Insurrection: Renegade [02] (18 page)

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Authors: Robyn Young

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Action & Adventure

BOOK: Insurrection: Renegade [02]
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Nodding to the men who guarded the entrance to the fort, where the prisoners and plunder they had conveyed from Turnberry were being housed, Humphrey climbed the external stairs that led up to the battlements. The fort was the first stage of the king’s fortifications, which he planned to turn into a fortress of stone using material gathered from Lochmaben’s old castle, destroyed in their last campaign. Once on the battlements, Humphrey had an extensive view across the surrounding land. The compound was built on a promontory that jutted into the waters of a loch. A flock of birds flew low across the surface, their reflections gliding beneath them. On the landward side, woods stretched north towards the ruins of the old castle, former home of the Bruce family. Its keep was a broken tooth of stone rising from a motte, visible against the purple, cloud-stippled sky.

Ahead on the walkway, looking out over the loch, was a young woman dressed in a silvery-blue gown. A padded net scattered with pearls covered her hair. Humphrey smiled as he saw her, his spirits lifting.

Bess turned. ‘You’re late.’

‘I was with your father.’ Humphrey halted a few inches from her, wanting to kiss her, but aware of the guards on the battlements behind them. He was Constable of England, she was the king’s daughter. There was decorum to be observed.

Bess didn’t share his compunction. Bridging the gap between them, she looped her arms around his neck. Like all of Edward’s children she was tall, almost as tall as Humphrey. She only had to tilt her head back to meet his eyes. ‘You are forgiven.’

Bess gave him a breath-soft kiss. The sentries forgotten, Humphrey pulled her to him, opening his mouth over hers. She responded and for some moments the two of them were lost in their own dark world of breath and desire. Humphrey drew back and looked into her eyes, which were a pale grey, ringed with violet. Queen Eleanor had left a Castilian legacy in her beautiful, black-haired daughter. He smiled at her, but the release from the kiss had allowed his mind to wander back to the king’s revelation.

Bess touched his cheek. ‘A cloud just passed across your face. What is it, my love?’

‘John Balliol has been freed.’ Humphrey paced the battlements, Bess falling into step beside him. They headed round the fort to the landward side, where the woods spread into a wind-tossed darkness. ‘The King of France is threatening to withhold Gascony unless your father agrees to a truce with Scotland.’

Bess nodded. ‘I heard my father talking to Bishop Bek.’ As Humphrey halted, she leaned against the battlements beside him. ‘He believes Balliol’s transfer to France, agreed in the treaty, means Philippe was planning this all along. Now the war is over, it appears the French king favours a return to his old alliance with Scotland, flanking my father on two fronts.’

Humphrey was sometimes surprised by the ease with which she discussed political matters, given her youth. At nineteen Bess was six years younger than he was, the same age as her father’s new wife. He had wondered if she’d become accustomed to such talk in the hall of her first husband, the Count of Holland, but they had been married only a short time before he left her a widow. ‘Philippe cannot be allowed to hold your father to ransom.’

‘But if my father refuses, he stands to lose permanently a duchy he spent years fighting to secure – a duchy that comprises some of his richest lands.’

‘And if Balliol returns all will have been for nothing.’ Humphrey’s face tightened, the memory of his father lingering at the edges of his mind. ‘Our sacrifices have been many, but we pay the high price for victory. We must. For only united, one kingdom under one king, will Britain be saved. We will make them see that. All of them.’

Bess studied his taut expression. ‘Do you not want an end to the war, Humphrey? An end to the campaigns and the bloodshed?’ When he didn’t answer, she sighed and looked out over the crowds of men drinking and revelling below. ‘Perhaps a truce will be the best course.’

He looked at her sharply. ‘You don’t know what you’re saying.’

Her grey eyes flashed, something of her father’s steel within them. ‘I am the king’s daughter, Humphrey. I know as well as most of those drunken sots down there the price of war. My childhood was spent with my father always on campaign. I was moved with my sisters from one castle to the next, never knowing if he would come home again, seeing the pain it caused my mother when she wasn’t with him and feeling the same pain whenever she was. She rarely left his side. I grew to girlhood with her absences, knowing that his desire for victory and her desire for him were greater than their love for me. Don’t tell me I do not know.’

He touched her shoulder. ‘Bess, I’m tired and these tidings weigh heavy on me. Things will be clearer tomorrow, after the—’ Humphrey stopped, his gaze caught by scores of tiny points of fire winking into life on the edges of the trees beyond the palisade.

As he watched, they flew into the air as one, arcing silently, gracefully up and over like comets. They came to earth quickly, stabbing down around the compound. Several struck tents, others stuck fast in the ground, or skidded along it trailing traces of fire. Some found human targets, plunging into chests and backs. Screams of pain rose above the music.

Grabbing Bess’s hand, Humphrey hauled her along the walkway towards the steps that led down the outside of the fort. The guards up here were running, shouting instructions to one another and those below, as beyond the palisade another crescent of lights winked into being. One man began pulling the cord of the bell mounted on the fort’s battlements. A loud clanging smote the air above the chaos breaking out across the compound as the flaming arrows rained down. Several struck horses, one of which reared with a squeal, breaking its tethers. The fiery barb protruding from its side, the beast galloped madly through the crowd, knocking down men as they ran for cover. As more missiles caught in the sides of tents fires began to bloom, fanned by the wind.

Humphrey was halfway down the steps when the third wave of arrows came. He shielded Bess with his body as they thumped into the timber fort around them. When the thuds ceased, they raced down the last few stairs, Bess holding up her skirts. Once on the ground, he steered her into the entrance of the fort, where two guards were watching the turmoil unfolding before them, swords drawn against an invisible enemy.

‘Stay here,’ he told Bess, who nodded, her face pale. ‘Guard her with your lives,’ he ordered the men.

‘Keep safe!’ she urged, grabbing his arm briefly.

Humphrey hastened towards the royal pavilion, past grooms racing to put out fires springing up in sheaves of hay. For every little patch of flame they extinguished another sprang up somewhere else. The air was full of smoke and the bell’s mad clanging. Humphrey saw one of the bare-chested wrestlers lying on his back in the dust, an arrow in his face. The sky filled with lights as another hail came in. ‘Wait!’ Humphrey roared at the men racing around him. ‘Watch the sky!’

Only a few listened, following his lead as he dived behind a cart loaded with barrels. An infantryman, tankard still in hand, was forced to his knees, his back arching as an arrow punched into his shoulder. The man yelled, grasping at the shaft.

‘Help him,’ Humphrey instructed a squire, before pushing himself to his feet.

The king was outside his pavilion, barking orders to the men around him, whose number swelled as more converged on his position. Humphrey saw Ralph, Henry and Aymer among them. He approached to hear one of the guards from the gate’s lookout platform yelling down to the king. He and his comrades were crouched behind the palisade.


There are men in the woods, sire! A hundred or more!

‘Saddle Bayard,’ snapped Edward, turning to his squire. His grim face was lit by the glow of the fires. ‘Where is my son?’

‘Here, Father!’ Prince Edward came sprinting towards the king, Piers at his side. The Gascon had a shield strapped to his arm. An arrow was embedded in it, the flames flickering around the painted wood.

‘We ride out and take these churls!’ the king shouted to the knights gathered around him. ‘Mount your horses!’

Humphrey pushed through the jostle of men, spotting Hugh, his squire, and several of his knights.

Hugh had already saddled Storm and was holding his sword. The squire’s face filled with relief as he saw him coming. ‘Sir.’ He held out the weapon. ‘Shall I fetch your mail?’

‘No time,’ said Humphrey, taking the naked blade and sliding it through the loop attached to his belt. ‘Just my gambeson and helm. Mount up,’ he said in the same breath to the rest of his knights, as Hugh ducked inside the tent.

His squire reappeared, holding his gambeson. Shrugging off his cloak, Humphrey pulled on the quilted tunic, which was padded with felt. It was still damp with sweat from the day’s ride. Donning the padded coif Hugh handed to him, Humphrey pulled on his great helm, decorated with the plume of swan feathers. Storm was stamping, agitated by the flames and commotion, but he calmed as Humphrey mounted and took up the reins. Around him, the knights of his household hauled themselves into their saddles.

King Edward was already astride his charger, Bayard, as Humphrey led his company to join him. Together, the king, his son and several hundred knights and sergeants rode towards the gates. More arrows poured down, most landing some distance behind them, where flames were spreading among the tightly packed tents. Part of the fort was burning, smoke billowing into the sky. Through the slits of his helm, Humphrey’s vision was channelled into a narrow world of smoke and fire. He glimpsed the bright crests and mantles that marked his companions, all in faceless helms. He feared for Bess, but he could only hope the guards would protect her. The guards were hauling open the massive timber gates.

Beyond, between the backs and rumps of comrades and horses, Humphrey saw a fringe of trees stretching into darkness. More fires sprang to life in the shadows, illuminating the outlines of men among the trunks.


Ride! Ride!

At the king’s roar, Humphrey drew his sword and jabbed his heels into Storm’s sides. The destrier lurched forward at the same time as the others around him, all of them moving swiftly from trot into ground-shuddering canter. He let out a furious war cry, the sound echoing around the steel chamber of his helm. Others took up the shout, urging their steeds into a gallop. As the king and his men poured out of the gates flaming arrows lanced towards them from the trees.

Humphrey saw one horse wheel madly, struck in the head. Pitching its rider from the saddle, it crashed into another, sending charger and knight sprawling. Flailing limbs and hooves disappeared as those behind rode on over them. Humphrey saw a flash of fire, coming straight at him and jerked out of the way. The arrow shot past, but the sudden movement caused him to wrench on the reins, jamming the bit painfully in Storm’s mouth. The horse stumbled, knocking against Henry Percy’s charger. Humphrey recovered quickly as Percy veered sharply away. Ahead, the trees loomed up quickly.

Men were moving beneath the boughs. Some turned and ran as the knights charged them. Others stood their ground, reloading their bows and aiming at the horses. Humphrey saw the king kick Bayard up and over a clump of briars, his broadsword flashing in his hand as he came crashing down on the other side to smash the blade into the neck of an archer who had shot at him a second earlier. A spray of blood splattered the trees behind as the archer, head sagging back on his shoulders, crumpled to the ground.

Humphrey fixed on two men sprinting away ahead of him. They carried bows and were wearing green tunics and hose, the sort of clothing a man would don for a hunt. Blood hot in his veins, he pursued, ducking low branches, hearing the cracks as twigs lashed across his helm, dimly feeling the impacts against his shoulders and knees. Raising his sword as he rode up behind one man, Humphrey brought it swinging down in a brutal diagonal cut as he passed. The man fell with a gurgling scream, a wide red gash opening across his chest.

Humphrey slowed Storm, looking around for the other man, his vision hampered by the helm. He spotted Aymer de Valence riding in to his left, going after the quarry. Roaring savagely, the king’s cousin leaned far out in the saddle to plunge the point of his sword through the back of the man’s neck. Screams rent the air as the knights found more targets. Humphrey urged Storm on, but the trees, which quickly became more densely packed, soon forced him into a walk. The rest of the enemy archers had fled deep into the woods, where the knights on their cumbersome chargers could not follow.

A horn blew, summoning the scattered knights back to the king, who had ridden Bayard out on to the fringes of the trees. The night sky was amber with the fires billowing beyond the palisade. The fort was alight, flames racing up the sides of the timber structure. Sparks crackled into the air, like hundreds of glowing insects. Shouts echoed as men struggled to contain and extinguish the blaze. Humphrey wrenched off his helm, praying the guards had taken Bess to safety.

‘It was John Comyn’s forces,’ shouted Aymer de Valence, ducking as he rode out under the low-hanging branches of a pine. ‘There were others further back in the trees, on palfreys and coursers. I knew my brother-in-law by his colours, but he fled before I could reach him.’

‘Do we follow, sire?’ questioned Ralph de Monthermer, trying to calm his skittish mount. ‘My lord king?’ he called, when Edward gave no response. ‘Shall we pursue them?’

Humphrey looked over at the king, who had pushed up the visor of his helm. He was staring at his burning fortress, his face thunderous in the hellish glow.

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