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"Ye'll get yerself
killed, riding in the open as ye are."
"I'm not in the mood to take the long way
around." Dylan's flush of gratitude was wearing thin with the
nagging. The Irish faerie was getting on his nerves once again, the
way she had for the entire two years he'd been stuck in the 18th
century.
It was only a day since the defeat at
Sheriffmuir, but now he wanted to put the uprising behind him, the
same way nearly the rest of the stripped and demoralized Jacobite
army was doing that day. Never mind he was riding an English cavalry
horse, and never mind that the countryside was crawling with
Hanoverians looking for rebels, his only wish now was to reach
Edinburgh and find Cait. And his son. He continued along the trail
that threaded its way among wooded hills, and the horse's hooves
thumped the ground with a steady beat.
"Ye willnae get there at all if George's men
find you with this horse." Sinann Eire sat on the rump of his stolen
horse, her thin legs stretched across it and her feet dangling. One
toe played with the cropped tail, and the horse snorted at the
indignity of it. She leaned against Dylan's back, and he pressed
back against her to compensate.
The pre-winter frost crusted the ground and
bit his nose. He huddled into the plaid he wrapped around himself,
wishing he'd also been able to liberate his coat from those thieving
English soldiers. Keeping his blue cap would have been nice, too,
but it was somewhere back on the battlefield, probably trampled into
the mud or taken by one of King George's men for a
trophy.
"Don't worry, Tink, I'm going to sell it and
we'll be rid of the horse." He'd already dumped the saddle and
bright red blanket into a gorse thicket not far from Dunblane. "But
I'll sell it in Edinburgh where, firstly, I'll have a shot at being
just another face in the crowd and, secondly, I'll also have a shot
at getting more than a Scottish threepence for it."
"For a certainty, laddie, it's but another
face ye'll be in that filthy kilt ye've got on."
Dylan urged the animal into a trot just to
bounce Sinann from her seat and shut her up. The ends of the piece
of cloth he'd tied around his cut arm for a bandage fluttered as he
rode.
Tossed into the air, she flew to catch up and,
once Dylan had settled back into a walk, stood behind him on the
horse's back. She squatted, held his shoulders for balance, and said
into his ear, "A bit rough, aren't ye, laddie? Who was it saved yer
life and returned ye to your own time when you were mortally
wounded?" Dylan tugged his plaid higher on his neck and declined to
reply, but she continued, "And who was it sent you back to the
battle once you were all stitched together again by your wondrous
future surgeons?"
"Will. You will send me back from the future.
November, 2000. Remember that. You haven't done it yet." His fingers
went to the fresh scar just below his ribcage where he'd lost a
kidney and his spleen after being run through by an English cavalry
sword. Sinann had returned him to his own time, where his life was
saved by modern surgery after six weeks of recovery, then she
returned him to the moment of his near death. Both the entrance and
exit wounds still ached. At each step of the horse's gait, his
entire left side throbbed with a dull thud.
"Be that as it may, it would be well for ye to
listen to me. What will ye do once ye're in Edinburgh? I suppose
when you find Ramsay's house ye'll simply march right in and take
her away from him, and he'll be saying, Och, but I dinnae know! By
all means, take her and be happy, the both of ye!"
Dylan sighed. "I'm crazy, not stupid, Tink.
Not that I don't think she would come with me, but I know she's
married. I know she can't leave him without causing a big enough
stink to make us both miserable for the rest of whatever." His voice
took on a thick sarcasm, "I even know that as an outlaw I'm more of
a liability than protection to her and the boy. I'm not going to let
them get hurt."
"They will if you dinnae leave her
there."
Dylan shook his head. "No way. You heard him
last summer. He beats her, and thinks it's his right. He thinks she
cheated him."
"And did she not? She went to him already with
child. I daresay that could be called cheating."
"Whose side are you on,
anyway?"
Sinann's voice took on an irritating tone of
anticipated triumph. "Deny it. I'm listening, lad."
Anger rose, warming his cheeks against the
frosty air. "It was her father who deceived Ramsay, not her. In a
business deal, for God's sake. He made her marry that Whig pansy to
cover his political ass. Furthermore, I daresay the only reason
Ramsay married her was to cover his own butt in case the Jacobites
won and James took the throne. Which, for that, I could have saved
him the trouble and told him the cause was doomed. Which means,
Tinkerbell, now that the Jacobites have lost for the time being,
he'll treat her worse than ever. For all I know about that
sleazebag, he might find a way to get rid of her so he can marry
someone else. For all either of us know, her life might be in danger
right now. Besides, it wasn't her fault. She was supposed to marry
me."
"You were arrested."
"I didn't do it."
"The Sassunach Major surely does not care
whether ye did or dinnae, as eager as he was to cut you to ribbons
with a whip in spite of knowing ye were innocent. Ye cannae win this
one, Dylan Matheson. Ye're a marked man as long as George of Hanover
has the throne."
Dylan's jaw clenched. "I don't want to hear
any more talk about what happened. It's done, and what I want now is
to see Cait and Ciaran. That's all I want right now, and I'll figure
out the rest later. I've got to see my son." Dylan's gut tightened,
and he pressed the heel of his hand to the sore muscles. "He's damn
near a year old, and I've never seen him. I just want to see my
son." He tried to picture the boy, but of course had no idea what he
looked like. Was he happy? Healthy? How was he affected by Ramsay's
hatred for him? Was he being taught Ramsay was his
father?
Sinann slipped down behind him to straddle the
horse and fell silent, her face pressed to his back. Dylan rode on,
to the thudding of hoof beats on the trail and the jingle of the bit
as the horse fidgeted it in its mouth.
After a while, she lifted her head and began
fiddling with something behind Dylan. He glanced back, and found her
untying a string she'd worn around her wrist for over a year. It was
a red braid that reminded him of the friendship bracelets he
sometimes had seen on kids in his kung fu classes back home. This
was a long one and, tied around Sinann's tiny wrist, the ends
dangled several inches. She said, "Give me your arm."
"Why? What's that, more of the
craft?"
"Aye. Give me your hand. It's a talisman, for
strength."
Dylan figured he could use as much of that as
he could get, so he reached back to let her tie the string around
his left wrist. Even though his wrist was much larger than hers, the
ends dangled some and lifted in the cold wind as he rode. Several
knots had been tied along it, and he counted seven of them. He'd
learned enough of the craft to know that seven was a magic number.
"You made this?"
"Aye. I made it for you, and have carried it a
long while. It's time you carried it yourself."
"Your powers being wonky and all, you're sure
it works?"
There was a short hesitation, then she said,
"Aye. It'll work. It must." Then she said, "Ye'll be needing to
learn more of the craft, you know."
"Yeah." He knew that. She'd already taught him
some things, and he'd come to realize the advantage of knowing
useful tricks. "What's on your mind now?"
"Astrology."
Dylan blurted a bark of a laugh. "Been there,
done that."
"Ye dinnae say?"
"Well, enough to know that I'm a Taurus/Gemini
cusp, born on May 22, 1970." He took a deep breath and recited in a
singsong voice, "I'm loyal, a lover of beauty, and I'm somewhat
ambidextrous, which means that though I'm right-handed I can fight
with both hands. That's all true, but so what. Astrology's a parlor
game. Nothing really useful. Take it from one who knows, knowing the
future is completely overrated. And how come a maiden of the Tuatha
De Danann knows that stuff, anyway?"
"What, ye think I've lived in a cave all my
life? Astrology, in fact, is often used by priests hereabouts, and
dinnae think it hasnae been a bone of contention for the past few
centuries. I, myself, have been familiar with the teachings since
the coming of the priests."
Dylan chuckled, "You can believe in the
influence of planets, but you don't believe in God?"
"Och, I wouldnae say that, now. I've been
around quite long enough to know I dinnae know
everything."
"Which means...?"
"Which means I dinnae not believe in your
Yahweh." Dylan's eyebrows raised, and he turned to stare at her, but
she gave his chin a shove to make him face front. "Ye needn't look
at me like I've gone daft. I'm a great deal older than yourself, and
know a great deal more."
"Yeah, like you knew the uprising would
fail."
"Och!" She was silent, sulking, for a few
minutes. Dylan's mind drifted to Cait, pulling together a picture of
her in his memory. Then Sinann said, "What time of day were ye
born?"
"Huh?" Dylan returned to the discussion
reluctantly.
"What time of day?"
His eyes narrowed as he tried to remember his
birth certificate. "Um...5:30 a.m., I think. Something like that.
Central Daylight Savings Time. Six hours earlier than
here."
There was only a moment's pause, then, "Taurus
rising. Ye're far more than just loyal, laddie. Ye're the one to
stand by your guns and your people until death."
Dylan grunted. "You didn't need to know my
chart to figure that. I've come close enough to death more than
once. He shrugged one shoulder and felt one of the scars on his back
tighten."
"Nevertheless, with a nativity such as yours,
ye're in great danger this day. I beg you to get bloody hell off
this track. Please. For the night, in any case."
Dylan pulled up his horse and turned to peer
at Sinann's face. Begging? She was serious. He chewed on the inside
corner of his mouth and then sighed. What the heck, the sun was
setting and the bitter night cold would be on them soon. "All
right." He threw a leg over the horse's neck and slid to the ground,
then drew the animal off the trail and into the loamy forest. Sinann
flew behind, scattering leaves over the track they made. He went
downhill to find a burn trickling and falling over rocks among reeds
and bracken ferns, then followed that to find a dry, level spot to
stop for the night.
He didn't dare light a fire, and ate the last
of his army ration of oatmeal cold from his hand, wetted by water
from the burn and mashed into sticky globs he then picked out with
his fingers. Drammach, it was called, and he'd eaten a lot of it
over the past year. Then he washed his hands and face in the burn.
Once the horse was hidden and hobbled in a stand of birches, he lay
in the dirt and rolled into his plaid for sleep. Sinann perched on
the rump of the horse and folded her wings around
herself.
He went unconscious quickly, a habit he'd
developed soon after coming to this century. The ability to sleep on
demand while cold and wet sometimes meant the difference between
survival and death, for a fuzzy head from lack of sleep could weaken
a man before his enemies.
Dylan didn't know how long he'd slept, but the
pain of awakening in a hurry told him it wasn't long before he was
disturbed. There had been a noise, he would swear it, but though he
strained to hear he couldn't tell what it had been. Dylan peered
into the darkness.
The wind made the trees sigh, the sound like
voices of the spirits. Branches reached out to each other then
retreated, the tall pines in conference over Dylan's resting place.
Then, carried on the wind, he heard it: a distant jingling sound. He
tensed as it approached, and discerned the sound of horses' bridles
on the trail above.
As they approached, hoof beats grew louder.
Soldiers? Probably. It didn't matter much, since just about everyone
this side of Glen Dochart was on the lookout for scattered
Jacobites. He glanced up at Sinann, who was alert in the moonlight,
listening. There were no voices among the riders, which struck Dylan
as strange. In fact, soldiers on the trail after dark was also very
weird. He and Sinann waited as the large party passed above. When
the voices and hoofbeats receded, Dylan whispered to Sinann, "How
did you know?"
She snorted, "Surely even you have lived long
enough to know you dinnae know everything, lad."
******
The next morning Dylan shook frost and dirt
from his hair as he rose from the ground and draped his plaid around
himself. It was a struggle to not shiver as he arranged his plaid
over his shoulder and tucked it into his belt. He rubbed his face to
restore the circulation to his nose, for a moment afraid the
numbness might be frostbite. But soon feeling returned, and he began
to scratch his itchy beard stubble. He debated letting it grow, but
decided to shave in the cold burn as he remembered there were still
English soldiers out to arrest him who knew his face as bearded. The
skill of shaving with his sgian dubh was like riding a bicycle, and
he quickly dispatched the stubble in spite of having no fire and no
hot water.
Down the trail a bit, he came upon a harvested
oat field between two hills and let his mount graze on the stubble.
He pulled his large dirk from the scabbard strapped to his right
legging. He'd named the dirk Brigid when he'd consecrated her by
fire years ago, after a pagan goddess turned Catholic saint. He spun
her in the air and caught her by the hilt, then began to warm up
with some light stretching. Once he was loosened, he eased into a
formal kung fu exercise. Wielding Brigid, he made wide swaths in the
air, and worked to hone his focus till he sweated in spite of the
cold. It was good to stretch, after weeks of
inactivity.
It was a struggle to clear his mind and focus.
His thoughts kept drifting to Cait, causing him to tense up. He
shook his head and blinked, determined to think only of the exercise
at hand. Slowly the
tension drained from him and his mind calmed.
Martial art and swordsmanship were nearly
lifelong interests that had led to his vocation back home as an
instructor of kung fu and European fencing, and there had been a
time when he was as skilled a fighter as anyone he knew. But the
wound and surgery had wrecked his stamina. Eighteenth century
Scotland wasn't a place where the average man could coddle himself
and live. So, while his empty stomach grumbled and the November air
found its way under his kilt and into his sark, he stretched the
damaged muscles of his side and back until they ached and sweat
trickled from his hair down his shaven jaw. Then, properly warmed
and loosened, he mounted the cavalry horse and went on his way. His
left hand absently pressed to his side as if still trying to hold in
his guts, the way it had the day he was wounded.
It was not long at all that morning before he
and Sinann emerged from a patch of forest and caught sight of
Edinburgh. In the distance, across open, rolling ground, the castle
was visible, perched on a rock just apart from a cluster of
buildings that huddled on the length of that rock. Dylan cursed the
lack of cover.
Sinann's voice was without sympathy. "Show me
a town or village in this entire kingdom to be approached by stealth
on horseback in daylight. Ye'll need to get rid of this horse,
lad."
"No, I'm going to bluff it." He urged his
mount forward again. Stray snowflakes began to drift by in the wind:
big, fluffy ones that didn't stick, but they'd be followed by others
that would.
Sinann muttered something in Gaelic he didn't
quite catch, and buried her face against his back.
Dylan rode at a walk, as if he didn't give a
damn who saw him. The road was not deserted, and he encountered
several people who peered at the horse and at the costly double bit
in its mouth. As he neared town and the castle grew larger in the
distance, there were one or two thatched stone houses to be seen
along the road and Sinann urged him to try selling the horse at one
of those. He didn't reply, lest anyone along the road think he was
talking to himself, and rode on. By mid-morning they were on the
street that circled to the south of the castle.
The hill ended in cliffs, and the stone
buildings of the castle seemed to grow from it like stalagmites. Awe
struck him as he rode through the Grassmarket. He realized this
place had once been the abode of Robert the Bruce and the birthplace
of King James VI and I. Much of the history he'd read of Scotland
had taken place within those walls. Then he circled the hill to
where the battery of cannon covered the approach to the portcullis
on the northeast side. Funny, it didn't look quite right to him.
He'd seen photos, and would swear he'd seen ones taken from this
side, but it didn't seem right.
Then it clicked. The entire Esplanade
was...different. The approach was nothing more than a dirt track
flanked by low heather and thistles. The paved Esplanade and the
portcullis bearing statues of William Wallace and Robert the Bruce
hadn't been built yet.
Dylan gawked like a tourist, until he spotted
a Redcoat on guard at the old portcullis to the north of the
battery. More Redcoats rode toward the castle along the track on the
hill above him, and he quickly looked away to mind his own business.
He should have known there would be Redcoats: since the construction
of Holyrood Palace at the other end of the city, the castle was no
longer a Royal Residence. In Hanoverian-occupied Edinburgh it was
now being used to garrison English soldiers.
Soon Dylan was able to duck among the tall
buildings of the city, climbing the rock on which it stood, and
Dylan's mind slipped away from the soldiers. Cait was here.
Somewhere in this mess of crowded, stinking stone and wood was the
house where she lived, and perhaps she was thinking of
him.
The wynde by which he reached the High Street
was steep and crooked, and the climb was relentless until they
crested the long, narrow summit. To the left the castle was just
visible between tall stone buildings, and on down to the right the
main road sloped gradually to the tail of Edinburgh's rock. Shops
and tenement houses, all seemed to lean on each other for support,
some with turrets reaching out over the street for whatever space
could be had.
The smell was appalling. Dylan had thought his
time in this century had taught him to not be bothered by stench,
but here the street itself was a sewer that made his eyes water from
ammonia and methane. Along the side of the street a cart full of the
stinking mud stood by while a woman with her skirts tied up between
her legs shoveled muck from the ground. Probably she would sell it
for fertilizer out in the countryside, and thank God for that or
else the city must be buried in excrement. He muttered to Sinann,
"I'm not so sure any more I want to sell the horse. I'll have to
walk in that."
"Ye're a fool if ye think a cell in a tolbooth
would smell prettier."
Dylan grunted and began looking for a sign
that might indicate a buyer of horses. By the standards of
eighteenth century Scotland, Edinburgh was a big place, but it still
didn't take long to find a stable. Several were tucked into the foot
of the hill near Cowgate. Dylan was able to sell the horse for
fifteen shillings in good, cold, English cash.
"Ye could have gotten an entire pound, at
least," said Sinann who hovered over the filthy street so as not to
walk in it. Before answering, Dylan stopped at the window of a
baker's shop and bought a wheaten loaf to eat, half of which he
wolfed in two bites. It was warm and delicious, heaven after having
eaten nothing but two handfuls of oatmeal in two days. He moved on,
wending his way between pedestrians and riders, back up a narrow
wynde to High Street.
When he swallowed, he finally replied to
Sinann, "No, I couldn't have gotten an entire pound. The man guessed
the horse was stolen. Which is good, since he'll know not to let it
be seen by those who would care."
"And if he turns you in?"
Dylan peered at Sinann, "Where's the profit in
that? They'd confiscate his horse and he'd be out fifteen shillings.
No, if he was going to do that, he would have refused to
buy."
"Probably."
He sighed and looked around at the crowds,
"Yeah, well, if they find me they find me. Meanwhile, I've got to
find Ramsay."
"You could ask after him."
He chuckled. "What, just go up to someone and
say, Pardon me, but I'm a fugitive Jacobite and former raider for
Rob Roy, and though I'm wanted by the Crown for treason and murder
I'm really a nice guy and I swear I didn't do those horrible things
they say I did-well, not all of them anyway-and I'm looking for the
man who married my sweetheart so I can kill him. Would you care to
help me out here?"
Sinann perked up. "Ye're set to kill him,
then?"
"I would have done it already if I
was."
"You dinnae do it because I stopped
you."
Dylan opened his mouth for a stinging reply,
but a rough, young voice piped up from behind Dylan, "Are ye out to
kill someone? With that there sword? Can I watch?"
Dylan spun to find a runny-nosed boy in a
raggedy coat, with mud on his legs almost reaching the hems of his
breeches, a perfect Dickensian picture a century before Charles
Dickens would be born. The coat was old, faded red and of a man's
size in the military style. Even without insignia or other
brick-a-brack, Dylan figured it must have been stolen off a dead
soldier. He shook his head. "I was just kid...uh,
joking.
Sinann said, "Ask the lad. He'll know where to
find Ramsay."
Dylan said to the boy, "Can you help me find
someone? He promised me a job, and so I want to work for
him."
The kid frowned, not fooled. Sinann said,
"Dinnae lie."
Dylan glanced at Sinann, then back to the boy.
"No, really. I want to work for him." He addressed the boy, but his
words were meant for both him and the faerie who was not visible to
anyone but himself. "You know, get to learn all the ins and outs of
his business. Really be indispensable to him. Maybe even get to know
his family." He cut a glance at Sinann.
Understanding lit her eyes, but the boy was
still mystified. He gave a gurgling sniff that did nothing for the
glob of green snot under his nose. "All right, sir, if you say so,
sir. Where is it ye need to get to?"
"I need to find the offices of a merchant
named Connor Ramsay."
"Right. A thruppence for it." Dylan fished in
his purse and handed the boy a silver coin. "This way." The boy was
off like a shot, hurrying through the crowded High Street. He ducked
under the head of a horse pulling a cart, and Dylan had to wait for
the cartload of leather goods to pass by before he could cross.
Sinann fluttering after, he caught up at the next block down the
street and followed the boy through a narrow archway and down a
steep wynde slippery with mud of suspicious origin. The weak
northern sun nearly disappeared this deep among the towering stone
buildings, and moss grew in thick patches over everything. The path
leveled out at a tiny close, planted with rose bushes and surrounded
on all sides by wrought iron. The boy pointed to a narrow wooden
door on which was mounted an iron plaque that said in raised
lettering, "Ramsay, Ltd."
Dylan thanked him and the guide was about to
dash off, but Dylan said, "Wait. Here." Another threepence piece was
pressed into the boy's grubby hand. "You never saw me." The boy
nodded eagerly, but as he tried to dash off again Dylan grabbed his
arm. "Be assured I have friends, madmen from the Highlands, who will
hold you to that." This time the boy's eyes darkened and there was a
pause before he gave a heavy, rolling sniff and nodded slowly. Then
Dylan let him scurry back up the wynde.
He then faced the door, ran his fingers
through his shaggy hair to get it off his face, and told
Sinann, "Well, Tink, here goes nothing."
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