Read The Complete Kingdom Trilogy Online
Authors: Robert Low
It nagged now that none of it was of any use â Isabel had gone like a morning mist and they had only found out after months of slipping and slithering round the forests and hills, avoiding the English â and Scots in their pay â who hunted Wallace.
The arrival of Bruce's messenger to pluck them from Wallace's last remnants came as a blessed relief, tinged with shame at feelin it.
Wallace himself, disgraced, discredited and with the old brigand settling back on him like a familiar cloak, simply shrugged and wished them God speed. Not long after, they had all the news of what had happened, at Herdmanston as well as elsewhere.
âAn ill-favoured chiel came for her,' Bangtail told them. âThe wee Guardian, the Red Comyn himself. Her uncle was slain at Falkirk and it made the difference.'
Hal had known it, of course, in the aftermath of the battle, in the sweating, fevered nights when he had woken from the spill of dead, white faces, the screams and the steel. MacDuff was dead and he had been the Buchan link to a say in the control of the Fife estates.
âShe told me to say it was no use,' Bangtail went on, his face twisted with grief. âShe said her husband would not let matters stand still now and that Herdmanston was in danger.'
Hal acknowledged Bangtail's words and the man went off, droop-shouldered at the loss and angry at his own impotence in the matter. Hal stood there, numbed by it; Isabel was gone back to Buchan.
Ironically, he knew that, even as she returned to her gilded prison, she was safer than before and had leverage of her own â he had no doubt that part of the price for her compliance would be that neither he nor Herdmanston would suffer.
But the price was high and, even when he returned to Herdmanston to prove to all there that it was his yet, he felt the bitter cost of it every time he looked at the lonely tower chamber, the dress folded neatly, the bed â and the pardoner's medallion she had left on the pillows.
Bruce, of course, offered sympathic noises and was struck by the darkness in Hal. Who would have thought Isabel could engender that? He had seen her, too, when Red Comyn and the Buchan had come to the Parliament at Scone to oust Wallace and redesign the power in the Kingdom.
The florid Earl had brought the Countess with him, flaunting her like some stag with a returned hind. Bruce had noted the hawk-proud bearing of her and the despair behind her eyes and felt a stab of anger â there was no doubt Buchan had burned his mark anew on his wayward wife. Yet there was defiance there, too â and loss. Who would have thought the likes of Hal could bring out that in her?
Because of what they had once been, he could see the clench of her and felt a wash of sympathy at her plight â yet the love in it was a mystery he dismissed with a head shake. Almost as much a mystery as the one which had married him and the Red Comyn to Scotland's fate. The only reason the wee popinjay had been so elevated was because he held a claim to the Kingdom's throne and the Comyn wanted to wave him as a taunt to Bruce.
Still â he was glad Hal had not been there to see Isabel with Buchan, for blood would have been spilled
âA strange marriage that,' Henry Sientcler offered as they ate, and Bruce, still thinking of Red John, acknowledged it with a wave of one hand.
âWishart says God may still make it work,' he said with a wry smile. âI had word from him in his Roxburgh prison.'
Sir Henry shifted and made a moue.
âHe has more ken of the mind of woman than I gave him credit for then,' he replied and, for a moment Bruce's food hung, half chewed in his open mouth.
Kirkpatrick chuckled.
âI believe the lord of Roslin was referring to the marriage of the Buchans,' he answered, ârather than yer hand-fasting to the Red Comyn as joint Guardians.'
âYe are unlikely to plough a straight furrow with that wee man at your shoulder,' Hal suddenly declared. âA more mismatched brace of oxen it wid be hard to find.'
âIndeed,' Bruce offered with a fixed smile, neither liking the comparison with an ox or the flat-out brooding moroseness of the man.
âAre you enjoying the fare, my lord earl?' asked Elizabeth, anxious to sweeten the air. Bruce nodded graciously, though the truth of it was that he thought the Lady of Roslin too pious for comfort â especially his. Broiled fish and lentils with oat bannocks might be perfect Biblical food for the occasion, reminding everyone that St Andrew was the patron saint of poor fishermen, but it was marginally better than a fast and no more.
He managed to keep the smile on his face, all the same, while he watched Sir Henry and his wife exchange loving glances. Well, Kirkpatrick thought as he witnessed this, you arranged for this loving reunion and I daresay you thought to get effusive thanks and pledges for it â at the very least a decent meal. More fool you, my lord earl ⦠there are too many folk who still regard you with suspicion.
âWhere is Wallace?'
Hal's voice was a knife through the soft chatter.
âGone,' Bruce replied shortly.
Hal lifted his head.
âGone where?'
âFrance, I hear,' Kirkpatrick said and Bruce nodded, chewing.
âFled,' he managed between forced swallows of clotted bannock, and Hal frowned. Fled did not sound like Wallace and he said as much, though he was surprised by the thoughtful nod he had back from Bruce. He had been expecting the sullen lip and the scowl.
âIndeed. The Red Comyn is ranting about him not asking permission of the Guardians â namely himself, of course â to quit the realm after he resigned the Guardianship. I suspect this is because he has designs on Wallace holdings.'
âResigned,' Sir Henry said with a twist to his voice which was not missed. When he caught Bruce's eye, he flushed a little.
âHardly freely done, my lord earl,' he added.
âThey forced him out,' Hal said, blunt with the black-dog misery of what he had heard of it. âThe bold
nobiles
in conclave at Scone. Not content with runnin' like hares at Falkirk, they then turn on Wallace, as if it was all his doing. Betrayed because he was not the true cut of them. Now ye tell me they squabble over his wee rickle of lands.'
âI trust,' Kirkpatrick said sharply, âye are not casting anything at my lord earl. Your liege lord.'
âNow, here, enough,' Sir Henry bleated and his wife stepped into the breach of it, bright and light as sunshine.
âFrumenty?' she asked and, without waiting, clapped her hands to send a servant scurrying. Bruce grinned, half-ashamed, across at Hal.
âScotland betrayed itself,' Bruce answered flatly. âYe all ran at Falkirk, even Wallace in the end. That's the fact and the shame â and the saving grace of it, for if you had stayed and fought, you would be dead. In my own defence, I had business enough in Ayrshire to keep me occupied â but I would have galloped from that field, same as everyone else.'
Hal felt the sick rise of it in his gorge, knowing he was right and having to admit it with a curt nod. They had all run and, because of it, proud Edward had his slaughter, but no real victory. The Kingdom had its back to the wall more than ever before, but though the struggle was more grim, the realm was no more subjugated than before.
Now the resistance was what it had always been â strike from the forest and hills, then run like foxes for cover. Bruce had occupied the English in Ayrshire with the tactic and showed a surprising aptitude for the business. He had learned well from Wallace, it seemed to Hal, and, by the time had finished, a desert seemed like a basket of cooked chicken compared with the desolation he made.
This was a new ruthlessness, which allowed Bruce even to destroy his own holdings if it hindered the enemy â he had burned Turnberry Castle to ruin and Hal well knew he had loved the place, since he had been born there and it had been his mother's favourite. There was new resolve and a growing skill in the man, Hal saw, and his next words confirmed it.
âWallace fled to France,' Bruce added, frowning at the bowl in front of him, âbecause he could not be sure that he would not be betrayed by his own. There will be no peace for Wallace. Edward will have his head on a gate-spike.'
Hal regarded the Earl of Carrick with a new interest, seeing the sullen face of two years ago resolved into something more stern and considered. There was steel here â though whether it would bend and not break alongside the Red Comyn was another matter.
Bruce stirred and looked up at Sir Henry, then pointedly at Hal, who nodded and levered himself wearily up from the table.
âIt is time.'
Sir Henry stood up and a flutter of servants brought torches. They left Elizabeth and the servants behind, moving into the shifting shadows and the cold dark of the undercroft, descending until the stairwind spilled them out into the great vaulted barrel that was Roslin's cellars. Their breath smoked; barrels and flitches gleamed icily.
âThis has been finished a little, since I was last home,' Henry Sientcler mused, holding up the smoking torch.
âAs well your Keep is now stone,' Hal said. âI would do the rest, and swift, my lord of Roslin, now that your ransom money is freed up â if Edward comes back, Roslin's wooden walls will not stand and that Templar protection we Sientclers once enjoyed is no longer as sure as before.'
Henry nodded mournfully while Bruce, his shadow looming long and eldritch, waved a hand as if dismissing an irrelevant fly.
âCastles in stone are all very fine â but only one stone matters now,' he said, then turned to Hal. âWell, Sir â ye claim to have the saving of us. Do you ken where Jacob's Pillow lies?'
Hal fished out the medallion and handed it to the frowning earl, who turned it over and over in his gloved hand.
âA medal of protection,' he sniffed. âSold by pardoners everywhere. Like the one we took from yon Lamprecht fellow.'
Hal watched while Kirkpatrick and Sim, suitably primed, moved down the length of the vaulted hall, shifting bundles and barrels, peering at the floor and tallying on sticks. Bruce and Sir Henry watched, bemused.
âIt is the very one,' Hal said, watching the two torches bobbing across the flagged floor. âIt was the pardoner explained the significance of the marks.'
Bruce turned it over and over, then passed it to Sir Henry, who peered myopically at it.
âA fish?' he hazarded and Hal fumbled out the ring corded round his neck.
âThe same one is on this,' he declared, âwhich the Auld Templar bequeathed me on his deathbed. An auld sin he called it.'
Bruce looked steadily at Hal and he was struck, again, by the absence of the sullen pout, replaced by a firm, tight-lipped resolve and an admitting nod. Sim appeared and shook his head; Hal felt his stomach turn.
âReverse it,' he said and Sim nodded. The torches started to bob again, the tallying began anew.
âA mason's ring,' Hal went on. âBelonging to Gozelo, who worked here before he became involved in your ⦠scheming, my lord. And died for it.'
âYes, yes,' Bruce muttered as he frowned, muttering half to himself. âIf he had not run ⦠a sad necesssity for the safety of the Kingdom. The ring went to the Auld Templar and then to you. It is the Christian fish symbol from ancient times -what has this to do with locating the Stone?'
Henry, who had only recently been told of all this, blinked a bit and shook his head with the sheer, bewildering stun of it all. Plots were nothing new in this Kingdom, nor the killing that invariably went with them, but, even so, the careless way the Earl of Carrick dismissed a murder was disturbing.
The torches bobbed to a sudden stop and Sim and Kirkpatrick both cried out.
Hal moved swiftly, the others following, drawing into a breathless ring round a single broad flagstone, the faint chiselled mark gleaming in the torchlight.
âA fish,' Hal said pointedly and Bruce agreed, then pointed to his left.
âThere is another. And one over there. Every flagstone is marked â there are scores of them.'
âJust so,' Hal said. âGozelo's mark, which all masons leave behind â if it seems he was excessive fond of making it here, he had reason, my lords.'
Sim and Kirkpatrick, their breath mingling as they struggled, shoved pry bars into the grooves of the flagstone as Hal spoke.
âNot an original mason's mark,' Hal said, speaking in rapid French, spitting the words out as if they burned him. âGozelo was not that imaginative and thought to find a good Christian symbol of this land, to suit the tastes of his customers. He took the fish mark from the same place the makers of wee holy medals took it and for the same reason â to impress and because it is simple to make.'
He held up the medallion.
âTaken from the Chalice Well in Glastonbury,' he said as they peered at it. âSee â the circumference of one circle goes through the centre of the other, identical circle. The bit in the middle is called the
vesica piscis,
which is the name of the mark.'
âBladder of the fish,' Bruce translated thoughtfully. âOf course â I had forgotten the Chalice Well had it.'
There was a grating sound and the flagstone shifted, the two men sweating and panting to slide it with a long grinding slither, leaving a dark hole. The dank of it seemed to leach chill into Hal's breath of relief.
âThe Holy fish symbol of Christians from the times of the Romans,' Hal explained. âLamprecht knows his business and told me the Holy nature of it â and it became clear why masons fancy the symbol. I am no tallyer, nor was he â but he knows his relic business well enough and the holy fish measures a ratio of width to height which is the square root of three â 265:153. The number 153 is the amount of fish Our Lord caused to be caught in a miracle, so there is the work of Heaven in it.'
âGospel of St John,' Kirkpatrick breathed, astounding everyone with that knowledge, so that he blinked and bridled under the stares.
âTwo hundred and sixty-five fish-marked stones one way, a hundred and fifty-three the other and you have this,' Hal said and held the torch over the hole, allowing the light to fall, golden as honey on the ancient sandstone snugged inside.