The Renegade: A Tale of Robert the Bruce (74 page)

BOOK: The Renegade: A Tale of Robert the Bruce
4.67Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

A man at the far end of the room stirred, sat up straighter, and then leaned forward urgently. His face was flushed, his features twisting into a scowl. Bruce had never set eyes on him before this meeting, but the man, whoever he was, had been the last to arrive, interrupting the proceedings a good half-hour after they had begun. He had entered the hall silently, nodding in stern-faced apology to Sir John as senior there, but had offered no explanation of why he was late and no one had sought to question him. Since then he had sat fidgeting and listening, his frowning gaze switching from face to face as various people spoke.

“I’ll tell ye what kind o’ shite it is,” he growled. His voice, though low pitched, was filled with sufficient anger to draw every eye in the room. “It’s the kind o’ shite that starts up wars, and I’m ready to do somethin’ about it.” He turned his eyes unexpectedly to Bruce. “Lord Carrick,” he said, nodding curtly. “I kent ye wis comin’ here to meet wi’ us and I was set to be here early, but I had ill news reach me just afore I set out.” He straightened in his chair and looked around at his fellows, then stood up. “I’m Alexander Armstrong o’ Jedburgh. My father died last year—November—and I was raised to take his place. I’ve been listenin’ here and I’ve never spoken out like this afore now, but I canna stay quiet on this.”

He gestured with a thumb towards the previous speaker. “Ye’ve heard Alastair’s story about Rab Dinwiddie an’ how he’s like to die o’ a fit. But vexed though he was, auld Rab fell down on his own, wi’ naebody near him. I hae a different tale to tell ye.” He swept his eyes around the assembly, all of whom were watching him raptly.

“I had word this mornin’ that a wheen o’ our folk was found slaughtered yesterday. They was cut down like beasts. Men, women, and bairns—three families o’ ordinary, law-abidin’ folk who never harmed a soul … and no’ a sign, supposedly, o’ who could hae done such a thing.” He paused, waiting for the outburst of shock to die down, and Bruce, as the only magnate there, had to fight to keep his own face expressionless.

“They had set up a place, about seven years ago,” Armstrong continued. “Three houses for the families and some pens for pigs an’ the like, and for the first five years they worked to clear new fields. They planted their first crop last year and brought it in wi’out help frae us. Their wee place hasna got a name, it’s just a bit o’ hard-won land about two miles frae Jedburgh. The eldest—the headman, if ye like—was my cousin Broderick MacRae. Him and his wife had three grown sons who lived there wi’ them. Two o’ them was married and had houses o’ their own, and between them seven bairns, the eldest o’ them about eight … They’re a’ deid … Fourteen folk.”

The silence stretched for a long time until one man said in a stunned voice, “Christ Jesus, Alec, that’s awfu’. That doesna stand belief. Who would do such a thing?”

“Nae human worthy o’ the name,” someone else added.

“Aye,” the first man said, his eyes agog, “but
somebody
must hae done it. Ye must hae
some
idea o’ who it was, Sandy, surely?”

Armstrong swung towards the speaker, his face suffused with rage. “Some
idea
? I don’t
need
ideas, Johnston, I know damn well who did it. The God-cursed Englishry did it. But I havena got a name to put to anybody, an’ no’ a shred o’ evidence to show, and a’ the folk who could point a finger o’ accusation hae been murdered.”

“But … ” It was the man Johnston. “But how d’ye
know
that if they’re a’ deid?”

“Because I was
telt
!” he howled. “They wis
seen
!” Armstrong reined himself in abruptly and drew in a deep, shuddering gulp of air. He turned to gaze wide-eyed at Bruce, and when he resumed his voice was calmer, almost matter-of-fact. “The lad that brought us the word saw them, less than twa miles from where it happened. He was on his way to see my cousin Broderick, wi’ a load o’ hay. He saw them comin’ out o’ the forest into a glade by the river there. Nine or ten o’ them, he said. English sodgers, wearin’ leather hauberks and steel hats. He was above them, lookin’ down the hill, and he hid as soon as he saw them.”

“Why?” Bruce asked, cursing himself for his stupidity even as the word left his mouth.


Why
? Because he kent better than to let them see him. He drove his cart into the bushes out o’ sight and hid himsel’ and watched them go by, waitin’ till they was out o’ sight.”

“And he was sure they were English?”

Armstrong ignored the question, clearly deeming it unworthy of response, and Bruce added, “Ten of them, you said?”

Armstrong shrugged. “Nine, ten … He didna try to count them. It was enough to see them there, wi’ naebody in charge o’ them. The boy kept out o’ sight and waited till they was past and then went on his way. And then he smelt the smoke as he got near Broderick’s place. Every buildin’ in the place was on fire and everybody was deid. The women were a’ naked, their throats cut … And the men and bairns had a’ been cut to bits … He couldna do a thing, he said, an’ he doesna ken how long he stayed there, no’ knowin’ what to do or where to turn. And then he came lookin’ for us.”

“So what did you do?”

Armstrong looked at him with eyes that were utterly blank. “What
could
I do? Nothin’ that would change a thing. I sent some men along with our priest to clean the place up and bury the bodies. And then I came here to bring the news.”

“But ye have a witness,” old Sir John Heriot said, speaking for the first time since Armstrong had begun. “The boy. Who is he?”

“Adam Westwood, they call him. He’s sixteen. But he didna see anythin’ to
witness
, ither than a rabble of Englishry comin’ out o’ the forest frae the direction o’ Broderick’s place. He wasna close enough to see their faces or even what crests they was wearin’ and he wouldna ken a single one o’ them gin he was standin’ in among them. I can just imagine what the English would say about that, the bastards.”

The Earl of Carrick nodded. “There’s nothing I can say to ease your grief or your anger. They might be anywhere by now, safe among their own kind. They might even have been deserters, but
we’ll never know.” He frowned. “You say the boy said they were a rabble. They were not in formation, marching?”

“No. A rabble was what the boy called them. No’ marchin’, just daunderin’ along wi’ naebody in charge, laughin’ and shoutin’ to one another like laddies wi’ no’ a care in the world.”

“Hmm … So what will you do now?”

Armstrong simply stared at him. “Had ye asked me that afore I cam here this mornin’ I wouldna hae been able to tell ye,” he said in a low voice. “But I ken now.” He turned away to address the gathering. “Justice for my folk,” he said. “I’m goin’ out to the Forest. To join the outlaws, join Wallace. If I canna depend on the law for help, then by Christ I’ll make my ain law. I’ll take my boys wi’ me, the twa eldest and a handfu’ o’ my men. Twelve o’ us a’ thegither, single men wi’ nae families to fret about. Them that stays behind will be enough to see that there’s nae repeat o’ what happened the day afore yesterday.” He glanced from face to face as though expecting opposition, but no one spoke. “My mind’s made up,” he said. “I’ve had enough o’ sittin’ on my arse an’ sayin’ nothin’, twiddlin’ my thumbs like some eejit. I’m goin’ lookin’ for English sodgers. I’m no’ askin’ for help frae any o’ ye, no’ askin’ ye to come wi’ me. This is my business and I’ll see to it. I’m just tellin’ ye so ye’ll ken when ye hear tell o’ it frae other folk.” He hitched his jerkin closer about him and looked at Sir John Heriot. “That’s all I have to say, and now I’m goin’ home. But I’ll be awa in three days frae now, and after that, God knows. We’ll see. Good day to ye all.” He nodded one more time to Sir John and then to Bruce, and then walked out, pulling the main door shut behind him.

The sound of the door closing seemed to echo in the silence before a sullen murmur erupted among those left behind. Sir John Heriot quelled them with an upraised hand and a sharp call for quiet. When the room was still again, the elder turned to look at Bruce.

“There you have it, my lord earl,” he said. “Better and more sudden than I could have told you. That’s the kind o’ thing that’s goin’ on in this sorry land these days.” He paused. “I hope ye’ll no’ mind my sayin’ so, but you and your faither hae no idea o’ what it’s
like up here. Ye’re both secure in England, magnates who hae sworn oaths o’ fealty to Edward, livin’ in England’s peace an’ doin’ your duty by England’s King. Ye see nothin’ o’ what’s truly happenin’ here. For us, though, it’s a different story. We hae to live wi’ that kind o’ arrogance and anger—frae the English, I mean, no’ frae the likes o’ poor Sandy Armstrong. And that’s no’ easy to thole at the best o’ times. Never was. For years we wis worried about civil war, Bruce against Comyn, but that never cam to pass, thank God. Now, though, it’s far worse, and that’s why I canna agree to what ye ask, no’ wi’out a letter o’ instruction frae Annandale himsel’, and I doubt, gin he knew what was goin’ on here, he’d write such a thing.”

Bruce was sitting straight-backed now, frowning deeply, and he threw out his hands in exasperation. “Forgive me, Sir John, and all of you. I hear what you are telling me, and God knows this is not the first time I have heard such things. It is, though, the first time I have truly seen how bad things really are, all across this land—the first time I have really
believed
it. You must think me stupid indeed, but—”

“The fault’s no’ yours, Lord Carrick. It comes frae the life you’ve lived in the south. Down there, you’re a Scots earl, loyal to the English King for good and ample reason. Naebody here questions your allegiance—the lack o’ it, I mean—to Balliol. That was aey understood frae the outset, and ye behaved wi’ honour throughout all o’ that. But now Balliol is gone, and Scotland should be a better place … Except it’s no’. But here’s what ye need to think o’ now.

“Up till now, we was a’ Bruce men wi’ a duty to do Bruce’s biddin’, and that’s no’ changed. But now it’s no’ about Bruce’s will in Scotland—no’ completely or as clearly as it was in the past. Now it’s about England’s
bein’
in Scotland, when they’ve nae right to be here. It’s about the depredations o’ the English sodgers an’ the way they treat the folk—rapin’ and murderin’ wi’ nae restraint and nae fear o’ reprisal. An’ it’s about the way the folk here look at what’s goin’ on. To them—to men like Sandy Armstrong an’ a host o’ others—it’s us and
them
,
them
bein’ the English. This Lord o’ Douglas whose castle ye’re sent here to burn isna rebellin’ against
the English King. He’s up in arms about the damage bein’ done to his lands and his folk by people who shouldna be there in the first place. To them that lives hereabouts, he’s mair hero than rebel and mair patriot than outlaw—is that the right word, patriot?” He saw Bruce’s reluctant nod and grunted. “Aye. Anyway, ordinary folk hae nae interest in the high obligations o’ the magnates. To them, it’s a’ about their wives and bairns, their goodmen and kinfolk, about house and hearth and livin’ frae day to day wi’out fear o’ being hung or trampled on. And to them, that’s what Douglas is tryin’ to protect. There was a word your grandsire used to use. It was ‘perceptions,’ gin I recall it right. D’ye ken what that means, Lord Carrick?”

“Aye, I do, Sir John. I understand it well.”

“Aye, well the
perceptions
here in Scotland this day, among ordinary folk, is that there are Scots folk, livin’ on their ain lands, and then there’s Englishry, actin’ as though thae lands are theirs. The folk winna thole it, my lord. And I winna order my men, be they Armstrongs or any other here in Annandale, to ride out barefaced and be
perceived
to be helpin’ the English in puttin’ down their ain folk. Ye may think what ye will o’ me, but there it is.”

Someone among the silent knights sighed, but Bruce did not look towards the sound. Instead he sat chewing on what he had heard and eventually, reluctantly, he nodded.

“Thank you, Sir John,” he said, then lapsed back into silence. No one stirred, their stillness reflecting the gravity of what had transpired here, and Bruce wiped the corners of his mouth with a spread hand before continuing. “This—session—has given me much to think about, and none of it expected.” He rose to his feet and began to pace, his gaze moving now among all the listeners. “
Much
to think about. And though I would never have believed yesterday that I would say what I am going to say, I say it now without reluctance and without hesitation.” His formal tone announced that he spoke not as Robert Bruce the younger but as the Earl of Carrick. “My grandfather taught me well on the importance of perceptions, and having listened now to Alexander Armstrong and the rest of you, I can see not only what you mean but also that you are correct. In my
own defence, I can only say that my blindness to the truth of what I’ve heard was—like my father’s own—born of our isolation in England. My father and I have had no idea of the situation you have to live with. And so I withdraw my request in the belief that my father would, too. I will ask no man of Annandale to place himself against the judgment of the folk in Scotland for what could look like treasonous behaviour in their eyes.

“My own men of Carrick have told me the same kind of thing, but until I came here this day I had chosen to believe they were speaking only of local occurrences. Carrick is far removed from here, after all. But now it seems that no place in Scotland is too far removed to be unscathed. The task I have to do at Castle Douglas can be accomplished with the men I have at hand. It is mine alone to perform and I will do it, as I must, with my Carrick men, under the blue banner of Bruce and the gold of Carrick.”

He looked around the room, meeting the gaze of each man. “I am grateful, then, for your patience in listening to what I have had to say and I thank you for allowing me the time in which to say it, foolish as it might have seemed to you even without the horror of the tale we have heard this day. And that said, I will detain you no longer. I will send a report to my father in Carlisle, and I give you my word it will contain my full agreement with your concerns and no hint of criticism of you or your beliefs in this matter. Once again, my thanks, and God be with you all.”

Other books

The Wild Girl by Kate Forsyth
Capture The Night by Dawson, Geralyn
Creación by Gore Vidal
Me & Emma by Elizabeth Flock
Earth's Hope by Ann Gimpel
To Love by Dori Lavelle
Hideaway by Dean Koontz
A Single Shot by Matthew F Jones
Things You Won't Say by Sarah Pekkanen