A jury is expected to consider its verdict on Monday in the case of a priest accused of carrying out a campaign of sexual abuse involving two schoolchildren more than 50 years ago.
Father John Angus MacDonald, who worked and studied at Blairs College in Aberdeen has been on trial this week at the High Court in the city facing two charges.
It is alleged the 69-year-old raped a young girl on one occasion in the 1950s or 1960s. He is also accused of using lewd, indecent or libidinous practices towards a schoolboy on a number of occasions within the same time period.
MacDonald, who was a teenager at the time of the alleged offences, originally faced another charge that he raped the girl on multiple occasions while acting alongside another youth. However, he was acquitted of this charge on Wednesday after advocate depute David Taylor accepted he had not led sufficient evidence to prove it.
MacDonald denies committing any of the offences which are all alleged to have happened in the Western Isles.
Throughout the week-long trial, jurors have heard evidence from the two accusers who claimed to have been abused by MacDonald as children.
The woman, who is now 65 and cannot be named for legal reasons, told the court the abuse had been “opportunistic” and was carried out over a five-year period starting when she was just four.
She claimed she recalled “acting like a well trained dog” removing her own underwear and lying motionless while she was raped.
And she said it was not until more than 30 years later, in 1988, while sitting meditating that the memories came “flooding back to her” as if she was watching a movie script unfold.
Two psychologists acting on behalf of both the defence and the Crown struggled to accept this scenario, however.
The court heard the woman continued to maintain contact with MacDonald, whose address is given in court papers as Ard Tullaich, Ardeonaig, Killin, after she claimed to have remembered the abuse. The court heard he carried out her wedding ceremony and baptised two of her children and that she would often stay at his homes as he moved around the country as a result of his job.
She also borrowed money from the accused in the late 90s, the court was told.
The jury, of nine women and six men, are expected to retire on Monday morning.