Tuesday, 24 October 2017

CHAPTER 1: TRIANGLE OF LOVE

CHAPTER 1: TRIANGLE OF LOVE


Copyright: Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, Edinburgh, October 2017


                                                                             


I am Anna, the White Witch of the Esk Burn, an interpreter of souls for the omniscient Goddess Asherah who watches us from the celestial Sea of Yam as if we were the cells of an infinitely astute, ever expanding brain.
The white witches are women of learning who date, in their various guises, to pre-Babylonian antiquity. We worship nature, and collect herbs and spices to cure the animals, the birds, and the people. Many Christians persecute us and say wicked lies about us, because they want to control mankind while abusing nature.
I bring you a comic tragedy of a saga which focuses on the wandering Scottish knight, Sir Richard de Liddell, a scatterbrained oracle of Christendom. It is about the kaleidoscope of enigmatic souls who entered hither and thither into the contrasting phases of Richard's life, which moved between the high places and the deep depths, and about the manner in which his fortunes were affected by divinely inspired chance in ways that will make your hair bristle in horrence.
The thoughts and emotions expressed between people, animals and plants influence the workings of the entire world. I will describe sensitive human feelings in their full diversity and as Asherah perceives them to be, rather than as the controlling mortal forces wish us to suppose them to be. Everything I recount will be according to Asherah's unique perceptions, in particular of the thoughts of all mortals as they reflect on each other and catalyse humankind and the wisdom of the gods above.
But beware, ye citizens of the future, of a dire warning from the Vates themselves! Do not feel tempted to visit the scant remains of the House on the Holy Trinity on Scotland's Soutra Hill under any circumstances. Why not? Because the black eschar dust which causes the dreaded sheep sweat is still mixed in the soil. The black eschar dust which killed so many patients in the great medical hospital on the Soutra remains there until eternity, waiting to destroy any poor soul who might besmirch his hands with it.

                                                                                      

A rabbi wrapped in a shabby tallit was approached by a Scottish knight whilst he stumbled up the cobbled Canongate, east of fair Embro and of the castle high on the extinct volcano.
Shalom to you, my Rabbi,” said Sir Richard de Liddell, with a polite bow.
Shalom to you, my Rabbi and teacher,” came the encouraging reply.
Foos yer doos [How're you doing], Father?” asked Sir Richard, fondling his crucifix.
Aye peckin, aye peckin. I'm here visiting from Dene.”
That's a pretty village!”
It flows upon the Water of Leith while the city of Embro flows up and beyond. Is there any way I can be of help?”
Prithee! There is. Please excuse my presumption, Father, but could you possibly explain why there are so few Jews in Scotland?”
I don't rightly know, my son,” responded the rabbi, rubbing his greying beard. “For myself, I was expelled from Paris in 1396 by King Charles's infamous edict. My cousin was expelled from Rouen as a tiny girl. Those here were, methinks, already here, though a stone-cutter arrived from La Rochelle during the purge of 1291.”
And have the Jews been well treated by we Scots?”
Better than by the English, who mistreated even our followers of Ariel's New Way. My great great grandfather was burnt in Durham for his semantics.”
How terrible!” exclaimed Sir Richard. “But prithee! What is this New Way of Jerusalem?”
It is the earliest form of Christianity, which the Children of Israel created as part of their own religion, my son. During the first century A.D., a group of Jewish activists, including Matthew the Tax Collector, Mark the Interpreter, and Luke the Physician, composed liturgies that greatly enlarged upon the mortal life of the Prophet Jesus. They added many wise sayings, numerous accounts of miracles and magical healings, and some grim descriptions of the end of the world.”
How wise of them! Those accounts should never have been omitted in the first place.”
I suppose not,” the rabbi tactfully replied, with a sigh. “The liturgies were read out loud on each weekly Sabbath throughout the year in many of our synagogues, and were much later incorporated into Christianity and published in three Gospels in your New Testament.”
Matthew, Mark, and Luke! I'm sure that the Pharisees hated those activists.”
We think in similar terms, my son. Many Pharisees believed that the followers of Ariel's New Way were too progressive in the way they challenged the traditional values on behalf of the poor, sick, and vulnerable. That created a debate within Judaism itself.”
Sir Richard flicked his eyebrows. “But within two or three centuries, many progressive early Christian bishops were preaching the essential importance of nurturing the poor and hungry, and of frowning upon the wealth mongers who exploit them.”
That is true indeed,” agreed the rabbi. “Basil of Caesarea was a shining light.”
Sir Richard paused for a few seconds, and stared down the Canongate towards Holyrood Palace.
Prithee, my dear learned Rabbi,” he inquired, as tactfully as he could, “if Jewish people started our religion in this superb way, then why are they disliked by so many Christians who should know better?”
That's because many people want to blame us for their ills, my son,” the rabbi wearily replied. “It helps them to excuse their perceived lack of success.”
That's very unfair,” said the insightful knight,” particularly as you are the chosen people of Almighty God.”
We, as a proud diaspora, were chosen to bring peace and harmony to this troublesome world. Maybe Gaulle was our greatest achievement, until the Caesars destroyed everything.”
But is there such thing as peaceful Kingdom, Holy Father?”
The rabbi's eyes glistened for fully several seconds, and a tear rolled down his cheek.
You speak with the wisdom of the Prophets, child of Bethlehem,” he murmured. “We should, at the very least, bear the peaceful Kingdom in mind.”
I would like to meet more Jews like you,” said Sir Richard. “Methinks they will influence my life for the better.”
If you marry a Jewish girl, then your children will be Jews.”
But I am, to my good fortune, married to my darling Ingibiorg from Orkney.”
May she bear fruit, my son, and your seed multiply and prosper. And now I must hurry. We are about to bury Jacob on his chosen ground.”
May he rise in glory!”
Maybe he will just stare at the stars.”
[Author's Notes: Ariel is an alternative name for Jerusalem (see Isaiah 29,1-8). For a detailed discussion of the first century Jewish liturgies which underpin the Synoptic Gospels, see Biblical Literalism: A Gentile Heresy by John Shelby Spong (Harper Collins, 2016).]
                                                                            

Sir Richard de Liddell adored his wife the Lady Ingibiorg who he'd met outside St. Magnus Cathedral in Kirkwall on Orkney during the Spring of 1430. Ever since that first, heavenly stroll around the ancient stones of the Ring of Brodgar, he'd adored the way she walked, the way she talked, and the way she stalked through the gardens of Óengus House hunting the mice, grass-snakes and ferrets.
Sir Richard cherished his French squire Cedric de Porthos who he met while visiting the de Liddell family vineyard in the Algarve in 1434. He cherished the way Cedric rode, the way he strode, and the way he recited rich ballads from his childhood in the Pyrenees.
Sir Richard and Lady Ingibiorg were both descended from Earl Finn Árnason of Norway; Richard's ancestors included Queen Ingibiorg of Scotland, and the similarly ill-fated FitzDuncan line which descended from the Scottish kings. His issue, when and if it was forthcoming, would therefore be of the Holy Bloodline of Mary Magdalene and Christ themselves.
Lady Ingibiorg loved her husband Sir Richard for his manliness, his prowess, and his dedication to the Scottish realm. She cherished Cedric for his impertinence, his dedication to his friendships, and the way he leapt feet-first off his sleek pony onto her doorstep.
Cedric loved Lady Ingibiorg for her kindness, her beauty, and her willingness to cook cakes and dainty pastries to tempt his palate and his mind. He adored Sir Richard for everything he was.
The omniscient Asherah enjoyed reclining on her raft on the Sea of Yam with her pet rabbit Noah while observing the thoughts and emotions which interplayed between the three lovers in Edinburgh. So intense was their triangle of love: a love which transcended all human desire, a love of which all the ancient gods would've been proud.
During the Summer of 1436, the passions became more intense, and the Roman goddesses banqueting on their gilded couches held their breath, and laid their bets.
'Twas during the early hours of St. Achilleus's Day during September 1436 that Sir Richard set off southwards astride his battle horse for the evocative slopes of the Soutra Hill, from his higgledy-piggledy, curiously designed house on Queen Maud Walk in fair Embro. Sir Richard was accompanied by his squire Cedric de Porthos who was riding his new pony with the eagerness of precocious youth. Cedric was modestly dressed in a woollen tunic, like many a Scottish yeoman, and with hose which stretched half-way below his knobbly knees.
Educated at the Grammar School of the Church of Edinburgh and the University of St. Andrew's, and now aged twenty-six, sandy-haired Richard was becoming a touch more brawny and thickset, though he well remembered the days when he was as lithe and clean-limbed as black-haired Cedric.
Richard was such a prankster in those Halcyon days. He once caused an almighty radge when he decked a worthy wool merchant's clothes line with silk petticoats and pretty lace knickers. The merchant's wife and all the other ladies rioted down the Canongate.
Sir Richard's wife the Lady Ingibiorg, the fulsome, youngest daughter of the Earl of Stromness, blew kisses at both of the riders from the pentagonal window above the copper-plated porch-way, took another sip of her well-heated honey mead, buttoned up her purple petticoat, and smiled at Fergus the Ferret who was performing a forwards roll on her Persian rug.
Lady Ingibiorg had lost a daughter in childbirth and a son in the womb. Now she was trying intensely hard for a healthy bairn by the following summer. That prospect appealed greatly to her good husband.
Cedric grinned like a Tiree fold-cat, his ears bending forwards like an owl's, and the seven-horned gargoyle on the parapet girned toothlessly back. As a Celt from ancient Bayonne, close to the Pyrenees in southern Aquitaine, he was well versed in matters of the heart.
I know where my love's invested, he thought. We have our own special trinity.
Two peacocks for the price of one, fantasised Lady Ingibiorg. I'll try to dream up a special way of celebrating their return. Maybe I'll conjure up a Greco-Scythian festival of sorts, involving all sorts of Roman sports.
We'll spend the night on the Soutra,” announced Sir Richard, flapping his hands at the murky clouds, “but we'll return by noon the morrow to enjoy your fine cookery. We could play a game of Royal Court Trickery in the evening.”
God bless ye pious man of God!” cried his good wife, cocking a snook. “I'll take the role of the princess of the faeries and you can be Prince Cud.”
He resembles a cow. I'd prefer to be King Cole, and Cedric can be Prince Fuming,”
God has indeed poured blessings upon me, realised Sir Richard. Ingibiorg is my warrior princess, such a loving wife, and Cedric is the Adonis of my dreams. I love him like Plato admired his pupil Aristotle. But was that an apparition which I saw in my bedchamber the other night? And would I really care if Cedric was a Lancelot to my Guinevere? Zooterkins!
A few minutes after her husband's and his squire's jovial departure, Lady Ingibiorg rummaged in her closet and found her small marble statuette of The Three Goddesses Entwined hidden under a pile of woolly blankets. She put the statuette on the rug in her boudoir, nestled on the couch with her favourite set of beads, and relaxed.
Why are my tastes so diverse? wondered the soulful Ingibiorg. Maybe it's because of the traumas of my childhood which were precursed in Isaiah's Jerusalem, and Gomorrah afore. How cruel my tormentor was! However, methinks it's really because I'm an all nurturing Mother Goddess in disguise.
As he rode into the countryside with his jolly squire, Sir Richard thought about his blood relatives, and wiped his brow in despair.
As the younger brother of the Lord of Roslands, Sir Richard occasionally visited the extensive family estate outside Duns in Berwickshire, but his relationship with his brother had recently become unduly strained.
The irritating lord was one of the many Scottish nobles who'd schemed and plotted against the king.
Moreover, Richard's tenure of Malbork House, a sprawling Teutonic mansion in Bothans, East Lothian, within an arrow's shot of Yester Castle, where he was born, and once owned by the de Giffards of Yester, was now in dispute. His father had left the thousand-year lease of the mansion to Richard in his will, along with ownership of Óengus House in Edinburgh, and the St. Clotilde herb garden which lay in the shadows of Calton Hill. However, the Lord of Roslands discovered a quirk in an ancient Celtic law of inheritance which, he claimed, gave him the rights to all the family property in the vicinity of the Lammermuirs.
The rude and crude behaviour of the lord's yowling eleven year old son Lulach also got on Sir Richard's wick.
Sir Richard realised that he was, by and large, highly esteemed in Edinburgh. As a Knight of the Sacred Orb of Jerusalem, he'd sided with the mean-spirited James the First during the King's continuing struggle against the rebellious nobles, and helped him to arrest the nefarious Baron of Strontian and to hang him high on the tall white poles at Ballachulish.
Sir Richard took pride in the influence he exerted around Scotland as a Privy Councillor, though he at times caused antagonism among peasants and landowners alike. As one of the seven Judges of the Royal Court, he'd condemned many a witch and more than a few wizards to burn at the stake.
Sir Richard knew that the vengeful King James' credibility had been badly damaged during August 1436 by his abject failure to take Roxburghe Castle (from which the rapacious English had pillaged the surrounding countryside, and put Lauder, Selkirk and Jedburghe to the torch), thus leaving the English in control to the south of the Tweed. That scenario left Sir Richard somewhat in limbo and he'd decided to leave his lance and battleaxe in his dovecot until they might once again serve godly purpose.

                                                                                  

The rising sun was spreading its refreshing rays over Blackford Pond when the early morning riders entered the Hermitage of Braid. When they reached the Braid Burn, a bare-breasted girl with the appearance of a ragamuffin leapt from the branch of a Skye flora ash tree and puffed her chest.

                                                                          


A tonic of beauty potion for a groat, good Masters,” she did offer. “My virtues for a penny.”
Are you a witch?” asked Sir Richard, caustically.
Not yet, Sire,” replied the girl, furtively. “I'm Adaira McTaggart. I'm an orphan from Bruchton, where my parents died starving in the village tollbooth. I'm trying to redeem my soul among the wood nymphs.”
You may sleep in my dovecot tonight then,” said Sir Richard, with a saucy grin. “Present thyself to my wife, the Lady Ingibiorg de Liddell at Óengus House before the clock strikes nine. She enjoys an occasional tumble on her feather couch with a buxom lass. And here's a groat for your potion.”
Thank you, kind Sire, and I admire your God-given penchants too. I'll nurture you in your dotage, while you piddle in your breeks and slaver in your mouth.”
Gad's budlikins! A mottle-head of hedgehog spines for your cheek!”
They would be well taken. And a healing potion for your squire's red flush, perchance?”
That won't be necessary,” said Cedric, blushing all over, “but here's two pennies for your virtues, my fine lady.”
May a thousand blessings rain upon your head, kind youth. Did God endow you well? A frolic in the burn, perchance?”
Cedric leapt gleefully from his pony, and threw off his breeks.
I'll swim you to the bridge,” he announced.
J'adore tes courbes,” she blandly replied, and he squirmed in delight at such a totally impolite suggestion.
Sir Richard sat on a grassy knoll and sipped his beauty potion while Cedric and Adaira splashed about in the burn, as well-dressed to God as a buck and a doe.
They're so like Ingibiorg and me when we first met, he mused, though Cedric is slightly more dashing.
Adaira emerged panting like a rabbit from the burn. “A favour for you before I leave, Sire?”
Sir Richard glanced sideways, and coyly lifted the tails of his shirt.
You may kiss the tattoo in the small of my back, as is my secret wont,” he murmured. “The dormouse and the hedgehog are from my family coat-of-arms, and the inscription is Simplicitate et Veritate.”
Adaira gritted her teeth, and nibbled the heraldic inscription. “A rare, though boring fetish. I will gladly oblige.”
Boring? It is my raison d'être.”
Simplicity and Truth!” exclaimed Adaira, cautiously kissing the hedgehog. “But why is the name Horatio P. engraved beneath your crest?”
'Tis a code by which my family may identify me should I die in battle,” replied the proud knight. “Horatio P. was my grandfather's great uncle of Inverness.”
But is your good wife Ingibiorg a woman of learning, Sire?” inquired Adaira, tactfully changing the subject.
Sir Richard proffered the lass a gentle smile. “Yes, she is. She is a composer of poetry and sings Psalms with the clarsach.”
In that case, I would be interested in meeting her,” said Adaira, licking the dormouse, “though she might treat me with disdain.”
Believe me, she won't.”
Let's go!” enthused Cedric, remounting his pony with aplomb.
I'm glad you enjoyed your frolic too,” said Sir Richard, preening himself, “though I must confess to experiencing a feeling of déjà vu.”
I don't know why,” said Cedric, looking mighty confused.
Don't forget your breeks,” said Sir Richard, with a frosty smile.
Waesucks! My memory should serve me better.”
You'd look better in a woollen dress.”
Now there's an interesting suggestion, deliberated Cedric. I could wear my grandmother's drawers as well.

When the riders emerged from the Hermitage of Braid, Sir Richard started to think about his reasons for his trip to Soutra Hill. The physicians and Augustinian monks at the House of the Holy Trinity cared for the sick and the dying. The vast conglomeration of buildings, which included an Iron Age drystone broch, also housed travellers and gave sanctuary to fugitives from miles around who had reason to doubt their safety in Holyrood Abbey (where the Holy Inquisitor reputedly enjoyed sending suspicious-looking guests from beyond the Girth Cross howling in their lice-ridden sackcloths down to the Athollian Crypt).
Sir Richard was travelling with his monthly selection of herbs for the sick from the St. Clotilde Garden, which he gladly donated in lieu of alms for the poor. However, he had far deeper reasons for his mission. While the friar on Soutra Hill was keen to protect all arguably innocent fugitives from justice against possibly unfair arrest, he gladly identified the most dastardly ones to Sir Richard, so that the loyal knight could report them to the Crown agents in Edinburgh. In particular, many of the cowardly traitors seeking sanctuary on the Soutra would subsequently mysteriously disappear. There's no peace for the wicked!
Who knows who is right and who is wrong? mused Sir Richard. Truth is whatever you can get away with. Truth is like a hare in a cornfield, as the heretic Peter the Seeker once said. You know it's there but you can't put your arms around it. All you can hope for is to follow its footprints. Heaven knows who is telling the truth in this day and age.
When they reached Cockpen, Sir Richard wondered whether to greet his cousin, Sir Leofric de Liddell in Dalhousie Castle, even though awkward Leofric was rumoured to be opposed to the king.
                                                                                  




Sir Richard was still ruminating on these possibilities when two slovenly men wearing straggly, black cloaks and riding grey mares emerged across the castle drawbridge at a fair gallop. They came to an abrupt halt just in front of the smartly dressed travellers.
Why, good morrow, de Porthos,” said the man with the strange foreign accent and a mean look.“Is this the trumped up knight who now employs you as a foot-licking snoop?”
This vulgar vagabond could be a French or a Teuton agent, thought Sir Richard, with a rude belch. His almond-shaped eyes are very distinctive, and I'll certainly be able to remember him from the dirty holes in his front teeth. Maybe the English have tortured him in the Tower of London like they torment the ghastly heretics.
Meanwhile, Cedric was concerned that Sir Richard might discover the shady secrets of his past.
My master will shred my hide and boil my guts, he agonized.
How dare you!” spluttered handsome Cedric. “I am Sir Richard's faithful squire, and we are here to see his worthy cousin Sir Leofric de Liddell.”
We have plans for you, de Porthos,” growled the man with the bizarre northern accent, “unless you want to be hung like a nose-less woman from a lofty tree, that is. Come to the Grassmarket, you cowardly, half-formed galoot! Saturday, before the clock strikes noon, and while the flayed skins are still wavering in the wind.”
I'm not sure whether he's from Lancashire or Dumfries, deliberated Sir Richard, but his face is as swarthy as a cat's nates.
I'd love to accept your kindly invitation,” replied Cedric, gritting his teeth, “were I not on my way to visit my dying grandmother in Kelso.”
Balderdash!” replied the rogue. “That witch resides in Nantes, along with the rest of you inbred guttersnipes.”
Excuse me, kind gentlemen,” interjected Sir Richard, “but is my good cousin Sir Leofric in residence?”
Oui, malfaisant m'sieur, though not wishing to receive any of his heathen kin, your noble brother the Lord of Roslands excepted,” replied the man with almond-shaped eyes. “Why don't you go forth and sizzle in the stench of the Styx while I deflower your shrewish whore of a wife?”
What a devil of a bore! raged Cedric. I'd like to deflower his ugly face.
Kindly present yourselves at my chambers on St. Giles when you next visit Edinburgh,” growled Sir Richard, grasping the silver hilt of his steel sword Vindicta. “You'll burn before you hang, and answer to Beelzebub's pitchfork in your gut for your venomous tongue.”
The swarthy horseman flourished his iron mace.
Egads!” he snarled. “Maybe you'll hang from your toes while you burn in Hellfire, pompous nastiness of a knight, though I have something more apt in mind.”
Away with thee, Pimp of Babylon!” roared Sir Richard, spitting snake's venom, whilst his enormous steed reared to a mighty height on its hind legs.
Away with us, from these gutter rats, to where the air is cleaner,” howled Cedric, and he and his worthy master departed at full gallop.
My master will be giving me shit for my own sins all evening, agonised poor Cedric.
This could be part of one of John Malory of Winwick's sad tales about King Arthur, mused Sir Richard, though that defiler of women is unbearably sanctimonious and his plagiarist of a son follows in his footsteps.
When they reached the tiny village of Gowkshill, Sir Richard and Cedric paused in the Ratshead Inn for their morning ale. A couple of impoverished pilgrims from Cullen who'd stayed overnight in the dank cellar were drinking water from a pump. But the nobility avoided well water like the plague, and regarded beer as much more healthy for mind and body alike. Sir Richard also ordered a couple of beef steaks, caramelised with plenty of onions, from the wart-ridden innkeeper.
The grumpy proprietor peered at Cedric, and blinked.“That's Auld Alliance beef rump cordon bleu. It mixes well with stale bread.”
And no quinkins, if you value your remaining ear!” retorted Sir Richard.
There's no need to be worry-some. I give the flea-ridden dregs to my pet vole. It makes them dance with joy.”
Cedric grinned in amusement. “Before they are thrown into your supper pot with the frogs for better flavour.”
The innkeeper was distinctly not amused. “I'll throw you into my cauldron and ask my mother to stir it, muddy-mettled cot-quean that you are!”
When the loaf arrived, Sir Richard tore a strip off it.
Cedric gulped, and quivered in his seat in fear of his master's forthcoming wrath.
But how did you ever come to meet the pair of rogues who came so hastily out of Dalhousie Castle, insincere youth that you are?” Sir Richard sternly inquired.
In Paris during the English Occupation and two years whence, while I was working for the Burgundians,” replied Cedric, shifty-eyed. “They tried to persuade me to join a highly dubious spy ring. The dim-witted English rogue said that he was soldier from Carlisle; the mean-faced one was a double agent from Flanders.”
Spy ring? And on whom were they proposing to spy?”
Cedric trembled in his boots. “They wanted me to spy on the Burgundians and hence to betray my paymasters. I refused, of course.”
And what were you doing for the evil Burgundians?”
Cedric was, by now, besides himself in anxiety.
Just collecting information,” he spluttered. “Just collecting information.”
Sir Richard frowned angrily at that lame excuse. “I understand you to a measure, delinquent of Aquitaine! But those vermin were undoubtedly anticipating your arrival in Cockpen. How in Joshua's name did they know you were coming?”
Your guess is as good as mine,” whined Cedric, feeling his sweat. “Did you tell any of your friends or relatives that we were planning to take this curious route this morning? I presume that you were trying to avoid the parish of Pathhead after your brouhaha there last month.”
I told only my dear Ingibiorg about my carefully plotted route,” replied Sir Richard, irritably. “I sketched it for her during yesterday's midday repast, just before she met for prayers with her dear brother, Father Baldr Sigurdsen from Haddington.”
But the explanation must lie therein! Perhaps your horribly flesh-ridden brother-in-law visited your ghastly kinsman in Cockpen during his return home.”
You rude, uncouth youth! I'll scrub your mouth with lard and your face with vinegar!”
Or Father Baldr could have bumped into the two ugly rascals in some whorehouse or other.”
How dare you! Father Baldr only visits the most respectable of hostelries. There must be some better explanation than that.”
Perchance we'll never know. These problems are sent to test us by the Goddess Fortuna herself.”
O, not ever waxing, ever oppressing Fortuna! Shame on you!”
No shame. She controls Yahweh himself.”
Zounds! It's God Almighty alone who rolls the die, and not that pagan usurper, the evil defiler of Constantine's Constantinople! I'll have you foot-flogged for the blaspheming infidel you are.”
Sorry, Master, just a slip of the tongue, Master. Please don't send me to be foot-flogged, Master. Not my feet, Master!”
Don't forget to wash them when you next trim your toenails.”
Elijah wept balls of fire! You're pulling my leg!”
No I'm not, though methinks it's not your feet which should sweat in dread.”
Not that! Mercy! Mercy!”
Aha! The steak is excellent. It sizzles like a bumble bug.”
The onions are tastier to my palate,” Cedric miserably replied, throwing his steak at the guard dog. The tawdry mongrel took a sniff, and ran, spluttering, towards the water trough.
Take care, Cedric de Porthos, or you too will lead the life of dog,” concluded Sir Richard, with his hand on his Celtic crucifix.
As they were about to leave the Ratshead Inn, the not-so-congenial companions were approached by a bony-faced itinerant dressed in rags.
I am the Prophet Ishmael MacHagar of Shur,” mithered the confused fellow. “The next Jew you meet will be a doctor of learning.”
You may well be right,” replied Sir Richard, with a smile. “If God is kind to me, I'll bump into one on the Soutra.”
And the next two will haul you naked and starving off the streets,” added the somewhat irritated fellow, “and many diverse Levites and Benjaminites will thenceforth enter your bedchamber as they did in Gibeah, concubine of the closet that you are.”
Why thank you, kind soothsayer,” replied Sir Richard, throwing a coin which snicked the itinerant's nose, “and now we must be on our Godly way.”
And you will found a dynasty to rival Nebuchadnezzar!” howled the crazy fellow, but Sir Richard had already closed his purse.

Sir Richard and his sullen-faced squire uttered scarcely a word while pursuing a narrow, muddy trail across Mid-Lothian. Indeed, the sheep muttered ne'er a 'baa', and the cattle stared at the turf.
When they reached the Via Regia south of Pathhead, Sir Richard scowled, and said, 'Awake, and straight ahead, sleepyhead!”
                                                                        


Cedric cheered up slightly during the late morning when they turned off the Via Regia for a rest stop in the pretty village of Fala. The Lady Fiona McLachlan was sitting astride her white horse Buttermilk outside the manse, ensconced on her lavishly designed Clackmannan saddle, peering at the rugged, green slopes of Soutra Hill to the south.
Roughly the same youthful age as Cedric, the Lady Fiona boasted flowing bright red hair, a freckly face, and the pert breasts of a Scottish gentlewoman.
Cedric sat in his saddle, licked his chops, and admired Lady Fiona's fleshy legs
Sir Richard was quick to perceive Cedric's none too delicate eye movements.
He's insatiable, agonized Sir Richard, and his manhood resembles a horse.
I'd love to chew cud with her in a haystack, mused Cedric, fluttering his eyelashes. It would give me such a relaxed feeling all over.
Good morrow, Lady Fiona,” exclaimed the proud Sir Richard. “What brings you to this neck of the woods?”
Your greetings are well received, Knight of the Sacred Orb,” replied Lady Fiona, with a sultry heave of her breasts. “I am travelling to the House of the Holy Trinity, though the reason for my mission much grieves me.”
Is she with child? wondered Sir Richard. Her husband is an irksome fellow. He smokes opium with the bizzoms on the Cowgate, and she could be forgiven for seeking her pleasures with one of his brash retainers. Her belly does protrude a mite too much for my comfort.
In that case, perhaps you would give us the pleasure of riding with us, my fine lady,” replied the bold knight. “This wicked miscreant and I are travelling there to deliver herbs for the sick from my delightful garden by Calton Hill.”
You are far too harsh on your lovely squire, good knight,” said Lady Fiona, with a sorrowful smile. “He is as faithful to you as the day is long.”
My good Lord will be the judge of that when I pray to Him during Vespers,” said Sir Richard, with a deft flick of his horse whip. “Our worthy Messiah isn't as forgiving towards those who blaspheme as St. Paul, in all his crassness, would have us believe.”
Cedric shuffled queasily in his saddle. “I too, would enjoy your charming company, my lady. The sound of a nightingale is to be much preferred to the squawk of a spot-tailed sparrowhawk.”
And the tweet of a sparrow pleases me more than than..er..the screech of a cornered rat,” added Sir Richard, a touch irritably.
To the courteous knight's surprise and his squire's expressions of sadness and alarm, Lady Fiona suddenly burst into a Noah's flood of crocodile's tears.
                                                                           


But woe is me, Sir Richard, eternal woe,” she exclaimed. “My dear husband of Comely Brae is bestricken with St. Cornelius's Lurge, and the scatter-brained sheriff-depute bethinks that it is I who poisoned him with a spider and snail potion. I therewith escaped from Edinburgh in fear of being captured by the burly sheriff's officers and burnt as a witch. If the good monks on the Soutra do not grant me sanctuary then I will, unless God forbids it, suffer horror and anguish in ever eternal Hellfire, and Merlin's freezing ice for good measure.”
Becalm yourself, fair lady, and dry your pretty eyes,” replied Sir Richard, pressing his hands together as if in prayer. “The blustery sheriff-depute frequently finds the wrong end of the donkey. We will accompany you to the Soutra and into the saintly friar's safe hands, and I will then defend your case for you in Edinburgh.”
And do give your nose a good blow,” interjected Cedric, proffering the lady his sodden lace handkerchief.
Lady Fiona cleared her nostrils. “Why thank you, kind squire, and a peck on my cheek from an impudent garçon would not go amiss.”
Cedric rode to the brave damsel's side and stuck out his Gallic tongue, like the unsophisticated juvenile he was.
Here's a kiss on your lips to absolve all your sins,” he cheekily replied. “Maybe it will help you to clear your throat.”
Coo!...Coo! You make me coo like a cuckoo. Let me lean on your sturdy arm.”
And I will ask my new pony to protect your white steed well tonight, fair lady. Methinks I'll call him 'Augustus' to honour the occasion.”
Buttermilk will be well bedded then,” purred the Lady Fiona. “I have a mind to cuddle between them to maintain my good virtue.”
Cedric smiled mischievously.
You have the thighs of a doe in the heather,” he replied, jerking his knees like a grasshopper.
Lady Fiona flapped her yellow and green cloak like a butterfly. “And j'adore your frog-like circumscription, joli garçon.”
You should quat all your curious quirks, quisquous [dubious] squire,” enjoined Sir Richard, nibbling his tongue, “and now it's time to roll into action. Let's go!”
While the motley trio were approaching the Soutra, the scruffy lass Adaira McTaggart tapped lightly on the kitchen door of Óengus House back in Edinburgh. A middle aged retainer with gums and no teeth let her in, and went to find Lady Ingibiorg.
How fair thee, comely lassie?” asked Ingibiorg, strolling in barefoot wearing her white and green silk gown.
Your sweet husband tells me that you are a poetress of Lesbos,” fibbed Adaira. “I would love to listen to your recital, and to learn of your Psalms.”
Now I understand,” said Ingibiorg with a knowing look. “Come to my boudoir, and all will be revealed.”
Lady Ingibiorg sat Adaira down on the velvet cushioned stool by her fluffy bed, and recited her adaption of a traditional Irish blessing:
May the road rise up to meet you
May the wind be always at your back
May the sun shine warm upon your face
The rain fall soft upon your fields
And until we meet again, may God
Hold you in the palm of his hand.
And raise you from the coasts you love
To the orchards in the Heavens.”
How apt!” exclaimed Adaira, tilting her bonnie head. “And you composed the last two lines your very self!”
You are very knowledgeable too,” Ingibiorg coolly conceded. “You would be most welcome to stay for fish and a hot turnip. We could play music on my clarsach together afterwards to sooth our minds.”
Are you familiar with the tunes of the dastardly Pink Witch of Castle Trilloch?” Adaira craftily inquired.
That woman?” snorted Ingibiorg. “Yes, I suppose I am.”
In that case, I'd gladly stay for the braw moonlicht nicht,” said Adaira, with a seductive twitch of her hips.

And Father Baldr Sigurdsen of Haddington drooled over a fallen angel after he'd paid his coin in the dire hostelry behind the blessed Kirk of St. Michael's in delightful Linlithgow.
Sigurdsen pulled up his breeks and scratched his pated noddle. “I do delight in your shapely, bouncing body, my cherub. Now who do you best remind me of?”
One more time?” begged the desperate woman.
I do not have a mind to it.”
Why not?”
You're so much older than my dearest love petal and your skin is lest couth,” said the decadent priest. “Goodbye and farewell!”

                                                                         


                                                             BACK TO CONTENTS
                                                   CHAPTER 2
                              

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Reborn on Soutra: CONTENTS, FEATURES, AND REVIEWS

                                                                  REBORN ON SOUTRA                                                        ...