Randall Wallace - Braveheart

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For love of country, for love of maiden, for love of freedom… he became the hammer and scourge of England. In one of history’s darkest hours there arose from humble beginnings a man of courage and honor—the likes of whom the world may never see again. Amid the color, pageantry, and violence of medieval Scotland unfurls the resplendent tale of the legendary William Wallace, farmer by birth, rebel by fate, who banded together his valiant army of Scots to crush the cruel tyranny of the English Plantagenet king.
Mel Gibson is William Wallace, the valiant highlander whose epic adventures changed the course of history.

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Except in Mornay’s dreams, where every night Wallace did return. Then Mornay saw his face on the field at Falkirk, though on the day of the actual battle he had been too far away to see Wallace’s features when Mornay led his men away. Yet now Mornay could see that face staring at him. The eyes unblinking, burning through him right into his soul. He was alive in those dreams! He would never go away!

Tonight Mornay had a new dream. Wallace was riding toward him. Tonight it was Mornay on foot, surrounded by his enemies, with Wallace riding—and not away, but toward him…..closer…closer!

Mornay awoke, sweating though still cold. He rubbed his face, looked about him to assure himself he as still within his castle and its safety, and rolled over to burrow back beneath the furs of his bead. But then he heard a noise and sat up. He heard hoofbeats. And not outside his castle but within!. It was not possible. He pressed his hands to his face, squeezed his head, felt the bristle of his beard against his palms to drive out what had to be the lingering echo of his dream.

Still he heard the sound. Hoofbeats! They were growing louder, the clatter of hoof on stone, rising up the spiraling stairway of his bedchamber tower. He heard shouts, too, screams from below. The human noised did not alarm him; they seemed real, human, comforting. But what were these hoofbeats that could not exist?

Then silence; it seemed to hand outside his doorway. Mornay stared at that door. Had it all been a nightmare after all?

Then the door exploded inward, propelled by the hooves of a rearing horse.

Into the bedroom rode William Wallace.

The shouts of Mornay’s guards, pursuing him up the stairway, flew in with Wallace like leaves blown through the open door. The guards were close behind, but Wallace seemed not to heed them. He looked at Mornay sitting straight up with the covers pulled up against his chest.

Wallace drew the broadsword from the scabbard at his back. Mornay never moved or spoke. His eyelids did not twitch, his eyes seemed not to see. Wallace’s sword cut through his neck in one stroke.

For a moment the guards at the door froze as Mornay had. But here was no retreat for them, as other guards, the castle’s entire garrison, was flowing up the stairs behind them in pursuit of the intruder. They gathered in the corridor just outside the bedroom door. They had William Wallace trapped! That he had ridden over the sentries in the courtyard, up he stairs—it was shocking, it had taken them all by surprise. But now he could go nowhere, could not maneuver within this room they had him! A single coordinate rush and they could finish him. The king’s reward would be theirs!

Wallace snatched a pelt from the bed, threw it over the horse’s eyes, and kicked the animal’s flanks. The horse jumped forward, blind and crashed through the shutters and out the window.

Horse and rider plunged down, down. Past the sheer walls of the castle, past its natural stone foundation, and into the loch.

High above its surface, Mornay’s guards and the castle servants clustered at the windows and looked in awe. They could scarcely believe the feat; as they watched the water returning to its rest, they found themselves praying in silence that he would live through the fall; surely he could not! And yet he had made the jump so quickly, as if he’d planned it all along. He must have planned to die, for the water remained quiet.

But there he was! Wallace and the horse surfaced. They swam to the shore of he loch.

The guards and servants of Mornay’s castle were cheering from the battlements as Wallace reached the shore, drew his horse to his feet, jumped upon his back, and rode away.

55

MORNAY DEAD BY THE HAND OR WALLACE! THE NEWS OF it burned through the Scottish countryside. So fast did word travel that by the time Craig heard it, traveled to Mornay’s castle and then on to Bruce’s, in every village he passed, he heard drunken chanting: “Wallace! Wal—lace! Wal—lace!”

Craig found the young Bruce walking the battlements of his own castle. Hearing the same chant, coming up to him from the tavern of the village at the base of the castle hill. The Bruce snapped around the moment he saw Craig and said before Craig could greet him, “Is it true about Mornay?”

Craig nodded, his face drawn and tight. “I had to go see for myself. The tales about Wallace, they’re so fantastical-he’s here, he’s there, he materializes out of darkness, he rides horses up castle towers—no one could believe such stories! But….this one is no rumor. It must have Wallace himself. He rode up the stairway—and not up the outside of the tower wall as some of the wags suggest! But Mornay is dead, cut down with one stroke.”

Craig handed him the blood-stained nightshirt Mornay had worn. The Bruce took it with eager hands, and Craig was surprised to observe that he seemed to admire rather than to fear Wallace’s apparent return.

“And he rode through the wind? My God!” Bruce said. Looking up and noticing the disturbance on Craig’s face, Bruce turned away and stepped to the wall overlooking the village, from which the cries of Wal-lace ! Wal-lace! Still rang up to them. “Don’t you see?” Robert said. “Those people down there, chanting his name, they take him as a hero. And a hero he is. But he’s not magic. He’s real. Don’t you see? He’s real!”

Craig most emphatically did not see. What could be young Bruce’s point? What could he possibly see in Wallace that filled him with excitement rather than dread? It was almost as if, in Wallace, young Bruce had found something — and in discovering it in Wallace had discovered it also in himself! But what was it? Craig was baffled, even angry at Bruce, who seemed drunk, frivolous, insane!

Tying to explain, as if he knew Craig’s thoughts, Bruce said, “He planned what he did! Think about it! He didn’t ride into Mornay’s castle like a madman, with no-well, yes, I mean he did ride in like a madman, like a man possessed of demons, which he is but—he has his angels, too!” Bruce’s words were tumbling, trying to keep up with his thoughts, but both were coming too fast. “What I mean — what I mean is — he has his passion and his pain, he lives with it all, he uses it all, he is willing to give up his life, and that is why he would think of an action that the rest of us could never imagine. We think first of our own preservation. He plans for his preservation, but that is not his goal.”

“I don’t — I have no idea what you are trying to say.”

“He rode out the window. Forced the horse through. Must have blinded it some way, yes?”

Craig nodded, surprised at Bruce’s perception.

“Yes. The guards said he threw a pelf from the bed over the horse’s eyes to trick the animal in doing something so insane.”

“But it was not insane! It was the sanest thing he could do! By calling him insane, you deny his courage — a madman is without fear and thus without bravery. But Wallace! He rode into Mornay’s castle, right through the spears of his guard’s, into Mornay’s bedchamber, and took his life and rode out the window as he had planned to do before he ever rode into the castle!” Bruce had turned to Craig and now grabbed his shoulder. “He is a man — like you and me. If we say he is not, that is he is more or less, than we — then we are saying we can never be like him. But we can be. We must be.”

Robert the Bruce turned back to the battlement. Craig stared at him for a long time, as the wind blew chilly against their faces and carried the sound of Wallace’s name up from the village. He had grown bored with young Bruce’s raptures. There were facts to be dealt with, and old Craig wanted those made clear. “So the sum of it all, “Craig said, “is that you believe Mornay’s killer was definitely Wallace, and –

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