"Seorus," Wallace broke in, "let's move."
Seorus waved for his clan to follow him, and Wallace rode ahead with the horsemen into the crossroads itself. There they found it exactly as Seorus said: a royal carriage to the side of the tent, out in the middle of a sun-drenched meadow, with nearly a dozen soldiers milling about, and not stocky Englishmen clothed in red but slender Frenchmen in royal French blue.
Wallace and his men rode in a complete circle around the tent. The soldiers watched warily, but they were disciplined and made no threatening moves. The Scots stopped thirty feet from the tent entrance.
No sound from the tent. Wallace rested his hand on the handle of his broadsword, ready.
"Longshanks! I have come!"
Servants pulled back the sides of the tent door, and a tall, slender, shapely female figure appeared. There in the shadows, she looked just like Murron! William was not the only one who noticed the resemblance; he glanced at Hamish and Campbell and saw them haunted by it, too. Was this another dream? William paled as she stepped into the morning sun. She moved toward him, her face lowered. It was Murron! He was dreaming again -- or he was insane.
She reached him, lifted her face --- and he saw the princes.
Not Murron! And yet as William saw the princes more closely, he was still shaken by the resemblance. In the way she carried herself, in her shape, in the way the regal lace framed her face as wedding lace had once framed Murron's she hunted the empty rooms in the secret chambers of his heart.
And while the princes reminded, William Wallace of everything he had loved and lost, he haunted her with everything she wanted and had never found. Tall, powerful, commanding his shoulders thick, his hair wild, his eyes soft, even pained. A man facing the hatred of the world's most powerful king; a man who had won great battles and commanded armies, yet who looked as if he could spur his horse away right now and ride away from adoration and glory and never miss any of it. She had never seen a man like this. She had never known such a one existed.
Wallace dismounted and moved to face her. Their eyes hung on each other. She saw something that she had not seen in the face of a man in her whole life. It was grief. Whatever else they said about him, this must she knew was true:" He had loved the woman he had lost; the pain of it was still etched in his face.
She surprised him by bending at the knee in a half-submissive yet proud curtsey.
"I am the Princess of Wales," she said.
"Wife of Edward, the king's son?" William asked.
She nodded; somehow she was already ashamed. "I am sorry to be a disappointment. I come as the king's servant and with his authority," the princess said.
"It's battle I want, not talk."
"But now that I am here, will you speak with a woman?" When he said nothing, she led him under the pavilion, a purple canopy shading rich carpets laid on the bare ground. Hamish, Campbell, and Stephen dismounted and flowed, shouldering their way in beside the princess's guards, so they could watch Wallace's back.
Inside the Scots found more opulence than they had ever before seen, even in Edinburgh Castle. A carved, gleaming table supported a silver serving bowl full of fruit, and even the apples and oranges there seemed to sparkle as if they too had been polished. Attending the princess were a beautiful young handmaiden -- Nicolette -- and a thin graying nobleman in a rich tunic embroidered with the king's symbols. The royal servants had brought a throne for the princess and a lower chair for Wallace. She sat; he refused the chair. She studied him and took in his anger and his pride.
"I understand you have recently been given the rank of knight," the princess began.
"I have been given nothing. God makes men what they are."
"Did God make you the sacker of peaceful cities? The executioner of the king's nephew, my husband's own cousin?"
"York was the staging point for every invasion of my country! And as for that cousin, I regret that he had but one head to lose. To try to repel us, he hanged a hundred Scots, even women and children, from the city walls."
"That is not possible!" Isabella protested. But she knew Longshanks and knew his family, She glanced at Hamilton, the richly dressed royal crony that the king had sent with her as both advisor and informant, and Hamilton averted his eyes.
"Longshanks did far worse the last time he took a Scottish city!" Wallace said.
Wallace watched as Hamilton, his silver hair smoothly combed, his beard finely groomed in the style of the court, his white hands graceful and delicate, tilted himself toward the princess and said softly in Latin, "he is a murdering bandit. He lies."
Wallace replied in Latin, "I am no bandit! And I do not lie!"
They were startled at Wallace's fluency in the language of scholars. He saw this; it made him angrier still. "Or in French if you prefer!" he went on. "Certainment, c'est vrai! Ask your king to his face, and see if his eyes can convince you of the truth!"
She stared for a long moment at Wallace's eyes.
"Hamilton, leave us," Isabella said.
"M'lady--" Hamilton began.
"Leave us now," she ordered.
He reluctantly obeyed. He saw that she wanted the exchange to be private, and Wallace turned and nodded for his men to leave.
Stephen, who had been admiring the lady's beauty nonstop, leaned in and whispered to William, "Her husband's more of a queen than she is. Did you know that ?" Without waiting for an answer, Stephen moved off with Hamish and Campbell.
The princess gestured to her handmaiden, and Nicolette, eyebrows lifted high in surprise, floated past Wallace, glancing back to appraise the view of him from behind and darting one last look at Isabella before moving out to stand beside the French guards by the carriage.
Wallace and the princess were left alone.
She spoke quickly as if anxious to settle their business and end the meeting. "Let us talk plainly. You invade England. You have it within your power to cause great suffering and death. But you cannot complete the conquest, and I perceive you are clever enough to know that. Yes, you have been victorious close to your shelter and supply. But the deeper you go into England, the harder your task will be."
Wallace broke in. "We will bear the hardships to make our country free. English rule ensures our deprivation."
She forced herself on, anxious not to deviate from the approach she had planned for herself. "The king proposes that you withdraw your attack. In return he grants you hereditary title, estates, and this chest with a thousand pounds of gold, which I am to pay to you personally."
"A lordship. And gold. That I should become Judas."
"Peace is made in such way."
"Slaves are made in such ways!" The sudden passion of his outburst startled everyone:" the princess, those watching from outside the tent, and even, so it seemed, Wallace himself, for he turned away from her sharply and struggled to control the emotions that had leaped from him.
Isabella gripped the handles of her regal chair. Her eyes were wide as a doe's and fixed on this man who stood before her in all his power and all his pain, and she understood exactly what had caused it all. She said something in a voice so soft that not even Hamilton, standing the closest to the tent opening and straining to hear, could make it out; the only one who heard was Wallace. What she said was, "I understand you have suffered. I know … about your woman."
And Wallace said back to her, just as softly, "She was my wife. We married in secret because I would not share her with an English lord. They killed her to get to me." He did not even turn his face to her, and get to me." He did not even turn his face to her, and yet she was breathless in the certainty that everything he said was true. "I've never spoken of her," he went on. "I don't know why I tell you now. Except you remind me of her."
He lifted his face now, and their eyes met.
"You resemble …." He began. "But not just in how you look. She was strong inside, like you are. She could have been a queen herself. In another world, a sweeter, kinder world, a world of justice, she would have
been." He tried to push the memories away, moving his hand as if they were physically beside him. He stared fully at the princess, and his voice took on an urgency, like pleading.
"Someday you will be a queen. So you must open your eyes," William said. "When I was seven years old I saw thirty Scottish patriots hanged in a barn, lured there by Longshanks under a flag of truce. My father and brother stood up to that savagery and lost their lives. When I grew to be a man. I tried to live in peace. I fell in love with …" But he could not bring himself to speak her name.
But he wanted -- needed -- to tell this woman who reminded him so much of Murron just how and why he had lost her. "The soldiers of your kind decided they could take her, like everything else in Scotland. I fought them, but she was caught. To lure me to capture, the king's magistrate cut her throat in the square of Lanark Village."
He paused and drew in a long slow breath. Isabella watched him, her eyes burning, her arms aching to hold him. He looked at her, his eyes growing harder. "My fight is not with fortress cities. It's with one man's desire to rule another man. Tell you king that William Wallace will not be ruled. Nor will any Scot while I live."
The princes rose slowly from her chair, moved in front of him, and lowered herself to her knees. Hamilton and her other attendants saw this from a distance and were shocked. But the Princess of Wales bowed herself before the heart of this commoner.
"Sir," she said in a voice only Wallace could hear, "I leave this money as a gift. Not from the king but from myself. And not to you but to the orphans of your country."
She lifted her face. Their eyes held a moment too long.
Wallace and his captains sat on horseback at the head of their company and watched as the princess's procession left. Hamish studied Wallace's face. Wallace noticed and gave him a noncommittal shrug. As the carriage rolled away, its window curtains lifted back slightly. All they saw were the princess's fingers, but they knew she looked back.
Wallace reined his horse away and rode back to camp.
37
THE LIGHT OF THE MOON SLIPPED DOWN THROUGH THE clear night air, over the charred broken timbers of York, into the barren streets of the sacked city, and onto the shoulders of William Wallace.
He walked there alone.
The bodies of the dead had all been carted away and buried, a task organized by York's monks and nuns. They had gone to the monastery and convent Wallace's men had spared and had recruited helpers from outlying villages to come back to the city and give the men who had once defended it a Christian burial. At first he villagers had been too frightened to come; they were amazed even to find the monks and nuns alive, knowing that Longshanks, when he had sacked a Scottish city near the borders, had slaughtered everyone within it, including not only the women and children but the nuns themselves. The monks and nuns of York assured them that this had not been the case with their city and that Wallace had given them a promise to allow Christian burial of the dead. Still the villagers would not come, many of them believing the nuns and monks were but ghosts or false apparitions sent by the devil to deceive them. The churchmen returned to the villages with women and children who themselves had been spared, and finally the people came out and hauled away the dead for sanctified burial.
The decapitated body of the governor was an exception. Wallace order it hacked apart and fed to the dungeon dogs.
He ordered the bodies of the Scots who had been hung from the walls to be cremated in a giant common pyre, and their ashes taken, to be spread upon Scotland.
And so York was empty, an entire city laid to ruin, and William Wallace walked among its burned-out, empty streets. Even the rats and dogs and cats had deserted the wreckage. There was nothing here but charred wood, dirty cobblestones, and moonlight. Never had William felt so alone.
He felt something unfamiliar. It was fear. Since Murron's death, he had feared nothing. Death did not frighten him; if it meant he could join Murron on the other side of life, he would welcome the passage. His dreams of her, though full of sadness, were still a comfort, a reassurance that his hopes of reunion might find fulfillment.
But something had stirred in him when he was with the princess that day, and he worried that those stirrings might keep Murron from coming to him, if only in his dreams.
Wallace walked through the streets all night long. As the black sky was turning gray with dawn, he returned to his campfire, where he found Hamish slumped in the seating position and dozing. He snorted and started as Wallace sat down beside him. Hamish had been there all night, waiting up for him, worrying about him.
He said nothing about William's absence. "Want some meat?" he asked, pointing to a joint of meat kept warm beside the fire.
William shook his head. "No word yet from Edinburgh?"
Hamish glanced over to the tent where his father lay snoring. He had hoped old Campbell would be the one to tell William. "One of the messengers got back last night, just after you went on your walk." Hamish paused, took a breath. "They're not sending any more men, William."
"They know about York? About our victory here?"
"They know."
"And still they won't support us with reinforcements?"
"They say you have heaped glory onto the throne of Scotland -- whoever ends up sitting there. They had decreed more honors and glories for you-"
"As if they could decree honor!" William said bitterly. Then he tried to hold back his anger. "But no reinforcements."
"No reinforcements."
William stared at the fire.
Old Campbell stirred awake, saw William at the fire, and rose stiffly. He looked to Hamish, who nodded in answer to his father's unspoken question: yes, he had broken the news to William. Old Campbell sat down at the fire with them.
Finally William spoke. "The princess was right about one thing. We can terrorize northern England, but we can't complete a conquest, not without reinforcements."
"We can get food from the land! We can supply ourselves from England itself!" Campbell said. "All my life -- do you hear me, William? -- all my life I've wanted to fight them, the way they're fought us, on their land! Now we're here. I don't want to go back. Not till we've finished it."
Hamish said nothing. William knew Hamish's opinion differed from his father's but they would speak of that later. William looked at old Campbell, who so often seemed like his own father, and said, "No one wants to finish this fight more than I do. And the men with us are like you, they would fight to London itself. They feel nothing can beat us. And truly I think that nothing could if we had a full army and true support. But it's not just battle that bleeds an army. It's disease. It's accident. To march from here to London we would lose more men to sprained ankles and dysentery than we lost in the taking of York. We would get to London. If I lead this army to London without reinforcements, then I lead it to slaughter."
"So what do we do?" Stephen said. He was lying near the fire, beneath his blankets. He spoke without ever opening his eyes. He may not have slept at all.
"We withdraw," William said. " But don't think this is over."
38
PRINCESS ISABELLA, HE SPINE STRAIGHT, HER HEAD LIFTED high, moved into the great hall of the London palace where Longshanks was conducting his council of war. She curtsied deeply to the king, then to her husband, Prince Edward, still marked from his beating.
"My son's loyal wife returns, unkilled by the barbarian!" Longshanks said. "So Wallace accepted our bribe?"
"No, he did not," the princes said, still standing before the council table. The kind provided no chair for her, she was expected only to report and leave them to their business. The other advisors -- even Hamilton, already there at the table with Longshanks --looked at her as if she was but a model, there to receive their approval of a gown.
Longshanks glanced at Hamilton and looked back to Princess Isabella. "The why does he stay? My scouts say he has not advanced."
"He waits, For you. He says he will attack no more towns -- if you are man enough to
come fight him." She said this with here eyes lowered to the floor, afraid that if she looked directly at the king, he would see her defiance.
But instead of exploding in fury at Wallace's challenge, Longshanks's voice sounded strangely pleased "He waits. And the longer he waits, the hungrier his army grows. His own nobles will not support him. He will return to Scotland. He must."
"So you will not fight him?" the princess asked.
"You may return to your embroidery," Longshanks said.
"Humbly, m'lord."
She curtsied again and turned to leave. Longshanks called, "You brought back the money, of course?"
She looked at the king. Clearly he already knew the answer with Hamilton sitting so close to him. The old crony would not even raise his eyes. Isabella knew he must have rushed in to tell the king everything he knew the moment they had arrived.
"No," she said. "I gave it to the children of this war -- in token of your greatness as a king."
"Little fool," he said, half under his breath, yet not caring who else heard -- even her.
She felt the words like a dagger but forced herself toward the door.
Longshanks had already begun addressing his council. Isabella, her ears burning with her own anger, was again surprised by the king's tone. She had expected -- to be honest, had desired -- the king to be cut by Wallace's courage. But Longshanks seemed so unconcerned. He was speaking loudly with a tone of boasting, proud of what he had done. And before she reached the door, Isabella put aside her own anger and listened to exactly what the king was saying"
"So the Welsh bowmen will not be detected, moving so far around his flank up the western coast. The main force from our armies in France can land here, on the east of Scotland."
Isabella froze at the door. Troops from Wales and France, all being sent around to attack the Scottish army from the direction it lest expected?
Prince Edward spoke up. He had not uttered a word to his father since the horrible day when Longshanks had beaten him after throwing Peter from the window. But the old man seemed to be growing senile; his planning was so flawed that Edward could not resist the chance to point it out. "Welsh bowmen?" he sneered. "Your troops from France? Even if you dispatched them today, they'd take weeks to assemble!"
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