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The word "Betty" resounded in the hills many times that evening. The lights in the village were already lighted when a tired, heartsick boy, followed by a sympathetic sheep dog, returned to the Craig cottage.
There they were awaited by Alan Craig. The lad stumbled blindly into the house.
He found his father with a candle in his hand, waiting to lead the disappointed boy to his bed.
Ian cried himself to sleep that night. Roy, the dog, sat beside him and mourned for the lost member of the little household.
The next day and the next were spent in searching the hills, the fields, and the forest. Fortunately for Ian, they were Sat.u.r.day and Sunday, and he did not have to go to school.
He arose before the dawn and did not return until evening. But it was always the same. Betty was nowhere to be found. Though Ian and Roy hunted in every conceivable place, the lamb had disappeared.
On Monday, Ian was forced to relinquish his hunt and go to school.
Immediately after school he called to Roy and was off again.
"The lad hardly eats his meals, he's so troubled!" said Mrs. Craig to her husband, as she shook her head.
Alan bit his pipe in silence, while his heart bled for Ian.
Alan had been training a new dog for the sheep. He was using this dog instead of Roy, who was allowed to stay with Ian and help him in his search.
But this meant added work for Alan, who had to be on the watch. He could not leave his charges completely in the care of this new helper, as he had done with Roy. Many times the new dog frightened the sheep.
They soon became panicky and ran in all directions.
Then the dog forgot all of Alan's training and ran after them wildly.
Alan always had to come himself to restore order.
One day he tramped miles to recover a terrified mother and her baby.
After this long walk, Alan sat on the hillside.
Meanwhile the new dog looked at him out of the corner of his eye, and dropped his tail because he was ashamed.
As the shepherd sat smoking, he saw his son coming toward him, followed by Roy. Ian threw himself down beside his father. Letting his head sink upon the shepherd's knee, he gave up the search.
"'Tis weary I am, Father," he sighed. "The search is over, and my wee lamb is gone."
[Ill.u.s.tration: IAN GIVES UP THE SEARCH]
"And your pipes, Ian? Are they to be lost, too?" queried the shepherd.
"Ay," answered his son, "for Sandy said, 'If you tend the wee creature well till spring!' Now Sandy will return in the spring, and there'll be no creature."
For a few moments Alan Craig smoothed Ian's curly black hair. The boy tried hard to hold back his sobs, which were nearly choking him.
Then Alan Craig spoke. "Ian, lad, have you not heard the story of Bruce and the spider?"
"Ay, Father," replied Ian. "'Tis in my history book."
"Then mind well while I repeat it to you. For King Robert Bruce was a great man, and he never gave up!"
Ian listened intently while his father recounted the well-known tale.
He told how, many, many years ago, King Robert Bruce had fought with the English and lost numerous battles. One night, he was lying despondent on a rude couch in his tent on the battlefield.
[Ill.u.s.tration: KING BRUCE AND THE SPIDER]
His heart was heavy with the memory of his lost battles and of the suffering throughout his country. Just then his eye fell upon a spider in the corner of the tent. The industrious little creature was trying to fix its web to the top pole of the tent. It had already made six attempts, but each time it had fallen.
King Bruce bethought him of his lost battles. Six! He and the spider had failed six times. And now he, King Bruce, was about to give up!
Would the spider also be downed, or would it, perhaps, persevere once more?
King Bruce made a vow to himself. He decided that, should the wee creature try again to fix its web and be successful, then he, Robert Bruce, would profit by the spider's lesson and fight another battle!
The spider made another attempt. Slowly it raised its shadowy body until, quivering in the air, it balanced itself for the final plunge.
The King raised himself on his elbow and watched. A nation awaited that spider's success or failure!
Again it plunged, caught at the pole, and fixed its web! King Robert Bruce jumped to his feet. He threw his plaid about him and began his preparations for the greatest battle in Scottish history, the Battle of Bannockburn.
As everyone knows, he routed the English at this famous battle. Never afterward would the great King give up!
[Ill.u.s.tration: ALAN TELLS THE STORY OF KING BRUCE AND THE SPIDER]
"So should we all feel, Ian," said Alan Craig as he finished his tale.
"From the King to the spider!" Though Ian had heard the story often before, it now held a new meaning for him. He looked up at his father.
Then he stood erect and called to his dog, "Come, Roy; we'll try again!"
He was soon off through the hills once more.
[Ill.u.s.tration]
CHAPTER VIII
PIPERS AND TROUBLES
At the beginning of that same summer, Jamie Robinson, Aberfoyle's piper, became restless. Jamie was not a steady man. He had never been a good provider. His poor wife and babies were often hungry and cold in the stormy winter months.
Jamie Robinson earned his living by his piping. He marched back and forth through the village street, playing his bagpipes. He hoped that the noisy, celebrating crowds, which arrived from Glasgow, would like his music and throw him pennies.
When the people were generous, his family might have a good dinner. But often Jamie Robinson did not bring the money home to his family.
Unfortunately Jamie, who was a weak man, was often led by some of the village men into public houses. Here men gamble and drink.
Sometimes poor Mrs. Robinson waited until very late for her husband to come home. When at last he arrived, he came penniless.