Midnight Honor (32 page)

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Authors: Marsha Canham

BOOK: Midnight Honor
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Hearing the screams of the startled soldiers who were pulled down out of the saddles and slashed to bloody ribbons, what was left of Hawley's cavalry turned and fled the field. Major Hamilton Garner, hatless and splattered with the bloody brains of a fellow officer, managed to turn a handful back through the threat of his own screams and slashing sword, but for the most part it was a repeat of their shameful performance at Prestonpans. So eager and desperate were the dragoons to clear the field, they trampled back through the
advancing ranks of their own infantry, causing an even greater crush of confusion and panic.

On the left, the Highland regiments led by the Camerons, the Appin Stewarts, and the MacKintoshes took aim and discharged their muskets in response to the first full volley of the opposing divisions of Hawley's infantrymen. As the general had boasted, the line was impressive, once assembled. Their tunics glowed scarlet through the haze of rain, providing well-marked targets between the stiff white leather of their neck stocks and the tall white spatterdash gaiters.

By contrast, the Highlanders in their muted plaids and plain woolen coats blended into the browns and grays of the surrounding moorland, and with nothing to aim at, most of the royalist volleys went wild.

As was their habit, the clansmen threw down their spent weapons and ran forward, the air filled with centuries-old battle cries that had carried their ancestors to meet their fate. When what remained of the Hanover front line saw them charging out of the mist and smoke, their broadswords raised overhead, the infantrymen were not far behind the dragoons in breaking rank. As they ran they took the second line with them, and General Hawley found himself staring aghast at a sea of red uniforms spilling down the slopes and rushing down the road toward the camp.

They ran by forties and fifties, fleeing without a care for the muskets they left behind, the ammunition packs they flung from their belts, the stocks they tore off and cast aside. They ran for safety in the streets of Falkirk, and when that was not deemed to be far enough, they kept running, all the way to Linlithgow, ten miles away.

Not everyone fled the field in a panic. Lord George's Athollmen, with the Camerons and MacKintoshes fighting alongside, encountered several regiments who were determined to stand and fight. A squad of government troops attempted to circle around behind Lord George in a flanking maneuver, hoping to catch his men in a crossfire. MacGillivray saw this and shouted the rallying cry of “Loch Moy,” calling for the men of Clan Chattan to veer off and charge to the rescue.

His long legs scything through the bramble and frozen grass, MacGillivray led his men into a headlong confrontation with the Elector's troops. He went in with his
clai' mór
at the ready, hacking and slashing in great sweeping motions that sliced through flesh and bone as if neither was of any substance. A pocket of infantrymen had the presence of mind to mount a volley and John felt a prick in his thigh, two more in his calf and rib. He shook them off as annoying stings, but something else caught the corner of his eye and took him by such surprise he tripped over a fallen clansman and went tumbling down into a shallow ditch.

Robbie Farquharson saw MacGillivray pitch headlong and bloodied into a culvert, but he had no time to stop. He ran alongside his twin, their two swords carving a fearsomely gory swath through the English lines. Eneas was close on their heels, as was Gillies MacBean, the stocky Highlander spattered in blood and mud from head to foot.

The English faltered, turned, and found the Camerons closing down on them like a swarm of demons from hell. In a body, the Elector's troops threw down their muskets and thrust their hands high in surrender, some of them squeezing their eyes tightly shut and bursting into tears in anticipation of feeling limbs hacked from their bodies.

Alexander Cameron shouted in time to stop his men from doing exactly that, but it did not prevent them from slapping out with the flats of their swords, spitting and hurling insults, especially when it was discovered that some of the captured troops were in the Royal Scots brigades.

With the lot of them surrendered and surrounded, Gillies MacBean doubled over at the waist to catch his breath. He was not yet fully recovered from his drinking contest with Struan MacSorley the previous night and when he turned green enough that it looked as if he might actually vomit, it gave the other men a reason to laugh.

All except Robbie, who turned and stared back into the sulfurous mist.

“What is it, lad?” Aluinn MacKail asked, clapping him soundly on the shoulder. “The bastards are in flight. We've won the day. Why are you wearing such a long face?”

“It's The MacGillivray. He were caught in that last crossfire, God preserve him, an' now it's that balky he could bleed tae death afore we find him.”

“Aye, well, God preserve yerself, lad,” MacGillivray said, limping up out of the mist and rain. “I've no need of His aid just yet. Someone else might well beg it though, by the by.”

He dragged his arm forward, sending Anne Moy MacKintosh sprawling across the wet ground. As she had lost her bonnet, her braid hung wet down her back, and her fountainous lace jabot had been flung away in the mud. There was blood on her face, on the gleaming length of her sword.

“What the bluidy Christ—?” Eneas pushed his brothers aside and strode forward, offering his cousin no helping hand as she clambered to her feet again. “Where did you come from? Were ye not told tae stay back wi' the prince's guard?”

“You really did not expect me just to sit and watch,” she said, her blue eyes sparkling with defiance. “Not when I can outshoot, outfight, outride the lot of you!”

MacGillivray snatched up a fistful of her jacket and spun her around to face him. He had caught a glimpse of her through the downpour and not been able to believe his eyes. Even worse, when he had gone down, it was a shot from Anne's pistol that had stopped an English soldier from plunging a bayonet into his unprotected back.

“Ye're the wife o' the clan chief, for God's sake,” he hissed.

“Aye, that I am. I am also colonel of this regiment, and I'll not sit comfortably under a canvas tent sipping wine and nibbling on sweetmeats while the brave men of my clan fight and die!”

John tightened his fist, drawing her so close she could feel the heat of his steamy breath on her cheek. He was angry enough to throttle her, a sentiment obviously not shared by her cousins, who whooped and tossed their sodden bonnets in the air, giving their answer plain enough, praising her courage. They scooped her out of MacGillivray's clutches and propped her on their shoulders, prancing around in maniacal circles until she grew dizzy from laughing and called for relief.

None of the Englishmen were amused. Huddled together in a forlorn clump, they had burned hot enough with shame without discovering there had been a woman on the battlefield. They had heard rumors of a flame-haired Amazon traveling in the prince's camp, but until now had assumed it was just that: rumors. Knowing no decent Englishwoman would be caught within several miles of a battlefield, they reasoned this one must be half man, half whore, but it still did little to soothe their battered pride.

They would remember her.

To a man, they would remember her.

The memory was to be embellished and emblazoned on the minds of a good many more prisoners when Anne rode through the British camp and surveyed the havoc. The prince had arrived a few moments earlier and had not only commandeered Hawley's tent but had found the general's personal valet cowering in a corner and ordered him to fetch wine and victuals from the officer's private stock in order that they might celebrate the full extent of their victory.

The royalist army, in full flight, had abandoned their camp, leaving nearly all the tents and equipment, fourteen heavy artillery pieces, and a considerable quantity of ammunition, all of which was in short supply in the Jacobite army.

Charles Stuart, suffering the lingering effects of a terrible chest cold, was happiest to discover Hawley had a fondness for French brandy. He was on his third glass when Anne and MacGillivray rode up, leading their prisoners in a straggled column behind them. Only Lochiel and Lord George had proved tardy thus far in joining the prince to celebrate; they were still snapping at the heels of the fleeing English, insisting the victory would be moot if Hawley's army was allowed to escape and reappear another day.

Charles Stuart's soft brown eyes widened, however, when he saw his
belle rebelle
enter the crowded tent, her clothing rain-soaked and spattered with the evidence of her further rebellion. He had been so involved in watching the battle unfold from his vantage point on the moor that he had not noticed her slip away.

“Good God,” he declared when she rose from her curtsy. “Do you mean to say you disobeyed a direct order from your prince?”

“You never actually ordered me to remain by your side, Your Grace,” she demurred. “I could clearly see the battle had turned in our favor”—a statement that won a glare from MacGillivray—“and thought only to be with my clansmen at their moment of triumph.”

The prince started coughing into a lace handkerchief. Although his face flushed a dark red, he waved away the concerns of his two advisors, O'Sullivan and Thomas Sheridan, neither of whom had ventured out from beneath canvas coverings long enough to dampen their wigs.

When the fit passed, he sank back into Hawley's wooden camp chair and took a long draught of brandy.

“If this is what victory feels like,” he gasped, only half in jest, “I should hate to envision defeat.”

“Your Grace—” O'Sullivan began.

“Yes, yes, I know. This infernal dampness does not improve matters overmuch, and I should find my way back to bed at once. But dammit, man, there are certain pleasures we cannot set aside simply because we do not feel up to indulging in them. Our evening meal, for instance, will be at Hawley's table with Hawley's food served on Hawley's china plate. A petty gratification, perhaps, to gloat at the table of the man who declared me an incompetent wastrel, but there you have it.” He glanced up at Anne, sparing a flicker of the eye to note the clods of mud attached to her boots. “And you, my dear. Apart from a hot bath, what would give you the greatest satisfaction at this moment?”

“Me, Your Grace?” She shifted her weight self-consciously from one foot to the other. “I am content enough to know your pleasure, Sire. However, I would beg one small favor if I may.”

He waved his hand. “Name it.”

“I would ask of your officers if they have had word of… of my husband's regiment.” She looked around at the gathering of chiefs, most of whom had come bloodied from the field, and thought she saw one or two of them smirk in
contempt. By the time the prisoners had been disarmed and marched back to camp, it had been too late to search the moor. If Angus had fallen, if he lay bleeding on the cold, wet ground, morning might come too late.

Angus's regiment had been attached to General Keppel, and they had been directly across the field from the MacKintoshes.

“I would beg your leave to go back and search, if—”

The prince held up his hand, cutting off her plea. While the royal hand was still upraised, he wiggled two of the slender fingers at someone standing beside the door of the tent. Anne turned in time to see Alexander Cameron smile and lift the flap of canvas. He stepped aside to let another man come in out of the rain—this one with dark chestnut hair plastered flat to his brow and neck, and clear gray eyes that sought Anne's at once and held them fast.

Aware of the warlike chiefs watching her every move, she did not run and fling herself into her husband's arms as she so longed to do. Instead, she kept her face clear and her movements calm as she walked slowly toward him, her gaze sweeping the length of his body long enough to note both arms and legs were intact, and he was in possession of all his appendages. There was a gash on his chin that stalled her breath for a moment, but his eyes were clear and steady, locked on hers with the same intensity she suspected was in her own.

“Your servant, Captain,” she said softly.

A muscle shivered in Angus's cheek before he squared his shoulders and slowly withdrew his sword. Holding it flat by the blade and hilt, he presented it to his wife in the acknowledged manner of a formal surrender.

“It would appear that it is I who am your servant… Colonel,” he murmured, adding almost under his breath, “and may I say: very happily so.”

“Quite right,” said the prince, his voice petulant. “And now if you will offer me your parole, sir, I will accept it and we may get on with more pleasant matters.”

Angus hesitated fractionally before stepping past his wife and approaching the royal scion. He went down on one knee and bowed his head. “I do offer you my word, Sire, not to take up further arms against your cause.”

“I confess you were a great disappointment to me, MacKintosh. I had hoped I could count you among my dearest friends.” When Angus made no response, he waved his hand again. “Rise. Your word as an officer and gentleman is accepted.”

“May I beg leave, Sire, to tend my husband's wound?” Anne asked.

Another flutter of the lace handkerchief dismissed them and they exited the tent together, neither one exchanging a word as they mounted their horses and rode back through the camp. The rain had turned to snow; by the time they returned to St. Ninians, it was full dark, and they were both chilled through to the bone. The escort of Highlanders left them at the cottage and took the horses away to be fed and stabled. The fire had been left untended, the ashes were cold and gray, but before Anne could even divest herself of her jacket, the slamming of the door behind her brought the heat of a blush to her cheeks.

Angus was leaning against the door. He was hatless, and had been during the entire ride from Falkirk. His ears were as red as his nose; the dark locks of his hair were scattered every which way, some curling forward over his cheeks, some trailing down over the collar of his tunic. The icy, appraising gray of his eyes held her steadfast, breaking away only once in the ensuing small eternity of ticking seconds to stare at the floor a moment before looking back up.

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