the Great Glen was the pass that led to Glenfern.
-Would she be welcome there? Surely Ian would remember
-that she had warned him against Alex, and so would forgive
-her for running away and leaving him struck down
-and half dead. Would he and his father join Montrose?
-she wondered. Or would Lochiel dare to raise his clan?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>She turned to Morag Mhor, who had sent Rab, protesting,
-out to the river for more water, and was now vigorously
-stirring the porridge. “Lochiel would be daft to call
-out his clan,” she suggested. “With his grandson in Campbell
-hands, he could not dare.”</p>
-
-<p>Morag thought about it for a while, her lean face still
-and expressionless. “There was a wise woman in our village
-long ago,” she said at last, “who used to say to me,
-‘Always dare to do what is right,’ and I am thinking
-Lochiel will say the same. Would you understand that,
-Kelpie?”</p>
-
-<p>“No!” said Kelpie forcefully and scowled. Ewen Cameron
-himself had used those same words. So here again
-were those ideas that she did not want to think about.
-She set her small face into a hard mask and dropped the
-subject. “I am thinking I have had my fill of armies and
-battles,” she announced. “I will stay behind when you go
-up the Great Glen, and perhaps go to stay with friends
-here in Lochaber.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, and a blessing on you,” said Morag. “May
-you find a home for your bones and your spirit—though
-I think you will never stay in one place for long. I’m thinking
-I’ll go back to Gordon country myself soon. No doubt
-there are orphans left by the Campbells who would be
-needing a mother.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie followed the army as far as Lochiel’s home at
-Torcastle, curious to see whether or not Lochiel would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-raise his clan. He did. The traditional cross was made of
-two sturdy sticks bound firmly together. And according
-to the ancient ceremony the ends were set aflame, extinguished
-in goat’s blood, then lighted once more: one of
-Lochiel’s men held the cross proudly high and set off
-at a trot that carried him deeper into Cameron territory.
-The torch would be passed from runner to runner until
-the whole area had received the message of war.</p>
-
-<p>The army stayed at Torcastle for two days while Camerons
-came flocking to the call of their chief. If any had
-misgivings about Argyll’s possible revenge on them, they
-did not show it; nor did Lochiel, that stern old man who
-held his head so high. Kelpie did not wait to see the
-Glenfern Camerons arrive, for she had sudden misgivings
-about seeing Ian again. Instead, she went back to the
-tower room at Inverlochy Castle in a very thoughtful
-frame of mind.</p>
-
-<p>For several days she stayed at the castle, enjoying her
-solitude, and getting her food from homes nearby with
-surprising ease. For the very people who had once regarded
-her with deep suspicion were now delighted to
-give food and hospitality to the wistful lass who had been
-a prisoner of Argyll, who had been helped by Ewen Cameron
-himself, and who had even got away with Lady
-Argyll’s fine cloak. Food, scanty though it might be with
-the men away in the army, was shared, and there was not
-a home where she was not urged to bide awhile.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But she shook her black head. Och, no, she said. She
-was away up the Glen. But she would take her leave
-marveling at such openheartedness to a stranger—even
-one who had not yet stolen anything. After thinking about
-it, Kelpie decided not to take anything at all. Somehow
-the good will seemed more valuable than anything she
-might steal.</p>
-
-<p>Then the mild weather turned into sudden bitter cold.
-The night wind hurled blasts of snow against the tower
-walls, crept up the winding stairs, and whined outside like
-the banshee. It was so cold that Kelpie thought she might
-put away misgivings and go to Glenfern after all. Surely
-Lady Glenfern would not refuse her shelter in this cold!</p>
-
-<p>She was heading back to Inverlochy in the early dusk
-when she decided this. Her stomach was comfortably full
-of hot broth and scones from a generous young Cameron
-wife, she was a trifle sleepy, and it would be good indeed
-to sleep tomorrow night or the next in the comfort of
-Glenfern, under the same roof with Wee Mairi.</p>
-
-<p>It was fortunate that Kelpie’s senses remained alert even
-when her mind was on other things. Even so, she had
-nearly walked up to the castle gate before she realized
-that something was wrong, and she never knew exactly
-what it was that warned her. But suddenly she stopped,
-alive to the sharp feel of danger, her small figure dark and
-taut against the faintly luminous patches of snow. An
-instant later she simply was not there, and the Campbell<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-soldier who came running out of the gate, under the impression
-that he had seen something, shook his head and
-cursed the weather.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie lay in the snow where she had thrown herself
-behind a small hillock, not daring to raise her head but
-listening as if her life depended on it—which it did. Soon
-there was no doubt. Inverlochy Castle was being occupied—by
-Mac Cailein Mor and his army!</p>
-
-<p>With sick dismay she pieced things together. Someone
-called for Campbell of Auchinbreck. Then there was a
-harsh and authoritative Lowland voice. And by crouching
-behind a thick clump of juniper and twisting her head
-cautiously, Kelpie could just make out a galley with black
-sails silhouetted against the gray waters of the Loch.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, there was no doubt whatever! The Campbell had
-gathered his courage and his army and had come after
-Montrose.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_19">19. Footprints in the Snow</h2>
-
-<p>Kelpie spent the night at the shieling hut of Lorne
-Cameron, which was nestled at the foot of Ben Nevis.
-Lorne had urged Kelpie to stay, for she and her four bairns
-were alone since her husband had gone off with Montrose
-and his army. Now her ruddy young face paled at Kelpie’s
-news.</p>
-
-<p>“Campbells! <i lang="gd">Dhé!</i> and they will be murdering us all,
-then!”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps not,” said Kelpie hopefully. “If Mac Cailein
-Mor is after Montrose, perhaps he’ll not be lingering in
-Lochaber.”</p>
-
-<p>But she slept with one ear well out of the folds of her
-plaidie, cocked for any sounds of danger. The hut was
-only a mile or so from Inverlochy Castle, and if Lorne had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-reason to fear Mac Cailein Mor, Kelpie had that much
-more.</p>
-
-<p>She had planned to be off the first thing in the morning,
-out of danger. But somehow she found herself waiting,
-even after she had eaten the hot oatmeal Lorne cooked,
-and tucked some food into her pouch. There was Lorne
-here, and the wee ones, and none of Kelpie’s concern at all.
-But Lorne was frightened and uncertain what to do, and
-they so helpless and looking up to Kelpie—and after all,
-perhaps it would be wise just to take a wee peek at what
-Argyll was doing, and see the size of his army.</p>
-
-<p>“You might just be getting food and blankets together in
-case you need to hide,” she suggested. “And I’ll go have a
-look around.”</p>
-
-<p>“Och,’tis both good and brave you are!” said Lorne
-gratefully. Kelpie left the house hurriedly, feeling oddly
-embarrassed.</p>
-
-<p>She moved cautiously around the flank of the ben, skulking
-behind masses of juniper and pine clumps, until she
-could see the castle. <i lang="gd">Mise-an-dhui!</i> It was an army indeed
-and indeed! Highland Campbells and Lowlanders too, and
-well more than twice what Montrose could have, even
-with his new recruits. But Argyll seemed to be making no
-move to follow him up the Great Glen, even with this
-advantage.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie’s heart sank as she watched groups of men forming
-before the castle. It was what she had expected in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-heart of her. Mac Cailein Mor had no heart for battle but
-would be about his usual practice of wiping out women
-and children. Even now one of the groups of soldiers was
-setting off toward the little cluster of homes on the edge
-of Loch Linnhe, and another was turning west along Loch
-Eil.</p>
-
-<p>She watched no longer but headed back around the
-northern side of Ben Nevis. In a way this might be fortunate
-for her, giving her time to be up the Great Glen
-ahead of them. But suppose they penetrated as far as
-Glenfern? Perhaps she ought to be heading eastward, and
-out of the way altogether. In any case she would be passing
-Lorne’s home on the way, and it costing only a few
-minutes to warn the lass. Nor was this just profitless foolishness,
-she told herself, for who knew when she might be
-needing a friend under obligation to herself?</p>
-
-<p>An hour later she was laboring up the side of the mountain
-with a bundle of food in one arm and the next-smallest
-bairn in the other; Lorne, with the baby, and the
-older children panting behind. “Mind ye stay clear of soft
-snow,” she warned over her shoulder. “It could be putting
-them on your trail.”</p>
-
-<p>Another hour saw them settled in a well-hidden shepherd’s
-shelter, cold and uncomfortable and not daring to
-have a fire, but at least safer than at their home.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you not be staying too?” begged Lorne, her dark
-eyes anxious for the safety of this generous new friend.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-But Kelpie shook her head. She wanted to be farther than
-this from Argyll. And besides, a new thought was beginning
-to hound the fringes of her mind. Montrose, all unknowing,
-was now between two armies, for was not Seaforth
-at Inverness with five thousand men? And if he
-should be caught in a trap and wiped out, it would put
-Argyll altogether in control of the Highlands as well as
-Lowlands—and what would happen to Kelpie then? For
-her own safety, it seemed, she must try to warn Montrose.</p>
-
-<p>It was a sore uncomfortable thought, filled with hardship
-and danger. She tried to put it out of her mind as
-she picked her way down the gaunt wintry slope, but it
-wouldn’t leave. And with it were thoughts of Morag Mhor
-and Rab and Archie and Montrose himself lying slain in
-the snow, and all the comradeship and merry teasing silenced
-forever. A pity that would be. With a sigh she
-headed up the glen, a sharp eye out for any movement
-that might spell danger.</p>
-
-<p>Och, then, but it was cold! Her feet were icy in their
-hide shoes, even with the woolen hose, and it was threatening
-to snow again. However could she catch up with the
-army at all? Perhaps it had already met Seaforth. But she
-kept on going.</p>
-
-<p>She saw nothing but hares and deer and a lone eagle,
-until she reached the River Spean. Then a short, wiry
-figure came from the brush just ahead, and Kelpie sank
-swiftly to the ground for a tense moment before she saw<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-he was not a Campbell. He was alone and in a faded Cameron
-kilt. Kelpie followed him to a dilapidated hut on the
-bank of the river and watched him enter. A drift of smoke
-began to rise. Might not he help himself and his clan by
-taking the message for her? And then she would be free
-to seek safety. She walked up to the door boldly.</p>
-
-<p>“Come away in,” came the expected lilt of Gaelic when
-she knocked, and the man’s face turned to her in surprise
-as she entered. “<i lang="gd">Dhia dhuit</i>,” he greeted her politely. “And
-what is a wee lass doing alone in the cold? Will you no
-have a sup of hot food?”</p>
-
-<p>“I will, then,” agreed Kelpie promptly. “And give an
-important word to you, and also a task if you will do it.”</p>
-
-<p>The man listened while she talked and ate, his face
-growing graver and grimmer. “Aye so,” he agreed. “’Tis
-the hand of destiny that I live alone here and knew nothing
-of the clan rising, or I would be with them, and a bad
-time of it you would be having alone and in this weather.
-Eat your fill, then, whilst I fill my pouch, and I’ll be away
-before you’re done. You can be biding here whilst I am
-gone.”</p>
-
-<p>“That I will not!” retorted Kelpie firmly. “For every
-house in Lochaber is a danger. I’ll be away east out of
-trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>He frowned and shook his head. “There is no shelter to
-the east of here, lass, and it too cold to be sleeping out.
-And I have just come from hunting a wolf that has been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-skulking upriver. You would be safer here, I am thinking,
-for my house is alone and well hidden. But if you’re feared
-to rest here, there is a bittie cave nearby, and you are
-welcome to my blankets and food. Follow the Spean along
-up for a mile or so, and where the Cour is entering it turn
-south for a bit and mark sharp the west bank. The cave is
-in a high bluff and well hid with juniper. But I’m thinking
-you’ll be safe enough the night here, whatever, and it
-nearly dark already. There’ll be no Campbells along this
-day, and ’tis no good for you to be freezing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, then,” agreed Kelpie, seeing the sense to this, and
-the man was off. Odd, she didn’t know the name of him,
-nor he hers, and yet he was away on a dangerous errand
-on her word. A purpose in common—or common danger—she
-decided, was like a spell, binding even strangers one
-to another.</p>
-
-<p>The morning was heavy with clouds, the new snow a
-dead white beneath the gray of the sky. Kelpie put out the
-fire for fear of any betraying smoke and set out to locate
-the cave, wishing she dared stay in the warmth of the
-shieling. But as she trudged along the Cour River, watching
-the west bank, she stopped. Clear in the snow were
-footprints coming down the Cour—and stopping just
-ahead in a tumbled heap of snow. Kelpie stared, eyes
-narrowed. Footsteps didn’t just stop, unless someone had
-wings.</p>
-
-<p>No, there were no wings. There the prints went, back<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-the way they came. In a moment Kelpie had read the
-story. A man it was, by the size of the prints, and coming
-north along the Cour in a great hurry, so that he did not
-notice the treacherous slab of granite by the river, with
-ice under the snow. And there he had slipped and fallen;
-the mark was plain. Then, it would seem, he had made
-back the way he had come, limping sorely.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie straightened and looked up the glen cautiously.
-Where was he, then? And who was he? Warily she began
-to follow the retreating footprints.</p>
-
-<p>They angled up the hill to the right presently, through a
-thick patch of pine and juniper. Kelpie hesitated, peering
-through it, her right hand reaching for the <i lang="gd">sgian dhu</i> in
-the front of her dress, feet ready to run. Nothing stirred.
-And then a tiny trickle of smoke floated up just a few feet
-away from behind the brush. <i lang="gd">Dhé!</i> It must be that he had
-found the cave and taken shelter there. Probably he was
-not a Campbell, then, but more likely hiding from them—though
-he would not stay hidden long, with the smoke
-giving him away. Kelpie grinned sourly and shrugged.
-This was no place for her, then. She turned and prepared
-to slip quietly away, back to the shieling.</p>
-
-<p>“And have I taken the home of the water witch?”</p>
-
-<p>It was a low voice with a mocking note that Kelpie
-could never mistake. She whirled. Alex! She could see him
-now through the brush, nearly invisible against the low
-winter sun. He sat at the mouth of a small, shallow cave,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-regarding her quizzically—but with a drawn look about
-the mouth of him. One foot, badly swollen, was propped
-up before him.</p>
-
-<p>Och, then, wasn’t it her curse on him that had come at
-last to bear fruit? Moving thru the juniper, but keeping a
-safe distance away, Kelpie told him so with considerable
-relish.</p>
-
-<p>Alex grinned wryly. “It may be so,” he conceded. “Sure
-it is you’ve cursed me enough. But have I not told you that
-such things are likely to fly back in the face of the one
-who curses? And if this is your curse at work, then ’tis not
-just me you’ve harmed, but Montrose and his army, and
-yourself as well. For Argyll is about, and I was on my way
-up the Great Glen to warn Montrose when I fell; and what
-will you do if Argyll wins and puts his witch-hunters over
-the whole of the Highlands?”</p>
-
-<p>His tone was still mocking, but Kelpie could hear bitterness
-and despair in his voice. It made her feel most peculiar,
-for Alex was usually so infuriatingly self-assured—and
-much easier to hate that way. His distress was not quite as
-satisfying as it should have been. For a moment she toyed
-with the idea of leaving him to his worry, but she could
-not resist bragging. She gave him a pointed grin.</p>
-
-<p>“You will always be thinking yourself the only clever
-body in the world,” she observed smugly. “I myself have
-already sent a messenger to Montrose.”</p>
-
-<p>Alex stared, frankly unbelieving. “You?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“And why not, whatever? Wasn’t I crossing Campbell
-land myself with the army, and you away safe out of it?
-Haven’t I the wits to see I’m not wanting Mac Cailein
-Mor king in the Highlands? It is I should be doubting
-you, for if Ian and his father are with Montrose now, I’m
-thinking you’d not be going near whatever.”</p>
-
-<p>Alex narrowed his hazel eyes at her, and Kelpie prudently
-moved a step farther away. “And why not?” he
-inquired lazily.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie laughed nastily. “I’ve eyes in my head!” she
-retorted. “Did you think I was not seeing? Aye, and I saw
-it before, as well, with the Second Sight, last spring.”</p>
-
-<p>Alex’s eyes widened for an instant, then narrowed. He
-seemed about to say something, but changed his mind.
-Instead, the planes in his face became more angular than
-ever, and he gave Kelpie a long, hard, brooding stare
-that made her thankful for the hurt foot which kept him
-from moving. For surely he was thinking that he would
-like to silence her. He shrugged finally. “I wonder,” he
-said, “whether ’tis the truth you’re telling me about that
-messenger. If so, I could find it in my heart....”</p>
-
-<p>He didn’t finish the thought, nor did Kelpie answer.
-Instead, she stared back at him, at the freckles and straight
-lines of his face, at the way the cheekbones stood out
-above the narrow strength of jaw, and at the tangled red
-hair which had not been trimmed or combed recently.
-He was thinner than he had been and pale under his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-freckles, and she could see a tiny pulse in his temple that
-was his life itself—so easy to stop, so small a thread of
-life. And was there not something she should be doing the
-now, to avenge Ian? But she could not think what. Alex
-was not asleep, nor by any means helpless, even with a
-sore foot; and she had no intention at all of risking her
-own life for Ian or anyone else. She pulled her thick
-brows together and regarded him darkly.</p>
-
-<p>Alex laughed suddenly. “You cannot be planning to rob
-me, so it must be some other devilment you have in mind.
-Are you not satisfied yet, water witch? Is it another wee
-spell, or have you learned the Evil Eye by now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sssss!” said Kelpie earnestly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, and why will you not be going to Mac Cailein
-Mor to say that I am here?” he asked. “He would make
-short enough shrift of me, and would you not be liking
-that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye so,” agreed Kelpie with enthusiasm. “But,” she
-pointed out regretfully, “he would be making even shorter
-shrift of me, and I’d not be liking that so well.” And then
-she bit her tongue in annoyance as Alex laughed again.
-It was a spell he had put on her, to be always telling him
-the truth she had never intended to say!</p>
-
-<p>She scowled and lifted her lip in the old wolfish snarl,
-and then found herself grinning ruefully, though she had
-never intended that, either. It was not funny; it was <em>not</em>!
-She stamped her foot.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Ou, aye!” said Alex. “Your sense of humor has slipped
-out again, and why will you be squashing it under? Laugh
-at yourself, Kelpie. ’Tis the cure for all ills, and it is in
-my mind that perhaps most evil is caused by folk who
-take themselves too seriously.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re daft,” said Kelpie and turned away uncertainly.
-She should be off about her business and leave Alex to his
-fate. But it seemed that the thing inside that had been
-pushing her for days against her will was pushing still.
-It was as if she were living a pattern, and it was yet unfinished,
-and the thing would not permit her to go off and
-leave it until it was complete. She paused, her back turned
-to Alex, who sat still and silent in the mouth of his refuge.</p>
-
-<p>“What will you be doing now?” she asked against her
-will.</p>
-
-<p>“Bide here,” he returned philosophically, “since I can
-do nothing else, and see what will happen.”</p>
-
-<p>“They will be seeing your smoke,” she pointed out, still
-reluctantly.</p>
-
-<p>“I will let my fire die during the day, and try to keep
-warm by moving about,” he returned, and the quizzical
-note was back in his voice. “And why do you warn me of
-that, water witch? Wouldn’t it please you just to see me
-captured?”</p>
-
-<p>“It would that!” Kelpie’s eyes flashed. “I will be laughing
-that day, and not at myself either!” And this time she
-did leave, heading angrily back toward the Spean River.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_20">20. The Campbell Lass</h2>
-
-<p>Kelpie went back to the hut, since there was no other
-shelter and it was better to risk Campbells than to
-freeze to death. But she found a hiding place on the river
-bank, just in case, and for three days she alternately
-huddled over the tiny coals which were all she dared have
-during the daytime and watched the path for signs of the
-invaders.</p>
-
-<p>There was plenty of time to think. She wondered
-whether the message had got through to Montrose, and
-what he could do even if it had. For he was trapped in
-the Great Glen between two armies, and no way out except
-over mountains impassable with snow. She wondered
-about Alex and that long, inscrutable look he had given
-her, and it came to her that she had been a fool to tell
-him that she knew what he had done. For if he could
-strike down his foster brother, it would be nothing for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
-him to silence her. She began to feel very trapped herself.
-Was no place in the world safe for her?</p>
-
-<p>Lost in brooding, she failed to keep her sharp watch,
-and on the third afternoon she heard, too late, the crunch
-of heavy steps in the crusted snow. Before she could do
-more than turn, a heavy-set Campbell flung the door open,
-two or three others looming behind him.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’ll be another cursed Cameron or two,” he shouted,
-and his broadsword bore grim stains from the last house
-he had visited. “And where is your husband hiding, lass?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie’s wits, well trained in crisis, worked quickly.
-“Husband indeed!” she retorted, staring boldly into the
-ruddy face. “Where are your eyes, man, that you cannot
-recognize a Campbell when you see one?” She snatched
-up Lady Argyll’s cloak and waved it at him, thankful for
-that particular theft. “Och, but I am glad that you have
-come,” she went on with a trusting upward smile through
-her lashes. “It was my wicked Cameron uncle who came
-by my home on Loch Awe with that devil Montrose and
-all the army, and stole me away to keep house for him,
-since his wife died, and he saying I must be his daughter
-now and some day marry a Cameron; and have I not been
-biding my time and waiting for warm weather to run away
-back home?”</p>
-
-<p>The Campbells blinked and believed her. She was
-utterly convincing, and in any case, what Cameron would
-have claimed to be a Campbell, even at the edge of death?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-And had she not the once fine Campbell cloak, clearly
-given her by a lady of that clan? The sword went back into
-its sheath.</p>
-
-<p>“Och, well,” said its owner with a sigh. “Naught to do
-here but burn the place. But at least you can be coming
-back the now.”</p>
-
-<p>This was the last thing Kelpie wanted! “To another
-army?” she jeered, hiding her panic. “No, now, I’ve enough
-of armies and battles. Leave me be, just, and when ’tis
-warmer I’ll be finding my own way. Will you not be fighting
-Montrose soon?” she demanded. “Or is it only women
-and bairns you are after?”</p>
-
-<p>They shuffled their feet. “We’ll be taking care of Montrose,”
-promised the stout one. “But we cannot leave you
-here, lass. You must just come along back to Inverlochy,
-and perhaps himself will be seeing you’re sent back home.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie’s heart threatened to choke her. He’d be sending
-her back, fine enough! “<i lang="gd">Dhé!</i>” she sputtered, knowing her
-life might depend on her next words. “Will ye be bothering
-the likes of him with a nobody, and him with a war on his
-hands? He’d no be thanking ye for it! Besides,” she confided
-beseechingly, “it is myself am afraid of Mac Cailein
-Mor, and he so great and all. No, now, just leave me here,
-and then it’s away back I’ll be by myself.”</p>
-
-<p>The stout one was not unsympathetic. “Well, women
-have daft fears,” he observed. “But ’tis true enough that
-himself is an awesome man. We cannot leave you here,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-but perhaps we can be tucking you into a wee bit place
-near Inverlochy where you’ll not be noticed until we
-move on. There is a burned shieling just near the loch,
-with one end left untouched. Come along now.”</p>
-
-<p>To argue further would be hopeless and perhaps fatal.
-This was a stubborn man, already close enough to suspicion.
-Numb with apprehension, Kelpie wrapped the cloak
-firmly around herself and let them lead her outside while
-they fired the thatch.</p>
-
-<p>And then, just as they were climbing up the bank, a
-tall man pointed to a faint wisp of smoke to the southeast.
-“Another shieling,” he announced happily.</p>
-
-<p>It was no shieling at all, of course. It was Alex’s fire,
-and now Kelpie’s curse would be well and truly fulfilled.
-Why hadn’t she thought of telling them herself? And why
-was it that she felt more dismay than elation? Frowning,
-she probed at the feeling, trying to figure it out. Och, of
-course; It was not for Alex’s sake she did not want him
-caught, but for her own. For he would be sure to tell
-them that she was no Campbell at all but a gypsy lass,
-and then they would take her straight to Argyll. She bit
-her lip as she silently followed the Campbells up the Cour
-in the direction of the telltale smoke, hoping passionately
-that Alex would either get away or be killed before he
-could betray her.</p>
-
-<p>He nearly did get away. The cave, when they finally
-found it, was empty, the fire quenched with snow. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-tangled footprints in the snow seemed to lead nowhere,
-and they might have given up but for the stubbornness
-of Hamish, the stout man. But at last someone saw Alex
-hiding high up amid the dark needles of a pine tree.</p>
-
-<p>“A MacDonald!” Hamish peered upward. “Come away
-down, now, or we’ll shoot you there.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what difference?” asked Alex mockingly from his
-high perch. “I’d as lief be shot here as on the ground.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie set her teeth. She hoped they’d shoot him now,
-before he could see her and speak against her. She <em>did</em>!
-But again Hamish had other ideas. What was a MacDonald
-doing here at all, he wanted to know, and one, moreover,
-who was clearly well educated and therefore at least the
-son of a chieftain? It was a thing out of the ordinary and
-had better have the attention of his own chieftain, Campbell
-of Auchinbreck.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re no for shooting you now,” he announced, “but
-will be taking you prisoner.”</p>
-
-<p>Alex seemed to think it over for a moment. Then he
-laughed. “’Twill be a braw task for you, then,” he observed,
-“for I’ve a sore hurt ankle and can no longer set
-it to the ground—or else you’d not have found me here,
-whatever. Are you wanting to carry me all that way? For
-if not, you may as well shoot me here.”</p>
-
-<p>This last clearly appealed to most of the Campbells,
-but Hamish stuck out his jaw. “Aye, then. Finlay and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-Angus will carry you,” he announced, to the displeasure
-of two of his men.</p>
-
-<p>Alex shrugged and came down, leaning for an instant
-against the trunk of the tree as he reached the ground. His
-face was cool, although his ankle must be hurting him
-badly. But his lips tightened slightly when he saw Kelpie,
-and he stood for an instant, fixing her with another of
-those long, penetrating looks. There was more than
-mockery in it now. Kelpie flinched from it, and it came to
-her that Alex thought she had brought the Campbells to
-find him.</p>
-
-<p>Of course he did! How could he suppose anything else?
-And he knew quite well that he held the power of vengeance
-in his own tongue. For although he could not know
-what was between Kelpie and Mac Cailein Mor, the mere
-word “witch” would be quite enough to destroy her.</p>
-
-<p>She waited for it, head high, with the look of a trapped
-fox in her eyes, hoping they might kill her swiftly, for
-Argyll would do worse. But Alex did not say it. Looking
-into her eyes, he gave one short contemptuous laugh and
-turned away. And while he arranged himself in the hand-chair
-made by the reluctant Finlay and Angus, Kelpie
-stood quite still, hot and shaken by feelings she hadn’t
-known she possessed.</p>
-
-<p>She tried to collect her thoughts during the long, slow
-trip back to Inverlochy Castle. Why had Alex not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-denounced her? He must be waiting, knowing she would
-be tormented by uncertainty. He would do it, doubtless,
-when they reached the castle. Och, then, she must forget
-the searing pain of his laughter, and try to get away!</p>
-
-<p>Dusk was lowering as they neared Inverlochy, and she
-sidled up to walk alongside Hamish. “I am frightened,”
-she whispered pathetically. “There are too many men, and
-I used to the lonely hills and cattle. Can I not just be slipping
-away down the loch and home? I know the way well
-enough.”</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her kindly. “No, ’tis much too cold for
-you to be traveling alone,” he said with firmness.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie’s lip trembled—and for this she required no
-great dramatic ability, either. He looked alarmed. “Do not
-be crying, now,” he said hastily. “I tell you, I know a place
-where you can bide, and no need to be going among the
-army at all. Just wait now until I’m turning the prisoner
-over to Auchinbreck. Fergus, run ahead a bit and see can
-you find out where he is the now.”</p>
-
-<p>He clasped Kelpie’s cold hand firmly in his, no doubt
-thinking he was comforting her; and Kelpie had to trudge
-along beside him, her heart thudding with fear. It thudded
-harder when Fergus returned to report that Auchinbreck
-was away down at the loch with Mac Cailein Mor, seeing
-about the two cannon.</p>
-
-<p>“Fine, then,” said Hamish. “For the wee bit placie for
-you to hide is down there too, and we need not be going<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
-near the castle at all but just deliver the prisoner and ask
-can you stay there at the same time.” And he beamed
-heartily upon the quaking Kelpie, who saw no escape now
-from a witch’s death by fire.</p>
-
-<p>Setting her teeth hard upon her lower lip, she tried to
-remember that she had faced death before. But this time
-she seemed to have no courage in reserve. The long strain
-had drained it from her. She could only remember Mac
-Cailein Mor’s cruel face and unbearable dungeon, and
-think that this could not really be happening, and wish
-that she could drop dead on the spot and be done with
-it.</p>
-
-<p>They were just past the castle now, and Hamish turned
-to watch a scattered group of soldiers come running from
-the slopes of Ben Nevis, cutting behind his group, in a
-great hurry to reach the castle. There was an air of alarm
-in their gray shapes in the dusk, and Hamish stared
-after them curiously.</p>
-
-<p>“A fine hurry they are in,” he said. “I wonder what news
-it is they are bringing from the ben, and what they could
-be finding at all on that wild place.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps the water-bull of Lundavra has been straying
-north a bit,” suggested Alex, breaking his long silence.
-His voice dropped to an eerie whisper, and only Kelpie
-could hear the hint of laughter in it. “You’ll have heard
-of it, no doubt, with its broad ears and black hoofs and
-wild demon eye?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The soldiers shivered, and one made a gesture, quickly
-halted, of crossing himself. For though the Campbells
-were now all good members of the Kirk, old habits remained
-from many generations past and were likely to
-pop up in a crisis.</p>
-
-<p>They went on, with occasional furtive glances over
-their shoulders at the brooding shape of that giant mountain
-Ben Nevis—the highest, it was said, in all of the
-British Isles, and therefore an apt place for uncanny and
-ungodly things. Kelpie too would have been glad to scurry
-from its menace, had there not been a greater one facing
-her. As it was, she would gladly have fled to Ben Nevis for
-protection, even if there were a dozen water-bulls there.</p>
-
-<p>They had circled below the castle now, to the river, and
-were perhaps a mile from Loch Linnhe. If only Hamish
-would relax his hard, reassuring grip on her hand, she
-might be able to dive into the surrounding dusk and lose
-herself. But when she gently tested his grip, he merely
-tightened it.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps if she should suggest to him that she could
-walk better with both hands free? Or was it already too
-late? There was a group of dark shapes in the gloom just
-ahead now. If that was Argyll, this was her last chance!
-“Please,” she began in her softest voice, and got no further.</p>
-
-<p>From behind came the pound of running footsteps, and
-an excited voice raised. “Mac Cailein Mor! Mac Cailein
-Mor!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A soldier rushed past them to the figures a few yards
-ahead, and the cold voice of Argyll answered. “Here.
-What is it, then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Montrose!” The soldier gasped. “Some of our scouts
-have just come back. They say Montrose is on Ben Nevis!”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_21">21. Vengeance</h2>
-
-<p>In the shocked silence which followed, Hamish forgot
-his comforting grip on the poor wee frightened lass for
-an instant, and in that instant the poor wee frightened
-lass vanished.</p>
-
-<p>She crouched on the far side of a rhododendron bush,
-tensed and ready for further flight. For the moment, it
-was best not to move again, for there was silence beside
-the river, and she dared make no noise that might call
-attention to herself. Och, the good luck of it! And a fine
-chance there was that, with this news, no one would think
-of her again at all.</p>
-
-<p>“Impossible!” said Argyll. His voice was thin.</p>
-
-<p>“It is true, Mac Cailein Mor!” insisted the messenger.
-“On the north slope of Ben Nevis it was, his army ran
-into our outpost, and some of our scouts escaped and
-came to warn us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Impossible,” repeated Argyll more thinly yet. “He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
-couldn’t. He went up the Great Glen, and he hasn’t come
-back down it. And there’s no other way he could have
-come in this cold and snow—not with an army and horses
-and cannon. It’s not humanly possible.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a good deal of sense in this. Even Kelpie,
-still as a bogle behind her bush, frowned in puzzlement.
-How <em>could</em> Montrose have come so quickly, and <em>not</em>
-through the Great Glen? Over the bitter impassable mountains,
-then? Och, Glen Roy, it must be! Argyll didn’t know
-this country as she did, and as the Camerons and MacDonalds
-would. Through Glen Roy, then—and it was
-next to impossible even then, but if anyone at all could
-do it, then it would be Montrose and his Highlanders, and
-she the cause of it all, with her message! She hugged herself
-silently.</p>
-
-<p>“It couldna be the army,” said an Edinburgh voice
-soothingly. “Gin ’tis Montrose at all, which I doot, ’tis a
-mere handfu’ o’ wild Hieland thieves he could ha’ brought,
-and we’ll wipe ’em oot the morn.”</p>
-
-<p>“Still and all,” came another voice, “it might be best
-for you to be going on board your galley, your Lordship.
-You’ve an injured shoulder, remember, and you’re too
-valuable to risk your life in a mere skirmish.”</p>
-
-<p>“You may be right.” There was unmistakable relief in
-Argyll’s voice, and Kelpie lifted her short lip in contempt.
-“I can put you in charge, Auchinbreck, and send commands
-from my galley. Who is that over there?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>His voice rose sharply, and Kelpie’s hair stood on end
-until she heard Hamish’s apologetic answer. “Hamish
-Campbell, just, with a MacDonald I found skulking up
-near the Spean River, and I thinking you might be wanting
-to see him.”</p>
-
-<p>“A MacDonald?” Auchinbreck’s voice was incisive. “Aye,
-he’s likely a scout for Montrose and may be able to tell us
-something. Will you speak to him, your Lordship?”</p>
-
-<p>“Later,” said Argyll. “Take him down to the shelter by
-the loch and stay there yourselves on guard. See that no
-one goes near the galley, and I’ll question the prisoner
-before I go board.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a crunch of snow as Argyll and his party
-started back toward the castle, and then a pause. “Why
-isn’t he tied?” came Argyll’s voice accusingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Och, your Lordship, he has a hurt foot, and it would
-be too hard to carry him this whole way if—”</p>
-
-<p>“He could have been shamming, you fool!” Argyll was
-furious. “Tie him now.”</p>
-
-<p>He went on, leaving the other group of dark shapes
-where they stood. “Well, so, and himself was saying ‘now,’”
-muttered Hamish, “so now it is, my lad. We’ll have your
-two hands behind you. <em>Were</em> you shamming?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a whit,” said Alex coolly. “I’d have left you before
-this, if I were.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I almost have it in my heart to pity you, just for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-your courage, though you’re a cursed MacDonald. Angus,
-where’s the wee lass?”</p>
-
-<p>“She was off and away at the word Montrose,” reported
-Angus, “and no wonder. She’s frighted even of our army
-and will be in terror of his. She’ll no be staying for a battle.”</p>
-
-<p>“Och, she’ll freeze, just, poor <i lang="gd">amadain</i>!” said Hamish
-worriedly. “And she could have been staying at the shelter
-with us, and quite safe. Well, so. Come away now.”</p>
-
-<p>They moved off toward the loch, leaving Kelpie to figure
-out her new situation.</p>
-
-<p>It was a great improvement, surely, but hardly rosy. If
-only the weather were warm, there would be no problem
-at all. She could set off for safety, leaving Alex just where
-she wanted him, and Montrose over behind the mountain
-to settle with Argyll after Argyll had settled with Alex.
-But it was cold! And there would be no shelter near, what
-with all the homes burned. And she didn’t want to freeze.</p>
-
-<p>An hour earlier she would gladly have taken the chance,
-gladly frozen, even, in preference to meeting Argyll.
-But now that she was out of danger from him for the moment,
-she wanted to live, and how could she be arranging
-it? If it were not for Alex, she might slip down to the
-shelter after all, and just hide when Argyll came. But
-Alex would not miss another chance to betray her. He
-had delayed too long once before, and he must be cursing
-himself for it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But she had to do something! Shivering, she got to her
-feet and silently followed an orange glimmer down near
-the loch. Och, a fire! Kelpie hurried her steps until she
-could see the ruins of a shieling hut, one side open to
-the night, but with a warm fire just at the edge, where the
-fireplace had once stood. Alex, well bound now, was lying
-against one wall, and the other men were grouped around.
-As she watched, they began taking food from their
-pouches.</p>
-
-<p>In an agony of indecision, Kelpie crouched in the
-bushes, just too far away to feel the warmth of the fire,
-but she didn’t dare to go closer. She could almost wish
-Alex free, so that—</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes widened. Alex had turned over to face the
-wall and was unmistakably settling down to sleep! How
-could he? Reluctantly Kelpie admired him for it. He was
-a bad one, but for all that he had a cool courage that was
-fine.</p>
-
-<p>She waited a few minutes more; then she <em>had</em> to get
-warm! And Alex seemed to be truly asleep. Standing up,
-she raised her voice scarcely above a whisper. “Hamish!”</p>
-
-<p>He was up, his ruddy face turning to search the bushes.
-“The wee lass! Are you frozen, just? Come away to the
-fire. It was gey foolish of you to run off.”</p>
-
-<p>She came, rubbing her numbed hands in the heavenly
-warmth, even though it made them hurt sorely. “I was affrighted,”
-she explained, “of Montrose, and of all the men,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-and of Mac Cailen Mor, and even of him.” She nodded
-toward Alex. “Please, if anyone comes, could I not be
-hiding away at the back behind the walls until they go?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ou, aye,” said Hamish tolerantly, “if you’re so frighted
-as all that.”</p>
-
-<p class="tb">It was nearly morning, and Kelpie had napped a little
-herself and was warm and fed (with a wary eye on the
-sleeping Alex), before voices and steps announced a party
-coming from the castle. In a flash she was around behind
-the ruined shieling, just at the corner where she could
-hear everything and even see a bit. She would be safe
-enough from now on, for although it was still dark enough
-to escape, the faintest of gray appeared over the stern
-dome of Ben Nevis, and the peaks farther south were beginning
-to show starkly black against the lighter clouds.
-The night was over, and she could afford to stay and
-watch what happened to Alex.</p>
-
-<p>“Put my things aboard,” ordered Argyll’s cold voice.
-“I’ll be along as soon as I see to this prisoner. Where is
-he?”</p>
-
-<p>“Here, asleep,” replied Hamish humbly. “Wake you up,
-MacDonald! Mac Cailein Mor wants to talk to you.”</p>
-
-<p>Apparently Alex awoke as Kelpie always did, all at
-once, for there was no trace of sleepiness in his voice.
-“Well, then, and let us talk,” he returned casually.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie knew that his coolness would enrage Argyll, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
-repeatedly fled danger and was about to do it again. This
-would go hard with Alex. She <em>must</em> see! There was a hole
-in the wall, just at the corner, where a stone had fallen
-out, and surely no one would be noticing a wee eye in the
-dark!</p>
-
-<p>She applied the eye to the hole. Sure enough, Argyll’s
-pale face was twisted with anger, the habitual sneer
-deeper than usual. And Alex had that faintly amused
-smile on his face, despite bound hands and swollen foot,
-and despite his fear.</p>
-
-<p>“Your name?” asked Argyll harshly.</p>
-
-<p>“Alexander MacDonald of Ardochy on Loch Garry,” replied
-Alex proudly.</p>
-
-<p>“So. Son of a chieftain, then. And what were you doing
-skulking in Lochaber?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nursing a sprained ankle,” replied Alex, still with a
-faint smile, “and hoping to be overlooked by your men.”</p>
-
-<p>“You knew we were here, then?” Argyll pounced upon
-the idea like a man looking for an excuse to unleash a
-storm of venom. And there was no doubt he had his victim.
-Kelpie’s revenge would be better than she had ever
-dreamed! She pressed closer to her peephole to see if Alex’s
-face would betray fear. But he just lifted a sandy eyebrow.</p>
-
-<p>“Could anyone <em>not</em> be knowing you were here, with the
-smoke of burning homes rising like the plague?” he retorted
-reasonably.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“You are one of Montrose’s men!” Argyll said accusingly,
-and Kelpie found herself thinking of the things Alex
-might answer to that. He would never claim to be a Covenanter,
-proud fool that he was, but he could say he was
-not with Montrose, that he never had been, that he had
-had a quarrel with the Camerons—any number of things.
-But he said none of them. Did he not know that his silence
-would seem an admission of guilt? Kelpie fumed at his
-stupidity before she remembered that—this time—she was
-on Argyll’s side.</p>
-
-<p>“You are a spy left behind!” Argyll went on threateningly.
-“It was you warned him we were here!”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I <em>had</em> been the one,” confessed Alex wryly. “I
-would not be here if I had. But since I <em>am</em> here, and not
-with Montrose, that is clearly nonsense.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t quibble with me!” Argyll was in a cold rage, the
-cruel, bullying streak in him showing clear. “You were responsible.
-You hurt your foot and sent someone else with
-the message.”</p>
-
-<p>In the gleam of the fire, Alex’s jaw moved up and outward
-a fraction. “I would have done so,” he retorted
-proudly, “but that I could find no one to send.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll not save your life that way.” There was wintry
-satisfaction in Argyll’s face. “Unless you can produce the
-guilty party and prove your innocence ...” The sentence
-went grimly unfinished.</p>
-
-<p>Even Hamish looked shocked at this unfairness, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-for an instant Kelpie missed the full irony of the situation.
-Then it dawned on her. Alex was to die for the thing she
-herself had done—and he well aware of it and helpless,
-since he had no notion where she was! It was almost too
-good to be possible!</p>
-
-<p>She bit her lip and pressed closer to the chink, and a
-squeak of what must be delight—although it felt almost
-like a sob—escaped her.</p>
-
-<p>Alex turned—oh, so casually!—and his eyes, dark in the
-shadow of the shelter, looked straight into hers.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie stopped breathing. Too appalled even to move,
-she stood frozen, waiting for the simple, deadly words
-that must come next. In her mind she heard them clearly.
-“Very well so, and you will find the guilty party is the
-witch lass hiding this very moment outside the wall....”
-She should be away, running like a hare! But she could
-not, for her shock had glued her feet to the ground, and
-already Alex had begun to speak.</p>
-
-<p>“And how,” he asked deliberately, “could I be doing
-that?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie missed the next part of the conversation, for she
-was altogether stunned. He had seen and recognized her;
-never a doubt of it. In that instant she had handed him
-the victory, his own life and hers as well, and he had
-dropped them indifferently at his feet! Why? Was he fey,
-then, to be deliberately throwing away his life? Not even
-the scruples of Ian could account for it, for Alex owed her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
-nothing and less than nothing, especially since he believed
-she had betrayed him to the Campbells.</p>
-
-<p>In her bewilderment she didn’t even feel relief at her
-own narrow escape. And when she was again able to concentrate
-on the scene inside, she found that Alex had
-taken the edge off her victory simply by giving it to her.
-Where had the triumph and savor gone? Frowning, she
-reminded herself that Alex was being justly punished for
-what he did to Ian, and she was <em>not</em> sorry! No, nor would
-she ever dream of wanting to save him whatever, for he
-deserved to die, and had she not been planning revenge?
-She would not <em>want</em> to help him even if she could—and
-couldn’t if she wanted to, for was it not her rule of life to
-look out for herself and no one else? And if Mac Cailein
-Mor should so much as glimpse the witch lass caught trying
-to hex him, and herself wearing his own wife’s gown
-and cloak this moment.... She laughed at herself for
-even thinking that such a daft idea could ever enter her
-head. It was gloating she was. She <em>was</em>!</p>
-
-<p>Intent on her gloating, she risked another peep through
-the chink and saw that Argyll was biting his lip with anger.
-Alex had no doubt just said something derisive, for
-he was smiling recklessly. But for all his composure, Kelpie
-knew that he was afraid in the face of death. Had not she
-herself, more than once, acted calm when she did not feel
-that way? Och, she knew how his heart must be pounding,
-as her own was just from imagining it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Or perhaps it was pounding with happiness and excitement
-and triumph. Her fists were clenched painfully and
-her lips drawn back from her teeth. This was the moment,
-and she would watch while—while—</p>
-
-<p>“Take him out yonder and shoot him,” said Argyll.</p>
-
-<p>Then Kelpie heard a reckless laugh coming from her
-own lips, and she found herself around the wall and in the
-firelight and confronting Argyll with her head held high.</p>
-
-<p>“No, now,” she said, “for ’twas I sent the messenger.”</p>
-
-<p>One part of her stood aghast and terrified at the insane
-thing she had done, but the other part—the thing inside,
-which had been pushing her for so long—was glad and
-triumphant.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="Chapter_22">22. The Last Word</h2>
-
-<p>For a moment even the daybreak seemed to pause over
-the Highlands. The thin sky of morning lighted a wan
-world of muted gray and white and purple with an eerie,
-ghostlike tone. There was no sound outside the ruined
-shelter with its circle of sickly firelight, and for just an
-instant there was no sound even there.</p>
-
-<p>Alex’s face seemed carved in an odd expression of exultation
-and anguish combined, and his eyes fixed upon
-her as if they would never leave. But Kelpie did not see
-this, for her own eyes were fixed defiantly upon Argyll,
-waiting.</p>
-
-<p>She had not long to wait. “The witch!” he whispered,
-and his eyes blazed in pale fury. “And in her Ladyship’s
-stolen clothes!” he added with new outrage.</p>
-
-<p>Alex laughed, and his laughter was delighted, exasperated—and
-somehow sad. He moved to stand beside<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-Kelpie. “Och,” he said, “and isn’t it just the way you
-will be overdoing things? I would have had you remain
-unprincipled and live. I would have called you liar and
-saved you yet. But you must appear in Lady Argyll’s
-stolen clothes and seal your doom—and knowing it!” His
-eyes were stricken, exultant, tender; but Kelpie only
-looked at him dazedly. All of it was beyond her understanding,
-except that she had doomed herself irrevocably
-by her own madness, and the thing inside said it must be
-so.</p>
-
-<p>Argyll was breathing hard, taut with hatred; his menace
-was overwhelming. “Shoot the man now,” he said between
-his teeth, “but bind the witch and take her aboard the
-galley. I will try her and burn her when this business with
-Montrose is over.”</p>
-
-<p>And then all Lochaber seemed to explode at once. Shots
-echoed from Ben Nevis just as Alex went quite berserk.
-His face was as she had seen it in the witch-hunting town,
-jutted with sharp angles of rage. He hurled himself against
-Argyll, the full force of his hard shoulder driving into the
-Campbell’s midsection; and down they went. The others
-rushed forward with yells, and from the castle came more
-yells and a new volley of shots.</p>
-
-<p>Hamish was pulling his chief from under Alex and
-shouting, “The battle has started!” Someone kicked Alex
-brutally in the head, and Kelpie flung herself at the culprit,
-using both teeth and nails, and was herself flung to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-ground, while still another voice shouted, “Get you to the
-galley, Mac Cailein Mor!”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie, dazed from her fall, saw Argyll, staggering and
-winded, clutching his shoulder and croaking contradictions.
-“Shoot them! Take the witch on board! I’ll burn
-them both! Shoot them at once!” Alex struggled up and
-tried to shield Kelpie with his own body as someone raised
-a gun. She heard a wild shriek of pipes from the direction
-of Ben Nevis, more shots and more yells. And then came a
-blaze of pain, and nothing at all.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">She lay for a while without opening her eyes, trying to
-decide whether she was really alive. It seemed quite unlikely.
-But on the other hand, except for a sore pain in
-her head and a hot, smoldering one in her body, this did
-not seem like Hell. For one thing, she seemed to be in a
-soft bed with sheets, and surely Hell would never provide
-such things. She decided to open her eyes and find out.</p>
-
-<p>Opening her eyes did not help much, but only added to
-her confusion. For was not this one of the bedrooms at
-Glenfern, which she had helped often enough to clean?
-And whatever could she be doing here at all? Clearly she
-could not be here—but how was it that a stout and smiling
-Marsali seemed to be feeding her beef broth? Och, it
-was too much effort to worry about it! She swallowed the
-broth, closed her eyes, and slept again. The next time she
-awoke, it was to morning light, and she felt much stronger.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There was a small movement to the left of the bed, and
-Kelpie slowly focused her eyes toward it. A flower face
-lighted and moved closer. “Och, my Kelpie!” whispered
-Wee Mairi, radiant. “You’ve come away back to me!”</p>
-
-<p>Hot tears stung Kelpie’s eyes. She closed them and
-moved her left hand gropingly and felt a small warm one
-creep into it. Och, the wee love! The tears slid down her
-cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>There was more movement presently, and then Ronald’s
-voice asking with deep interest, “Is she awake yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course she is, or how else could she be weeping?”
-demanded his twin scornfully. “Kelpie, is it hurting you
-are? Can you open your eyes, Kelpie? Fiona, will you run
-to tell Mother she is awake?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie opened her eyes mistily and saw the rosy, concerned
-faces over her. Fiona, crossing herself as usual, appeared
-beyond them and then disappeared again. Donald
-vanished too, while Kelpie—still gripping Wee Mairi’s
-hand—closed her eyes again and tried to sort out the confusion
-of her thoughts. Presently there was a slight denting
-of the bed near her elbow.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve brought Dubh,” announced Donald cheerfully.
-“We decided before that you were not a witch, but now
-Alex says you are, but a nice one; and I was thinking, if
-Dubh is still liking you, perhaps Alex is right.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie wrinkled her forehead as Dubh spat nastily at
-Donald. Alex? Alex at Glenfern? Dubh regarded her with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-slitted yellow eyes and then draped himself in a scraggy,
-purring fur piece across her shoulder. “Alex?” said Kelpie
-aloud, puzzled.</p>
-
-<p>“Ou, aye, and he sore hurt, too.” Ronald nodded. “But
-he is better now. Kelpie, when you are well, will you tell
-us about your adventures? Why were you leaving Glenfern
-at all, Kelpie? Do you <em>like</em> your Grannie Witchie, or
-was it that you were afraid of her, as Father said? Is she
-truly a witch, Kelpie? Where is she the now? Are you going
-to stay with us? Wee Mairi says you love her. Do you,
-Kelpie?”</p>
-
-<p>The small hand in Kelpie’s stirred. “Aye so!” piped Wee
-Mairi indignantly. “My Kelpie <em>does</em> love me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye,” confessed Kelpie, her defenses quite down.
-“But,” she went on incredulously, “is Alex truly here? At
-Glenfern?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course,” said Donald. “He has been telling us of his
-adventures too, and how Montrose was sending him on a
-special important mission to talk to clan chiefs and see if
-Lochiel would join the army, and all; and that was why
-he was alone and caught by the Campbells. But we do not
-know why you were there at all.” He paused, head tilted
-hopefully to one side.</p>
-
-<p>But Kelpie, more and more bewildered, was in no state
-to tell stories. “Alex?” she repeated stupidly.</p>
-
-<p>“Himself.” It was his voice, with something new in the
-laughter of it. Suddenly the room was full of people.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
-Eithne and Lady Glenfern smiled at her from the foot of
-the bed, and Alex himself was coming slowly across the
-floor. There was a bandage round his head, and he leaned
-heavily on Glenfern and Ian.</p>
-
-<p>Och, it made no sense at all! Kelpie closed her eyes
-again and moved her head fretfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Alex has told us what you did,” said Glenfern. “It is at
-such times that a person’s true character comes forth.” He
-smiled down at her warmly. “Let you know now, Kelpie,
-that you will always have a home at Glenfern, and our
-love; and for saving Alex we owe you a debt that we can
-never pay.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie’s puzzlement deepened. <i lang="gd">Dhé!</i> It must be that
-Ian had never known that it was Alex who struck him
-down! In the confusion, perhaps herself was the only one
-who had really seen it. It must be so, for no other explanation
-made sense. Perhaps Archie hadn’t known either,
-and she had merely read meanings into his words that
-evening in the camp. Her blue eyes flew open and met
-Alex’s quizzical ones. What an actor he was, then, behaving
-as if nothing had happened! But <em>she</em> could tell them
-what had happened, and Alex knew it, and yet here he
-stood quite at ease.</p>
-
-<p>They stared at each other for a long, searching moment,
-and a look of baffled frustration came to both faces. And
-then Kelpie closed her eyes once again, too weak to cope<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-with such a puzzle or even to decide whether or no she
-should tell Ian what his foster brother had done.</p>
-
-<p>“<i lang="gd">Dhé</i>, and she’ll be confused enough, poor water witch!”
-The old teasing note in Alex’s voice overlaid a new tenderness.
-“Just be settling me in a chair by the bed, and then
-away out, the rest of you, whilst I tell her the end of our
-adventure.”</p>
-
-<p>Presently the room was silent again, except for Dubh’s
-purring. Conscious of a presence beside the bed, Kelpie
-opened a cautious eye again after a minute and found the
-hazel eyes fixed on her broodingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Och so,” he murmured, shaking his head sadly. “I had
-thought my cousin Cecily unpredictable and you an open
-book, with your devious wiles, and so candidly unprincipled.
-And then—you put a spell on me, with the ringed
-witch-eyes in your head. You baffled me, you haunted me,
-you eluded me, leaving me forever two jumps behind and
-never knowing what to think at all. Aye me, I suppose I
-shall never understand you at all, and that is my fate and
-destiny.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie slowly progressed from bewilderment to indignation.
-Only the last words had any meaning whatever, and
-that was little enough.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>I!</em>” she fumed, causing Dubh to dig in a protesting
-claw. “It is you who make no sense at all, and I never
-knowing what to think!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Alex grinned ruefully. “At least we are even, then. Are
-you wanting to know what has happened since Argyll’s
-men put bullets in the both of us?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, were you hearing the start of the battle,
-just as our own wee war was getting exciting?” asked Alex.
-She nodded again, content to lie still and listen. “Well,”
-he went on, “it was the battle that saved us, for Argyll
-rushed off to the safety of his galley, and his men left us
-for dead—and very nearly right they were. And so we
-lay unknowing while Montrose won a great victory over
-an army twice his size. It was another Tippermuir, and
-this time the fighting force of the Campbells is crippled
-for years to come. Some say as many as fifteen hundred
-were slain, and the rest taken prisoner or chased back to
-their own country, and our men on their heels all the way
-to Lundavra. I think it will be another generation, Kelpie,
-before Clan Campbell can come raiding other clans again—and
-a good blow for the King’s cause as well,” he added,
-almost as an afterthought. Loyal to the king though he
-was, Alex was a Highlander, and Highland affairs were
-his closest concern.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie found herself wondering suddenly about Morag
-Mhor and Rab, Archie, and the others. “And had we many
-killed?”</p>
-
-<p>Alex shook his head. “It was a rout,” he said. “They tell
-me there are some two hundred or more wounded, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-scarce over a dozen killed outright. It seems fair unbelievable.”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie assimilated this and then returned to another
-matter of interest. “What of Mac Cailein Mor?” she demanded
-vindictively. “And what was happening to us,
-after all?”</p>
-
-<p>“Och, the great General Campbell was away down the
-loch in his galley before the fight was yet over, hero that
-he is!” Scorn was bright in Alex’s voice. “But as for us,
-we lay until some of our men found us and recognized my
-tartan, so they took us up to the castle with the other
-wounded. There were plenty of the army who knew me—and
-you, too, it seems, for there was a hulking great
-man named Rab and a huge fierce woman called Morag
-Mhor nearly come to blows over which could be doing
-most for you.” His eyes crinkled at her with approval and
-amusement. “So it was soon enough that my brother and
-Ian both found us. And when we were fit to be carried,
-they brought us here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Here!” echoed Kelpie, renewed bafflement upon her.
-Forgetting her wounds, she tried to sit up and then
-changed her mind. Wincing, she lay back again, and her
-ringed eyes stared beneath lowered brows at Alex. Dubh,
-his nap disturbed, glared with equal fierceness, and Alex
-found the combination disconcerting.</p>
-
-<p>“You would be coming <em>here</em>?” Kelpie spat. “You, with
-all your prating of loyalty and the laws of hospitality<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
-and this principles thing? And you have not even good
-sense, for here am I, and whatever makes you think I
-will not be telling? And yet you have not even tried to
-threaten me.”</p>
-
-<p>Complete bewilderment was on Alex’s face. “Either
-your wits or mine are wandering entirely,” he said. “What
-are you talking about? Tell what?”</p>
-
-<p>“That you tried to kill Ian!” answered Kelpie.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>What?</em>” He was utterly dumfounded, and Kelpie’s
-conviction wavered, but only briefly. She knew what she
-had seen!</p>
-
-<p>“Do not be denying it, for I saw it myself, and twice
-over—once with the Second Sight, which never lies, and
-again when it happened.”</p>
-
-<p>Alex’s eyes narrowed thoughtfully, as if he had begun
-to see a clue to some deep puzzle. “You were saying something
-of the sort back at yon cave,” he said. “It made
-no sense, but I had already given up expecting to understand
-you, and there were other urgent matters on my
-mind. Tell me now: What was it that you saw twice over?
-Tell me exactly, for although the Second Sight never lies,
-sometimes the reading of it can be wrong. What was it
-you were seeing, water witch?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie frowned. “It was the crowd of witch-hunters,
-although the first time I did not know who or where, or
-that it was me they were going to burn. But I saw Ian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-coming through them, and you after him with a black
-anger on your face. And when you reached him, you
-raised your sword and brought it down on him, and he
-dropped like a stone and out of sight.” She glared at him
-defiantly.</p>
-
-<p>A whole series of expressions chased one another across
-Alex’s face, but they were not quite the ones Kelpie had
-expected. Wonder and relief and joy surely had no place
-there!</p>
-
-<p>“My sorrow,” he whispered, closing his eyes for an
-instant. “And is it for that you’ve hated me so darkly this
-long while? No wonder!” He looked at her suddenly with
-new delight. “And for Ian too, though you tried so hard
-to admit no loyalty or friendship, and I believed you!
-Think carefully,” he commanded as Kelpie was about to
-burst out at him in frustration and fury. “Were you actually
-<em>seeing</em> my sword <em>strike</em> Ian?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye so—” began Kelpie hotly, and then paused. “Well,
-and there was a head in the way for a wee moment,” she
-conceded, conjuring up the vivid picture and looking at
-it carefully. “Your sword is striking him just behind the
-head—the other head, I mean—but now Ian is falling
-straight away, and so—”</p>
-
-<p>“Look again!” interrupted Alex. “Look closely, Kelpie,
-and do not judge too quickly. For my sword was falling
-on the man who was in the act of dirking Ian, and they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
-went down at the same moment. Little <i lang="gd">amadain</i>, how could
-you be thinking I would turn on my foster brother, dearer
-than kin, for whom I would give my heart’s blood?”</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie scowled in sudden, unreasoning resentment, but
-he leaned forward to place his hand on her arm where it
-lay outside the covers. “Look in your heart for the truth,”
-he commanded urgently. “Ask it of your reason as well.
-You <em>must</em> know that I did not do it.”</p>
-
-<p>It was true. She did know it. She felt slightly dizzy, as
-if the sun had spun round suddenly and begun rising in
-the west. And was it a mistake that she had hated Alex
-this long time? Och, no! Had he not always infuriated her
-with his mockery and scorn and his uncanny knowledge
-of what she would think and do next? But whatever had
-possessed the both of them that dawn in the shelter, each
-offering his own life to save the other? She could hardly
-believe that it had really happened.</p>
-
-<p>The eyes she raised to Alex were night-blue with wonder.
-“You knew I was hiding behind the wall! Why didn’t
-you save yourself by telling Mac Cailein Mor it was I sent
-the message? And especially when you thought that I had
-betrayed you to the Campbells? <em>Why?</em>”</p>
-
-<p>There was sudden gladness on Alex’s lean face. “Kelpie!”
-he fairly shouted. “You didn’t betray me, then?”</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head irritably and immediately wished
-she hadn’t. “I <em>told</em> you I did not dare! And now you know
-why, with Mac Cailein Mor already wanting me for a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-witch, and I with his wife’s clothing on my back. ’Twas
-the smoke from your fire betrayed you, fool that you were!”
-She glared at him. “But you were <em>believing</em> it was I, and
-you needing only a word to save yourself and settle all
-accounts. Why did you not tell?” she demanded angrily.</p>
-
-<p>Alex grinned flippantly at her, but the angles of his face
-seemed softened, and his voice as well. He seemed to be
-laughing at her and at himself too. “Perhaps, <i lang="gd">mo chridhe</i>,
-it was for the same reason that you spoke out when you
-needed only to stay still. Can you answer me your own
-question, Kelpie? Why did you come forth?”</p>
-
-<p>“I was daft, just!” she retorted promptly. “And,” she
-added, remembering, “there was a thing in me pushing
-where I was not wanting to go.” She frowned.</p>
-
-<p>“There has been a thing in me too, this long while,” said
-Alex softly, and for an instant he saw her as she had appeared
-from the shadows to face Argyll—intense then too,
-but heartbreakingly brave, nearly tearing him apart with
-joy for her gallantry and with despair for its result. And
-he had not known, then, the full horror of what she was
-facing, that she was giving herself up to be burned as a
-witch.</p>
-
-<p>She was regarding him with annoyance. “I think it was
-a spell, whatever,” she announced accusingly.</p>
-
-<p>Alex looked at her oddly. “Aye so, a spell,” he muttered
-with a wry twist to his mouth. “And I with a fondness for
-merry, fair-haired lassies, like my sweet Cecily in Oxford.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>
-And now she will have to marry Ian, just, though perhaps
-neither of them will mind much. I have <em>never</em> cared for
-witches!” he told her plaintively. “And especially not
-black-haired ones, with dark, pointy faces, all uncanny
-eyes. It’s never a moment’s peace I shall have again; but
-’tis a terrible, strong spell you have put on me, and I cannot
-break it. Och, there’s no way at all out of it, but I
-shall have to marry you, just!”</p>
-
-<p>“Marry me!” Kelpie’s shock reached to the very soles
-of her feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Ou, aye,” answered the outrageous lad, wagging his
-head sadly. “And a dreadful life it will be, never a doubt
-of it, wed to a wild wee water witch. But marry you I
-must, for I cannot help myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>I</em> can, then!” Kelpie sizzled with outrage. “Did you
-never think of consulting <em>me</em>? Were you thinking I would—<i lang="gd">Dhé!</i>
-I’d sooner be wedding the sea horse in Loch Ness,
-or Argyll himself! And the very conceit of you to be thinking
-it! ’Tis a spell indeed I’ll be putting on you! Wait until
-I learn the Evil Eye, and then see will you not be begging
-my mercy, and with the horrid spots all over you, and—”</p>
-
-<p>Alex silenced her by the simple expedient of putting his
-lips firmly over hers. When at last he lifted them, it was
-to laugh into her startled and indignant eyes with the old
-mockery.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m thinking,” he said, just as if she had never uttered
-a word of her last speech, “that I shall have to be taking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-you out of Scotland altogether, or sooner or later it would
-be to the stake with the both of us. And in any case, what
-else could I be doing with the gypsy wanderlust in your
-feet?”</p>
-
-<p>“The gypsies <em>stole</em> me, I tell you!” retorted Kelpie automatically.</p>
-
-<p>He raised a quizzical eyebrow. “And did they so, truly?
-Well, and what does it matter? You could never be finding
-your parents now, nor fit into their life if you did. And in
-any case, you’re going to marry me, and we’ll away to the
-New World. A grand wilderness it is, they say, with all
-the space needed for wandering in and out of trouble.”</p>
-
-<p>He bent toward her again, and reached for her hand,
-as Kelpie opened a mutinous mouth. Dubh, who had
-patiently endured the last disturbance of his nap, opened
-one yellow eye, saw Alex’s hand approaching, and slashed
-it. Then he rearranged himself across Kelpie’s neck and
-went back to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>Kelpie laughed at Alex, who was also laughing and
-sucking at his torn finger. “You see?” he said. “The Red
-Indians and wild animals will never have a chance against
-you with your dark power over man and beast, witch that
-you are. I wonder, would next week be too soon for the
-wedding?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sssss!” said Kelpie contentedly.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<img src="images/author.jpg" width="550" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="right smaller">PHOTO BY LARRY WAY</p>
-<p class="center"><i>Sally Watson in costume for the Highland Games competition</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WITCH OF THE GLENS***</p>
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