“Nicol Sinclair–he, and he only. Sorrow and suffering and ill luck of all kinds he has brought her, and there is no help for it.”
“No help for it! I shall see about that.”
“You had best let Nicol Sinclair alone. He is one of the worst of men, a son of the devil–no, the very devil himself. And he has your kinswoman Matilda Sabiston at his back. All the ill he does to Nanna he does to please her. To be sure, the guessing is not all that way, but yet most people think Matilda is much to blame.”
“How came Nanna Borson to marry such a man? Was not her father alive? Had she no brothers to stand between her and this son of the Evil One?”
“When Nanna Borson took hold of Nicol Sinclair for a husband she thought she had taken hold of heaven; and he was not unkind to her until after the drowning of her kin. Then he took her money and traded with it to Holland, and lost it all there, and came back bare and empty-handed. And when he entered his home there was the baby girl, and Nanna out of her mind with fever and like to die, and not able to say a word this way or that. And Nicol wanted money, and he went to Matilda Sabiston and he got what he wanted; but what was then said no one knows, for ever since he has hated the Borsons, root and branch, and his own wife and child have borne the weight of it. That is not all.”
“Tell me all, then; but make no more of it than it is worth.”
“There is little need to do that. Before Nanna was strong again he sold the house which Paul Borson had given to her as a marriage present. He sold also all the plenishing, and whatever else he could lay his hands on. Then he set sail; but there was little space between two bad deeds, for no sooner was he home again than he took the money Paul Borson had put in the bank for his daughter, and when no one saw him–in the night-time–he slipped away with a sound skin, the devil knows where he went to.”
“Were there no men in Lerwick at that time?”
“Many men were in Lerwick–men, too, who never get to their feet for nothing; and no man was so well hated as Nicol Sinclair. But Nanna said: ‘I have had sorrow enough. If you touch him you touch me ten-fold. He has threatened me and the child with measureless evil if I say this or that against anything he does.’ And as every one knows, when Nicol is angry the earth itself turns inside out before him.”
“I do not fear him a jot–not I!”