Twelve Great Black Cats

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Twelve Great Black Cats Page 8

by Sorche Nic Leodhas


  Murdagh shook the sweat out of his eyes and settled down to rest a bit. He could hear the March wind gasping and panting from the stress of the battle.

  “Och, aye,” said Murdagh with a grin. “Am I not panting a bit myself?”

  He sat quietly until his breath came easy again, then he began to think of what he would be doing next. He could not just go on sitting there, holding down the March wind. A notion came into his head.

  “O Balach mo chu,” he said. “Fetch me the creel!”

  Balach the dog fetched the creel with the three pairs of stockings in it that Murdagh had finished knitting. Murdagh forced the March wind’s wrists behind his back and took both wrists into his left hand. With his right hand he took a pair of stockings from the creel and wound their double thickness around and around, binding the March wind’s wrists together and tying the ends with a good hard knot. Then he felt around until he had the March wind’s ankles and, taking care not to ease his weight from the March wind’s chest, Murdagh bound the two ankles together with a second pair of hose from the creel.

  “That will hold you for the time,” said Murdagh, “but I can do better than that.”

  He took the last two stockings from the creel and knotted the ends together twisting them into a rope. With a quick twist he turned the March wind over on his face and put the stocking round his neck. Before the March wind knew what was happening to him, Murdagh had drawn his legs and arms together, up behind his back, and fastened them with the ends of the rope of stockings and tied them tight. Murdagh stood over him and laughed. “You’ll blow no more for a while, you rogue!” said Murdagh. “That’s a pickle you’ll not be getting yourself out of soon!”

  The March wind learned at once that the less he stirred about the better off he’d be. If he moved as much as a finger or a toe the cruel rope of stockings tightened about his neck so that he was all but choked to death.

  Murdagh took the napkin from his bonnet and tossed it into his creel. He shook up the bonnet to put it in order, and set it back on his head.

  “Och, now,” he said to the March wind. “What will I do about you?”

  “What are you going to do, Murdagh?” the March wind asked fearfully.

  “Balach the dog and me were up by the bens one day, tracking a fox that was nosing about the hen run. We found a hole up there that led into a cave deep down in the ben. I’m thinking it would be a good place to drop you into. A good big boulder set across it to seal up the hole would keep you inside in case you were able to get yourself untied.”

  “Och, you would not do so!” the March wind cried in horror.

  “Why should I not?” asked Murdagh. “We cannot have you lying here. The sheep would take fright at you, and maybe run away, losing themselves on the moor or in the glen. I’d be falling over you, not being able to see you. Sure, one or the other of us would come to harm. The best place for you is the hole in the ben, and when I get a bit of rest I’ll carry you up and drop you in.”

  “Ochone! Ochone!” the March wind wailed. “Le-e-e-e-et me-e-e-e-e go-o-o-o-o!”

  “I’ll not do it,” said Murdagh indignantly. “You’ve been naught but a vexation and a trouble to me in the past, and so you would be again if I should set you free.”

  And Murdagh sat down on his stone and taking up his needles and yarn he set to work at knitting the stocking he had begun that morn.

  After a while the March wind said softly, “Murdagh?”

  “Aye,” said Murdagh.

  “Murdagh,” said the March wind. “I know a place over beyond the bens where two great kists full of gold and siller are hidden away. For more than a hundred years they’ve lain there, and the man who brought them there is long dead and turned to dust. Nobody knows the kists are there but me. Let me go free, Murdagh, and I’ll blow both kists to you.”

  “What good would all that gold and siller be to a shepherd like me?” Murdagh said scornfully. “All a man needs is a good roof over his head, food to fill his belly, working clothes for weekdays and good clothes for Sundays. All these I have already, and my croft and my sheep, forbye. If there’s aught else I fancy I’d like to buy, I’ll have you know I’ll get it for myself. I have a wee kist of my own, and though it is not full to the top, there’s plenty of gold and siller in it to buy me anything I’m likely to want. Och, keep your kists for yourself.”

  Murdagh went on with his knitting, and after a while the March wind said softly, “Murdagh?”

  “Och, aye,” said Murdagh. “What would you be wanting now?”

  “Murdagh,” said the March wind. “Let me go free and I will blow fame and fortune to you. The king himself will give you his favor, and you will be a great laird in a castle, with servants to wait upon you. Would it not suit you fine to be proud and great?”

  “Proud and great!” exclaimed Murdagh scornfully, with a flash of his eyes and a lift of his chin. “Och, ye great omadhaun, do you not know, then, who I am? Murdagh MacAlister, and my family goes all the way back to Alister Mor! There is royal blood in my veins, and there’s no man in Scotland that is better than me! I’m that contented I’d not call the king my cousin. I’m very well suited the way I am. As for your castles, they are too big to please me. I’ll take my shieling instead, and when the day comes that I need servants and cannot wait upon myself it will be because I’m dead and in my grave.”

  So Murdagh took up his needles and yarn and began to knit again. After a while the March wind said softly, “Murdagh?”

  “Och, what now?” Murdagh said.

  “Murdagh,” the March wind said, “let me go free and I will blow you the bonniest lass in Scotland to be your own true love.”

  “Och, what sort of lass would it be that the wind would blow in?” Murdagh asked in disgust. “Why would I be needing anybody to get me a lass forbye? There are no bonnier lasses in the world than those in our own town. I can smile and crook my finger to any one of them and she’ll come running to me. When I want a lass of my own I’ll get one for myself. I’m weary of all your nattering. I’m beginning to feel like myself again, so we’ll be going along to the ben and I’ll drop you down the hole.”

  “Is there naught you would take at all to let me go free?” the March wind cried in despair.

  Murdagh sat turning the question over in his mind for a long time while the March wind waited anxiously.

  “If you play me false,” said Murdagh at last, “I promise you that I will neither sleep nor eat until I catch you again and drop you into the hole in the ben.”

  “Ask what you will,” the March wind said eagerly, “I give you my word.”

  “A-weel, in the first place,” said Murdagh, “you must bring back my two bonnets that you stole from me.” “That I will!” said the March wind. “And then?” “Then,” said Murdagh, “never again will you come roistering down upon us, bound upon mischief as you have so often done before. From now on you will leave the moor, the glen, the wood, and the brae, and all my croft, forever untroubled and at peace.”

  “That I will do indeed,” the March wind promised. “So let me go.”

  Then Murdagh got up and went to the March wind. He untied the knots in the stockings on neck and wrists and ankles, and cast them aside. Murdagh heard the March wind rise from the grass with a great sigh and stretch himself. Then there was silence on the brae. Murdagh did not hear him go, but he knew that he was gone.

  Balach the dog gathered up the three pairs of stockings and laid them in the creel, making sure that all six stockings were there. And Murdagh sat down on his stone and busied himself with his knitting again. Presently, the leaves rustled softly on the trees and there was a whispering along the grass, and into Murdagh’s lap dropped his two bonnets—his third-best and his second-best.

  One day, between spring and summer, the old shepherd came up to the brae and took the job of tending Murdagh’s sheep, with Balach the dog to watch over shepherd, sheep, and all, and make sure all went well. Murdagh dressed himself in his best an
d went off to town. He strode down the high street, young and gallant and gay, with a high step and a swagger to his kilt, and every lass he met turned her head to look after him and sighed to see him pass by.

  As he was going along he caught sight of a bonnie wee lass standing in the doorway of her father’s house, and she was the one he had had his mind on, for a year and more. He was ready now to pick out a lass for himself, so he smiled and crooked his finger at her, and she came running to him. She followed him to the minister’s house, and they were wed that day. Then Murdagh took his bonnie wee lass under his arm and they walked together up the long road home to Murdagh’s shieling and to Balach the dog and the sheep on the brae.

  Then there were three of them watching the sheep on the brae. There were Murdagh and Balach the dog, and when she had the shieling in order and her woman’s work done, there was the bonnie wee lass forbye.

  And after a year or so, there were four, because there was a wee bairn in a cradle beside his mother and father where they sat on the stone. Then, as the years went by, there were five, and six, and more, for a new babe lay in the cradle each year. How many bairns there were in the end, I cannot tell you, but there were a sluagh of them, all as healthy as ever you’d want to see. And on mild and fair days Murdagh and his bonnie wee lass would sit on the stone knitting, while Balach the dog kept one eye on the babe in the cradle and the other on the browsing ewes and the bairns racing over the brae with the young lambs.

  It takes a lot of knitting to make all the vests and trews and stockings and things needed to keep a raft of bairns warm and safe from the cold.

  Sometimes, in the early spring, with lambing time over and the young lambs growing strong and frisking about their dams, the March wind would come slipping down from the bens, so secretly, so softly, that the bloom on the heather scarcely bent its head, the leaves scarcely stirred on the trees. He would lean to look at the flying fingers of Murdagh and his bonnie wee lass as they sat knitting, then he would move away to breathe gently on the sleeping face of the babe in the cradle, and to ruffle the curls of the bairns at play. Then stealthily, silently, the March wind would creep away from the brae, up the glen and over the high moor and back to the bens. Nobody ever heard him come, nobody ever heard him go, nobody ever saw him—unless it was Balach the dog, and if he did he paid him no heed at all.

  The March wind never broke his word. The high moor, the glen, the brae with its bairns and its sheep, the croft with its wee shieling were left forever untroubled and at peace.

  The Sea Captain’s Wife

  THERE is an ancient castle that stands on a dark crag above the sea on the northwest coast of Scotland. Ages of neglect, and winter’s icy gales and summer’s storms, have had their way with it, but still it rears its ruined walls proudly as ever it did when it was the grand stronghold it was built to be. The name of it has long been forgotten, and fishermen from the isles who use it for a landmark, when on their seal-hunting courses, call it an dun na cuantaiche, the Sea Rover’s Castle. And it is the fishermen who through generations have kept the old tale of the castle alive, passing it down from father to son and from lip to ear.

  At the foot of the crag there is a wide sweep of sand and shingle half enclosing a wee bit of a harbor. The shore is bright and shining—an traigh bhean, they call it—and above the line of high tide, where the road comes down from the castle to the sea, a scattering of fishermen’s shielings once nestled against the cliff. The shielings are long gone, and the fisherfolk who once lived in them are dead and forgotten. Nothing is left now but the white sands below and the old castle on its dark crag above.

  Six hundred years have passed since the castle was built, and for a full half of them it has been abandoned and tenantless. No man’s foot has trod its floors, no man’s voice has echoed from its walls. The fox hunts through its passages by day, and the owl seeks its prey in its halls by night. Curlews call mournfully above its crumbling stones, and screaming sea gulls wheel around its ruined towers and return to the sea. The roof has fallen, the moat is dry, bracken grows among the stones of the courtyard, and there is an air of desolation over all, enough to chill a man’s blood to behold it. Yet, the fishermen will tell you, there was a time when the castle was full of light and life. As the old story goes the time of its greatest glory was in the day of its last laird.

  The last laird of the castle was young and handsome and gallant, in face and form and bearing all that a man should be. He was a sea captain and often away from home, but he had in his heart the true spirit of western Highland hospitality. His door was always open and a warm welcome awaited every guest. All in his household were instructed to welcome and provide for anyone who came to his house during his absence in the same way that they would have done if he had been at home. And so they did, indeed.

  There was a day when the sea captain came home from a voyage, and went up to his chamber to change his travel-worn clothes for fresh ones before going down to greet the visitors who had come to the castle while he was away. As he dressed he talked to the ghillie who had brought him wood for his fire and water for washing.

  “Who would my guests be?” he asked the ghillie. “Can you tell me who is waiting for me below?”

  “Och, the usual run of folk from roundabout,” the ghillie answered. “They having got word that you’d be returning during the day. Nay! I’m forgetting. There are two fine ladies from Edinbro’ that are cousins of your own, or so they say. One of them has brought her young daughter along. I doubt they’ve been here before.”

  “Cousins?” the sea captain said. “Aye, then! That would be the Frasers. There were some of them from Edinburgh who were distant cousins on my mother’s side, but the kinship is not close. Och, I’ve not laid eyes upon them since I went with my mother to visit them when I was a lad. I saw the daughter then.” He settled his coat and shook out the lace at his throat and wrists, and finding himself garbed to suit his taste, he started down the stairs. As he went down he thought of the young daughter of his mother’s cousin. He remembered her very well. A greedy wee dumpling of a lassie, that one had been, with tousled red hair. A whey-faced brat with her mouth always sucking on sweeties. She’d pawed him with her sticky wee hands, forbye! He shuddered at the thought.

  Then he was down in the room where the company awaited him, greeting the gentlemen and making his manners to the ladies. And there were his mother’s cousins, and one of them drawing forward a young lady by the hand and saying, “You’ll be remembering my daughter, your cousin Catriona, will ye not?”

  He stood, dumbfounded. This was no wee dumpling with sticky paws!

  He looked, and saw a tall lass, a slim lass, as straight as a young birch tree. If her hair was red it was the red of pure gold, and her face was not the color of whey but so white and smooth that he thought it would put shame to the petals of the whitest rose that ever grew. He saw two eyes of gentian blue, two smiling rosy lips, and two rows of teeth like pearls. “This is all the beauty of Edinburgh!” he told himself. “All in one caillean.”

  She looked at him, and saw a big man, a tall man, with broad shoulders, and a handsome face. She saw a mop of black curls sweeping back from his brow, two bold black eyes with laughter lines at the outer corners, a firm mouth, a strong chin, and the proud air of a man who liked to have folk heed what he said, and to have his word obeyed. They stood there, silent for the space of half a minute, no more, looking at each other, and anybody seeing them would have said that nothing had happened at all. But in that short time he had fallen in love with her, and she with him.

  Then he collected his wits and greeted her courteously, calling her “cousin” and bidding her welcome to his house. And she, composed and calm, replied, thanking him for his courtesy in receiving them.

  That was where the trouble began. Because he had no right to love her. He had already given his heart to the sea. Nevertheless, he did woo her. He lilted to her, he danced with her, he sang to her, he talked to her, until he had her as tame as
if she were a bird coaxed to his hand from its nest, and before spring turned fairly into summer they were wed.

  He loved her, be sure, as much as he was able, but she doted upon him. The world held nothing for her but himself. Nothing else had value in her life. But she could never be more than second best in his life. His first love and his dearest love was the sea. Her heart nearly broke when she found it out, and they not more than two months wed. If it had been another woman he loved she could have fought for him, and no doubt won him. But how could one fight against the hold the sea can have on a man? Folk who knew him well told her that when he was but a wean in his nurse’s arms he clapped his wee hands and leaped for joy to see the white-capped waves come rolling in. When he was a bairn he ran from home whenever he could, they said, to play around the boats and over the rocks with the fishing lads and lassies on the shore. When he was a lad half-grown he coaxed a boat of his own out of his father, and after that his days from morn to night were spent sailing along the coast, and his nights, as like as not, out with the fishermen until they came in from the sea with their fish in the early misty dawn. Nobody had the need to tell her that now that he was a man, and master of a great ship, he loved the sea so dearly that he could not be happy long away from it.

  So with their wedding day no more than two months behind them, the sea captain told his young wife that he was going to leave her and go to sea.

  “But we have not been married long, mo graidh,” she protested, unable to believe he meant it.

  “Och, I’ll come back,” he said, laughing. “But I must go. I’ll not be long away, nighean mhúirninn. A month, or maybe two.” She stormed at him, she wept, she begged him to stay. But he only shook his head. “You knew I was a sea captain before you wed me,” he told her. “Did you not expect that I would go to sea?”

 

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