This particular and ancient history that I am telling is a story that is to be heard on winter nights in the fir-wood bothies of Upper Loch Finne. It is the story of an affair that happened in the wild year before the beginning of the little wars of Lorn. Colkitto Macdonald and his Irishry and the Athol clans came, as the world knows, to Argyll, and carried the flambeau and the sword through every glen in the country-side. Into our peaceable neighbourhood, so harmless, so thriving and content, they marched on a winter’s end—wild bearded fellows, ravenous at the To that rich and beautiful country the spring of the year comes always with vigour for the young heart. One feels the fumes of myrtle and fir in the head like a strong wine. It is the season of longing and exploits, and, if adventure is not in the way, the healthy young blood will be stirred to love or manly comradeship. Then the eye is keenest for the right girl, or (it may happen) the boon companion comes by the right chance, and leads the one waiting for him into the highroads where magic is at every corner, and old care is a carle to snap a finger at. There are no meats so It was in that season that the two men of my story met at a ceilidh, as we call a night gossiping, in a tacksman’s house in Maam. There had been singing of the true Gaelic songs and telling of Gaelic stories. A fellow, Alan, sat in a dusky corner of the room with a girl, Ealasaid, and they had little heed of song or story, but whispered the sweet foolishnesses of their kind in a world of their own, till a man new over from Cowal—Red John, by the byname—stood to his feet and sang a Carrick ditty. “I never heard better,” said Alan in the girl’s ear, for the new man and his new song had cried them back to the company. “Good enough, I’m not denying,” said she, “but he looks slack; you never saw a man with a low lip so full and a laugh so round and ready who was not given to wandering.” “From—oh! from good guidance,” said she, flushing; “from the plain ways of his more common and orderly neighbours—from the day’s work.” “The day’s work,” said Alan, “had no great hold on my fancy, and still and on I’m not what one would call lazy. I wish, do you know, I could sing yon jovial gentleman’s songs, and think life so humoursome as I’ll warrant a man with that laugh finds it.” He learned Red John’s best songs before summer-time, for Red John was his boon companion. They wandered, the pair of them, day after day and dusk after dusk, in the way of good-fellowship, coming on many jovial adventures, gathering curious songs, meeting free-handed folk and bits of good fortune. They went many a time on the “Could you come to meet me to-morrow?” once asked Ealasaid, finding her lover alone on his way to a new folly. She put a hand on his arm and leaned up against his side. “Where would we go?” he asked, tucking a loose lock of her hair behind her ear, less for his love of trimness than to get some occupation for his eyes. “It used to be enough that it was with me when I asked before,” said Ealasaid, staying his fingers; “but my cousin-german in Coillebhraid asks us up to curds and cream.” “John and I are promised at a wrestling in the town,” he said; “would the next day—” The girl drew her screen about her like one smitten by a cold wind. “The decentest lad in the world; he quarrels with none.” “For cowardice.” “He understands me in every key.” “So much the readier can he make you the fool.” “He has taught me the finest songs.” “To sing in the ale-house—a poor schooling, my dear!” “I never before saw the jollity of living.” “It’s no flattery to one Ealasaid; has he said aught of the seriousness of death?” Alan hummed the end of a verse and then laughed slyly. “Lass,” said he, “does it make much differ that he thinks you the handsomest girl in the parish?” “I would sooner you yourself thought me the plainest, and yet had some pleasure in my company.” “Yesterday (on a glass), he said your “Then he’s the man who should be doing your courting,” said the girl, with a bitterness; and she went home sore-hearted. The days passed on birds’ feathers; the brackens coarsened in the gloomy places of the forest; the young of bird and beast lost themselves in the tangled richness of the field and wood. No rains came for many days, and the sun, a gallant horseman, rode from hill to hill, feasting his eye on the glens he saw too seldom. In those hours the winds dozed upon the slimmest stem of heather; the burns, that for ordinary tear down our braes, bragging loud to the lip, hung back in friendly hollows under saugh-branch, rowan, and darach leaf; “but a little sleep,” said they—“a little sleep, that we may finish a dream we woke in the middle of,” and the grasshopper’s chirrup drowned their prayer. It was not the genius of him, but the affable conduct and his gentleman’s parts. A scamp, with duty near tugging at the cuff of his doublet, he went dancing through life, regardless as a bird. Had you a grievance And wherever he went, this light-head, in humour and carelessness, Alan walked faithful at his heels, nearer his heart than any foster-brother, more and more learning his ways of idleness and diversion. Ealasaid at last went to this Cowal fellow once complaining, with some shame, for a Highland girl has small heed to speak of the heart’s business to any man but one. “I’m sorry, my dear, I’m sorry,” he said, with no pretence in the vexation of his brow. “I tempt no one to folly, and surely I’m not to blame for friendship to a lad so fine a woman can have the heart to think the best of.” “I’m foe to none, woman,” he cried, “except perhaps to a man they call Red John, and the worst enemy ever I had was welcome to share the last penny in my sporran. I have my weakness, I’ll allow, but my worst is that my promise is better than my performance, and my most ill-judged acts are well intended.” “Blame yourself,” said Ealasaid. “I blame nobody,” said he, laughing. “If other folk get such contentment out of their good deeds as I get out of my good intentions, it’s no bad world to spend a while in.” “You’re like the weak man in the ceilidh story,” pressed the girl. “How?” quo’ he. “Because you botch life,” said she. “Let a girl tell it you. And the pity of it is you’ll do it to the end.” At the worst of Ealasaid’s heart-break and the folly of Alan and his boon Death struck with an iron hand at the doors of Maam, Elrigmore and Elrigbeg, Kilblane and Stuckgoy, and at Stuckgoy lived the girl of my story. She would have been butchered like her two brothers, by the fringe of Athol’s army, but for her lover and his friend, who came when the need was There had been a break in the frost. It was a day of rain and mist, so the men who chased them lost them early. “If we can reach the head of the glen first,” said Alan, “there’s safety in the Ben Bhuidhe cave.” So the cave they ran for. The cave is more on Ben Shean than Ben Bhuidhe, for all its name; a cunning hiding-place on the face of Sgornoch-mor rock, hanging over the deer wallows where the waters of Shira and Stacan sunder, seeking Lochow and Loch Finne. It was the home of the reiver when reiving was in vogue, a hold snug and easy for sleep, and deep enough for plunder. Fires might flash at night far ben in the heart of it, or songs might shake its roof, but never the wiser was the world outbye. The way to the cave was off Shira side at the head of the glen, among whin bush The girl and her friends reached the head of the glen well before the band that followed them on the beaten road. There the mist fell off, and the bare hills closed in on a gullet the wind belched through. “Poor girl, poor girl!” said he to himself, “I was wrong to have come between you in the long summer day, for here’s in truth the black winter and the short day, homelessness and hunger, and the foe on our heels.” They got on the front of Sgornoch-mor, and all the north Highlands free of mist were in broken peaks before them, cut with glens, full of roads to liberty and safety, but too far off for a quarry before the hounds. At the foot of the haw-tree was the rope in coils. “There’s little time to waste,” said Red John, “for though I said nothing of it at the braefoot, I heard a corps of our followers too close on our heels for comfort. It would “I could die sweetly where I stand,” said Ealasaid, shrunk in weariness and grieving, “but for Alan here,” she added, looking at the lad beside her. “Dying here, dying there,” said Red John, “I’ll dance a reel at your wedding.” He was fastening the rope round Ealasaid’s waist as he spoke. “There’s one thing in my mind,” he said, in some confusion of voice. “What is that?” she asked, with small interest written in her swimming eyes. “It’s about Alan,” said he (and busy about the rope): “I am your debtor for many hours I robbed you of, unthinking—my old weakness, as I told you.” “That’s all bye,” she said; “that’s all bye and done with. Do you fancy I’m thinking now of such small sorrows? If “I’m all the better pleased to hear you say it,” said Red John, “because your taunt about my botched life rankled.” “I did you less than justice; one should never judge a life till the end of it.” Down the rock face the two men lowered her to the cave, where she let herself free of the rope, with a shake of it for her signal. “Hurry, lad,” said Red John, looking into the glen; and Alan went over the edge, and down, foot and hand, eager enough to join Ealasaid. The torn mists blew farther down the glen, the wind took a curve round Sgornoch-mor, and eye and ear told Red John that a band of the Athol men were close on him. He saw their bonnets on the slope, and heard them roar when they saw him beside the haw-tree. “My sorrow!” said he, “here’s Red John He lifted the rope a little to make sure that Alan was off it, then slashed at it with his dirk till he cut it from the tree. “Here’s a cunning and notable end to the botched life,” said the boon companion to himself, turning, with the dagger still in his hand, to face the Athol men. And the rope in heavy coils fell past the cave mouth to the deep below. THE END. PRINTED BY WILLIAM BLACKWOOD AND SONS. |