<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"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />