Sins of the Highlander

Chapter 30

“Father Kester, might I have a word with ye?” Mrs. Beaton cornered the young priest at his evening prayers before the altar of the chapel. Father Kester rose, crossed himself elaborately, and walked toward her. Bookish and long-winded, he didn’t even have a pleasant voice for singing the mass. Mrs. Beaton had thought him a young fool when he first came.

Now she’d see if he could be a useful young fool.

“Of course, Mrs. Beaton. I live to serve the souls here,” he said. “But please be brief. I was heading to my pallet. We who keep the canonical hours dinna get much sleep, ye ken. What’s this about?”

“Well, I’m usually not one to carry tales, but some troubling matters have come to my attention.”

“Troubling? In what manner?”

“In a spiritual manner, Father, else I’d not have come to ye,” she said primly. “I greatly fear an evil has come upon the people of Clan MacLaren.”

“Whist, ye needn’t fear.” He patted her shoulder as if he were very much older and wiser than she, though he was young enough to be her grandson. A sanctimonious, half-witted grandson. “My studies have prepared me to deal with every wile the devil may use to lure us into sin.”

“Indeed? And did they prepare ye to recognize and try a witch?”

His sandy brows shot skyward. Prosecuting a witch, especially if she could be proved to be consorting with the devil in the most lurid fashion, won a certain notoriety for the priest who successfully convicted and punished her. Father Kester was the ambitious sort.

“And who d’ye think might be wandering such a grave path of error within these walls?” he asked.

Unfortunately, his ambition was far greater than his intellect. Mrs. Beaton restrained herself from rolling her eyes. “Were ye no’ in the Great Hall at supper this night?”

“Ye mean the Lady Elspeth?”

“Aye, she was possessed of Satan himself, I’ll warrant.”

“Hmmm. I was at the other end of the hall when all the commotion started, and our laird spirited her out of the hall verra quickly,” he said, tapping his teeth with a long fingernail. “I just thought the young woman had seen a mouse. There’ve been plenty of them of late.” He shuddered. “Nasty wee beasties.”

Mrs. Beaton bristled at the slight to her housekeeping skills. “Well, she didna see a mouse, but she was seeing something else right enough, or so she claimed. The devil was showing her a battle, she said. The last battle, I’m thinking, and Elspeth Stewart was shrieking encouragement to his evil horde.”

“Ye’re certain of these things?”

“Certain as I’m standing here. I helped put her to bed whilst she raved,” she said. “Did ye no’ wonder how the MacLaren won his way back into the castle without coming through one of the locked gates?”


“No, I simply thanked God for granting us a miracle.”

Simple is right. “I’m thinking another power might be responsible for his sudden appearance among us, and the devil used Elspeth Stewart to spirit our laird back into his stronghold. Witches can fly, ye ken.”

“I’ve heard of such things.” Father Kester narrowed his eyes. “I’d need proof, o’ course.”

“Oh, aye, there’s proof and more. Much more, and several who can bear witness to her unholy bent, and…” Mrs. Beaton lowered her voice to a whisper. “There’s an unusual mark upon her person, high up on her…well, best we not speak here where anyone might stumble on our counsels.”

“Will ye step into my private chamber?”

Mrs. Beaton nodded and followed him to his spartan little cell. She’d see the way cleared for her niece to become the lady of this place or know the reason why. By the time she was done with Father Kester, he’d be ready to light the fagots beneath Elspeth Stewart’s feet with his own hand.

***

“T’would be best for the sake of my good name that ye be seen leaving my chamber verra soon,” Elspeth said. “Albus is watching outside the door and forming his own conclusions. Besides, your people need to see ye in the Great Hall. Ye dinna realize how much heart they draw from ye.”

Rob argued for a bit but finally gave in. “I’ll check on ye later then,” he said.

“I usually sleep like the dead after a visit from my Gift,” she warned.

He kissed her cheek. “Verra well. I’ll no’ disturb ye.” Then a rogue’s smile tilted his lips. “But if ye wake in the night and wish to disturb me, slip under the tapestry and come to my chamber.”

“I might do that,” she said, wishing it could be so.

“I’ll just stay till ye’re asleep, then,” Rob said and would not be dissuaded. He pulled a chair next to her bedside to keep watch over her.

Elspeth closed her eyes, intending to feign sleep. But she was skimming the surface of slumber in truth, almost ready to sink into oblivion, when she heard the door latch lift and fall back into place. She forced an eye open.

Rob was gone.

Even though her head still pounded, she dragged herself from bed. With haste, she donned the skirt and leather bodice she’d worn when she and Rob arrived at Caisteal Dubh. She needed the broad skirt if she was to ride astride, assuming the horses hadn’t been turned out of the cave. Then she rifled through Lady MacLaren’s clothes trunk and found the warm cloak Rob had mentioned. As he described it, the cloak had a hood with a wee tassel and a fine copper brooch.

She plumped a pair of pillows and arranged them to mock a sleeping form. After she pocketed the tinderbox, she blew out the candle Rob had left burning. Then she slipped under the tapestry.

It was the first time she’d been in Rob’s chamber. The room was smaller than the one he’d assigned to her, the furnishings less ornate and more masculine. But there was a fireplace on the outer wall for heat instead of braziers. And the ceiling soared clear to the distant thatch on the top of the turret.

The massive bed looked soft and inviting.

What would Rob do if he found her snuggled between his sheets when he returned after supper? A number of wicked possibilities sprang to mind, and her body felt hot and achy at the mere thought.

This is the chamber where he bedded his wife, she realized suddenly.

The fact that he invited Elspeth to join him in this very bed must mean the madness that drove him at first was fading. His wife’s ghost troubled him less and less. Elspeth wished she could stay and love away that last bit of bitterness and anger and grief from his heart.

But the only way to show Rob she loved him was to leave as quickly as possible. It was all she could think to do to stop her vision from coming to pass.

She lifted the latch and peered into the corridor. The space was empty, since Albus was around the curve of the wall, guarding her chamber. With extreme care, she pushed the door open and padded out and down the steps, running her fingertips along the stone walls to keep her bearings, since she didn’t dare a candle.

On the ground floor, she skirted the Great Hall and stepped into the bailey. Keeping to the shadows, she worked her way around the half-timbered buildings to the chapel.

Candles burned in the nave. She picked one up and carried it with her into the sanctuary. Stone angels stared down at her from the tops of columns before the ceiling soared in a high arch. No one seemed to be about, so she hurried to the altar and slipped beneath the cloth.

I have to find a way to move the stone.

Lifting her candle, she studied the underside of the altar. Next to the hidden pulley and rope, she found a stout metal bar fastened to the underside of the altar. It seemed to be part of the construction, but the bar slid out from its fastenings easily.

Then she felt for the seam in the stone and wedged the sharp end of the bar into it. The stone lifted enough for her to slip her fingertips underneath it. She raised it another couple inches and then slid the flagstone off the opening with a grunt of effort.

And heard the sudden patter of footsteps. She pinched off the candle and froze in the darkness, ears pricked as the steps came nearer.

“There doesn’t seem to be anyone here,” someone whispered.

“I’m sure I heard something,” another voice said.

“This old chapel has many voices. Ye should hear the way the wind plays tricks on me sometimes.”

“Or mayhap the devil’s trying to spy on our meeting.”

“They do say the Prince of Darkness favors the hour of shadows. Perhaps we should speak more later. In daylight. And no’ here, ye ken,” the first voice said. “A witch knows where her enemies may be found.”

A witch? What on earth are they talking about?

“Verra wise, verra wise,” the second voice said, but something about the hissed tone made Elspeth suspect the person speaking wasn’t sincere. “I’ll see ye on the morrow, then. After the laird parleys with the Stewart and Drummond again. Then we’ll see what’s what. Good even, Father.”

“God send ye rest.”

Two pairs of footfalls moved away from the sanctuary, heading in different directions, judging by sound. Elspeth waited until silence reigned for the count of thirty before she twitched so much as an eyelash.

Then she uncoiled the rope attached to the underside of the altar and let it drop into the dark opening. She swung her legs over the edge. She could see nothing below.

Something inside her shivered, and not with cold.

’Tis only a dark space. Nothing to fear, she thought sternly as she started to lower herself. Then her grip on the rope slipped, and she slid the rest of the way down, burning her palms. She landed in a heap at the bottom. Her thigh screamed in pain, and she suspected such rough treatment would have it bleeding again.

Elspeth didn’t move for the space of several heartbeats. She strained to listen for any sound that indicated her descent was heard from above. Or attracted attention from anything that might lurk below.

Finally, she stood and felt for the torch. She’d simply dropped it after she stubbed it out when she and Rob used this secret way to enter the castle. It wasn’t there. Then she remembered that there were wall notches at the entrance to the cave. If Rob used the torch when he saw to the horses, he’d have replaced it in a holder on the wall when he was done.


Darkness-blind, she swept her fingertips over the rock walls and found the torch. After only a few tries with the flint, she managed a spark which caught, and the torch burned brightly. The smell of pitch and sulfur almost covered the mousy staleness of the underground space.

Then Elspeth retraced her way out. She crept down the long steps, mindful of the slick spots and listening to the steady drip of water through the rocks. She walked softly through the corridor with dark passages leading off at intervals. Once or twice in the corner of her eye, she thought she saw the gleam of feral eyes in the dark, but when she turned her head, they were gone.

Her heart pounded in her throat. She heard the scritching of wee claws on rock and held the torch aloft, banishing the shadows. The temptation to run snatched at her skirts, but she forced herself to keep to a steady walk. She never caught sight of any creeping thing, but she sensed movement in the shadows on all sides.

When she smelled warm dung and hay and heard the soft whicker of the horses ahead, she nearly wept with relief. Rob had been back to see to their care. There was water in their trough and fodder in the manger.

The soft starlight stealing into the opening of the cave was enough for her to see to saddle the mare, so she stubbed out the torch and replaced it in the wall notch. When she led the mare out, the gelding tried to follow, but she pushed him back and reblocked the exit.

“No, my fine lad,” she said softly. “There’s nothing for ye abroad in the world but misery. Stay with my Rob, now. He may need ye.”

As she mounted and rode in the direction of her father’s encampment, tears gathered in her eyes. She swiped them away.

He wasn’t her Rob. Not really. And he might not ever be.

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