I have now secured the job at the Kingshouse, as I just did not see my open to stay and see the inn go to the dogs. If Bryan could run it I think he would have run it like a decent hotel, and not like the third rate place it was turning into.
But of course I was going on holiday again, and this time it was to Mull. I was looking forward to that, as Mull always had a kind of mysterious pull for me, maybe because of all the stories about the clearings, but I think that a book by Jim Crumley called 'The Heart of Mull', had really sparked my interest, as it was so beautifully written.

Annette, an old friend of Liz came to visit while we were looking for a cottage, and when she heard that cottages where it would be convenient for Benny (if you bally please!) was scarce, she offered to look after the dogs, and Liz and self almost became enemies when I said that I find it a wonderful idea!
Annette was a wonderful lady, who started a university degree at the age of seventy four, and finished it. She had a small farm where she kept a few sheep which she sheared herself, wash and dye the wool, with dye made from plants, and the she spins it, and either weave with it, or knit jackets, and all of this with the help of her daughter.She also drives around her son in law, who, together with a lot of other Strathyre men, had lost his drivers licence because the new policeman had caught him driving under the influence.
In the end we found little Staffa Cottage overlooking loch na Keal.
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