The Renegade: A Tale of Robert the Bruce (26 page)

BOOK: The Renegade: A Tale of Robert the Bruce
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He loosened his grip and formed his hand into a fist, then punched the younger man’s breast gently. “I think you might make such a leader, one o’ these days. Wi’ the help o’ God, of course.” He smiled. “It’ll no’ be soon, mind, for I’ve no plans to die afore my time, but I’m encouraged to think the day will come when you’ll remember
this
day and make your own choice to
be
somewhere, to make a stand, for Bruce and for Scotland … Now, come back to the tent wi’ me, for I have things I’ll need you to do for me.”

CHAPTER NINE

FAMILY TIES

“M
aster Bruce. Your turn, if it please you.”

The words were expected, but Rob felt his chest tighten none the less. His friend John Bigod had just picked up his fallen sword and walked out of the whitewashed circle in the centre of the training ground, holding the weapon awkwardly in his left hand while he clamped his sore right hand, still in its mailed gauntlet, beneath his armpit and fought to keep his face free of any sign of the pain he was feeling. Sir Marmaduke Tweng, now alone at the centre of the circle, was waiting for Rob, waving his long sword gently, point down, from side to side in front of him.

Rob stepped into the circle, hoisting his blade as he went, and for a moment stood in a slight crouch, acutely aware of the weight and heat of the plate armour he was wearing over his mailed hauberk and of the padded stiffness of his heavily armoured gloves as he flexed his fingers on the sword’s hilt. It was approaching noon on a hot day in late September, and he could feel sweat running down the channel between his shoulder blades to pool in the hollow at the small of his back before trickling itchily to the crack of his buttocks. His hair was soaked under the mailed cowl of his coif, and he knew that if a single bead of sweat ran down his temple to penetrate the corner of an eye it would sting unbearably and he would not be able to wipe it away … Not with a steel-backed gauntlet.

Sir Marmaduke, on the other hand, looked cool and fresh, notwithstanding that he had dispatched seven consecutive opponents within the past half-hour, all of them less than half his age. The only sign of his efforts was the slightest sheen of perspiration on his
forehead, and even that seemed to dry up as Rob approached. The knight brought his weapon up to touch his chin with the cross-guard in a salute, then swept it down and out before bringing it back into the guard position.

Rob sucked in a deep breath and repeated the gesture, then fell into his fighting stance. Tweng had had them drilling in the blazing sun since daybreak, mercilessly running them through their paces with quarterstaff and heavy weights until their muscles were numb and their reflexes hammered into nothingness. This final test, blade to blade and without shields, had become a ritual, the last ordeal of each day, a ceremony religiously pursued at the close of every training session in order to remind the trainees that, though they were within days of achieving knighthood, none of them had yet managed to best their mentor and taskmaster.

There were eight trainees, all senior squires, and the swords they used were blunted, their edges filed flat and their central spines augmented with narrow strips of lead solder to increase their weight, making each one half again as heavy as a normal sword blade. But the solid weight of them on impact was barely less lethal than a keen-edged blow would have been, and John Bigod, nursing his bruised hand, was the last of seven who had been newly reminded of that. This was the final half day of formal training for the youths, and the knight seemed determined to sweat the last ounce of fight out of them before he released them for the last time at noon. By tradition, the night ahead would be theirs as soon as they were dismissed, an entire night in which to celebrate together in the knowledge that their training was complete and there would be no pre-dawn run and no soul-numbing drill the next day. Instead, the following afternoon, they would be ceremonially bathed and shriven in preparation for the solemn rites of the eve of their knighting. At sunset they would be escorted into the castle chapel to stand vigil, spending the entire night in prayer, in full armour, under the watchful eyes of priests. The next morning, ritually purified, they would be knighted by the King himself, their manhood and nobility formally acknowledged in the eyes of all the world.

Sir Marmaduke tilted his head slightly to one side, questioningly, and Rob gripped his sword more firmly and moved to the attack. He saw his opponent back away respectfully, his eyes watchful and his movements slightly tentative, but he knew from experience that the move was designed to tempt him to strike out. It had been successful in the past, but this time he ignored the invitation and concentrated on how he could change his established pattern of engagement. Tweng had taught them well, and Rob, at least, had finally learned that fighting patterns were predictable to a self-possessed antagonist, especially after months and years of familiarity with the fighters. And predictability, when the matter at hand was combat with swords, was invariably lethal.

Today, this last bout, Rob was determined not to be beaten as easily as he usually was—as all of them always were—and a thought flicked into his mind. He sprang forward, eyes and point centred upon his opponent’s breast in a full frontal lunge, but before he committed himself fully he went down on one knee, almost as though his foot had slipped, opening himself up to a punitive rap from Tweng’s ever-ready blade. As his knee touched ground, however, and the knight’s sword came slicing towards him exactly as predicted, Rob thrust his blade upward, straight-armed, to catch the descending edge on the braced bar of his own. In the brief moment of Sir Marmaduke’s surprise, Rob twisted with his entire upper body to sweep the knight’s sword to the side with all his strength, then, with a two-fisted grip, whipped the blade down to land solidly on the outside of Tweng’s knee. The knight stumbled sideways and back, off balance but already swinging his blade back awkwardly to defend his centre. He was too late, though, for Rob had immediately launched himself into a lunging, two-handed thrust, driving himself forward and up from his kneeling position with churning legs, his sword striking like a lance solidly against the very centre of the knight’s armoured breast, with all of Rob’s uncoiling strength and weight behind it. He heard the roar of approval from his fellows as Sir Marmaduke Tweng crashed full-length on the flat of his back. He was suddenly appalled at what
he had done and stricken with fear by the stunned silence that followed.

In the distance, a bullock bellowed in outrage, but no one moved. Rob swallowed hard, feeling himself begin to shake, then bit down on his own teeth and thrust the blunted point of his sword into the ground, leaning on it to force it home, He stepped forward and stood looking down at Sir Marmaduke, one nerveless hand extended in a timid offer of assistance. The knight lay still, looking up at him with wide-open eyes. Then he blinked and moved his head to one side, to where the others of Rob’s group stood staring in awe.

“I have never seen any of you from this viewpoint before,” he said evenly, “but I must admit it is no more flattering than my normal view of you.” Still no one moved and no one dared to smile. Tweng did, however, his strong white teeth showing suddenly in a bright grin. “That, gentlemen,” he said, looking up at the seven gaping observers and then back at Rob, “is what these past months have been all about. That was the triumph of a fighting man. A stratagem that came from inside, unsought—and unplanned, I believe—and perfectly executed. Help me up.” He gripped Rob’s proffered hand and heaved himself to his feet. “Well done, Robert Bruce,” he said, his smile still in place. “We’ll make a fighting knight of you after this.” He hesitated. “It
was
unplanned, was it not?”

“Aye, sir, it was. It came into my mind as we saluted.”

“And what prompted it, do you know?”

“Aye, sir, I do … I was thinking about how to be unpredictable for once, and then it came to me that even you can be predictable. I didn’t stop to think about it but I knew at once what you would do if I left myself open, even slightly.”

Tweng was nodding judiciously. “Excellent. Truly excellent. Of course, the boy I first crossed swords with a few years ago could not have done it, nor even thought of it. But that boy has changed greatly in those years—as have all of you. Bigger by far, stronger by far, and sometimes, unfortunately, denser by far. Well done, Bruce. By knocking me down you have brought your training to a fitting end.

I wish you all well in future, gentlemen, and I know you will be worthy knights in the King’s service. Go, then, and enjoy yourselves with my full blessing. Oh, wait.” He reached into the pouch at his waist and pulled out a small leather purse, which he tossed to Rob. “In case you should have need of coin tonight, this should purchase a decent meal for all of you. Now be off.”

He turned to walk away but stopped, his eyes on a figure running towards them. “Hold again,” he added. “It looks as though someone here might be in demand.”

The runner reached them, breathing heavily, and made a sketchy bow. “Your pardon, Sir Marmaduke,” he gasped. “Is Master Robert Bruce among your number?”

“I’m Robert Bruce,” Rob said.

The fellow was still labouring for breath. “You are summoned, Master Bruce. You must come with me at once. To meet the King. As you are.”

Rob glanced at Tweng, wide-eyed with surprise, and the knight bowed his head.

“At once is the word. But I would counsel you to walk, not run. A knight must show dignity at all times, and it will not aid your case—whatever that might be—to walk into the royal presence panting like a dog and pouring with sweat. Go, then, and fare ye well, Robert Bruce.”

Rob bent his head in acknowledgment and spoke to the messenger. “Lead on, then, but bear in mind what Sir Marmaduke has said. We will walk befittingly.” He tossed the leather purse to John Bigod. “I’ve no idea what’s afoot, so don’t wait for me. But if you find any wenches worth spending time with, save one of them for me. I’ll join you as soon as I may.” He flipped a hand in farewell and turned away to follow the messenger.

He thought of the last time King Edward had sent for him unexpectedly, more than two years before, and he recalled quite clearly how apprehensive he had been about entering the royal presence then, not knowing what to expect and then finding the King surrounded by dukes, bishops, and barons, all of them looking at
Rob as if he were a beggar who had intruded upon them. Today he was even more ill at ease, because the Edward Plantagenet who summoned him now was a very different man. The King had lost his Queen to a sudden illness in November that same year of 1290 and had vanished from public view for months, shutting himself up with his grief for an entire winter, during which the governance of the realm of England was effectively suspended. When he re-emerged to take up his reign again, people immediately began to note the changes in him.

Eleanor of Castile had been Edward’s wife for thirty-six years, and not only had they loved each other deeply and faithfully throughout that time but the Queen’s advice and tolerant guidance had become indispensable to Edward, who trusted her above all others in matters relating to his own weaknesses. It had been she who advised him best in matters of policy wherein his own impetuosity and impatience might often have led him astray, and it was well known within his small circle of intimates that Queen Eleanor had, in many instances, been the actual source of Edward’s more important regal decisions. The tragic loss of her had radically changed the man she had loved. Gone forever, it seemed, was the whimsical, frequently irrational, and self-deprecating sense of humour that had set Edward apart from other powerful men. Nowadays he was all careworn monarch, beset by swarming, never-ending duties, and it was said that he had not laughed aloud since.

Rob had greatly liked Queen Eleanor, and she had returned his fondness, often going out of her way to make him feel welcome at her court, for despite his family’s great English landholdings, others still perceived him as something of an alien, a Scot among Englishmen. She it was who had encouraged him to take advantage of his differentness rather than try to conceal it; she had encouraged him to be more flamboyant in dress and manners than his peers, accentuating his status as a visiting guest from beyond the borders of the realm. Rob missed her greatly.

They were all far from Westminster on this occasion, in the formidable stone castle of Norham that belonged to the King’s
friend and sometime deputy for Scotland Antony Bek, Prince-Bishop of Durham. The castle, two hundred years old but recently rebuilt, lay at the northernmost reach of England, directly facing the Scots border, and for the past two years it had been the setting for King Edward’s court of inquiry to decide which one among an entire cadre of claimants—fourteen of them in all and including Rob’s own grandfather—held the strongest claim to the vacant Scots throne. That number of competitors had long since failed to impress Rob, for he knew, as did everyone, that there were only two serious contenders, his own grandfather and Lord John Balliol of Galloway, both of whom were southern Scots. Edward of England, though, as arbitrator in the affair, had been, as always, at great pains to be perceived as even-handed and judicious, and a gathering of 105 auditors, including the King himself as moderator and presiding judge, had been assembled at Norham. The court was modelled on the
centumviri
of the ancient Roman republic, the court of 105 formed to settle property disputes.

The entire affair had become known throughout Scotland as the Great Cause, though none could say who had coined the name. In the early days there had been much argument in Scotland about the wisdom of agreeing to convene what was in essence a meeting of the Scots parliament on English ground. In consequence, great care had been taken to assure the four estates of the Scots community—the earls, clergy, barons, and commons—that neither the Scots participants nor the realm of Scotland itself would be placed in any kind of legal jeopardy. It appeared deliberate, though, that the court of auditors should consist of eighty Scots lords and bishops—forty supporters from the ranks of each of the two principal claimants, Bruce and Balliol—with the remaining twenty-four being English, and thereby presumed neutral. Over the preceding year, amid exhaustive and exhausting legal wrangling, the lesser claims had been adjudicated and set aside, leaving only the matter of the Bruce/ Balliol contention to be settled.

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