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And besides, when folk talk of a country covered with troops, itโ€™s but a kind of a byword at the best. A soldier covers nae mair of it than his boot-soles. I have fished a water with a sentry on the other side of the brae, and killed a fine trout; and I have sat in a heather bush within six feet of another, and learned a real bonny tune from his whistling. This was it,โ€ said he, and whistled me the air.

โ€œAnd then, besides,โ€ he continued, โ€œitโ€™s no sae bad now as it was in forty-six. The Hielands are what they call pacified. Small wonder, with never a gun or a sword left from Cantyre to Cape Wrath, but what tenty17 folk have hidden in their thatch! But what I would like to ken, David, is just how long? Not long, ye would think, with men like Ardshiel in exile and men like the Red Fox sitting birling the wine and oppressing the poor at home. But itโ€™s a kittle thing to decide what folkโ€™ll bear, and what they will not. Or why would Red Colin be riding his horse all over my poor country of Appin, and never a pretty lad to put a bullet in him?โ€

And with this Alan fell into a muse, and for a long time sat very sad and silent.

I will add the rest of what I have to say about my friend, that he was skilled in all kinds of music, but principally pipe-music; was a well-considered poet in his own tongue; had read several books both in French and English; was a dead shot, a good angler, and an excellent fencer with the small sword as well as with his own particular weapon. For his faults, they were on his face, and I now knew them all. But the worst of them, his childish propensity to take offence and to pick quarrels, he greatly laid aside in my case, out of regard for the battle of the roundhouse. But whether it was because I had done well myself, or because I had been a witness of his own much greater prowess, is more than I can tell. For though he had a great taste for courage in other men, yet he admired it most in Alan Breck.

XIII The Loss of the Brig

It was already late at night, and as dark as it ever would be at that season of the year (and that is to say, it was still pretty bright), when Hoseason clapped his head into the roundhouse door.

โ€œHere,โ€ said he, โ€œcome out and see if ye can pilot.โ€

โ€œIs this one of your tricks?โ€ asked Alan.

โ€œDo I look like tricks?โ€ cries the captain. โ€œI have other things to think ofโ โ€”my brigโ€™s in danger!โ€

By the concerned look of his face, and, above all, by the sharp tones in which he spoke of his brig, it was plain to both of us he was in deadly earnest; and so Alan and I, with no great fear of treachery, stepped on deck.

The sky was clear; it blew hard, and was bitter cold; a great deal of daylight lingered; and the moon, which was nearly full, shone brightly. The brig was close hauled, so as to round the southwest corner of the Island of Mull, the hills of which (and Ben More above them all, with a wisp of mist upon the top of it) lay full upon the larboard bow. Though it was no good point of sailing for the Covenant, she tore through the seas at a great rate, pitching and straining, and pursued by the westerly swell.

Altogether it was no such ill night to keep the seas in; and I had begun to wonder what it was that sat so heavily upon the captain, when the brig rising suddenly on the top of a high swell, he pointed and cried to us to look. Away on the lee bow, a thing like a fountain rose out of the moonlit sea, and immediately after we heard a low sound of roaring.

โ€œWhat do ye call that?โ€ asked the captain, gloomily.

โ€œThe sea breaking on a reef,โ€ said Alan. โ€œAnd now ye ken where it is; and what better would ye have?โ€

โ€œAy,โ€ said Hoseason, โ€œif it was the only one.โ€

And sure enough, just as he spoke there came a second fountain farther to the south.

โ€œThere!โ€ said Hoseason. โ€œYe see for yourself. If I had kent of these reefs, if I had had a chart, or if Shuan had been spared, itโ€™s not sixty guineas, no, nor six hundred, would have made me risk my brig in sic a stoneyard! But you, sir, that was to pilot us, have ye never a word?โ€

โ€œIโ€™m thinking,โ€ said Alan, โ€œtheseโ€™ll be what they call the Torran Rocks.โ€

โ€œAre there many of them?โ€ says the captain.

โ€œTruly, sir, I am nae pilot,โ€ said Alan; โ€œbut it sticks in my mind there are ten miles of them.โ€

Mr. Riach and the captain looked at each other.

โ€œThereโ€™s a way through them, I suppose?โ€ said the captain.

โ€œDoubtless,โ€ said Alan, โ€œbut where? But it somehow runs in my mind once more that it is clearer under the land.โ€

โ€œSo?โ€ said Hoseason. โ€œWeโ€™ll have to haul our wind then, Mr. Riach; weโ€™ll have to come as near in about the end of Mull as we can take her, sir; and even then weโ€™ll have the land to kep the wind off us, and that stoneyard on our lee. Well, weโ€™re in for it now, and may as well crack on.โ€

With that he gave an order to the steersman, and sent Riach to the foretop. There were only five men on deck, counting the officers; these being all that were fit (or, at least, both fit and willing) for their work. So, as I say, it fell to Mr. Riach to go aloft, and he sat there looking out and hailing the deck with news of all he saw.

โ€œThe sea to the south is

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