At the first one, Sym shoved open the unbarred cowhide door without ceremony and shouted for the woman and three children gathered round the fireplace to flee. “Raiders comin’!”
Without awaiting a response, he was off again, finding two men next in a sheep pen, marking lambs despite the drizzle. “Horns!” he shouted at them. “Raiders in the dale!”
“To horse, Will,” the elder snapped to the younger. “Ride for Hermitage!”
“But the laird’s clapped up at Blackness!” the younger protested.
“His captain will ken wha’ to do. I’m for Broadhaugh, m’self.”
Paying scant heed to the exchange, Sym was off again, having known before the men spoke what they would do and where each would go. It was not the first time in his short life that the English had attacked Liddesdale and its neighbors.
More cottages hove into sight, clumped around a small common near one of the many peel towers that dotted the Scottish Borders, this one a dilapidated square tower perched on a rocky outcropping above the burn. Sym saw men, women, and children on the common.
“Raiders,” he cried. “Trumpets!”
In well-practiced actions, the people of the hamlet reacted, women calling to the children and darting into the cottages to grab the various household goods they called “insight,” while the men snatched up arms and fetched ponies.
Sym raced on.
He could see others now on the opposite bank of Tarras Burn, running to spread the alarm. Beacons soon took fire on hilltops despite the drizzle, for the wood was soaked in sheep fat and the beacon woodpiles kept covered until needed.
The lad’s breath came in heaving gasps, but he could not stop. He had farther to go. At the next hamlet he found breath enough to shout, “’Ware raiders!”
Doors opened. People gaped out at him and then darted back inside, reappearing with children and precious possessions, ready to make for the hills and nearby Tarras Wood. The shadowy gloom of the dense forest loomed ahead of him now in the gray mist.
As Sym darted into the forest, he heard a low, thunderous rumble behind him in the dale. He also heard screaming. The raiders had swarmed over the ridge.
His chest ached, but he dared not pause to catch his breath. Hoping the trees would provide cover enough for him to reach the cottages near the center without being run down by mounted soldiers, he ran on. With the slightest luck, any who tried to follow him would find themselves trapped in one of the many bogs that turned Tarras Moss and the forest floor into a treacherous maze. Sym had known them all since his toddler days and easily found his way.
He emerged at last from woodland into a clearing and flew over its grassy slope to the first of three stone cottages, shouting, “Dad! Dougald! Raiders!”
The cottage door opened, and to his relief his father’s tall, lanky figure filled the opening. Even before Sym could gather wind enough to shout again, he saw Davy Elliot cock his head to listen in much the same way that the two dogs had.
Sym stopped running at last and bent over, hands to his knees, gasping to catch his breath. He heard voices and scrambling movement from his parents’ cottage and by the time he looked up again, his father was already emerging from the second cot, where his uncle lived, and heading for the third, which housed his granny and gramp.
His cousin, yellow-haired Anna, ran to help catch the ponies.
When Sym went toward his parents’ cottage to help his mother with the bairns, he saw a familiar dark-haired young woman standing in the doorway. “Laurie,” he shouted, “dinna stand like a post. There be raiders comin’. Tak’ yer pony and gang home!”
“Your mam’s got the baby, Sym,” she replied calmly. “Come and pick up Wee Fergus for her, will you?”
Without argument, he hurried to do her bidding, although it was still a struggle to catch his breath.
Laurie was a special friend. Not only was she merry enough, most days, to enjoy a prank as much as he did, but he liked that she called him plain Sym and not Wee Sym the way his folks did. Around other people she called him Davy’s Sym, the way others called his dad Sym’s Davy. Sym was named for his gramp, and since so many Elliots and Halliots bore the same first names, it was easier to tell them apart by using their to-names. His was Sym’s Davy’s Sym to anyone who took long enough to say such a mouthful. Mostly, though, folks other than Laurie called him Wee Sym and would do so until he did something distinctive enough to make them call him by a more impressive name.
Breaking into his train of thought, Laurie Halliot said thoughtfully, “Do you think you can hold Wee Fergus if I put you on my pony, Sym?”
“Aye, o’ course I can,” he said, still trying to catch his breath. “But what will ye do then, yourself? That pony willna tak’ three.”
“Your father will help me. Come now, be quick!”
But when they went outside again, although Laurie’s pony stood waiting, when she moved to help Sym mount it, Davy Elliot stopped her.
Hurrying toward her with his brother Dougald at his heels, he said, “We canna tak’ your pony. Ye’ll be needin’ it.”
“Not if we’ve still got time enough for you to put me up a tree in the wood,” Laurie said firmly.
“Aye, well, I can do that right enow, but if you’re no goin’ to need the pony, then I’ll put my Lucy and the bairn up. We’ve ponies enough for the old folks, Dougald’s Anna, and ourselves, but the lad there will ha’ to scamper.”
“Nay then, Davy,” she protested. “You can see that he’s purely winded. He’ll bide with me to protect me from the raiders. Can you do that, Sym?”
Sym nodded, fiercely determined to see that no harm befell her.
“Send the others on to the cave, Davy,” Laurie continued in a matter-of-fact way. “Then, once you’ve put us up the tree, you must go after them—and watch well. They will need you when the raiders leave.”
“Ye might fit into the cave along wi’ the rest of us,” Davy said, but his tone was doubtful.
“Nay, you’ve barely enough room for yourselves,” she said. “Quick now, the others are ready. Sym, give Fergus to your Uncle Dougald and come with me.”
Kilting up her long skirts as she ran, as barefoot as Sym, Laurie dashed ahead of them up the wet slope of the clearing to the woods.
Sym did not think that he could run another step, but to his relief, when he had handed Wee Fergus to his uncle, Davy swung him up onto his shoulders. With Sym clinging to his long, dark hair, Davy loped after Laurie.
She had not gone far into the woods before she stopped beneath a tall beech tree and looked back. “This one will do,” she said in a low but carrying voice. “The lower branches are too high for anyone to reach unaided. No one will seek us here.”
From his perch on Davy’s shoulders, Sym looked down at her with a frown and said, “But what if they fire the trees?”
“They are too green and wet from the rain,” she replied. “If the raiders fire aught, they’ll fire the cots. Oh, be quick, Davy! I think I heard a man shout.”
Quick as thought, the tall man swung the boy down and clasped his hands together to make a stirrup. When she put her right foot into it, he hoisted her high, and she climbed like a cat, clearly not caring that both males could catch glimpses of all that she had beneath her skirts.
When she was safe on the lowest sturdy branch, she lay lengthwise along it and reached a hand down for the boy. His father practically tossed him to her, and after she had dragged him up, the two of them climbed higher.
“Go back now, Davy,” she called down to him urgently.
“I can still see ye,” he said.
“Then we’ll climb higher. Now, by the blessed Mary, go!”
Without further protest, he ran off to look after the rest of his family.
“You climb higher, Sym,” Laurie said. “Climb as high as you can, but take care that you do not fall. I shall be right behind you.”
Sym began climbing, but he had not gone much higher when he stopped and whispered over one shoulder, “Some’un’s comin’ close.”
His words barely reached Laurie’s ears, but she understood them, for just then she too heard the soft splat-splat of a horse’s hooves on the wet leaves of the forest floor. A moment later, she realized that two horses approached.
She could not climb higher without forcing Sym to do likewise, and not only were the branches above him slender and thus less safe, but the two of them could not risk noise or movement. Taking comfort from the fact that dense leaves almost completely concealed him, she decided that no one would see him from the ground. But she knew that they might see her if they looked up at the right moment.
Not daring to speak, she hugged the thick trunk of the tree and tucked her skirts beneath her, trying to make herself small. Her overskirt was a soft green, close enough to the leaves’ color to go unnoticed, but her underskirt was the usual red flannel, and she prayed that none of it was showing. On such a gray day, even a wee patch of red would stand out like a spark in Davy’s black cave.
The horsemen drew nearer. She was surprised that they had managed to get so far without encountering difficulties in one of the bogs.
The two men did not converse, and she realized that they were probably listening for sounds of flight or alarm. If they knew about the three cottages in the clearing, doubtless they were hoping to surprise the inhabitants.
A moment later, she saw them in their gleaming steel bonnets and plate. One was tall and broad-shouldered, riding a dun-colored pony with black points that was larger than most she had seen. The other man rode a chestnut roan. He was shorter and square of shape, his waist and hips nearly as wide as his shoulders. He carried a bill, an English weapon, part spear and part ax. His companion wore a sword at his side and a longbow strung across his back where he could easily reach it. In one ungloved hand, he carried an ominous looking pistol at the ready.
Scarcely daring to breathe, knowing that the boy above her would keep still, she sent a prayer heavenward. Although it was not unheard of for the English to kill women, even women of her rank, she did not fear for her own life as much as for Sym’s. English raiders were not noted for asking questions or for encouraging conversation of any sort before putting their victims to the sword. Nevertheless, she felt oddly calm. Had Tarras Wood suddenly swarmed with horsemen, she told herself, she might have felt more fear, but the two silent men seemed harmless—unless, of course, one of them looked up.
In any event, if they caught her, she would do whatever she had to do to save the lad.
When the pair drew rein almost directly beneath the tree where she and Sym hid, she stopped breathing. A chill of pure terror shot up her spine. Quaking, she realized that she had grossly underestimated her composure.
The man carrying the bill said in a gruff voice, “There be two or three cottages ahead. Like as not, they’ve heard nowt, so we should take ’em easy.”
The other man wiped a leather-clad arm across his face and brow, and then, resting his pistol on a muscular thigh, he took off his steel bonnet, revealing a shock of red curls a shade or two darker than his neatly trimmed, reddish-blond beard. As he thrust long fingers through his hair, he tilted his head back.
For one horrible, frozen moment, Laurie’s gaze locked with his.
“Brackengill?” The man with the bill spoke sharply, and the red-haired man turned to look at him.
“Aye?”
“If ye’ve finished combing your pretty locks, we’ve work yet to do.”
“Let’s get to it then.” His expression did not alter.
When he replaced his helmet, raised his pistol again, and rode on, Laurie decided with a surge of relief that the dark foliage surrounding her had prevented him from seeing her after all.
He rang’d all around down by the woodside,
Till in the top of a tree, a lady he spyd.
S
IR HUGH GRAHAM, LORD
Scrope’s deputy warden, had seen the girl in the tree. Indeed, he had seen her clearly enough to know that her eyes were large for her face and so dark as to look black. But he had seen little more than those dark eyes and the small, pale, heart-shaped face framed in a halo of dark, damp curls.
It was the face, he thought, of a child. Doubtless, her eyes had seemed enormous because of her terror.
As he followed Martin Loder, Scrope’s chief land sergeant, Sir Hugh was not certain why he did not mention seeing her. He knew as well as anyone—perhaps better than most—that a female could be as dangerous as any man. For all he knew, the girl in the tree held a pistol cocked and ready to shoot.
A nerve between his shoulder blades twitched.
The girl had seemed young, though, and more terrified than terrifying. At all events, despite the nervous twitch, every fiber of him rebelled at the thought of telling Loder about her.
Martin Loder was a villainous creature, envious of his betters and overeager to prove himself to Scrope. Moreover, given a choice in the matter, Hugh did not make war on women or children. What he had seen that day had already been enough to turn his stomach, though his reputation was that of a hardened soldier.
The last straw was seeing armed men forcing women and children to remove their clothing, then leashing them in pairs like dogs and driving them naked through the dale. That sight had stirred his impulse to follow Loder into Tarras Wood.
Loder’s courage—or foolhardiness—had surprised him, for the man was not aware until Sir Hugh had shouted that he was following him. Sir Hugh considered himself a brave man, but he would not have ridden alone into that infamous bog-ridden area.
He understood Scrope better than he understood Loder. Scrope was determined to teach Liddesdale a lesson, and Hugh understood his fury, for Liddesdale was a notorious reivers’ nest. The whole, wide valley was a grim, forbidding place dotted with robber towers. Shut in by bleak fells, it consisted largely of quaking morass and vast primeval forest. Reivers flourished in every march, but in Liddesdale, every able-bodied man was one.
Just months before, a small army of Liddesdale men and other ruffians—doubtless under the direction of their powerful leader, Sir Walter Scott of Buccleuch—had raided Carlisle Castle to free one of their own. Carlisle was Scrope’s stronghold.