The Complete Kingdom Trilogy (88 page)

BOOK: The Complete Kingdom Trilogy
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‘The Bruce brother – Niall, is it? Yes, him. I will axe him, certes and send his head to Berwick for spiking. Atholl must also suffer, earl or no. He can hang instead. If he is higher in rank than any of the others, then we can add thirty feet to his gallows drop, for benefit of his station.'

He smiled greasily. ‘As for the Bruce women – well, I have an Italies punishment for them.'

He saw Thweng's bewilderment.

‘After Fossalta – you recall the battle? The Bolognese imprisoned Henry of Sardinia in an iron cage. It took him twenty-two years to die.'

‘In the name of Christ's Mercy,' Thweng blurted before he could stop himself and saw the storm gather on the royal brow, reined round and came up on another attack.

‘You can scarcely do that to his wife, Your Grace. A De Burgh of Ulster? And the Bruce daughter, Marjorie, is a slip of a girl yet.'

Edward frowned, then shrugged.

‘True. I shall send them to a convent. But the others – his sister and that harlot of Buchan's who crowned him – them I shall have in cages, by God.'

He sucked his fingers again, then winced and shifted as his stomach flickered with pain – anger flooded him at his own betraying body.

‘If any of those bastards dare return from their French tourney,' he added, ‘I shall find more cages for them …'

He broke off as a tendril of chill circled his feet like an anklet and he rounded on the hapless servant.

‘God's Holy Arse, you sludge – will you get that fire going or I will burn YOU in it.'

Baleful as a wet cat, he turned savagely to Thweng.

‘I want Bruce. Go back to my son and make him hunt the usurper out.'

Thweng smiled wanly, looked at the finger-ruined pie, then pushed it away.

Near Dunaverty Castle, Kintyre

Feast of St Malachy, November, 1306

The fires were small, but a welcome warmth to the men huddled in heavy wool cloaks in the bowl-shaped depression. The snow had been driven back by the flames, but it still fell in soft, slow drifts, so that the men were warm at the front and felt the cold bite their backs, even through the layers they wore. The surrounding trees sighed and creaked under a rising wind.

There were ponies, too, stamping nearby as they kicked hopefully at the ground to try to dig up a little to eat and Dog Boy wanted to leave the men and go to his with a handful of oats he still had in his pack. He dared not, for it would mean admitting he had a peck of oats in the first place and he was sure these wild men of the north would have something to say on it.

He and Sim Craw, Hal and Chirnside were all that was left of the Herdmanston men, who had been running and fighting since Methven, driven north and dependent now on the good graces of these Campbells and MacDonalds and even wilder tribal trolls from beyond The Mounth. He did not want to seem to be getting above himself.

Hal caught Dog Boy out of the corner of one eye, watched him fret and saw his eyes move to where his horse was, saw him shift, but not dare move. He did not like to think of the boy … God save us, hardly that these days … fretted by the presence of these Kintyre growlers. They were fighters, these men of Neil and Donald Campbell, Angus Og of the Isles and others, loyal still to King Robert, where the earls of Ross and Sutherland had turned.

Ross especially, who had broken into the sanctuary shrine at Tain and dragged out the Queen and all her women. Isabel … Hal felt the rising heat of it, was almost driven to his feet by it and fought to sit still, though it trembled him to do it.

All anyone else saw, if they looked, was a lean, grim man, all planes and shadows, made darker by the greasy black wolf cap he had taken from a dead man and the thick cloak he had filched at knife-point. His maille and hardened leather were hung about him, wrecked and rusted by weather and hard use; with his gaunt, unsmiling face he looked like a cadaver, newly surfaced from the forest mulch.

Neil Campbell appeared and men stirred. He wore simple clothes and a furred cloak, affected a fox hat – ears and all – while his own hair was as red as the hat and he wore gold in a thick braid round his neck, like one of the Old Norse.

Hal and his men – a dozen when they had set out weeks ago – had been making for Dunaverty in Kintyre, where it was said King Robert had taken refuge, but the English were already sieging it when they arrived.

They had then fought running battles in and around the steep glens and forests until, cut to shreds by disease and half-starved, they had fallen in with men barely clothed never mind armoured, with slings and short spears and long knives.

A lot of Herdmanston men had thrown up their hands then and Hal had sent them away, back to whatever life they could make round the ruin of his old tower, or at Roslin. There was no such possibility for him – and, besides, he needed to find out if Isabel had escaped the Earl of Ross' wrath, or had been taken with the Queen; in the sinking stone that was his heart these days, he was sure he knew the truth.

Now himself, the ague-trembling Sim, Dog Boy and the grim Chirnside Rowan were what was left, living more and more like animals with these hillmen, who spoke in their own way and knew little or no other tongue. It wasn't until Neil Campbell turned up, with as much easy command of French as he did the Gaelic, that Hal caught up with the news.

It was grim enough – the King had escaped from Dunaverty and was gone, almost certes out of the Kingdom and probably for good. Isabel was taken. The King's brother, Niall, was dead. Even the Earl of Atholl was dead.

Yet the Campbells and MacDonalds, as much fighting against old enemies the MacDougalls as the Invaders, had at least a thousand bare-footed, bare-arsed fighting men, which was a feat considering the time of year and the fact that they had been at war since the summer. No harvest had been gathered and the families of these men hungered – though that seemed the lot of these people, Hal saw.

Here, though, there were barely a hundred, the leaders and what passed for a
mesnie,
met to try and sort out what to do now that their king seemed to have vanished, as if taken by Faerie. They gathered in a circle round the fires, the flames dangerously close and unheeded at their own cloaks, passing a jug of something harsh as burned wine and glaring at each other, for old tribal grievances lurked just under the surface of them all.

Not that it mattered much to Hal, now that his worst fears were confirmed; all he wanted was to find the King and plead for whatever help he could raise on Isabel's behalf.

Neil Campbell, big and splendid and grinning, raised the jug, drank deep, smacked his lips and began the matter by raising the oak branch he held in one hand. At once someone rose and took it from him and the others subsided, growling and waiting for him to finish having his say.

The man spoke Gaelic and Neil Campbell waited, then translated it for the benefit of Hal and his handful of men; the wild men glowered impatiently and the speaker curled a hairy lip. He had braided hair and missing teeth, a Lennox man Hal recalled vaguely, from some wild cleft above Loch Lomond.

‘I have heard,' the translation said, ‘that the siege at Dunaverty has failed to locate our King Robert. Yet the Invaders are still there and so we must be after deciding – do we fight them, or go home.'

No-one spoke. No-one passed the jug to Hal, whose grin turned feral and snarling at this rudeness. This was a farce, he thought. These men had no choice but to fight, since anything else returned the English raids to their pathetic little lives. He almost said so, but chewed on it, thinking of Sim Craw lying, sweating and groaning in a thick fever and needing their care.

‘The power of hills and isles will destroy them in the end,' Neil Campbell translated, as a man took the stick and spoke. It was Grann, a MacDonald islesman Hal had been fighting with for several weeks, a black-avowed killer with a tangle of hair and beard who gralloched captives like stags in case they had swallowed their coin and trinkets.

According to Neil Campbell, Grann came from some island to the north and west and thought himself something because of that and the fact that he had a fine weapon, a sword, taken from some old Viking pirate, with a tarnished and worn-smooth silver cross set in a fat pommel. It did not make Grann any less of a heathen.

‘Only the power of the arm will halt them,' Hal growled, unable to stop himself. ‘Our arm, with steel in it.'

There was a silence, for some were chilled by the teeth-grinding delivery and others embarrassed that Hal had dared to speak without the stick, or dared to at all, for he was a southerner with so few men that he was of no account.

Neil Campbell translated for those who had no Southron, glancing at the dark scowl of this Lord of Herdmanston, but showing nothing in his face as he did so.

He saw the corded sinews and old scars on the back of the man's hands, the tangle of grizzling hair and beard, the whole of him hung about with tattered links and old leather. Somewhere in these hills, he thought to himself, this Lothian lord has become like darker, older folk, even older than the one in
Ma-ruibhe
's sacred oak grove, like the ones who had blood-sacrificed to gods. He reached for the oak stick and held it up.

‘The Lord of Herdmanston is correct,' he said, in English and Gaelic, and that brought heads up.

‘We scattered the Invaders at the Old Glen,' he went on, ‘while Angus Og and his men killed many good warriors and took a deal of their provender as plunder.'

He broke off and looked round at them all.

‘But the Invaders are like lice. If you do not kill them all, they will simply return.'

There were nods and grunted agreement at this – then a man stood up and held out his hand. Dog Boy knew him as Gillespie a small chief from somewhere that was barely in the Kingdom at all. He did not like the man, the way he did not like strange dogs.

‘I am Gillespie, known as Erkinbald of the True People of Auld Burn in Cawdor,' he said, sibilant slow. ‘I have listened to His Honour and seen the Lothian lord who stands with him. It is all very fine that this Lothian lord has come to defend the birthright of the True People of Auld Burn and very fine that we are gathered here to do the same.'

He stopped and looked round at the others while Neil Campbell muttered the meanings to Hal and the wind flared into the silence, flurrying snow and flattening the flames.

‘I did not see anyone here defending the birthright of the Auld Burn folk when the Irishers raided, even though they had to cross some of your lands to get to us. Nor do I hear the Lothian man telling me how he and his wee handful will kill all the lice.'

Again he paused and folk stirred, some eager to reply but bound by the conventions of the oak branch. Others had their hands out, but were silent still.

‘My father's father,' Gillespie went on with maddening slowness, ‘fought against your people, Grann. Seventy-four different battles. My father never passed a day without shedding the blood of either Grann's folk, or of less than kindly neighbours to us. I myself have fought the Invaders fourteen times. You claim we are all of one blood, but if the Invaders had not come to these lands, we would be fighting each other, or even the lowland men from Lothian, who send priests to turn us to their way of God and away from the old way of our own saints and Christ priests.'

There was a flurry, like a shadow of wind and, suddenly, Grann had the stick and was almost nose to nose with Gillespie, who took a surprised step away from the man snarling at him. He spat out the words like the sparking of wet wood, looking round the fire-blooded faces.

When he had finished, he waited, standing stern as an old tree, while Neil Campbell spoke the English of it to the Lothian lord. Then he went on, with the same bitter rage as if he had not stopped.

‘There is Gillespie, whose father's father fought mine and lost as much as he won. Whose father fought all his neighbours and gained neither land nor honour from it. Who himself fought the Invaders – who still burned him out. Until he came here with all the rest of us, he has never won.'

He broke off and slashed them with his feral stare while Neil Campbell bent to murmur the translation only in Hal's ear, glancing uneasily at Grann, for he felt the tension coiling in the snow wind.

‘I know my father's deeds and his father before him,' Grann spat, the Gaelic liquid as flowing fire, ‘but I also know what I myself have done. I have fought these English and everyone who supports them, be it MacDougall or MacDonald, every day of my waking life since good king Alexander died.'

There was a half-angered, half-shamed shifting among the MacDonalds at that, for there had been a birling of politics beyond The Mounth since Bruce had taken the throne.

Before it, the MacDougalls had been patriots and the MacDonalds pro-English; now the reverse held true, though Hal was black in his thoughts that it could all change, just as easily. No matter which of them supported Bruce, Hal knew, the other would take the opposite stance, for old feuds would not suffer a MacDougall and a MacDonald to stand shoulder to shoulder.

‘There has never been a day I did not take a head to preserve in oil,' Grann went on and folk shifted uneasily at that, which was altogether too heathen for Christian men to hear.

‘But Gillespie is right in one thing,' Grann went on, ignoring them. ‘Not all blood is the same. These English have blood that is black, like the belly-blood of slaughtered hogs, fat with the best of our own land. The blood of the Lothian lord's people is red, but flows thick and slow. The blood of the Auld Burn people is thin and clear – like water.'

There was a howl at that and Gillespie hauled out his only weapon, an eating knife. There were yells and growls and, eventually, Neil Campbell signalled to his own men and they waded in, dragging people apart.

Neil himself took Grann by the arm and led him out of the circle, taking the stick from him as he did so. He handed it to Hal and then called for silence; the Dog Boy saw the Lord of Herdmanston, slightly embarrassed, turning the stick round and round in one grimy hand.

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