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On the eve of the Glorious Revolution of 1688, a series of gory murders are discovered by investigative advocate John MacKenzie and his assistant Davie Scougall. Drawn into a world of Papist plots, Presbyterian secret societies and religious and political upheaval, the pair follow a trail of clues left by a murderous, self-proclaimed 'Messenger of God'.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2015
DOUGLAS WATTis a novelist and historian who lives in Linlithgow with his wife Julie and their three children. He won the Hume Brown Senior Prize in Scottish History in2008forThe Price of Scotland: Darien, Union and the Wealth of Nations(2007).Pilgrim of Slaughteris the third in his series of ingenious murder mysteries set in17th-century Scotland featuring lawyers John MacKenzie and David Scougall. The first two in the series wereDeath of a ChiefandTestament of a Witch.
By the same author:
Fiction
Death of a Chief(Luath Press,2009)
Testament of a Witch, Luath Press (Luath Press,2011)
History
The Price of Scotland: Darien, Union and the Wealth of Nations(Luath Press,2007)
Pilgrim of Slaughter
DOUGLAS WATT
Contents
Author Bio
By the same author
Title page
Copyright
Dedication
Epigraph
The Main Characters
Historical Note: Scotland in 1688
Prologue
1: An Incident on the High Street of Edinburgh
2: News of a Birth
3: A Letter for Rosehaugh
4: Dinner at The Hawthorns
5: A Mother's Despair
6: The Music of the Virginal
7: Dr Black Secures a Loan
8: Confession of an Assassin
9: An Opportunity for Davie Scougall
10: A Customer for Maggie Lister
11: Application of the Boot
12: A Secret Association
13: Proclamation of Papist
14: A Note from Rosehaugh
15: Dissection of a Frog
16: A New Case for MacKenzie
17: Investigations in Niven's Wynd
18: Pittendean House
19: Lodgings of a Papist
20: Conversation in Parliament Square
21: Golf on the Links
22: A Body in a Bawdy-House
23: Scougall Makes a Confession
24: A Walk in the Country
25: A Late Sermon
26: Purchase of a Periwig
27: An Awkward Request
28: Questions Over Coffee
29: A Liberal Education
30: Sanctuary at Holyrood
31: A Capital Fund
32: A Night on the Town
33: A Witness Comes Forward
34: A Summons to the Castle Hill
35: Weight of a Body
36: The Association Reconvenes
37: Turkish Baths
38: Storming of the Palace
39: The Road to London
40: Christmas Day in Edinburgh
41: Revelations
42: A Confession
43: A Walk in the Gloaming
44: Cabinet of Wonders
45: A Visit from Bessie Troon
46: The Lair of Satan
47: Recovery at Libberton's Wynd
48: Failure of a Bill
49: Jacobite Rebellion
Epilogue: Glorious Revolution
Acknowledgements
First published2015
ISBN (EBK): 978-1-910324-54-7
ISBN: 978-1-910021-99-6
The author’s right to be identified as author of this book
under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act1988has been asserted.
© Douglas Watt2015
To Jamie
The Lord hath made all things for himself:yea, even the wicked for the day of evil.Proverbs 16:4
The Main Characters
Davie Scougall, notary public in Edinburgh
John MacKenzie, advocate in Edinburgh, Clerk of the Court of Session
Elizabeth MacKenzie, his daughter
Archibald Stirling, Crown Officer
Sir George MacKenzie of Rosehaugh, Lord Advocate
Kenneth MacKenzie, Earl of Seaforth, chief of the clan MacKenzie
Colonel Ruairidh MacKenzie, brother of Seaforth
Alexander Leslie, Earl of Pittendean
David Leslie, Lord Glenbeath, eldest son of the Earl of Pittendean
Francis Leslie of Thirlsmuir, second son of the Earl of Pittendean
James Douglas, Duke of Kingsfield
Agnes Morrison
George Morrison, merchant
Alexander Stuart, son of the Laird of Mordington
Jean Stuart, his mother
Adam Lawtie, physician in Edinburgh
Peter Guillemot, French refugee, wig maker in Edinburgh
Maggie Lister, brothel madam
Andrew Quinn, perfumer from Dublin
Helen Quinn, his sister
Alexander Baillie of Lammington, laird
James Guthrie, minister
James Cockburn of Grimston, laird
Archibald Craig, Pittendean’s writer
Robert Johnston, student at the College of Edinburgh
Isaac Black, doctor
John Graham of Claverhouse, Viscount Dundee
Historical NoteScotland in1688
THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY was a time of bitter religious division across Europe which had its origins in the Reformation of the previous century when the Continent split into Protestants and Catholics.
In Scotland, two rival branches of the Protestant church – Episcopalian and Presbyterian – vied for domination. The Episcopalians, who were in power in 1688, believed in a church run by bishops and held a hierarchical view of society. The Presbyterians were democratic and puritanical in outlook, revering the National Covenant of 1638.
After the Restoration of the monarchy in 1660, Presbyterians refused to accept a church run by bishops and were persecuted by the government in an attempt to force them into conformity. They resorted to worshipping illegally in fields and hillsides at conventicles. Repression precipitated rebellions in 1666 and 1679 which were brutally crushed. Many Prebyterians fled into exile in the Netherlands, while others were packed off to the plantations in the Caribbean as indentured labour.
As a result, Presbyterians and Episcopalians hated each other. They both despised Roman Catholics who they viewed as servants of Satan. The Pope himself was the Whore of Babylon or the Antichrist. France was the major Catholic power in Europe at the time. In 1685 the French King Louis XIV revoked the Edict of Nantes, ending toleration for French Protestants (Huguenots). Thousands fled oversees with many settling in London and some in Edinburgh.
Catholics were a tiny minority in Scotland in 1688, perhaps only a few thousand individulas spread across the country, mainly in Highland clans and noble households. However, the popular perception was that they were becoming much more numerous, a feeling stimulated by high profile conversions among those who sought to curry favour with the King.
King James VII and II inherited the thrones of England, Ireland and Scotland on the death of his brother Charles II in 1685. By the time he became King he was an open Roman Catholic. His reign was a disaster. In the space of a few years he had alienated many of his subjects in the three kingdoms by his policies of extending toleration for Catholics. In Scotland, both Episcopalians and Presbyterians were horrified as the Mass, which they viewed as blasphemous, was celebrated in the centre of Edinburgh, Jesuit priests were established in the city and a Catholic printing press set up at Holyrood Palace. Among extreme Protestants, feelings of paranoia became a hunger for Catholic blood.
On 10 June 1688 the King’s second wife, Mary of Modena, who was a Catholic, gave birth to James Francis Edward Stewart. The House of Stewart had a male heir. The King already had two Protestant daughters, Mary and Anne, from his first marriage. Protestants feared that the King’s pro-Catholic policy would be extended, perhaps indefinitely. William of Orange, the Dutch Stadtholder, who was married to Mary, and revered as the upholder of Protestant rights in Europe, was encouraged to intervene. It was unclear if he would aim to influence the King by persuading him to change tack, or, as more radical Protestants hoped, seize the Crown for himself and his wife.
Over the autumn of 1688 the atmosphere in Edinburgh became increasingly frenetic as rumours circulated in coffee houses and taverns of an imminent invasion by William in the south of England. The town was already bursting at the seams, swollen by exiles returning from Holland, as well as an influx of radical Protestants from the south-west of Scotland.
The anti-Catholic mob was increasingly active on the High Street, burning effigies of the Pope, smashing windows and terrorising suspected Catholics. Secret Presbyterian associations met across Edinburgh, planning revolution against the King, while politicians schemed, hoping to benefit from any change of regime. The city was a powder-keg ready to explode.
Prologue
May 1688
THE KNIFE’S BLADE shines before me. I test its sharpness against my finger. The crowd on the hillside are shouting, exhorting me to be done with it, to get the job done. The man is still screaming. His white shirt is pulled up to reveal a lean grey belly.
He only knows me by sight. I have watched him many times. I have seen him in the court house where he works as clerk, where he aids those who abuse the Godly. I have watched him in the ale house, laughing, telling jokes to his creatures, while I ponder from my dark corner – that is the man I will kill.
‘Get on with it,’ one of them grunts. ‘Soldiers will be here soon!’
I act for God and His people, the covenanted folk of Scotland, the abused flock, the crushed remnant. I see their faces around me, beckoning me to sacrifice. Some of the blessed are already in Heaven, cut down as they worshipped in the field by Claverhouse, vile servant of James Stewart, called by some King of Scotland, England and Ireland; slaughtered like lambs.
The man stops screaming. Does he sense a conflict within me? Does he not know with whose authority I act? There is no doubt in my soul. I simply savour the moment. I thank Him for the chance to avenge his poor blighted followers.
I look down on the taut belly, choosing a place for my dirk just above the spot where the cord connected him to his mother. This moment is predetermined from the beginning of time. There is nothing that can be done to save him. I plunge the knife into flesh. It slips through easily; penetrates deeply. For an instant there is no reaction from him or those who watch.
The blade is embedded in his body. We are conjoined by metal; the crowd hushed to silence. Then, blood spurts from the wound and screams rise from him and them. I thrust deeper, working up and down with my knife as his cries echo across the hills. The coils of his bowels steam before me; the bloody intestines of a vile sinner who has paid for his treachery.
I slam the blade into the earth between his legs. Forcing my hands into the cavity, I scoop up the viscera, holding them up for all to see. Each man and woman and child standing on the hillside will bear witness. Then, taking the knife again, I cut the ends and raise the guts above my head, dripping blood and excrement over my face. It is as holy water baptising me.
He has lost consciousness. The blood still gushes from the wound onto the grass of the hillside. I take up my knife again. There is still work to be done. There is still butchery in His name and I am a man skilled in the craft. I slash across the chest; place a boot on the body to give purchase; heave the rib cage open. Bones snap and flesh is ripped.
I cradle it in my hands, mesmerised by its pulsing. I slice through the vessels surrounding it. The blood gulps out like water from a pump. I hold it aloft.
Behold my people, behold the heart of Antichrist!
Screams of exaltation echo around the hillside.
I do God’s work. I am saved. I am promised everlasting life from the start of the world. I was born to perform this act from the beginning of time. My name is written in the book of life from the foundation of the earth. I was born to kill Satan. I was begot to defeat Antichrist. I am God’s agent of transformation.
1
An Incident on the High Street of Edinburgh
June 1688
EVERYTHING FOR AN afternoon’s work was in place: inkhorn, paper, quills, wax. Scougall looked down on the legal instrument he was working on – a conveyance of land from John Nisbet to James Dickson, two of the burgh’s merchants. It would be a long afternoon at the desk, but one he relished. There was nothing to disturb him, no awkward conversations with Papists, or painful thoughts about Elizabeth, although he found it impossible to push her completely out of his mind.
If only he could find a wife, the feelings for her might fade, easing the frustrations of body and spirit which he wrestled with day and night. He was ashamed to confess that he was more and more tempted down the path of self-abuse, his mind overwhelmed by illicit images. Such behaviour was postulated a sin of the first rank by some, though others regarded it as only a minor transgression, and a few blades as no sin at all. Major Weir’s dalliance with beasts stood as a dreadful warning of the dangers of the unmarried state. He felt his face redden, despite being alone, and he asked God to forgive him such sinful thoughts. What was beyond doubt was that he needed a wife.
A knock at the door roused him from these reflections, and before he could shout ‘enter’, a young woman stood in front of him, soberly dressed in black cloak and dark gown with a blue bonnet on her head. She smiled warmly. ‘Do you not remember me, Davie Scougall?’
He knew her at once. Agnes Morrison was a year or two younger than him, but much improved in looks by the gap of six years since they last met.
‘It’s been so long, Agnes,’ he managed to splutter out. He was not prepared for a conversation with a woman. After a few embarrassing seconds, he offered her a chair beside his desk.
‘You’ve done well for yourself, Davie,’ she said in a half mocking tone with a look of mischief on her face. ‘This is a far cry from the honest toun. I hear you are now acquainted with the great and good.’
Scougall thought of the Earl of Seaforth, with whom he was forced to dine that night. Surely she did not have this kind of acquaintance in mind. He had travelled far, perhaps too far, from the simple life of his parents in Musselburgh.
‘I’m not changed… much,’ he said as his face reddened again.
‘You’ve changed, favourably so. You were a boy when I last saw you.’ Unused to compliments, he did not know what to say. There was another uncomfortable silence.
‘As you have too, Agnes,’ he said finally. ‘You look very fine,’ but he immediately regretted being so forward.
‘I come on a business matter.’ Her expression became serious. ‘Do you remember my brother George?’
Scougall recalled a boisterous youth a few years older than him, something of a bully in the school yard, with a large looming face.
‘Your work as writer comes highly recommended. We’ve a few instruments for you, if you’ll take them.’
He had plenty of work to be getting on with, but would happily work late for Agnes. She was changed into a fine-looking woman. ‘What’s the nature of the business?’
‘As you know, we’ve suffered terribly since father was accused in the Rye House Plot. We fled Scotland like many others and took up residence in the Dutch Republic. Unfortunately he died a few years ago, joining mother in eternal bliss.’
‘I’m very sorry to hear of their demise.’
‘It’s a terrible loss, but we must look to the future. Great change is afoot, Davie. The Indulgences allow us to return home. St Magdalene’s Chapel is sold by the Council to our people. We Presbyterians have a place to worship in the heart of Edinburgh. It’s like the days of the Covenant again. George and I decided to come back to our native soil. We wish to buy a property in Edinburgh where we can trade from. We need your help to obtain it.’
‘I’ve always wanted to visit Holland,’ Scougall mused. ‘The Dutch follow a sound path in religion and a profitable one in commerce.’
‘You could not imagine a more magnificent trading metropolis than Amsterdam,’ she replied. ‘Everything under the sun can be purchased there. The bank is the safest in the world and there’s a bourse where shares in companies are bought and sold. The Dutch are Godly also. They’re a fine people, led by a noble prince.’
He listened attentively, impressed by the fluent way she spoke, observing her face carefully, drawn more and more into her serious, but lively, brown eyes.
‘My brother wants to establish himself as a merchant in Edinburgh. We’ll trade with Holland where we have many friends. All is change… all is flux. We must prepare, perhaps, for greater transformations.’
He nodded again. Scotland was an abused nation. The Stewart King James was a servant of Antichrist. But there were hopes of change. ‘Do you think William will come?’
‘We’ve seen the preparations with our own eyes; a fleet will sail.’ She smiled, before continuing, ‘My brother seeks an audience with the magistrates to obtain a licence for a shop. I’m looking forward so much to living in Scotland again. I’ve missed it, despite the wonders of Holland. I long for strolls by the Firth, watching the waves. Do you remember flying our kites on the sand?’
He could not remember flying a kite with Agnes; perhaps she was speaking in general terms, or thinking about someone else. What he did remember was her sharp tongue. She had teased him about his shyness at school. But he did not care. He was already captivated. God forgive him, he could not stop appraising the way she looked; her shapely figure and smiling face. She may have lacked the polished breeding of Elizabeth, the silks and jewels and perfumes, but she possessed a natural disposition which was equally appealing. He found himself feeling strangely light. He had not felt so happy since thrashing Hector Stoddart at golf on Leith Links.
‘So you’ll act as writer for us?’
Working for her family would bring him more than a few pounds. Had God sent her just as dejection threatened to cast him downwards into a spiral of sin?
‘Yes, Agnes. It would be a great pleasure…’
A thunderous bang, so loud he could remember hearing nothing like it in the whole of his life, shattered the blissful moment, as the whole building shook. The sound was followed by screams outside on the street. He peered through the window, pressing his nose against the glass. There was a man lying only a few yards from the door. Another was being grappled to the ground.
‘My God! Someone’s been shot. Wait here, Agnes.’
‘Don’t endanger yourself, Davie.’
He climbed the few steps from his office in the basement of the tenement up onto the High Street. In front of him a young man was being pinned down. To the left, an older figure lay on his back attended by a servant. He knew the victim was James Douglas, Duke of Kingsfield.
‘Fetch a doctor!’ a voice screamed from the crowd.
The Duke was groaning in agony, the blue silk of his suit stained darkly at the chest. A long periwig had fallen from his head which Scougall picked up. He noticed the name Simon Tippendale on the label, one of London’s most famous periwig makers.
‘The Duke’s shot!’ a cry came from an onlooker. ‘Papist bastards!’ a woman’s voice shrieked. A man waved his fist at the young man on the ground, screaming obscenities about the Pope and the Jesuits. ‘Run the fuckin Papists oot o toon! This is the murderous rule of Antichrist!’ The volume of abuse rose like the stink from a midden. ‘The Papists have shot Kingsfield!’
‘Whaur’s the doctor?’ Kingsfield’s servant cried. The Duke was lying motionless, his old head resting in the man’s hands.
Scougall recognised Adam Lawtie, a physician employed by Crown Officer Stirling, emerge from the throng. Kneeling beside the Duke he sought a pulse. After a minute or so, he shook his head.
Screams exploded from the crowd. ‘Papists hae murdered Kingsfield! Papist sodjers will burn the city! Oor King is a Papist Traitor! The King’s servant o the Whore of Babylon! The rule of Antichrist has come tae Scotland!’
Scougall had never heard such visceral hatred at close quarters before. From his attire, the man who was being restrained appeared of some means, probably from a landed family. A few yards away a pistol lay on the ground. The feeling of lightness was gone. Kingsfield was assassinated in broad daylight. He was known to be a supporter of the Presbyterians. There would be uproar in Edinburgh that night.
2
News of a Birth
THE MESSENGER STOOD at the doorway allowing his eyes to adjust to the gloom. Having spotted the man he sought at a table towards the back of the coffee house, he squeezed through the crowd, eager to unburden himself of the news.
A thin middle aged man looked up with alert eyes. He put his pipe down carefully on the table.
‘Ah, Mr Stark. How are you?’
‘I hae news, sir,’ Stark spoke breathlessly. ‘I’ve come aw the way frae Lammington today as fast as I could. I kenned you’d want tae be the first tae ken, sir.’
‘News?’ Lammington repeated. The others at the table stopped talking and looked up at Stark who gathered himself before speaking deliberately in a whisper. ‘The King has a son, sir.’
‘The King has a son,’ Lammington repeated and then with more volume: ‘The King has a son. James Stewart has a son.’ There was a smile on his face.
One of Lammington’s companions, an older man with a gaunt face, rose to his feet and roared. ‘Our Papist King has an heir! Antichrist has a son!’
The news spread from table to table, provoking curses, screams, shouts and general discord. No one seemed pleased by the tidings.
‘Do you know what the bairn’s called, Mr Stark?’ asked Lammington.
‘I’m telt it’s James Francis Edward Stewart.’
‘Not another king called James,’ said a man in a French accent wearing an enormous wig which dwarfed the other head-pieces around the table.
‘Just like the French,’ said another. ‘Louis, Louis, Louis. James, James, James. It’s always the same wi despots.’
‘But she wasnae due yet. It’s surely an imposter. It’s an attempt tae help the King oot of his difficulties,’ said the older man.
‘Calm yirself, Grimston, be seated,’ warned Lammington. ‘Let’s nae lose our heads. I thank you, for conveying such important tidings punctually, Stark. Here’s something for your trouble. Now return hame and tell my wife I’m delayed in Edinburgh for a few mair weeks. There’s business tae be done, important business.’
‘The King will be strengthened by this, Lammington. He has two daughters and now a son. The succession is secured for a Papist,’ said a thin man in an Irish accent.
‘It may not be so, Quinn. The birth will nae be celebrated with enthusiasm in England or Scotland.’ He took up his pipe again and began puffing slowly, savouring the tobacco. He looked animated by the news. Things were coming to a head at last, he thought. There was much to be done, but they would be ready. ‘Don’t lose heart, gentlemen. This may be the trigger we look for. It may encourage William tae intervene. We must continue wi our plans.’ His voice dropped to a whisper. ‘The boys on the street must be a little mair vocal in their condemnation of Antichrist.’
‘Where’s Johnston?’ asked the Frenchman.
There was laughter round the table. ‘He’s still at the college, Mr Guillemot,’replied Lammington. ‘He is very much the scholar, although vehement in his hatred o the Papist. They will be oot on the street when we have more intelligence. Any news of Black?’
‘He’s been released frae the castle,’ announced Grimston.
Lammington stopped smoking and stared intently at the faces round the table. ‘We must be ready, gentleman. The news frae London is good. The King is weak. The birth will encourage our brithers in the south. The Prince of Orange will sail soon. A revolution in the government will follow.’
3
A Letter for Rosehaugh
HE SAT AT the ancient desk sipping claret. He had never known before such utter disregard for sound policy. The King was antagonising everyone, even his closest supporters. The political situation was deteriorating at an alarming speed. He wondered if it had been a mistake to return to office as Lord Advocate. He could not resist being at the centre of things one final time. He was not yet ready for retirement to his country estates. But how was he to advise a King who would not listen, who only followed the advice of the fools who had converted to the Catholic religion? He sighed and poured himself another glass. Whatever happened, rebellion was treason. It could only lead to chaos.
He flicked through his correspondence on the desk; the usual communications from the Privy Council, intelligence reports from his agents, countless letters. One caught his eye. The writing was more florid than the rest, as if the writer had taken care with it:
To Sir George MacKenzie of Rosehaugh, Lord Advocate,
the Tolbooth, Edinburgh.
He put the other papers aside, broke the seal and read the following:
Scotland: haunt of the profane, den of iniquity, cavern of chaos, cradle of witches. I look down on you from a great height. I watch your black castle against the western sky, your tenements filthy with squalor, your tollbooths, kirks and palaces. I wander your closes, wynds, courts and vennels. Your King is the slave of Satan. Your King is besotted with the Whore of Babylon. Your King welcomes Antichrist to the heart of your realm where the blasphemous Mass is proclaimed.
Hear the cries of the people. Edinburgh is a city awaiting deliverance, a synagogue of Satan. I hear your calls. I feel your agony and despair.
My children, I will free you from the chains of Antichrist. I will free you from the government of the Godless. I will liberate you from the plague of priests.
The black stone of the castle speaks to me. The stink of the streets speaks to me. Oh city renowned through Europe for nothing.
Until I returned to you, little land, forgotten, until I stirred you with my breath. You were forgotten by the world, small and insignificant, left alone to suffer the reign of Antichrist, abandoned, until I remembered you, until I was called by you, until I returned to wake you from your slumber.
I seek out your labyrinths of debauchery. I seek out your parlours of hypocrisy. I seek out your ministers with hearts of lust. I seek out your abusers, whoremongers, idolaters, warlocks, witches.
I seek out your great men hungry for mammon, lawyers crafty and covetous, doctors cheating the sick of their last pennies, servants despising their masters. I will bring them to account for their sins.
Let the fierce wind blow. Let the mighty wind blow. Let the gale of reformation blow, stirring you from lethargy, awakening you from this quagmire of atrophy. Oh nation burning and suffering in the pit, I will be as a wave among you, a great wave of the ocean, deep-formed within the mighty water. I will wash through you, sweeping your streets clean. I will cleanse you of the stain of Antichrist.
Rise like the sun, burning red. The time is at hand, oh my children.
Rise like a mighty sun. I bring transformation. I bring glorious revolution.
Rosehaugh shook his head in despair. It was the ranting of another fanatic. Scotland had enough of them these days. He folded the letter carefully and rose from his desk. On the way to the large press in the corner he stopped suddenly. There was the pain again, deep inside his stomach. It was becoming more frequent. He wondered how much time he had left. Whatever happened, he would struggle on. He opened a drawer and dropped the letter on top of a pile of other documents. Should he keep them or burn the lot? The mind of man was troubled indeed, angry and troubled.
4
Dinner at The Hawthorns
SCOUGALL’S EYES TOOK in the large collection of plate on MacKenzie’s dresser. It was principally made of silver rather than pewter, a collection of bowls, cutlery, jugs and dishes engraved with hunting scenes of stags and hounds, surely worth a small fortune. In the centre was a round silver salver with the clan coat of arms embossed upon it, a mountain engulfed in flames with the legendLuceo non uroaround it. Scougall translated the words to himself, pondering their meaning – I shine but do not burn. The light of reason rather than the flames of passion – that sounded like MacKenzie’s philosophy of life. The plate showed he was a rich man; the pickings of the law were greatest for advocates at the top, but not for notaries like him. He wondered how much capital he could amass by the time he was MacKenzie’s age of fifty-six.
They sat in the dining room at the back of the house where two sash windows looked onto the gardens. Water gurgled from a stone fountain in the gloaming. Across the table from Scougall sat Kenneth MacKenzie of Kintail, the Earl of Seaforth. He was only a few years older than him, perhaps in his late twenties, and did not look like a Highland chief, dressed in his blue silk suit and long periwig. His younger brother, Colonel Ruairidh MacKenzie, diagonally opposite, was even more splendidly attired in a scarlet suit, the latest fashion from Paris.
Elizabeth was wearing a vibrant green gown. She had eyes for Ruairidh only, a man who had fought in battlefields across Europe, and, according to his own account, played a vital role in every one. They made a fine pair, Scougall had to admit. Reason told him to lay his feelings for her aside; jealousy was a sin. But he could not help himself. Could it be possible that she would marry a Roman Catholic? He had heard rumours about his conversion but had not told MacKenzie. He wanted to warn her that the souls of her unborn children were endangered. But it was not his place and, after all, it was still possible the marriage might not happen. He felt his face burning red as he picked at his lamb ragout. He could not understand why MacKenzie insisted on torturing him. He had no business dining with Papists.
MacKenzie had set aside the black garb of the law for his best suit. Having drunk a number of glasses of claret, he was in relaxed mood, his conversation darting back and forwards between Gaelic and English, leaving Scougall feeling left out. Despite learning a few words, he understood little of the language of the Highlands. He nodded grimly as if he understood more.
At last MacKenzie addressed Seaforth in English. ‘What do you make of the rumours about the Prince of Orange, my Lord?’
‘It’ll come to nothing, John.’ Seaforth spoke in an unusual accent, influenced by the courts of Europe where he had spent much of his life, with little suggestion of a Scots brogue. ‘The Stadtholder will not risk invasion,’ he continued. ‘Getting bogged down in a British war would play into French hands. The people of England and Scotland remain loyal to their King. His policy of toleration looks to a time when all religions are viewed as equal. He wishes men to follow their hearts in religion. Is that not unreasonable?’
‘The aim of toleration is a worthy one,’ replied MacKenzie, refilling the Earl’s glass, ‘but the manner of its introduction is unwise. The Indulgences have unsettled the King’s supporters in Scotland, stirring up a hornet’s nest. ’
Scougall stole a look at Elizabeth who was deep in conversation with her fiancé. They had no interest in politics tonight.
‘You’re too pessimistic,’ Seaforth continued. ‘The lawyer always sees the bottle half empty. The world is changed. Seaforth is a Privy Councillor.’ Scougall found his affectation of referring to himself in the third person annoying. ‘He sits with the great men of the realm, administering the kingdom. He’s raised to the Order of the Thistle and looked upon as a loyal servant of the King. The MacKenzies have never been so favoured. Tarbat is on the Council; Rosehaugh restored as Lord Advocate; a dozen advocates of our name prosper in Edinburgh, including yourself. We rival the Campbells as the most powerful family in the realm. Atholl is weak. Hamilton broods in London.’ He stopped to sip his wine and emphasise what followed. ‘A dukedom is talked of at court. Can you imagine it – the Dukedom of Ross restored, or the Dukedom of Seaforth established! What honour for the clan! What riches it may provide!’
MacKenzie nodded, but his expression had lost its playfulness. He reflected that aristocrats were always puffed up with their own importance, obsessed with obtaining honours at any cost. ‘I believe the King’s policies are foolish, my lord. Our country has no appetite for the Roman religion. The establishment of Jesuits in Edinburgh inflames the fanatics.’
‘The fanatics are diminished since Renwick’s execution. Those of a reasonable disposition may worship in private chapels. They’ve no need to scurry off to the hills.’
‘What say you as a man who favours Presbytery, Davie?’ asked MacKenzie.
