mine. I trust you will not suffer moments, which are perhaps my
last, to be embittered by his
barbarous triumph."
"He shall have the
treatment he merits," said Menteith; "let him
be
instantly" target="_blank" title="ad.立即,立刻">
instantly removed."
Sir Dugald here interposed, and spoke of Ranald's services as a
guide, and his own
pledge for his safety; but the high harsh
tones of the
outlaw drowned his voice.
"No," said he, "be rack and gibbet the word! let me wither
between heaven and earth, and gorge the hawks and eagles of Ben-
Nevis; and so shall this
haughty Knight, and this triumphant
Thane, never learn the secret I alone can
impart; a secret which
would make Ardenvohr's heart leap with joy, were he in the death
agony, and which the Earl of Menteith would purchase at the price
of his broad earldom.--Come
hither, Annot Lyle," he said, raising
himself with
unexpected strength; "fear not the sight of him to
whom thou hast clung in
infancy. Tell these proud men, who
disdain thee as the issue of mine ancient race, that thou art no
blood of ours,--no daughter of the race of the Mist, but born in
halls as
lordly, and cradled on couch as soft, as ever soothed
infancy in their proudest palaces."
"In the name of God," said Menteith, trembling with
emotion, "if
you know aught of the birth of this lady, do thy
conscience the
justice to disburden it of the secret before departing from this
world!"
"And bless my enemies with my dying breath?" said MacEagh,
looking at him malignantly.--"Such are the maxims your
priests
preach--but when, or towards whom, do you
practise them? Let me
know first the worth of my secret ere I part with it--What would
you give, Knight of Ardenvohr, to know that your superstitious
fasts have been vain, and that there still remains a descendant
of your house?--I pause for an answer--without it, I speak not
one word more.
"I could," said Sir Duncan, his voice struggling between the
emotions of doubt,
hatred, and anxiety--"I could--but that I know
thy race are like the Great Enemy, liars and murderers from the
beginning--but could it be true thou tellest me, I could almost
forgive thee the injuries thou hast done me."
"Hear it!" said Ranald; "he hath wagered deeply for a son of
Diarmid--And you, gentle Thane--the report of the camp says, that
you would purchase with life and lands the
tidings that Annot
Lyle was no daughter of proscription, but of a race noble in your
estimation as your own--Well--It is for no love I tell you--The
time has been that I would have exchanged this secret against
liberty; I am now
bartering it for what is dearer than liberty or
life.--Annot Lyle is the youngest, the sole surviving child of
the Knight of Ardenvohr, who alone was saved when all in his
halls besides was given to blood and ashes."
"Can this man speak truth?" said Annot Lyle,
scarceknowing what
she said; "or is this some strange delusion?"
"Maiden," replied Ranald, "hadst thou dwelt longer with us, thou
wouldst have better
learnt to know how to
distinguish the accents
of truth. To that Saxon lord, and to the Knight of Ardenvohr, I
will yield such proofs of what I have
spoken, that incredulity
shall stand convinced. Meantime, withdraw--I loved thine
infancy, I hate not thy youth--no eye hates the rose in its
blossom, though it groweth upon a thorn, and for thee only do I
something regret what is soon to follow. But he that would
avenge him of his foe must not reck though the
guiltless be
engaged in the ruin."
"He advises well, Annot," said Lord Menteith; "in God's name
retire! if--if there be aught in this, your meeting with Sir
Duncan must he more prepared for both your sakes."
"I will not part from my father, if I have found one!" said
Annot--"I will not part from him under circumstances so
terrible."
"And a father you shall ever find in me," murmured Sir Duncan.
"Then," said Menteith, "I will have MacEagh removed into an
adjacent
apartment, and will collect the evidence of his tale
myself. Sir Dugald Dalgetty will give me his attendance and
assistance."
"With pleasure, my lord," answered Sir Dugald.--"I will be your
confessor, or assessor--either or both. No one can be so fit,
for I had heard the whole story a month ago at Inverary castle
--but onslaughts like that of Ardenvohr
confuse each other in my
memory, which is besides occupied with matters of more
importance."
Upon
hearing this frank
declaration, which was made as they left
the
apartment with the wounded man, Lord Menteith darted upon
Dalgetty a look of
extreme anger and
disdain, to which the self-
conceit of the
worthycommander rendered him
totally insensible.
CHAPTER XXII.
I am as free as nature first made man,
Ere the base laws of
servitude began,
When wild in woods the noble
savage ran. CONQUEST OF GRANADA
The Earl of Menteith, as he had undertaken, so he proceeded to
investigate more closely the story told by Ranald of the Mist,
which was corroborated by the
examination of his two followers,
who had assisted in the
capacity of guides. These
declarations
he carefully compared with such circumstances
concerning the
destruction of his castle and family as Sir Duncan Campbell was
able to supply; and it may be
supposed he had forgotten nothing
relating to an event of such
terrific importance. It was of the
last
consequence to prove that this was no
invention of the
outlaw's, for the purpose of passing an impostor as the child and
heiress of Ardenvohr.
Perhaps Menteith, so much interested in believing the tale, was
not
altogether the fittest person to be intrusted with the
investigation of its truth; but the
examinations of the Children
of the Mist were simple,
accurate, and in all respects consistent
with each other. A personal mark was referred to, which was
known to have been borne by the
infant child of Sir Duncan, and
which appeared upon the left shoulder of Annot Lyle. It was also
well remembered, that when the
miserable relics of the other
children had been collected, those of the
infant had
nowhere been
found. Other circumstances of evidence, which it is unnecessary
to quote, brought the fullest
conviction not only to Menteith,
but to the unprejudiced mind of Montrose, that in Annot Lyle, an
humble
dependant,
distinguished only by beauty and
talent, they
were in future to respect the heiress of Ardenvohr.
While Menteith hastened to
communicate the result of these
enquiries to the persons most interested, the
outlaw demanded to
speak with his grandchild, whom he usually called his son. "He
would be found," he said, "in the outer
apartment, in which he
himself had been
originally deposited."
Accordingly, the young
savage, after a close search, was found
lurking in a corner, coiled up among some
rotten straw, and
brought to his grandsire.
"Kenneth," said the old
outlaw, "hear the last words of the sire
of thy father. A Saxon soldier, and Allan of the Red-hand, left
this camp within these few hours, to travel to the country to
Caberfae. Pursue them as the bloodhound
pursues the hurt deer
--swim the lake-climb the mountain--thread the forest--tarry not
until you join them;" and then the
countenance of the lad
darkened as his
grandfather spoke, and he laid his hand upon a
knife which stuck in the thong of leather that confined his
scanty plaid. "No!" said the old man; "it is not by thy hand he
must fall. They will ask the news from the camp--say to them
that Annot Lyle of the Harp is discovered to be the daughter of
Duncan of Ardenvohr; that the Thane of Menteith is to wed her
before the
priest; and that you are sent to bid guests to the
bridal. Tarry not their answer, but
vanish like the lightning