The Stars Shine Down

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Book: The Stars Shine Down Read Online Free PDF
Author: Sidney Sheldon
Bonnie Banks O’Loch Lomond.”
    Once a year there was a parade in town, and all the Scotsmen in Glace Bay would proudly put on their kilts or tartans and march through the streets to the raucous accompaniment of bagpipes.
    “Why do the men wear skirts?” Lara asked Mungo McSween.
    He frowned. “It’s nae a skirt, lass. It’s a kilt. Our ancestors invented it long ago. In the Highlands a plaid covered a mon’s body agin the bitter cold but kept his legs free sae he could race across the heather and peat and escape his enemies. And at night, if he was in the open, the great length of the cloth was both bed and tent for him.”
    The names of the Scottish places were poetry to Lara. There was Breadalbane Glenfinnan, and Kilbride, Kilninver, and Kilmichael. Lara learned that “kil” referred to a monk’s cell of medieval times. If a name began with “inver” or “aber,” it meant the village was at the mouth of a stream. If it began with “strath,” it was in a valley. “Bad” meant the village was in a grove.
    There were fierce arguments every night at the supper table. The Scotsmen argued about everything. Their ancestors hadbelonged to proud clans, and they were still fiercely protective of their history.
    “The House of Bruce produced cowards. They lay down for the English like groveling dogs.”
    “You dinna ken wha’ you’re talking aboot, as usual, Ian. ‘Twas the great Bruce himself who stood up to the English. ‘Twas the House of Stuart that groveled.”
    “Och, you’re a fool, and your clan comes from a long line of fools.”
    The argument would grow more heated.
    “You ken wha’ Scotland needed? Mair leaders like Robert the Second. Now, there was a great mon. He sired twenty-one bairns?”
    “Aye, and half of them were bastards!”
    And another argument would start.
    Lara could not believe that they were fighting over events that had happened more than six hundred years earlier.
    Mungo McSween said to Lara, “Dinna let it bother ye, lassie. A Scotsman wi’ start a fight in an empty house.”
    It was a poem by Sir Walter Scott that set Lara’s imagination on fire:
Oh, young Lochinvar is come out of the west:
    Through all the wide Border his steed was the best;
    And save his good broadsword he weapon had none;
    He rode all unarmed and he rode all alone.
    So faith in love, and so dauntless in war,
    There never was knight like the young Lochinvar.
    And the glorious poem went on to tell how Lochinvar risked his life to rescue his beloved, who was being forced to marry another man.
So daring in love, and so dauntless in war, Have ye e’er heard of gallant like young Lochinvar?
    Someday, Lara thought, a handsome Lochinvar will come and rescue me.
    One day Lara was working in the kitchen when she came across an advertisement in a magazine, and her breath caught in her throat. It showed a tall, handsome man, blond, elegantly dressed in tails and white tie. He had blue eyes and a warm smile, and he looked every inch a prince. That’s what my Lochinvar will look like, Lara thought. He’s out there somewhere, looking for me. He’ll come and rescue me from here. I’ll be at the sink washing dishes, and he’ll come up behind me, put his arms around me, and whisper, “Can I help you?” And I’ll turn and look into his eyes. And I’ll say, “Do you dry dishes?”
    Bertha’s voice said, “Do I what ?”
    Lara whirled around. Bertha was standing behind her. Lara had not realized she had spoken aloud.
    “Nothing.” Lara blushed.
    To Lara, the most fascinating dinner conversations revolved around the stories of the notorious Highland clearances. She had heard them told over and over but could never get enough of it.
    “Tell me again,” she would ask. And Mungo McSween was eager to oblige…
    “Weel, it began in the year 1792, and it went on for more than sixty years. At first they called it Bliadhna nan Co-arach —The Year of the Sheep. The landowners in the Highlands had decided that
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