Read Insurrection: Renegade [02] Online

Authors: Robyn Young

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

Insurrection: Renegade [02] (4 page)

Two years ago, almost to the day, after William Wallace resigned as guardian of Scotland, Robert and John Comyn, the same age and heirs to the fortunes of their families, had been elected in his place. Together they had governed the king-less, war-torn realm, presiding over the fractured community of earls, lords, knights and peasants who sought an end to Edward Longshanks’ English dominion. It had not been an easy alliance. There was enmity enough between the two men, but worse still was the bitterness between their families. Poisoned by an act of betrayal decades earlier that bad blood had seeped through the years since, flowing from father to son.

In invoking Comyn, Alexander Seton played a clever move. But he missed the fundamental point. When Robert left, his place as guardian had been taken by William Lamberton, but even the appointment of the formidable Bishop of St Andrews wouldn’t have stopped Comyn bolstering his support among the men of the realm. In order to restore his own authority in Scotland, Robert knew he had to return with something that could prove his greater worth, something that could win them their freedom. John Comyn was just another reason he could not return without the prize he sought: St Malachy’s staff.

‘You told us our country needed a new king,’ Alexander continued gruffly, mistaking Robert’s silence for indifference. ‘One who would defend our liberties, where John Balliol failed. You told us you would be that king.’

Now, Robert turned to him. The memory of the words he had spoken in the courtyard of Turnberry Castle three years ago – the year he broke his oath of fealty to King Edward to fight alongside William Wallace – was still vivid. He had addressed his men back then with fire in his heart, promising to defend their freedom and pledging to be their king. Not only did his veins flow with the royal blood of the house of Canmore, but his grandfather had been named heir presumptive by Alexander II. Before his death, the old man had passed that claim to him and Robert had sworn to uphold it, no matter the pretenders who sat upon the throne in defiance of the Bruce family’s right.

His voice strengthened. ‘And I will be.’

Chapter 2

The hunting party made their way across the fields in the deepening gloom. The huntsman carried the buck’s severed head, trailing a bright line of blood that had summoned the crows which circled in their wake
.
After the hounds had been given their reward the rest of the carcass had been dismembered, the best bits of venison going to Lord Donough for his table, the rest to the men who had participated in the chase. Even the local lads who jogged alongside the mounted nobles had leaf-wrapped parcels of meat and bone to take home to their families. Donough always saw that everyone was fed.

They joined the track that took them on the homeward stretch to Donough’s hall, past the remains of a ring-fort where sheep grazed in the ruins that were stippled with moss and yellow rosettes of butterwort. Robert stared at the crumbling stones, struck by memory. He saw himself, lean and long-limbed, straddling the highest point of the tumbled-down walls, fists raised in triumph as his foster-brothers clambered up behind him, panting from the race. His own voice echoed down the years.


I am the king! I am the king!

He turned from the ruins as the track dipped with the slope of the land and the hall came into view. Cormac dug in his spurs and galloped ahead, his red hair wild in the wind. Niall and Thomas rode after him, racing one another. The hall dominated a grassy mound that rose over the banks of a shallow river. It was ringed by a defensive ditch and palisade, the stakes of which were unstained by weather or time. Eighteen months ago, most of the buildings had been destroyed by fire, leaving only the stone shell of the hall. It had taken months of labour, but with Donough’s determination, the devotion of his tenants and coins from Robert’s coffers, the place looked almost as it had when Robert lived here as a boy.

Following in the wake of the three young men, the rest of the company funnelled through the gate in the palisade. The guards nodded a greeting to Donough and Robert, who urged their mounts up the well-worn incline to the yard in the centre of the stables and barns, which still smelled of sawn timber. Thomas and Niall had dismounted with Cormac and were issuing orders to the grooms who came out to meet the party. Robert’s younger brothers had remained in fosterage when the war broke out between Scotland and England four years ago and were now more at home here than in the Bruce family’s strongholds in Carrick and Annandale.

As Robert swung down from the saddle and handed the reins to Nes, he saw Donough’s steward.

‘My lord.’ The steward raised his voice over the excited barking of the hounds. ‘I trust you fared well?’

‘A fine fallow, Gilbert,’ said Donough, dismounting. ‘We have meat for hanging.’

‘I will see to it. For now, my lord, you have company.’

Donough frowned. ‘Who?’

‘Two monks from Bangor Abbey. They arrived shortly after noon.’ Gilbert’s gaze lingered on his lord’s mud-caked boots and cloak. ‘Shall I bid them wait while you change?’

Robert stepped forward. ‘No, Gilbert. We’ll see them now.’

When the steward glanced at Donough, the lord nodded. ‘See there is food enough for all the company tonight. My men will dine with me.’

‘Yes, my lord.’

Leaving the steward to direct the huntsmen and the varlets to usher the hounds to the kennels, Robert and his foster-father headed for the hall. As he crossed the yard, Robert caught the eye of Alexander Seton. Feeling vindicated, and satisfied with it, he stepped into the smoky shadows, his anticipation rising.

Inside the hall, by the chamber’s hearth, were the two monks in black habits. They turned as Robert and Donough entered, the flames in the grate gusting with the rush of cold air. One was younger than the other and had a plain, earnest face and worried, darting eyes. The older of the two was more distinctive with a grotesque scar that carved its way down his cheek and through his lip. He stood erect, feet planted apart, meeting Robert’s appraising gaze with a bellicose stare that would have looked more at home on a warrior than a man of the cloth.

Donough didn’t seem at all affected by the hostility in that look, going straight to the scarred monk and clasping his hand in both of his. ‘Brother Murtough, it has been too long. You received my messages? I feared the worst when you failed to answer.’

‘We would have come sooner. But the danger was too great.’

The scarred monk’s Gaelic was rough and guttural, different enough in cadence from the way his own family spoke it that Robert strained to understand him.

‘Ulster’s spies have been watching us.’ Murtough’s eyes roved around the hall, taking in the new beams that criss-crossed the roof. ‘I am glad, Lord Donough, to see you were able to repair the damage his men caused here.’

Donough’s smile vanished at the name of the man whose knights had been responsible for the destruction of his home. ‘I wasn’t going to let the dogs think they had won.’ He turned to Robert. ‘And I had a great deal of help from my foster-son, Sir Robert, Earl of Carrick and lord of these estates.’

The scarred monk’s attention shifted to Robert. ‘Your name and pedigree precede you, Sir Robert. Your grandfather was a great man, God rest his soul. My brethren and I honour him still.’

Robert frowned in surprise. As far as he knew, his grandfather had never visited Ireland. The Bruce family’s lands in Antrim, from Glenarm to Olderfleet, had not been part of the old man’s legacy. Like the earldom of Carrick, they were part of the inheritance of Robert’s mother, acquired by his father on their marriage and granted to him eight years ago. Having taken his father’s place, Robert had found it strange, returning to Antrim as lord, to have his foster-father kneel before him to pay homage. ‘I didn’t know you knew my grandfather.’

‘Not personally,’ the younger monk clarified. ‘But we benefited from his generosity. He sent money to our abbey for years to pay for candles to burn at the shrine of our blessed founder, St Malachy.’

Donough nodded when Robert looked at him. ‘Your grandfather had the donations sent to me through your mother.’ He gestured to the long table that dominated the hall, where a jug of wine and goblets had been placed. ‘Let us sit.’

As they moved to the trestle and benches, Robert thought of the abbey at Clairvaux in France and other holy sites where his grandfather had paid for candles to be lit in honour of the saint. How many wicks still smouldered in chapels and abbeys, kept alight by the old man’s will, all in an effort to atone for the sins of their ancestor?

When travelling through Scotland, so the story went, Malachy, Archbishop of Armagh, once stayed at the Bruce family’s castle in Annan. Hearing of a robber who was sentenced to hang, he requested the man be spared, a plea the Lord of Annandale granted. When, the following day, Malachy saw the man hanging from a gallows, he brought his wrath down upon the lord and his line. The curse he laid upon them was said to have caused the river to rise and wash away their stronghold, forcing the Bruce family to build a new castle at Lochmaben.

Robert’s father had always mocked the legend, citing a winter storm as the cause of the damage to the castle, but his grandfather had blamed it not only for past misfortunes, but for all the events following the tragic death of King Alexander III that led to the crowning of Edward’s puppet king, John Balliol, and the loss of the Bruce family’s claim to the throne.

‘Last year, my brothers sought me out to tell me of the destruction of Donough’s hall at the Earl of Ulster’s hands,’ explained Robert, as he sat. ‘They said Ulster’s men were looking for a relic King Edward desired – a relic known by some as the Staff of Jesus and by others as the Staff of Malachy.’ He studied Murtough while he spoke, but the monk’s scarred features revealed nothing. ‘I resigned from the guardianship of Scotland in the hope that I might find this staff and prevent the king from seizing it. Lord Donough sent messages to your abbey in the belief that your order may know of its whereabouts.’

When the two men remained silent, Donough sighed roughly. ‘Come, Murtough, you may have kept your distance these past months, but word travels even if you do not.’ He poured a goblet of wine and passed it to the monk. ‘We know Ulster’s men searched your abbey after the staff disappeared from Armagh. Why else would they do this if they did not suspect you of having taken it?’

‘And why would he destroy your home, Donough?’ countered Murtough. ‘Are you believed to have stolen it?’

‘Our support of your order is well known. We became suspects by association.’ Donough scowled. ‘And doubtless it presented the excuse Ulster has been looking for to remove us from Glenarm for good. Under the lordship of the Bruce family we have been protected all these years, while our countrymen were driven into the west by English invaders. I was one of only a handful of men who retained his lands. Of course Ulster wants me gone. But I say God help him and all his kind when our countrymen rise to take back what is theirs. Trouble grows in the south for de Burgh and his kin from what I hear. There are rumours of rebellion. Of war.’ He thumped his fist on the table. ‘A day of reckoning is coming. Mark my words.’

‘Richard de Burgh was an ally of your family for years, Sir Robert,’ remarked the younger monk. ‘We know too of your allegiance to King Edward. How can we be sure where your loyalties lie in this matter?’

‘Those allegiances are three years dead. They ended the day I joined the insurrection led by William Wallace.’ Robert leaned forward, holding the monk with his gaze. ‘Both our countries have suffered under the English king’s dominion. If you know where the staff is, I can help you keep it from him.’ As the young man glanced at Murtough, Robert caught a flicker of hope in his face. He seized on it. ‘In Monmouth’s
History of the Kings of Britain
it is written that Brutus of Troy, who founded these islands, had certain relics in his possession. On his death, his sons carved up the land between them into what would become England, Ireland, Wales and Scotland, each taking one of the four relics to symbolise his new authority.’

‘I am aware of Geoffrey of Monmouth’s works,’ Murtough cut in.

Robert continued, undeterred by the monk’s tone. ‘According to a vision of the prophet Merlin, whose words Monmouth claimed to be translating, this division began Britain’s descent into chaos. Merlin foretold that these relics would need to be gathered again under one ruler to prevent the land’s final ruin. Both Utherpendragon and his son, King Arthur, came close to succeeding, but never fully achieved this. When Edward conquered Wales he discovered a lost prophecy that named the four treasures. For England, Curtana, the Sword of Mercy. For Wales, the Crown of Arthur, believed to be the diadem worn by Brutus himself. For Scotland . . .’

Here, Robert faltered, his thoughts filling with the bitter image of a block of stone in the belly of a wagon, careening down a dusty track. He was riding furiously in its wake, shield held high. Around him rode other men, blades in their hands and victory in their faces. All bore the same shield as him: blood red with a dragon rearing, fire-wreathed, in the centre. Shamefully, he had played his own part that day, in taking that most precious of relics to Edward.

‘For Scotland,’ he finished, ‘the Stone of Destiny, upon which all our kings have been crowned.’

‘We have heard of King Edward’s conquests,’ said the younger monk gravely. ‘We know he has taken these treasures for his shrine at Westminster. Only the staff of our founder evades him.’

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