<h2 id="Chapter_2">2. The Waif</h2>
<p>It was one of those days that couldn’t decide between
winter and spring. A cold, gusty wind whistled thinly
through dark pine and barren birch and chased fat clouds
over the sky one by one, causing flurries of hard rain to
alternate with pale and hesitant sunshine.</p>
<p>They had traveled the thirty miles of Loch Ness, stopping
at the village near Urquhart Castle, and again at
Kilcummin, where they had nearly been caught picking
the purse of one of the MacDonald chieftains. And now
they were moving south beside the silver ripples of Loch
Lochy.</p>
<p>Kelpie was far ahead of Mina and Bogle, moving along
high on the hillside with a prancing motion caused partly
by high spirits and partly by the masses of tough-stemmed
heather that covered the slope. She was still sore from her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</SPAN></span>
latest beating, and also hungry. Her life consisted largely
of pain and hunger and cold, and was peopled by enemies
to be feared and hated or fools to be tricked, but Kelpie
had discovered all that long ago and was quite used to the
fact and found life very enjoyable anyway. Certainly it
was never dull, and she had a zest for adventure.</p>
<p>And in spite of everything, the world was beautiful.
Kelpie could forgive it a lot for that. In any case, her day
was coming! She had deliberately described the details in
last night’s crystal quite wrongly, and Mina hadn’t known.</p>
<p>Or had she?</p>
<p>This appalling thought caused Kelpie to miss her usually
sure footing and to step right in the middle of a gorse
bush. Neither the travel-hardened toughness of the bare
brown foot nor the deceptive beauty of the silvery leaves
saved her from a good pricking, and Kelpie swore with
an ardent fluency that would have pleased Bogle greatly.
Still hopping and cursing, she saw the movement and
color of the three horsemen down the loch much later
than she should have. They were coming along toward
her in the path below and doubtless had well-filled purses
which might well be lightened. She was halfway down
the steep slope when suddenly the sun shone brightly
from behind the latest cloud, and Kelpie recognized the
scene from the crystal: young Glenfern and his red-haired
companion and the giant blond <i lang="gd">ghillie</i> riding behind.</p>
<p>But there was no time to wonder about it. Timing her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</SPAN></span>
movements carefully, Kelpie threw herself headlong down
the last steep bank and sprawled full length in the path,
almost under the horses’ feet.</p>
<p>“<i lang="gd">Dhé!</i>” exclaimed Ian Cameron as he and Alex reined
the horses so sharply that they reared for a moment on
their hind legs. All he could see on the ground was a pitifully
small and tattered figure, clearly in great danger of
being trampled to death.</p>
<p>Alex MacDonald, from his better position behind, saw
something a little more. As Ian’s horse stepped alarmingly
close to Kelpie, one “thin and helpless” arm moved, neatly
and efficiently, the precise six inches required for safety.
Alex’s red eyebrows arched, and an appreciative grin
danced on his face. He relaxed and prepared to enjoy the
comedy that was sure to follow.</p>
<p>The crisis was over in a moment. “Is it all right you
are?” demanded Ian of the wee figure, and the wee figure
nodded biting its lip in a fine imitation of silent courage
as it raised itself painfully to an elbow. For Kelpie had
discovered that this sort of act was much more touching
than loud wails and tears. She decided to have a hurt
back, this being hard to disprove, as well as more impressive
than other hurts. So she winced to indicate great pain
and looked up with a brave and pathetic smile.</p>
<p>The lads looked back at her. A scrawny waif it was,
tattered and unbelievably dirty. The tangled dark hair,
apparently never touched by water or comb, fell over the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</SPAN></span>
thin face in a way that reminded Ian of shaggy Highland
cattle—except that these eyes were unlike those of any
cattle that ever lived. They were long and black-fringed,
set at a slant in the narrow face, and strangely ringed.
Around each black pupil was a wide circle of smoky blue,
then a narrow one of lightish gray, and a third of deep
and vivid blue. Astonishing eyes, almost alarming! Where
had he seen them before?</p>
<p>While Ian stared in wonder and pity, Alex made a few
further observations of his own. He noted the high cheekbones
and the pointed chin and the wicked slant of black
brows and the short upper lip—giving rather the effect,
thought Alex, of a wicked elfin creature, or perhaps a
witch. Amused but wary, he sat back and let his foster
brother make up his mind. Ian wouldn’t have been noticing,
of course, that the wee <i lang="gd">briosag</i> threw herself into the
path on purpose. Ian had the way of always believing the
best of everyone.</p>
<p>Ian was aware of the cynical smile behind him. A nasty
suspicious mind Alex had! It was a pity. What else could
he be expecting of a poor wild waif like this? What sort
of life must she have had? Then Ian remembered where
he had seen her before: with that wicked old witch Mina.
Och, the poor creature!</p>
<p>“’Tis hurt you are,” he said worriedly, to Kelpie’s relief.
She had feared for a moment that she’d been too
subtle altogether.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Och, only a little,” she whispered, putting on a braw
show of dreadful pain heroically borne.</p>
<p>“Now, do not be overdoing it,” drawled Alex.</p>
<p>Kelpie shot him a look which, had she been a properly
qualified witch, would surely have caused him to break
out with every loathsome disease known to mankind. Unfortunately
the only effect of her venomous glare was that
Alex’s smile broadened to an insulting chuckle. Och, what
a beast he was, then, with the bony, freckled, jeering face
of him, and the two jaunty tufts of red hair jutting upward
just where horns ought to sprout! She was about to
tell him so, and in great detail, but just in time she remembered
her role and Ian, who was still showing his
pity and dismay.</p>
<p>What a misfortune, he thought, that this should happen
now, just when he and Alex were nearly home again after
those long months away in Oxford, where he had been
savagely homesick. They were about to get home early,
and with very important news, and now this had to happen,
not five miles from Glenfern.</p>
<p>“What shall we be doing with you at all?” he said. “We
cannot just be leaving her here!” he added fiercely, turning
on Lachlan, the blond <i lang="gd">ghillie</i>, who, looking larger
than usual on his short shaggy pony, had muttered something
from behind.</p>
<p>“Give her a copper,” Alex said, laughing, “and see how
quickly she’ll mend!”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Copper indeed! thought Kelpie. It was silver she was
wanting. But she didn’t hide the gleam in her eyes quickly
enough.</p>
<p>“I’ll show you,” said Alex. Slowly, tantalizingly, he drew
a coin from his sporran and held it up. It gleamed silver,
and Kelpie stared at it greedily. “See?” Alex chuckled
and spun it toward her.</p>
<p>Quick as the flash of bright metal in the air, her brown
hand shot out to catch it in flight—then dropped, and the
coin fell noiselessly on the path. Kelpie sat staring first at
it and then at her own shoulder with dismay that was, for
a change, perfectly genuine.</p>
<p>“I—I <em>am</em> hurt!” she said with astonishment and then
hastily snatched up the coin with her good left hand before
they should change their minds.</p>
<p>“Not too hurt to be picking up the silver,” observed
Alex, but the gibe lacked his earlier light tone. Ian had
already dismounted and was touching rather gingerly the
filthy rags covering the shoulder in question. The lass
frankly stank.</p>
<p>This time Kelpie’s face showed an honest flicker of pain.
“I think it will be sprained, or perhaps out of place,” Ian
decided and looked at Alex.</p>
<p>Alex looked back at him. “Well, so. And where does she
live, then? Where are her people? Perhaps Lachlan could
be taking her home.”</p>
<p>Ian shrugged. “I think I’ve seen her with Old Mina and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</SPAN></span>
Black Bogle. Is that so?” he asked Kelpie, who nodded.</p>
<p>Alex raised his eyebrows, not in the least surprised. It
was logical that she should belong to the nastiest witch in
Scotland.</p>
<p>“Will they be coming along, then?” Ian inquired, and
again Kelpie nodded, so bewildered by her unexpected
hurt and the pain that was now shooting sharply through
her shoulder that she couldn’t really think clearly at all.</p>
<p>A glum silence settled on them, broken only by furtive
and disapproving mutters from Lachlan. His duty was to
be protecting his young masters, and now here they were
consorting with witches, and he not able to prevent them
at all, at all. He crossed himself.</p>
<p>Ian sighed with relief when the bent figures of Mina and
Bogle appeared up the loch-side. They would take care of
their lass, and he and Alex could be away home.</p>
<p>But it wasn’t that easy. Mina, after taking in the situation
at a glance, burst into lamentations and curses that
caused the ruddy Lachlan to go pale. “And is it our poor
lass you have harmed, wicked beasts that you are?” she
wailed, while Bogle stood like a massive old tree in disconcerting
silence. “Ocho, ocho, whatever shall we be
doing now? May the Evil Eye fall on all your cattle, and
the pox upon yourselves, <i lang="gd">uruisgean</i> that you are!”</p>
<p>Ian himself recoiled, not from the curses, but from the
evil that was in this horrible old woman. What a dreadful
thing that a young lass should belong to such as these! It<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</SPAN></span>
was wicked! And yet, what could he do? What could anyone
do? Unhappily he stood and stroked his horse’s nose
while Alex handled the matter.</p>
<p>Alex did handle it beautifully, with just the right mixture
of indulgence, severity, and money. “’Twas no fault
of ours that she fell, but altogether her own,” he told
them. “Still, we are kind-hearted and willing to give you
a bit of silver.” And when Mina would have demanded
more, he fixed her with a stern hazel stare that caused her
own pale, muddy eyes to waver and fall. It was all settled
then, and Ian, feeling depressed, turned to mount his
horse.</p>
<p>And then Black Bogle, perhaps feeling that they had
been worsted in the bargaining, reached down and jerked
Kelpie roughly to her feet by the injured arm.</p>
<p>The bit of brutality wrenched a choked cry of anguish
from the girl. Ian whirled around, and Alex was off his
horse in a flying leap and seized Bogle’s arm in a grip that
had no gentleness whatever.</p>
<p>“Let go of her, you vile bully!” Alex snarled, red with
fury, while Ian removed the sagging Kelpie from Bogle’s
grasp. Lachlan, brandishing a steel dirk a foot long, loomed
ominously behind....</p>
<p>When Kelpie was again able to take an active interest
in events, she heard several voices: a cold, contemptuous
one and a dangerously quiet one, Bogle’s growl and Mina’s
whine, with dour grumblings in the background. More<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</SPAN></span>
money changed hands, and then Mina bent over Kelpie,
a cunning, complacent look on her face.</p>
<p>“The fine gentlemen will be taking you home with them
to fix your hurt, and we will come to fetch you in the
morning,” she said. “You will be properly grateful—and
behave as I’d be wishing you to,” she added meaningly,
and Kelpie nodded. She knew quite well what Mina meant—steal
whatever she could lay hands on.</p>
<p>Then Ian’s concerned face was close to hers as he removed
the grimy once-red sash from about her waist and
gently bound the injured arm to her side. “And who’s
knowing what further damage the brute will have done?”
he muttered.</p>
<p>After that she found herself lifted to the fearful height
of Alex’s horse and felt his hard young arm firmly around
her. And at a slow walk they set along toward the fork
in the path that led through the hills to Glenfern.</p>
<p>By the time they reached the top of the pass, Kelpie
was feeling much better. She began to relish the adventure,
and she stared with interest at the scene before her
as they paused. Ian’s face was alight with joy, and Lachlan
actually had tears in his eyes. A strange thing that was,
she thought wonderingly, ignorant as she was of the love
of the Highlander for his own hills. Kelpie knew no home
but the ground she walked on.</p>
<p>The glen ran westward ahead of them, a long little
valley cradled in hills that were just turning jewel-green<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</SPAN></span>
with new bracken and showing dark with juniper and
white here and there with birch trunks and unmelted
snow. On the northern slope stood a weathered gray house
which seemed large and grand indeed to Kelpie, and
scattered along the glen were little rye-thatched shieling
huts of unmortared stone, nestled into the hillside as if
they had grown there. Farther down the glen was a wee
loch of silver and blue, ringed with white birches and
dotted with green islets.</p>
<p>“Loch nan Eilean—Lake of the Islands,” murmured
Ian with his heart in his voice, and they rode on down
the hill and along to the stables.</p>
<p>Alex lifted Kelpie down from the horse, looked at her
oddly, and then with a grin forced open her left hand.</p>
<p>“You little devil!” He laughed. “You’ve picked my
pocket!”</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />