‘I was never going to settle anywhere else,’ she said.
We slept that night on the floor of her office. It was a strange place after Sue left. She seemed to take the warmth with her, and an insidious damp slunk in once her back was turned. The centre at one time had been an army swimming pool and diving training facility. I lay fitfully with my back to the door that opened onto a cold dark passageway, where a creeping chill would spread across my back and wake me every time I fell asleep. Shuna had wisely bagged the space furthest from the door.
Perhaps it was the redshank song of that morning opening up other worlds to me. Long-forgotten memories pushed their way in as I held my eyes wide open in the darkness. Mum telling me that I used to see ghosts on the walls of my bedroom in the house at St Cyrus where we’d lived when I was a baby. She said she’d come into the room and find me screaming at the wall. Mum had seen the ghosts sometimes too. They were ‘horrible creatures’, she’d said, ‘running over the wall’. She also told me she’d taken acid in that house when she’d had friends visit, and that while she was tripping she saw me being put into the oven. She never took acid again. I tried turning my thoughts to other things, to the baby Oystercatchers Shuna and I had seen that day, balls of fluff running on long legs through the machair, their mum doing everything she could to distract us. We weren’t a danger, but she was right to be wary. Better safe than sorry.
The chill didn’t leave my back all that night. I tried rolling over, but my front tightened and the hairs on my head prickled. I was spooked, and only happy when the pink glow of dawn crept across the windows. Later Sue told us that the stables were haunted, that they hear horses come and go on summer evenings. They like to think they’re horses from days gone by, just checking up on them.
DAY NINE
Benbecula to Grimsay
The ponies were breathtakingly handsome in the early light, heads high, nostrils fluted in velvety lines. A breeze lifted their manes and their foreheads gleamed. The trip was doing them good. They were alert and vital and in their element. We rode through the outskirts of Balivanich along quiet roads, we hoped to get to Grimsay before the day’s traffic started up. We didn’t fancy meeting buses on the North Ford (Oitir Mhòr) causeway, the five-mile loop of single-track road that links Benbecula and North Uist via the western tip of Grimsay. The sun climbed steadily ahead of us and brindled the sea with silver. On the skyline was Eabhal once again, and behind it the smaller but similarly shaped Burabhal – two ski-slope smiles canting to the west.
I looked back over my shoulder, with the sun behind us the colours were astonishingly lucid: Reeds gleamed gold, Cotton Grass flowers shone pearl white, two sheds boasted roofs of peacock green and teal blue. In his book Hebridean Connection Derek Cooper writes about the extraordinary light: ‘I know few places in the world which have such an ability to improve on nature as in the Hebrides. It has something to do with ultraviolet rays, I’m told, but the intensity of the light, its magical powers of magnification and its aggrandisement of colour are to me unparalleled elsewhere.’
We passed a sign that read ‘CAUTION: Otters Crossing’ and rode onto the causeway. Ross was unsure, jumpy. The sea splashed forcefully against the causeway walls, and the incoming tide powered noisily through narrow channels beneath us. It was exhilarating, this walking over water with a fresh wind on our faces. A couple of work vans were approaching but we had plenty of time to trot to the next passing place. The drivers slowed, courteous and smiling. ‘Failte gu Uibhist a Tuath/Welcome to North Uist’, said a sign on the little island of Eileen na h-Airigh. Just one more stretch of causeway ahead and we’d be turning off to Grimsay.
‘Car coming,’ I shouted ahead to Shuna. We started trotting but I could hear the car coming up close and fast, I turned round and indicated to the driver to slow down. As we turned into a passing place he accelerated past us, a look of darkest anger on his face. ‘Idiot,’ I said to Shuna, inhaling exhaust fumes. I was shaken, feeling frayed with lack of sleep. I’d need to be careful today. Luckily Shuna was in a better humour than I.
We took the second turning signed for Grimsay and followed Catriona’s instructions, and there she was, walking towards us and waving. We’d met her through long-distance riding. Like us she was passionate about getting out in the hills with her horse. She owned a house on Grimsay which she’d kindly offered us the use of. We’d be there alone as she and her husband were heading back to the mainland that morning. We followed a trail of Christmas tinsel that she’d thoughtfully tied onto fences and gateposts, ‘in case you arrived after we left’, she explained, to a field that belonged to her neighbour Theona. ‘That’s her house there,’ she said, pointing to a white farmhouse built on a peninsula. The tide was in, and the house, surrounded by water, floated at the end of its slip of track. ‘She’s so excited about having the ponies to stay, very disappointed to miss you but she’s away for a couple of days.’
Theona had left buckets filled with water in the field. I felt huge warmth for this woman and her welcoming water, her care, and her lovely name which I savoured quietly.
Back at the house we had breakfast with Catriona and her husband, Mike, a softly-spoken bushy-browed man who charmingly said ‘touch wood’ in almost every sentence. We were suddenly enfolded in a warm and organised world where every detail had been thought of. The instructions on how to leave the house were a masterpiece in attention to detail: ‘leave the kettle empty and on its side’. I wanted to ask why but didn’t, and felt so sloppy by comparison. Shame simmering again near my tired surface. I was self-conscious of our mucky, worn gear and ragged itinerary. Once alone Shuna and I sat in the upstairs living area looking over the garden of rhubarb and solar panels, to the tide now going out, the causeway, the stippled western horizon beyond.
I had a snooze then picked up The Pebbles on the Beach from the bookshelf. We’d hardly seen any shingle on our trip so far, in all these miles of sand. On Grimsay I was looking out at yet more sand, but this was grey and sludgy, the causeway was interfering with the old current patterns. I would be transported back to that place a few months later while reading about The North Ford in Terry J. Williams’ book Walking with Cattle. While researching the book she was led across the sands on the same route they drove the cattle along on their way to the cattle sales in North Uist. She describes how a line of cairns had been built to mark the safe route across the ford:
‘some kept their heads above water even at high tide. Most have disappeared, broken by storms, and scattered by the ever-meddling sea. Others are hardly distinguishable heaps, although a keen eye can still detect traces of the skill that made them. Every year the sea dislodged one more stone, widens one more crack. For now, enough remains for those who know to show those who don’t how it used to be […] in places there was a line of stones set in the sand like stepping stones between cairns […] Angus showed me a remnant – one, two, three, four, each with its crown of seaweed – and I wondered how it felt to be not-quite-lost out here in darkness or swirling mist, trusting this thread of stones to lead you to the next cairn, listening for the sound of creeping water.’
In the early afternoon we set off with the ponies to explore Grimsay. We felt rested, and the beautiful day beckoned. We came to a field with a handful of tups, bachelor boys standing resting in the sun, one was a little way off from the others, head down he was well and truly caught up in wire. His flanks were heaving in the hot sun. We’d need wire cutters to set him free. When a pickup truck drove along towards us I lifted my arm and flagged it down. The woman driving wound down her window.
‘Hi, there,’ I said, smiling. ‘Do you know who these sheep belong to?’
‘Who’s asking?’ Her accent was surprising, American maybe.
‘We’re just riding through with ponies and saw there’s a tup tangled in wire. I think he’ll need cutting free.’
‘Well, no doubt someone will be along.’ With that she drove off, sour-faced. I felt my temper flare. What was her problem?
Another car came along and stopped, a helpful woman called Joan, who it turned out lived in the house across the water from Catriona’s, said she’d call the farmer straight away. When we came back later, we found the tup had been cut free.
The houses we rode by were immaculate. Lawns trimmed and mown, washing pegged precisely on tightly strung lines. ‘It feels very sanitised here compared to Barra and South Uist,’ Shuna said. Later on a passer-by who stopped to pet the ponies explained it to us as being a ‘religion thing’: North of Benbecula is Presbyterian, South Uist and Barra are Catholic. ‘You know how it goes,’ she said cryptically. She added that there were a lot of incomers on Grimsay. You could understand why. This quintessentially picturesque ‘stepping-stone island’ with its stunning backdrop of Eabhal to the north, the sea all around, sheltered fishing harbours, tiny stone cottages, and its close proximity to the airport, was a little haven. ‘Incomers’, the word always landed somewhere difficult for me. I could never hear it without taking it a tiny bit personally, imagining there might be resentful undertones lurking. Sometimes there were, of course, but not always. All my life I’d lived as an incomer, my accent never fitting. That worn-out spool of conversation goes:
‘Where are you from?’
‘Scotland.’
‘No, but where are you really from?’
I thought back to Anglesey. The first house Mum bought after she left Dad was a tumbledown farmhouse at the end of a long track. It was a freezing house with flagstone floors and no heating. We were troubled with what Mum called ‘the prowler’. We never found out who it was but someone would walk around the house in the middle of the night. Mum borrowed a friend’s dogs, two huge chow chows who would run around the inside of the house, barking and shadowing ‘the prowler’ as they made his or her sinister way around the outside. It was terrifying. After a few nights the prowler disappeared, but that sense of being an outsider, of being looked in on from the outside, of feeling vulnerable, never left me. Mum, being who she was, always outspoken and revelling in standing out (the only Mum at parents’ evening to wear green contact lenses and a short ra-ra skirt) meant that we were always conspicuous in our difference. By contrast I loved going up to Oban to see Dad who was welcomed and respected in the community. I piggybacked on his belonging, loving that he had a clear role and that when I said who my father was people’s faces softened. I loved that when I was with him ‘normal’ people would have me into their homes, give me tea and cakes, make a fuss.
We rode through the village of Bagh Mòr past the old stone pier, half on the lookout for Norman MacLean’s house. Norman was a comedian, singer, poet and piper who Shuna remembered from ceilidhs in her family home years before. She’d just finished reading his autobiography The Leper’s Bell. We didn’t see a house that quite fitted the description we’d been given and weren’t feeling up to knocking on doors. Pickup woman had dinted our confidence.
I’d seen Norman MacLean talking about ‘creativity and values’ on YouTube. He described himself as ‘someone on the periphery of both societies, the English and the Gaelic, not quite belonging in either one’. It was strange for me to think of this legend in the Gaelic world as feeling that he didn’t quite belong. Was it much more of an internal thing then, ultimately, to feel belonging? If you didn’t feel like you fitted with yourself then it didn’t matter how much Gaelic or heritage or connections to family or place you had. I wondered if that feeling of not quite belonging had been at the root of his alcoholism. He was living a sober life now.
A few months after we rode past his house he died, his obituary in the Sunday Herald told the story of how he’d been rescued by a teacher from Uist who’d found him in the Southern General hospital in Govan, and couldn’t bear to see him die ‘in some dingy flat , besieged by empties’. She’d said ‘people in Uist love him and here we have a huge tolerance for drunks. Every family here has an alcoholic, so I knew he’d be safe.’
Beyond the village we stopped by a small hill loch. Its almost-black surface was mottled with the claret leaves of Water Lilies. Two white flowers were just opening up, the first I’d seen this year. I’d read back at the Kildonan Museum that their rhizomes were used for dyeing Harris Tweed. They gave dark browns and black, but that it was dangerous harvesting. You had to walk in the loch barefoot and dig out the tenacious roots with your toes, people had drowned doing it. The rhizomes were also used for tanning leather out here in the Hebrides where trees were so scarce.
A farm vehicle pulled over. It was my daughter’s school-friend Fergus and his father, Iain, both smiling out of the same long-lashed eyes.
‘How is the revision going?’ I asked Fergus.
‘I’ll be glad when it’s all over!’ They invited us to call round for a cup of tea later.
We carried on following signs for Kallin Shellfish Ltd. The car park was built on tons and tons of scallop shells. A convertible arrived at the same time as we did. Once again, I was taken back to Anglesey, and the throat-catching smell of scallop shells. I remembered one of Mum’s boyfriends who’d taken me to Brownies in his convertible. I’d felt mortified by his shaved head, his strange car, and how the other Brownies peered out at us from the windows of Llanethli village hall. I only went once. Mum wasn’t great at driving us to things. I can remember getting my hopes up about various clubs, activities. She’d take me to one maybe, and then the novelty would wear off. Perhaps the illness was working away in her even way back then. All those times she couldn’t get us up for school, maybe she’d been ill our whole childhood.
‘I’d imagined something smaller,’ said Shuna. ‘This is a factory.’
‘Shall I hold the ponies and you go and have a look? If they’ve got sparkling water could you get me some?’
The ponies didn’t want to stand still, possibly it was the smell of shellfish, or the clouds of dust lifting every time a vehicle came or went. Kallin Shellfish Ltd was a hive of activity, a booming business.
‘What did you get?’ I asked Shuna as she walked towards me holding a white plastic bag.
‘Some squat lobsters, couldn’t bring myself to buy scallops. They’re all dredged, but got you some water.’
We decided to just go back the way we’d come. We were tired, dawn in Balivanich felt like a long time ago. I also had a peculiarly strong feeling of not wanting to let Eabhal out of sight, of wanting to stay facing north. On the way back we left the road where in the lee of a knoll we found a patch of sun-warmed rock. We sat down, looking west across Loch Hornaraigh, and beyond to the tidal channels around Catriona’s house, which we could just make out. The ponies trailed their ropes and grazed between Bog Cotton stems. I walked to the tiny summit behind us where there was a tump, a pointed mound of turf about a foot high. Mussel shells were scattered around, and I imagined all the birds that stopped here to eat: Oystercatchers, Great Black-Backed Gulls, maybe birds of prey, their droppings fertilising the ground, building up over the decades, centuries even, into this green-topped nipple. Some people call them fairy hills. The bedrock around was covered in crusty black Lichens. There were Mosses too, red and yellow and frog green. Welts of bright white quartz ran through the gneiss. I knew exactly what to leave for Mum here. I dug about in the bead purse and found it, not a bead but an unpolished crystal shard, and lay it down on the rocks where it was absorbed by all the colours of that Lichen forest. Instant belonging!
I went back down and sat beside Shuna. We shared the Squat Lobsters and left the pink tail shells where we dropped them. Wriggling my toes inside my boots I looked across the loch to the hillside freckled with Hebridean Sheep. The best preserved Iron Age wheelhouse in the Uists was somewhere around here. We should explore, but the sun felt so good, and the ponies had stopped grazing and were resting. I thought of the lines from Pauline Prior-Pitt’s poem Late Adventure: ‘Lose control. Catch up with Vikings’. But once again we were too slow to catch up with anything, let alone Vikings, or early Celts. Then again maybe that’s exactly what we had done, caught up with
the ancient ones. There on that sun-warmed rock on Grim’s Island sucking Shellfish through our teeth.
DAY TEN
Grimsay to North Uist
The ponies spun their bums to the wind as the rain struck. They were in the paddock in front of Bonnie View Croft at Carinish, owned by Heather and Ian Morrison. We’d been drinking tea and eating Penguin biscuits with them for the past hour or so, hearing about their own horses, their seven dogs. ‘Rescues from Portree, Stornoway, South Uist.’ They’d shown us their calves – Highlanders, Charolais crosses, a Limousin – and told us how they took in any orphaned calves on the Uists. It was obviously a labour of love, each one was named, were all finger-sucking friendly, had deep straw bedding, they even had Himalayan salt licks hanging from the gates. Before I could stop him, Ian, who was allergic to horses, had picked up my tack and carried it into the barn. That’s who they were, through and through kind. Every creature on that place was loved and knew it.
We stepped under the Morrisons’ porch overhang waiting for the rain squall to pass. The Morrisons had just left to go to the annual North Uist Tractor Rally. They’d encouraged us to attend, said that there’d be a great spread of cakes, and soup too. We said we’d try and make it along later.
‘The weather’s not great but at least there’s a good bite of grass for them here,’ Shuna said. Ross and Chief were dark with rain. We’d only ridden a few miles that morning, from Grimsay to Carinish in the south of North Uist. We were now waiting for Dorothy, Fergus’s mum, who’d offered to drive us back to Iochdar to collect the pickup.
‘This must be the last thing Dorothy needs on a Saturday morning,’ I said to Shuna. She was a full-time teacher in Iochdar, and a very busy woman. We’d watched her car go past the house numerous times last night. Nonetheless she was smiling when we got in her car.
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