<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"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />