Read The Complete Kingdom Trilogy Online
Authors: Robert Low
I told Constance that Sister Giles was welcome to my cage, as I shall be leaving it soon enough. God wills it.
The sky is thick and umber, heavy with that thunder that brings no rain, only oppressive heat â there has been no rain for weeks.
Bannockburn
Vigil of the Feast of St John the Baptist, June 1314
There had been no rain for weeks, so six hundred cantering hooves slashed up the sere grass and dirt of the carse into a haze that filtered the sun to a gold coin. The Carse was supposed to be boggy, cut about by vicious little streams and hard going for horses, but Sir Robert Clifford saw only a trickle of water in the bottom of steep-sided, bush-choked ditches.
âStill a barrier, my lord,' William Deyncourt noted, indicating the dark-streaked horses, foamed at the neck where the reins champed the sweat into a lather; they'd had to work hard to cross the dry streams.
âYet the undergrowth is green enough,' Sir Thomas Gray added, âwhich means it is watered regularly.'
Beaumont, grimming along in a world of reeling heat, wished he had the energy to argue, to growl at Deyncourt that it was only a barrier if men defended the opposite side of it, to spit at Gray that none here were bloody churl farmers and who cared where a bush got water? But Clifford nodded as if he understood what Gray had meant, which only flared Beaumont the more.
Too clever by half, he thought hotly. He did not like Deyncourt much, the more so because he was in Gray's retinue. He liked Gray even less and knew he should not harbour the feeling, which made matters worse still. Sir Thomas Gray had almost been killed saving him at the last siege of Stirling â Christ's Bones, a decade ago now.
The memory of that great hook, swinging down to try and grab the siege tower, made him whimper even now. It had missed its target and snagged him like a fish, catching in his surcote â the thought that it might have been his flesh still made his hole pucker.
Like a giant hand it had lifted him up and swung him, arms and legs flailing like a pathetic insect, to batter into the walls â but Gray had leaped forward, risking arrows and showers of stones to grab and hack the hook out of the surcote. Just then a springald bolt had taken Gray in the helmet, straight through it and into his face, so that they'd needed smithing tools to cut him free.
Guiltily, Beaumont glanced at Gray now, seeing the great scar like an accusing beacon that flushed more heat through him, composed of shame and gratitude. Gray should have died, Beaumont thought. He had lain under a pile of dead until Beaumont had come to his senses and gone back with men to look for him, expecting a corpse and finding what he thought was one; it was only when they paraded him back, all solemn and sorrowful for burial, that he had groaned and moved, shocking everyone â especially those who had tugged and heaved at the helm and then given up because it was skewered fast to his head.
He should have died anyway, Beaumont thought, from a horror wound like that â but he had recovered and Beaumont knew he should have been pleased for his saviour, should be sending prayers to God to preserve the life of this man who had preserved his.
Yet that face only reminded Beaumont of his bowel-loosening fear on that day, his utter helplessness and what he had babblingly offered to God for deliverance, which no man nor saint could possibly have fulfilled.
He wanted this business done with, so that he could put Gray behind him and if it meant riding across this strange terrain into the gates of Hell itself, he would spur on.
The Carse was strange, no doubt of it. They had all been told how treacherous it was, a sward that looked firm yet was a soft and sinking bog. Not now. Not after weeks of summer sun. Now it was like fresh bread, slightly spongy and new-toasted so that it crumbled; Clifford voiced this and his
mesnie
laughed dutifully, but they were nervous. They had started out slightly later than the Van, knew nothing of what was happening in the New Park away to their left and Clifford was apprehensive. The distant sound of cheers and shouting did not help; who was celebrating and why?
Yet, if he was to achieve his king's orders and ride round to cut off the retreat of the Scots, he needed speed. That was why he had three hundred mounted knights and men-at-arms, all flogging expensive warhorses in the heat to come up on St Ninian's little chapel; the nearest foot were miles away, slogging desperately up with the baggage.
Clifford eyed the wood to his left, which had some outlandish name, as did the plain they rode across; they were coming up on another steep-sided stream and Clifford slowed to a walk, Gray and Beaumont coming up alongside.
âThe Pelstream, my lord,' Gray offered. âTidal, like all the rest. We are leaving the Carse of Balqhuiderock and heading out into the Dryfield. As the name suggests, it is firm ground even in bad weather.'
No one could tell the difference; the plain looked exactly the same, though Clifford beamed, the beads forming on his fleshy nose and pouched cheeks.
âGood ground for horse,' he exclaimed cheerfully. âThe King will be pleased â this is where the army wants to be, my lords.'
Gray looked dubiously at the constrictions of wood and stream and mentioned them; he and Clifford fell to arguing the merits of the place as a âgood field'.
âGod-cursed place,' Beaumont growled into the middle of their polite debate, wiping his face with a corner of his surcote. âWhat's that there?'
He pointed one mittened fist and everyone followed it, some rising in the stirrups to try and see better.
It was a line, a scar on the landscape, seeming to undulate and sparkle. Gray laughed, which made Beaumont's scowl all the darker.
âThat, my lord,' Gray said, almost joyously, âis the enemy.'
Bruce had blinked and shaken himself out of the daze, ruthlessly forcing it away along with the memory of that fury, that great, crunching crack as he brought the axe down â hard enough to snap the shaft, by God's Wounds. His hand and arm hurt, wrenched with the power of the blow.
Like a blown egg, he recalled with a shudder. On the back of the boy's head as he rode away ⦠he quelled that, too, stuffing it in the choked chest along with all the other sins.
The irony was not lost on him as he rode into an avenue of cheers and furious joy from those who had heard that the English Van had been repulsed, that a proud English champion lay dead like an offering, slain in single combat by their hero king. A good start, for all the sin in it, Bruce thought, and tried not to concern himself with the Curse of Malachy.
Yet it was lurking there, made itself plain when he rode up to Randolph's thousands and found no Earl of Moray, only Duncan Kirkpatrick of Torthorwald, anxious and stumping up and down in front of the serried ranks. At a glance, Bruce saw that the best of the Battle was gone; only the ill-armed were here, stripped down to a shift that barely covered their decency and leaning carelessly on their tall shafts; some had only shaved and fire-hardened points, some had strange hand-scythes and long shafts with other crude blades lashed to them, but none was a proper spear or bill.
I shall defend myself with the longest stick I have, Bruce thought.
Duncan Kirkpatrick, his face twisted as if in pain, blinked the sweat out of his eyes and knelt dutifully, thinking to himself that he was damned by Hell itself to be the one having to explain to his king what Sir Thomas Randolph, Earl of Moray, was doing.
Bruce felt the rise of panic in him, welling up like shit from a privy as he stared at Duncan. Kirkpatrick's kinsman, he recalled. Where is that auld dug â and Hal of Herdmanston? If we do not get them back, their mission successful, then we are done with this day and possibly this life. And where is Randolph with the best-armed men we have? The thought that he might have deserted like Atholl almost crushed him, but he heard Jamie Douglas give a surprised grunt and then a snort of derision.
âWhat in the name of Christ's Wounds is he thinking?'
âMay the Lord forgive you,' said fat little Gilbert de la Haye piously and Jamie barked out a crow laugh, pointing with one hand down across the Dryfield.
âNot me that needs forgiveness, my lord,,' he answered. âHim.'
They all looked. Out on the Dryfield, long hundreds of men skeined forward, their spears glinting, the Randolph bedsheet banner fluttering boldly alongside the saltire. It was his own
mesnie
, stripped from this command, all the well-armed and best-armoured men committing the unthinkable â the unforgivable â and marching unsupported out into the open against heavy horse.
Coming at them, hard and fast, Bruce saw, the pennons and streamers and blazing flags, the lances and tippets and heraldry glowing brightly through the golden haze.
Clifford's checky banner he recognized. And Beaumont's. The black fork-tailed lion of the Stapledons. The Leyburns. Tailleboys. Christ's Bones â three hundred or more heavy horse of Clifford's command, bearing down on a little knot of men, already coalescing into a shield ring, as seeming vulnerable and small as a robin's egg in the middle of a busy stone path. Bruce felt the breath squeeze from him with the vice-crush of it.
âWhat possessed him?' gasped an incredulous de la Haye.
Carelessness, thought the Dog Boy, panting in the heat-flushed ranks of men behind Jamie; The Earl of Moray was supposed to watch for this and has missed it. Now, too late, he puts himself out like a stopper in a leather bottle to prevent the English going further towards Stirling's fortress.
Glory, Jamie Douglas thought laconically. Randolph has heard what the King did with the rearguard and seeks to outdo it, rub all our noses in his paladin splendour. He did not know what would be worse: that the Earl of Moray be ridden into the dust like a martyr or skewer the English to ruin like a hero. Either way, he thought moodily, we will never hear the end of it.
âHe sought to prevent them reaching the castle, Your Grace,' Duncan Kirkpatrick offered miserably.
Bruce had his own answer to the why of it, watching with a sick, stone-heavy lump of fear in him as the English closed like a fist on the schiltron.
The Curse of Malachy.
Clifford could not believe it and said so. Beaumont, shaking sweat from his eyebrows like a dog does water, agreed with him, yet the sight gave him a sudden burst of savage exultant triumph.
âLet them come on further,' he bawled out, red-faced and beaming. âThe more ground we give them, the easier they are cut off and cut up.'
âGive them any more,' Gray answered wryly, âand they will have it all, my lord.'
He meant nothing by it that anyone else could ascertain, but Beaumont swelled like an angry toad and astonished everyone by his ugly snarl; those who knew the tale of it were doubly shocked, for if anyone deserved Sir Henry de Beaumont's undying respect it was the man who had saved his life.
âIf you are so concerned about them,' Beaumont savaged out, his face sweat-greased and dark with suffused blood, âthen feel free to flee.'
Now Gray boiled up, almost standing in the stirrups as he quivered with fury.
âYou dare?' he demanded. âYou dare say that to me, sirrah. To me?'
âIf it fits, wear it,' Beaumont growled, realizing he had been too harsh, yet unable to retreat from it.
âBy God, Beaumont,' Deyncourt burst out, his own face raging. âThat is mean â this is the man you owe for being here at all.'
That did not help. Deyncourt, as Beaumont hissed out, was nothing at all and should mind his station when addressing an earl. That drew a sharp seal-bark of laughter from the furious Deyncourt and his brother, Reginald, came scowling up to make his presence felt.
âEarl? You may style yourself Earl of Buchan, Beaumont,' Deyncourt bawled, âbut when you have more than a wife's portion and a parchment to show for it, then you may have your due from me.'
â
Gentilhommes
,' Clifford shouted. He had three hundred mounted men on plunging horses which â already highly strung â not only sensed action but the nervousness of their riders; it meant that men were cavorting in circles to keep them from bolting; Clifford needed calm and did not get it.
âBe damned to you, Beaumont. I never ran from a fight and none should know that better than yourself.'
Gray spat it out with all the venom he could make, wrenched savagely at the reins, dragging the squealing warhorse round. Before anyone could understand what he was doing, he had turned, couched his lance, set his shield and was trotting out, breaking into a canter. Behind him, like a grim shadow, trailed the Deyncourts, fumbling helms on as they went; young Reginald whooped with mad delight.
Alone, they thundered down on the hundreds of men forming into a bristling circle of spears.
In the circle it was blazing. Hot, Will thought. I hate the heat. I have always hated the heat, the way it prickled the skin and turned it dark as a saddle, as a Moorish heathen. When the rest of the bairns longed for the endless days of summer, when barefoot did not mean cold blisters, when they needed to swim in the river to cool off rather than get the dirt and shite off, I knew what it was doing to Da's stock.
My da would be fretting now, Will thought. Down in the undercroft, wondering if it was cool enough and fretting mad. This was more fiery than any heat Da had known, mark you, made worse because I am pressed fore and aft, shoulder to shoulder with men as boiled as me, sweating fear out in a nose-pinching stink. Smelling rank in ranks, he thought and nearly laughed.
Yet my da is to blame for me being here, squashed and melting like mutton tallow in a roaring ring, waiting for Hell to fall on me.
It's not our fight, I told him. What do we care who wears the crown â would the priory not need candles under an English king? And my da put me right on it, as he always did, as he did when he taught me how to measure to the last drop the tallow needed for a candle clock â a proper one, not the thin streaks of piss stuck in a graded pewter sconce that some folk affect.