"How many men did you say?"
"More than twenty-thousand, the Bruce told us. Edward himself at the lead. They crossed into Scotland two weeks ago. They are camped not more than five miles from the ford now."
"And how many Scots?" James Young asked. He could not settle down. He was pacing about the tent of his liege lord, John Douglas, at the Scot's encampment half way between Stirling Castle and the ford over the Bannockburn. Edward II had made quite clear that his intent was to break the Scottish siege of Stirling Castle, currently held by the English but invested by the forces of Robert the Bruce. No castle was more important to the Scots than Stirling, which commanded the main passage from England into the Scottish Highlands and that had long been the unofficial seat of the Scottish kings.
"Perhaps seven thousand here, now in the field. More are coming, we were told. But the English will try to cross the burn tomorrow. Robert's spies are sure of that." John Douglas, effectively Robert the Bruce's second in command, was sitting in his camp chair, near his field cot, watching his powerfully built lieutenant pace. As always, Young was dressed only in a kilt and his boots and high socks, playing his role—thanks to his magnificent physique—of the last Scot an English soldier wanted to see standing before him, to the hilt.
Only one other figure was in the tent: Douglas's manservant, who was obediently—and to the two Scottish warriors, invisibly—kneeling in the shadows at the edge of the tent, polishing the scabbard of Douglas's sword—or at least pretending to. If only these two realized, the servant thought, how much they revealed in the face of their servants' invisibility to them, they would be sore afraid of the power their servants held. Fortunately for Douglas, the servant admired him. It was more a case of fear and past bitterness toward the other one, though.
"Seven thousand Scots against twenty thousand bastard Englishmen. It seems fairly even, perhaps a little heavy on the Scots' side."
Douglas sighed. There was a time when he had thought that Young would drop the bloodthirsty bravado when they were alone, but he had come to accept that Young believed his own boasting—and that, in fact, it had been what had carried the no-longer-young warrior through decades of fighting.
It had not been an easy sixteen years for James Young. Before the burning of the castle at Ayr, he had been the man closest to Robert the Bruce. In that one act, going against deBruce's orders even though Young did exactly as the troops expected and desired, Young was sent away from deBruce's presence. Robert couldn't exile him completely from military operations—he was too much of a legend and a charismatic symbol of the Scottish determination for him to be sent from the battlefields. But Young no longer would be included in the counsels of the man who was crowned king of the Scots in 1306, after having duped and murdered his leading rival for the crown, John III Comyn. Young had been assigned to serve under Douglas to be close to Robert and yet still far away.
"I wish you had been there, in the council, to voice that hope and determination, James," Douglas murmured, with another sigh. "Too many of the lairds are pessimistic about tomorrow." And that was exactly how Douglas felt about it. Young very likely would have been just the voice they had all needed to give them assurances about tomorrow's battle.
"It is none of my decision that I'm not in the council," Young answered, his bitterness evident. "Most of the twenty thousand are on horse, are they not?" he continued, obviously more interested in the coming battle than past bickering.
"Yes. Edward prides himself on his English cavalry."
"Yes, I've heard how well he likes to ride—and I'm not talking of horses, but rather his young squires," Young said, with a slight leer in his eyes. "But for all that, he is a capable military leader; not one to disregard. Ours are infantry? And sturdy lads all?"
"Yes, most."
"Then we shall be fine. Tell me, has Robert told you where he wants us to go from there? I have heard that he will keep with the Stirling siege but that he wants you elsewhere."
Such optimism, Douglas thought. We face a tough fight tomorrow, and James already is thinking toward the next conquest. I wish I had his confidence. Most of all, however, I wish I had his physique. Douglas looked over at Young. Older than he was by a few years and yet magnificent of body. Enhanced by always strutting around bare chested like that. Intimidating to most. Desired by a few others.
"Roxburgh next," he answered. "But just you, taking our forces. Robert wants me to linger at Stirling for the moment. The lairds are restless, and Robert thinks that I calm and assure them."
"Roxburgh? Why there? It is not on the direct route from the south."
"No, but it has something there Robert wants. It is commanded by Thomas Howard."
"Ah, Thomas Howard." Both of the men thought back sixteen years to the siege and burning of Castle Ayr. That had been commanded by Sir Thomas Howard as well even though it turned out that Howard wasn't there. "And that is important to Robert because . . .?"
"DeBruce wants Howard dead. But here is the delicate part for your mission. Robert wants Howard's son alive."
"Howard's son? He has a . . .? Oh, yes, I remember. I once saw the son, I believe."
The manservant in the corner dropped the scabbard he was polishing and, looking mortified that he'd made a sound, snatched it back up off the hard ground and turned away from the two men in the room. As a servant, he just wasn't there. And as a servant, he should have not been making a sound while he "wasn't there."
"I wonder why?" Young continued.
"Why he does not want the son harmed? Why he wants the son brought to him?" Douglas said. "I cannot say, but I'm told if you saw what the young man looked like—who he looked like—now, you would not have to ask that question."
"Ah, yes I see," Young said. And see he did. It explained so much more as well. It explained why the Bruce took Castle Ayr so softly, which was completely out of his character—and why he escorted the lady of the castle and her brat to a nunnery himself. And also, to some extent, why he had been so angry that Young had raised the castle despite deBruce's promise to that woman. The Scottish king was known for guarding the welfare of all of his by-blows. But was Robert wise in this? Did he really need bastards running around the countryside? Were not the secession issues and contenders abundant enough and enough of a puzzle already?
"So, yes, I understand, even though, with the complications, I think him not wise to be so maudlin."