wrong. Then the alarm went and Donald announced he was leaving, though he could only manage the horse he rode and two others — the other two he left with Nichol and Annie ‘for mercy’.
‘Nichol is wild over Roger,’ she went on in a panicked, shrill whisper. ‘He waited only to tackle him — he heard us… exchanging auld whispers in the coal house. He cast loose the horse he held and has gone hunting Black Roger in the dark.’
She had brought this mount a little way, hoping to meet her old lover first, Hal thought and cursed them both.
‘Oh, Christ’s Mercy,’ Annie declared, giving up the reins to him and sinking down in the slush. ‘I did not want either of them harmed. In the name of God, I did not want any of this.’
Hal felt the rush of it — they were not so different, he and Annie, caught up in madness. He patted her awkwardly, as you would a sick dog, then left her there and went back to the road, trailing the one horse and looking for Kirkpatrick.
He was where Hal had left him, still hobbling desperately, but he stopped when he heard the hooves ring on the frozen ruts. Then his face got grim through the pain.
‘One?’
Hal told him, swiftly and Kirkpatrick groaned and hauled himself to the stirrup leather.
‘Aye. Well, there ye have it. Now ye can say that I am mainly for sense, save ower that wummin and have yer revenge.’
‘Haul yourself up,’ Hal declared. ‘We can ride double. Get settled while I have a listen for the hounds.’
He moved off, cocking his head and straining to hear deep into the dark, judging by the questing bell of the dogs whether they were on the scent or still looking. There was a sudden movement behind him and he turned, in time to see the dark figure spring out of the shadow between two howfs and run at Kirkpatrick’s back.
Kirkpatrick, laboriously hauling himself into the saddle of the patient mount, heard the final boot scuff too late; the blow smacked him in the back, slammed him into the horse, which skittered away and let Kirkpatrick fall and roll in the slush.
He knew he had been attacked and by whom, knew he had been stabbed, too, and was astonished by it, for he had never been in all his life so far. So that is what it is like to have the knife in, he thought, that terrible feeling of steel violating a place it should not be, that sickening, sucking grip of his own flesh, as if reluctant to see the blade withdrawn. Then the burn hit him and he struggled to rise.
‘Ye filthy boo,’ Nichol was spitting, breathing hard and standing straddle-legged. ‘Ye golach gowk-spit. I will learn ye to get on my wummin…’
He was cursing half in triumph, half in horror at what he had done, then turned and bellowed at the top of his voice.
‘Here. Over here. I have Black Roger…’
Then he remembered the reputation of the man who was struggling back to his weaving legs and whirled to face him, uncertain of what to do and afraid to close and finish it. The sudden clack of boots behind him made him whirl again, in time to see Hal come running up, the great blade of the sword bright in one hand.
Nichol yelped and fled, shrieking; Hal let him and darted to where Kirkpatrick, down on his one good knee, was gasping.
‘Christ and all His Saints,’ he panted. ‘That is sore.’
‘You are alive yet,’ Hal said, lifting him so that he grunted with pain.
The hounds were close, their baying loud. Hal forced Kirkpatrick up into the saddle, then looked steadily into the man’s pain-filled eyes.
‘Get gone back to your king,’ he said flatly. ‘Tell Dog Boy what happened here.’
Kirkpatrick knew that the horse would not outrun the dogs with two, knew what Hal was going to do and almost railed against it, but the hand came down on the horse’s rump and it sprang away into the night, leaving Kirkpatrick with all he could do to hang on as it went.
Hal was aware of what he had done, what was coming, with the small part of his mind not calculating the trajectory of the arrowing dogs. If he thought at all of whether Kirkpatrick deserved this, or whether this was some martyr’s posturing in the Kingdom’s Cause, it never registered more than a flicker.
He was here. He was a knight, defending the back of a weaker man who, for all his faults, had more to offer his king. It was enough…
The first dog darted out like a slim wraith and Hal stepped sideways, slashed once and left it tumbling behind him, yelping. The second he speared, but the wrench of it tore the sword from his grasp and then the rush of men came up, led by Fitzwalter and the Hospitaller, the fat young Ross lad peching up behind.
‘Alive,’ roared Fitzwalter. ‘Alive…’
Hal fought with fists and boots and teeth, until something crashed on him, a world of pain and dark scarlet, as if he had dived into a bloody pool that grew black and old the deeper he fell.
Then there was darkness only.
EPILOGUE
Crossraguel Abbey, Ayrshire
Feast of St Drostan, July, 1307
The fields lolled, the forest was still, both breathing in the hot air of noon through leaves and grasses, sifted with dragonflies, green frogs and brown toads all looking to the relief of water. There were curlews and hares and squirrels — but most of all, there were flies.
They came to feast on the bloat of dead cattle and sheep, rising off the carcasses as thick as the smoke that curled from the abbey buildings. Folk moved with cloths over their mouths against the stink and even the hardiest of them winced at the smell.
‘Bad cess to them,’ Jamie Douglas said and the Dog Boy, looking at the bloodied, snarling muzzles of the abbot’s dead hounds, could only agree. Bad cess to the English, who had viciously swiped one petulant claw at the defenceless, as if to reassure themselves that they were still in charge despite being beaten at Loudon Hill scant weeks before.
That had been the garland on a new spring. There had been a long hard winter of exile and then, as the thaw melted everything to drip and yellow, the news went out, leaping from head to head like wildfire.
The King was back.
Slowly, like a winter bear emerging from its cave, the Scots crawled out into the Kingdom and started to make their mark against the surprised English.
Kirkpatrick had been busy, too, with coin and promises, most of which came to ripeness — the last fruits had arrived only the night before, clutched in the brown mouth of a man who looked like a packman and had been taught as a priest.
There were a score or more of them, men and women both. Anonymous as dust and dark, they went where Kirkpatrick sent them and did as they were bid for revenge, the promise of advancement or — and Kirkpatrick’s cynical nature was amazed by it — increasingly for belief in the King and the Kingdom.
This one brought news.
‘He’s dead,’ the man said and, for a moment, Kirkpatrick felt the coursing shock of it plunge him to limpness — then the next words rushed him with relief.
‘At Burgh on the Sands, a week or less. They have not told the army yet.’
Longshanks. The news should have raised Kirkpatrick up, but he was too relieved that it was not the other man he had set agents to watching. Not Hal, then — Kirkpatrick blew out his cheeks. He had found where Hal was held and did not understand why the man was still alive. But he was, though no closer to rescue than before.
Now Kirkpatrick waited impatiently while the abbot of the charred Crossraguel, grim and resigned, accepted the commiserations of his king — after all, the Bruces of Carrick had founded the place and it was donations from there that kept it going. So the abbot tried to ignore the ruin and war that had been brought to him, smiled and bowed and fervently agreed to keep perpetual Mass for the souls of the King’s brothers, Thomas and Alexander,