When he was out of sight, Jean brought
in the washing and then it was time to get supper.
Alan helped set the table and kept the fire bright
under the pot, while Jock fed the hens and brought
in the eggs; and when the Shepherd and Tam returned
from the hills, you can imagine how surprised they
were to find three children waiting for them instead
of two. At supper the Shepherd had to be told
all the adventures of the day and how it happened that
Alan was wearing the kilts, and by the time it was
over you would have thought they had known each other
all their lives. While Jean cleared away the
dishes, the Shepherd drew his chair to the fire and
beckoned Alan to him.
“Come here, laddie,” he
said, “and give us a look at your plaidie.
It’s been lying there in the kist, and I’ve
not seen a sight of it since I was a lad. It’s
the Campbell plaid, ye ken, and I mind once when I
was a lad I was on my way home from the kirk and a
hare crossed my path. It’s ill luck for
a hare to cross your path, and fine I proved it.
I clean forgot it was the Sabbath and louped the dyke
after him. My kiltie caught on a stone, and there
I was hanging upside down. My father loosed me,
but my kiltie was torn and I had to go to bed without
my supper for breaking the Sabbath.”
“Is the hole there yet?” asked Jean.
“Na, na;” said
the Shepherd. “You didn’t think your
grandmother was such a thriftless wifie as that!
She mended the hole so that you could never find where
it had been.”
He examined fold after fold carefully.
“There, now,” he exclaimed
at last, “if you want to see mending that would
make you proud to wear it, look at that.”
Jean and Jock stuck their heads over
his shoulder, and Alan twisted himself nearly in two
trying to see his own back.
“We have a plaid a good deal
like this,” said Alan, looking closely at the
pattern. “My mother’s name was McGregor,
but she has relations named Campbell.”
“Are you really a Scotch body,
then?” cried Robin with new interest in Alan.
“I thought you were an English boy.”
“I live in London,” Alan
answered, “but my mother’s people are
all Scotch, and she loves Scotland. That’s
one reason why she sent me up here to be with Eppie
McLean.”
“Losh, mannie,” cried
the Shepherd, “if you have Campbell relatives
and your mother’s name was McGregor, it’s
likely you are a descendant from old Rob Roy himself,
and if so, we’re all kinsmen. Inversnaid,
where Rob Roy’s cave is, is but a few miles
from here, and it was in this very country that he
hid himself among rocks and caves, giving to the poor
with his left hand what he took from the rich with
his right. Well, well, laddie, the old clans
are scattered now, but blood is thicker than water
still, and you’re welcome to the fireside of
your kinsman!”
“Is he really a relation?”
cried Jean and Jock eagerly.
“Well,” said the Scotchman
cautiously, “I’m not saying he is precisely,
but I’m not saying he is not, either. The
Campbells and the McGregors have lived in these parts
for better than two hundred years, and it’s
not likely that Alan could lay claim to both names
and be no relation at all. If there were still
clans, as there used to be in the old days, we’d
all belong to the same one, and that I do not doubt.”
“I’m sure I’d like
that,” said Alan, and Jock was so delighted
with his new relative that he stood on his head in
the middle of the floor to express his feelings.
When the excitement had died down a bit, Alan drew
his stool up beside the Shepherd’s knee and
said: “Won’t you please tell us about
Rob Roy, Cousin Campbell? If he’s an ancestor
of mine, I ought to know more about him.”
“Oh, do, Father,” echoed
the Twins, planting their stools beside the other
knee. Even Tam was interested. He sat on
the hearth in front of the Shepherd, looking up into
his face as if he understood every word.
The Shepherd gazed thoughtfully into
the fire for a moment; then he said: “I
can tell you what my grandsire told me, and he got
it from his grandsire, so it must be true. In
the beginning Rob Roy was as staunch a man as any,
and held his own property like other gentlemen.
Craig Royston was the name of his place, and fine and
proud he was of it, too. He was a gey shrewd
man in the cattle-dealing, and his neighbor, the Duke
of Montrose, thinking to benefit his own estate, lent
Rob money to set him up in the trade. There was
a pawky rascal named McDonald who was partner to Rob,
and didn’t he run away with the money, leaving
Rob in debt to the Duke and nothing to pay him with?
The Duke foreclosed on Rob at once, and took away Craig
Royston and added it to his own estate. You can
well believe that Rob was not the man to take such
dealings with patience. If the Duke had not been
so hasty, Rob would more than likely have got hold
of McDonald and made him pay either out of his purse
or out of his skin, but he did neither the one nor
the other. Instead he left his home and took his
clan with him into the mountains and became the terror
of the whole country-side.”
“Wasn’t he a good man?”
asked Jean, gazing at her father with round eyes.
“Well,” said the Shepherd,
“not just what you’d call pious, maybe,
and it cannot be said that he was aye regular at the
kirk. It’s true he never forgot an enemy,
but he never forgot a kindness either and was loyal
and true to them that were true to him.”
“What did he do when they weren’t
true to him?” asked Jock.
“He made them wish they had
been,” replied the Shepherd mildly.
“But what made the Duke of Montrose
take away Craig Royston?” asked Jock. “Didn’t
he have a great big place of his own?”
“Aye,” answered Robin,
“but what difference does that make? The
more land he had, the more land he wanted, the same
as other lairds. Be that as it may, Craig
Royston was certainly taken away from Rob, and a bitter
man it made of him.”
“Why, it’s just like ourselves
and the Auld Laird,” cried Jean. “He’s
going to take away our home from us!”
“It’s not just the same,
little woman,” said the Shepherd, laying his
big brown hand on Jean’s small one on his knee.
“But the loss of it hurts just the same.
Rob Roy loved Craig Royston no better than we love
this wee bit hoosie.”
“But why must you go, then?”
asked Alan, his eyes shining with interest and sympathy.
“You see; lad,” answered
the Shepherd, “it’s like the tale of the
dog in the manger. The Auld Laird will neither
use the land nor let us.” He explained
about the lease, and when he had finished, Alan said,
“But what will you do when you leave this place?”
“I’m spiering the same
question myself,” answered the Shepherd.
“As yet I dinna ken.”
“I tell you what,” shouted
Jock, springing to his feet and knocking over his
stool. “Why don’t we live in the caves
the way Rob Roy did? If the Crumpets and all
the people who have to give up their homes should
band together in a clan and hide themselves in the
glen, the Auld Laird could send all the Mr. Craigies
and Angus Niels in the world after us and they’d
never get us!”
The Shepherd smiled and shook his
head. “The time for that has gone by,”
he said sadly. “Na, na, we must
just submit. But one thing I do know, and that
is, we’ll not seek a place with the Laird of
Kinross. They say he will let his land to none
but members of the Established Church, and I’ll
not give up my religion for any man not if I’m
forever walking the world!”
“But come, now,” he went
on, seeing them downcast, “you all have faces
on you as long as a summer Sabbath. Cheer up,
and I’ll tell you a tale my grandfather told
me of the water cow of Loch Leven. You mind the
song says, ’The Campbells are coming from bonnie
Loch Leven.’ Well, it was around that loch
that the Campbells pastured their cattle. One
day when my grandsire was a young lad he was playing
with some other children on the pastures near the
shore, when all of a sudden what should they see among
their own cows but a fine young dun-colored heifer
without any horns. She was lying by herself on
the green grass, chewing her cud and looking so gentle
and pretty that the children played around her without
fear. They wound a wreath of daisies and put it
on her neck, and then they got on her back. The
cow stretched out longer and longer to make room for
them until they were all on her back except my grandsire.
Then all of a sudden the dun cow rose up, first on
her hind legs, tipping the children all forward, and
then on her forelegs tipping them all back ward, yet
no one fell off at all, and when she was up on her
feet, didn’t she start straight away for the
deep waters of the loch? The children screamed
and tried to get off her back, but no matter how hard
they tried, there they stuck. My grandsire ran
screaming toward them, and put up his hand to pull
them down, and his finger touched the dun cow’s
back! Now never believe me, if his finger didn’t
stick so he could not pull it away, and by that he
knew the dun heifer for a water cow and that she had
bewitched the children. He was being dragged
along with them toward the water, when all of a sudden
he slipped out his knife and with one blow chopped
off his own finger and he was wanting that finger till
the day of his death.”
“What became of the others?”
gasped Alan, his black eyes glowing like coals.
“They went on the dun cow’s
back into the lake, and the water closed over them
and they were never seen again,” said the Shepherd,
“and that’s the end of the tale.”
While the Shepherd talked, the twilight
had deepened into darkness, the fire had died down,
and the corners of the room were filled with mysterious
tricky shadows that danced with the flickering flames
on the hearth. Jean looked fearfully over her
shoulder. There was a creepy feeling in the back
of her neck, and Jock’s eyes were as round as
door-knobs. The Shepherd laughed at them.
“Good children have little to
fear from the fairy folk,” he said. “Come,
now, your eyes are fair sticking out of your heads.
I’ll give you a skirl on the bagpipes if Jeanie’ll
bring them from the closet. Jock, stir up the
fire, and Alan, give your clothes a turn and see if
they are drying.”
The children ran to do these errands,
and in a moment the fire was flaming gayly up the
chimney, chasing the murky shadows out of the corners
and making the room bright and cheerful again, while
the Shepherd, tucking the bag under his arm, stirred
the echoes on old Ben Vane with the wild strains of
“Bonnie Doon” and “Over the Water
to Charlie.” At last he struck up the music
of the Highland Fling, and the three children sprang
to the middle of the floor and danced the wild Scotch
dance together.
Just as the fun was at its height,
and Alan, looking very handsome in his kilts, was
doing the heel and toe with great energy, there came
a loud rap at the door. Instantly everything
stopped, just as short as Cinderella’s ball did
when the clock struck twelve, and the Shepherd, laying
aside his bagpipes, opened the door. There stood
a man with a bundle on his arm. “Eppie
McLean sent these clothes to the lad,” he said,
handing the bundle to the Shepherd, “and he’s
to come back along with me.” Alan took
the bundle, thanked the man, and disappeared with
Jock into “the room,” where he changed
his clothes, returning the kilts, with regret, to
Jock. “I’ve had just a grand day,”
he said to Jean and the Shepherd as he shook hands
and took leave of them in the kitchen afterward.
“I’ll be back to-morrow for my clothes.”
“Come back and play then,” said Jock.
When he was gone, Jean folded the
kilts away in the closet again. “He’s
a fine braw laddie,” said the Shepherd.
“Aye,” said Jock.
“He had two suits of clothes, one as good as
the other, but he was not proud.”
“I wonder what his father’s work is,”
said Jean.
“He never spoke of his father
at all, just his mother,” said Jock, and at
that moment the wag-at-the-wall clock struck nine.
“Havers!” said Jean.
“Look at the hour, Jock Campbell! Get you
to your bed.”