<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"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />