I only six when Wee Brown Elspeth
was brought to me. Jean and Angus were as fond
of each other in their silent way as they were of me,
and they often went together with me when I was taken
out for my walks. I was kept in the open air
a great deal, and Angus would walk by the side of
my small, shaggy Shetland pony and lead him over rough
or steep places. Sheltie, the pony, was meant
for use when we wished to fare farther than a child
could walk; but I was trained to sturdy marching and
climbing even from my babyhood. Because I so
loved the moor, we nearly always rambled there.
Often we set out early in the morning, and some simple
food was carried, so that we need not return to the
castle until we chose. I would ride Sheltie and
walk by turns until we found a place I liked; then
Jean and Angus would sit down among the heather, Sheltie
would be secured, and I would wander about and play
in my own way. I do not think it was in a strange
way. I think I must have played as almost any
lonely little girl might have played. I used to
find a corner among the bushes and pretend it was
my house and that I had little friends who came to
play with me. I only remember one thing which
was not like the ordinary playing of children.
It was a habit I had of sitting quite still a long
time and listening. That was what I called it—“listening.”
I was listening to hear if the life on the moor made
any sound I could understand. I felt as if it
might, if I were very still and listened long enough.
Angus and Jean and I were not afraid
of rain and mist and change of weather. If we
had been we could have had little outdoor life.
We always carried plaids enough to keep us warm and
dry. So on this day I speak of we did not turn
back when we found ourselves in the midst of a sudden
mist. We sat down in a sheltered place and waited,
knowing it would lift in time. The sun had been
shining when we set out.
Angus and Jean were content to sit
and guard me while I amused myself. They knew
I would keep near them and run into no danger.
I was not an adventurous child. I was, in fact,
in a more than usually quiet mood that morning.
The quiet had come upon me when the mist had begun
to creep about and inclose us. I liked it.
I liked the sense of being shut in by the soft whiteness
I had so often watched from my nursery window in the
castle.
“People might be walking about,”
I said to Angus when he lifted me from Sheltie’s
back.
“We couldn’t see them. They might
be walking.”
“Nothing that would hurt ye, bairnie,”
he answered.
“No, they wouldn’t hurt
me,” I said. I had never been afraid that
anything on the moor would hurt me.
I played very little that day.
The quiet and the mist held me still. Soon I
sat down and began to “listen.” After
a while I knew that Jean and Angus were watching me,
but it did not disturb me. They often watched
me when they thought I did not know they were doing
it.
I had sat listening for nearly half
an hour when I heard the first muffled, slow trampling
of horses’ hoofs. I knew what it was even
before it drew near enough for me to be conscious
of the other sounds—the jingling of arms
and chains and the creaking of leather one notices
as troopers pass by. Armed and mounted men were
coming toward me. That was what the sounds meant;
but they seemed faint and distant, though I knew they
were really quite near. Jean and Angus did not
appear to hear them. I knew that I only heard
them because I had been listening.
Out of the mist they rode a company
of wild-looking men wearing garments such as I had
never seen before. Most of them were savage and
uncouth, and their clothes were disordered and stained
as if with hard travel and fight. I did not know—or
even ask myself—why they did not frighten
me, but they did not. Suddenly I seemed to know
that they were brave men and had been doing some brave,
hard thing. Here and there among them I caught
sight of a broken and stained sword, or a dirk with
only a hilt left. They were all pale, but their
wild faces were joyous and triumphant. I saw
it as they drew near.
The man who seemed their chieftain
was a lean giant who was darker but, under his darkness,
paler than the rest. On his forehead was a queer,
star-shaped scar. He rode a black horse, and before
him he held close with his left arm a pretty little
girl dressed in strange, rich clothes. The big
man’s hand was pressed against her breast as
he held her; but though it was a large hand, it did
not quite cover a dark-red stain on the embroideries
of her dress. Her dress was brown, and she had
brown hair and soft brown eyes like a little doe’s.
The moment I saw her I loved her.
The black horse stopped before me.
The wild troop drew up and waited behind. The
great, lean rider looked at me a moment, and then,
lifting the little girl in his long arms, bent down
and set her gently on her feet on the mossy earth
in the mist beside me. I got up to greet her,
and we stood smiling at each other. And in that
moment as we stood the black horse moved forward,
the muffled trampling began again, the wild company
swept on its way, and the white mist closed behind
it as if it had never passed.
Of course I know how strange this
will seem to people who read it, but that cannot be
helped and does not really matter. It was in that
way the thing happened, and it did not even seem strange
to me. Anything might happen on the moor—anything.
And there was the fair little girl with the eyes like
a doe’s.
I knew she had come to play with me,
and we went together to my house among the bushes
of broom and gorse and played happily. But before
we began I saw her stand and look wonderingly at the
dark-red stain on the embroideries on her childish
breast. It was as if she were asking herself
how it came there and could not understand. Then
she picked a fern and a bunch of the thick-growing
bluebells and put them in her girdle in such a way
that they hid its ugliness.
I did not really know how long she
stayed. I only knew that we were happy, and that,
though her way of playing was in some ways different
from mine, I loved it and her. Presently the mist
lifted and the sun shone, and we were deep in a wonderful
game of being hidden in a room in a castle because
something strange was going to happen which we were
not told about. She ran behind a big gorse bush
and did not come back. When I ran to look for
her she was nowhere. I could not find her, and
I went back to Jean and Angus, feeling puzzled.
“Where did she go?” I
asked them, turning my head from side to side.
They were looking at me strangely,
and both of them were pale. Jean was trembling
a little.
“Who was she, Ysobel?” she said.
“The little girl the men brought
to play with me,” I answered, still looking
about me.
“The big one on the black horse
put her down—the big one with the star
here.” I touched my forehead where the queer
scar had been.
For a minute Angus forgot himself.
Years later he told me.
“Dark Malcolm of the Glen,”
he broke out. “Wee Brown Elspeth.”
“But she is white—quite white!”
I said.
“Where did she go?”
Jean swept me in her warm, shaking
arms and hugged me close to her breast.
“She’s one of the fair
ones,” she said, kissing and patting me.
“She will come again. She’ll come
often, I dare say. But she’s gone now and
we must go, too. Get up, Angus, man. We’re
for the castle.”
If we three had been different—if
we had ever had the habit of talking and asking questions—we
might surely have asked one another questions as I
rode on Sheltie’s back, with Angus leading us.
But they asked me nothing, and I said very little
except that I once spoke of the wild-looking horsemen
and their pale, joyous faces.
“They were glad,” was all I said.
There was also one brief query from Angus.
“Did she talk to you, bairnie?” he said.
I hesitated and stared at him quite
a long time. Then I shook my head and answered,
slowly, “N-no.”
Because I realized then, for the first
time, that we had said no words at all. But I
had known what she wanted me to understand, and she
had known what I might have said to her if I had spoken—and
no words were needed. And it was better.
They took me home to the castle, and
I was given my supper and put to bed. Jean sat
by me until I fell asleep; she was obliged to sit rather
a long time, because I was so happy with my memories
of Wee Brown Elspeth and the certainty that she would
come again. It was not Jean’s words which
had made me sure. I knew.
She came many times. Through
all my childish years I knew that she would come and
play with me every few days—though I never
saw the wild troopers again or the big, lean man with
the scar. Children who play together are not
very curious about one another, and I simply accepted
her with delight. Somehow I knew that she lived
happily in a place not far away. She could come
and go, it seemed, without trouble. Sometimes
I found her—or she found me upon the moor;
and often she appeared in my nursery in the castle.
When we were together Jean Braidfute seemed to prefer
that we should be alone, and was inclined to keep the
under-nurse occupied in other parts of the wing I
lived in. I never asked her to do this, but I
was glad that it was done. Wee Elspeth was glad,
too. After our first meeting she was dressed
in soft blue or white, and the red stain was gone;
but she was always Wee Brown Elspeth with the doelike
eyes and the fair, transparent face, the very fair
little face. As I had noticed the strange, clear
pallor of the rough troopers, so I noticed that she
was curiously fair. And as I occasionally saw
other persons with the same sort of fairness, I thought
it was a purity of complexion special to some, but
not to all. I was not fair like that, and neither
was any one else I knew.