witness to previous carelessness and Bruce had the grace to flush and begin to protest about present company. Wishart waved him silent.
âWallace is no priest,â he answered. âNo red spurs nor dubbing neither, but his father owns a rickle of land and his mother is a Crawfurd, dochter of a Sheriff of Ayr â so he is no chiel with hurdies flappinâ out the back of his breeks. Besides, he is a bonnie fighter â as bonnie as any I have ever seen. As a solution to the thorny problem of Bruce or Balliol it takes preference over murder plots on a chasse, my lord.â
âIs that all it takes, then?â Bruce demanded thickly. âYou would throw over the Bruce claim for a âbonnie fighterâ?â
âThe Bruce claim is safe enough,â Wishart said, suddenly steely. âWallace is no candidate for a throne â besides, we have a king. John Balliol is king and Wallace is fighting in his name.â
âBalliol abdicated,â Bruce roared and Kirkpatrick laid a hand on his arm, which the earl shook off angrily, though he lowered his voice to a hoarse hiss, spraying Wishartâs face.
âHe abdicated. Christ and All His Saints â Edward stripped the regalia off him, so that he is Toom Tabard, Empty Cote, from now until Hell freezes over. There is no king in Scotland.â
âThat,â replied Wishart, slowly wiping Bruce off his face and staring steadily back at the pop-eyed earl, âis never what we admit. Ever. The kingdom must have a king, clear and indivisible from the English, and Balliol is the name we fight in. That name and the Wallace one gains us fighting men â enough, so far, to slay the sheriff of Lanark and burn his place round his ears. Now the south is in rebellion as well as the north and east.â
âFoolish,â Bruce ranted, pacing and waving. âThey are outlaws, cut-throats and raiders, not trained fighting men -they wonât stand in the field and certainly not led by the likes of Wallace. Your desperation for a clear and indivisible king blinds you.â
He leaned forward and his voice grew softer, more menacing while the shadows did things to his eyes that Hal did not like.
âOnly the nobiles can lead men to fight Edward,â he declared. âNot small folk like Wallace. In the end, the gentilhommes â your precious âcommunity of the realmâ â is what will keep your Church free of interference from Edward, which is really what you finaigle for. Answerable only to the Pope, is that not it, Bishop?â
âSir Andrew Moray is noble,â Wishart pointed out, bland as a nunâs smile, and that made Bruce pause. Aha, Hal thought, the bold Bruce does not like the idea of Moray. Moray and Wallace as Guardians of the Realm would go a long way to appeasing nobles appalled at the idea of a Wallace alone.
Bruce would not then be at the centre of things â he had not been party to any of it so far, nor would he have been if he had not turned up on his own, dangling The Hardyâs family as security of his intentions and looking for the approbation of the other finely born in Wishartâs enterprise. Hal, dragged along in the Auld Templarâs wake, had wondered, every step of the way, what had prompted Bruce to suddenly become so hot for rebellion and Sim had remarked that Bruceâs da would not care for it much.
Bruce the son had not got much out of it. The Hardy had been grudgingly polite, the Stewart brothers and Sir Alexander Lindsay had been cool at best while Wallace himself, amiable, giant and seemingly bland, had looked the Earl of Carrick up and down shrewdly and wondered aloud why âBruce the Englishmanâ had decided to jump the fence. Now they were all glowering on the other side of the door, still wondering the same.
It was exactly what Wishart now asked.
âIf you have set your face against this enterprise and my choice of captain,â Wishart
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