We woke to rain, but by the time we finished breakfast it was over. I told someone later that we brought the sun from Florida and she bowed down to me and asked if I could keep it here in Scotland. Apparently the sun is rare here, but we haven't seen any evidence of that.
Darcy and Tom packed the car. I was sitting with Grandma in reception enjoying the wifi when this man and woman appeared to check out. The woman looked exactly like my friend Kelly, and I was wondering if it would be rude to take a picture when two teenage girls and a boy joined them.
Lady - "Did you sleep well?" (Insert accent)
Girl - "I slept great. Best night yet. Did you sleep well?"
Lady - "I did."
Man - "How did you like that nice wake up call we got this morning?"
Girl - "Oh! That was terrible. That noise was so loud and woke me right up. I jumped out of bed!!"
Immediately Darcy and Grandma look over at me and start snickering.
Me - "Sorry about that."
Man - "It was you that did it?"
Me - "Apparently the hairdryer I was using set off the fire alarm."
Man - "You did that with a hairdryer? Woke us all up?"
Me - "Yep. Happy 4th of July!"
And with that we bid the Bonham Hotel and its guests good-bye and headed to the castle. Edinburgh castle sits high on a hill (Castle Rock) and does not have a car park.
Across the room hanging in a frame was a locket that belonged to Charles I (I think) that held a picture of his wife. The locket wasn't open, but a picture of it opened was in the display. Also in there was a huge necklace that one King (no photography meant I had to rely on my memory so yeah) had worn around his collar with a bejeweled pendant. It was all quite a splendid sight and well worth the line to get inside.
The Castle Vaults lie beneath the Great Hall and are renovated to show how they were used as prisons during various wars in the 18th and 19th centuries. It was an interesting room with three of the original prison doors, now housed in glass, that showed the graffiti carved into the wood from prisoners of different nationalities. It smelled dank and musty. Another section in this area had a lot of historical war information, and I felt quite proud reading on this Fourth of July about the Americans winning their independence from Britain. I refrained from giving a loud cheer and instead cheered silently.
The last place of interest was St. Margaret's Chapel built by Alexander I and David I in memory of their mother Queen Margaret. This is the oldest surviving building in Edinburgh and it sits on the highest point of Castle Rock. It had some beautiful stained glass and was a lovely little chapel.
After a pop into the whisky shop, I headed back toward the entrance. Tom had paid for a little over an hour and a half for parking and it was getting close. I met up with three out of the four. Madison was still a no show. Tom and Mary Anne decided to head off for the car while Darcy and I hung back to wait for Maddy. Once we gathered her we slid back down the many hills and inclines to the car where we found no one. No Tom. No Grandma. Apparently they had taken a wrong turn and were lost in the city. (More on that in tomorrow's blog) I got tired of waiting and needed to use the bathroom so I left the girls and hiked up to the Museum on the Mound directly across from our parked car.
It was a free museum all about money. The design, the technology, trading, securities, and forgery of money. It was about the building of the first Bank of Scotland and was very interesting. It is new, opened in 2006 and was very well thought out and displayed. I felt bad for coming in to just use the facilities so I felt the need to wander around. I was glad I did. It was a great museum. I texted Maddy and suggested she join me. She and Darcy both did and we got to strike our own Alexander III penny.
We got word that Tom was back at the car and we joined him in what became Operation Rescue Grandma (tomorrow's blog entry). Once she was safely in the car we said good-bye to Scotland and heading south toward England.
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