<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"><SPAN name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</SPAN></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"><SPAN name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</SPAN></span></p>
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