“Would that I could, Hugh,” she answered sadly. “What thoughts but gloomy ones can fill my mind when I am ever thinking of the danger you incur by coming here so often, and thinking, too, of the woeful fate to which we are both destined.”
“Think no more of it,” said her lover in a cheerful tone. “We have hope yet.”
“Alas, there is no hope. Even this day my father hath fixed the time for, to me, this dreaded wedding! And now, Hugh, let this be our last meeting—Mar tha mi! our last in the world. Wert thou caught by Inverinate, he so hates thee, he would have thy life by the foulest means.”
“Fear not for that, dearest. And this bridal! Listen, May; before that happen the eagle will swoop down and bear thee away to his free mountains, amid their sunny glens and bosky wood, to love thee, darling, as no other mortal, and certainly none of the Clan-’ic-Rath mhearlaich has heart to do.”
“Ah me!” sighed May, “would that it could be so. I cannot leave my father until all other hope is gone, and yet I fear if I do not we are fated to be parted. Even this may be the last time we may meet. I warn thee, Hugh, I am well watched, and I beg you will be careful. Hush! was that a footfall in the grove below the crag?” and she pointed to a clump of trees at some distance under where they were standing, and on the path by which he would return.
“By my troth it may be so,” said he. “Better, dear May, retire to your chamber, and I shall remain here till you bid me good night from your window.”
Again they listened, and again the rustling met their ears distinctly. It ceased, and the maiden, bidding her mountain lover a fond good night, ascended to her chamber, while he, disdaining to be frightened away by sound, moved to his former position below the alder tree. Seating himself at its root, with his eyes fixed on the window, in a voice low but distinct, he sang to one of the sweet sad lays of long ago a ditty to his mistress, of which the following paraphrase will convey an idea:—
“O darling May, my promised bride, List to my love—come fly with me, Where down the dark Ben Wyvis side The torrent dashes wild and free. O’er sunny glen and forest brake; O’er meadow green and mountain grand; O’er rocky gorge and gleaming lake— Come,—reign, the lady of the land.
“Come cheer my lonely mountain home, Where gleams the lake, where rills dance bright; Where flowers bloom fair—come, dearest, come, And light my dark and starless night. One witching gleam from thy bright eye Can change to halls of joy my home! One song, one softly-uttered sigh, Can cheer my lone heart—dearest, come.”
The moment the song ceased the fair form of May Macleod appeared at the casement overhead, she waved a fond farewell to her mountain minstrel, and closed the window; but the light, deprived of her fair face, had no charm for him—he gazed once more at the pane through which it beamed like a solitary star, amid the masses of foliage, and was turning away when he found a heavy hand laid on his shoulder.