Nigel Tranter - The Price of the King's Peace

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This trilogy tells the story of Robert the Bruce and how, tutored and encouraged by the heroic William Wallace, he determined to continue the fight for an independent Scotland, sustained by a passionate love for his land. Bannockburn was far from the end, for Robert Bruce and Scotland. There remained fourteen years of struggle, savagery, heroism and treachery before the English could be brought to sit at a peace-table with their proclaimed rebels, and so to acknowledge Bruce as a sovereign king. In these years of stress and fulfilment, Bruce’s character burgeoned to its splendid flowering. The hero-king, moulded by sorrow, remorse and a grievous sickness, equally with triumph, became the foremost prince of Christendom despite continuing Papal excommunication. That the fighting now was done mainly deep in England, over the sea in Ireland, and in the hearts of men, was none the less taxing for a sick man with the seeds of grim fate in his body, and the sin of murder on his conscience. But Elizabeth de Burgh was at his side again, after the long years of imprisonment, and a great love sustained them both. Love, indeed, is the key to Robert the Bruce his passionate love for his land and people, for his friends, his forgiveness for his enemies, and the love he engendered in others; for surely never did a king arouse such love and devotion in those around him, in his lieutenants, as did he.

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“No harm in that-and it would add to alarm. Soon reach London’s ears.”

“When do we ride, Sire?” Douglas asked.

“So soon as we can muster the men.”

“Numbers?” Edward jerked.

“For your company? How many do you want? To make a swift, tight, manageable force? Strong, but not too large.”

“Six hundred. Well mounted.”

“Very well. And you, Thomas?”

“More, Sire. Since I will require to divide, flanks and rear. And

hold a corridor secure. Two thousand.”

“Yes. As I would have said, myself. So be it.”

There was excitement in the great chamber now, men stirring in their seats. Bruce had to call for silence.

“My lord Chancellor,” he said, “the next business?”

At a parliament the Chancellor acted as chairman, with the monarch merely present in a presidential capacity; but a Privy Council was the King’s own meeting, and the Chancellor only acted as secretary. Bernard de Linton, Abbot of Arbroath, was young for such an appointment, young even to be an abbot; but he had one of the shrewdest brains in the kingdom, and Bruce had never regretted his choice of him, even though it had offended more senior clerics who coveted the position of first minister. A long-headed, lantern-jawed man, with hair receding and smouldering dark eyes, he sat at the King’s left hand.

“My lord of Carrick’s claim to be appointed heir to the throne, Your Grace,” he said, tonelessly.

The stir round the table now was different, with new elements in it, discomfort, some resentment, as well as tension. All eyes were on the two brothers.

“Ah, yes,” the King nodded.

“This matter has been raised before. But without decision. You would speak to it, my lord?”

Edward cleared his throat.

“You all know the position,” he said abruptly.

“This rejection of our peace treaty makes it the more urgent The King is no longer young. He has these bouts of sickness.

And war is still our lot. The succession must be assured-and he has only a daughter. The Lady Marjory has now returned to us.

We all esteem her well. But she would make no monarch for Scotlandany can see that. This realm requires a king, and a strong king-not a weakly lassie as queen. In peace as in war. None can gainsay that. As next male heir, I say that, for the good of the realm, the succession should be settled on myself. Herewith.” He ended as abruptly as he had begun.

“You have heard, my lords. The situation is known to you all. I shall value your advice.”

“Your Grace, it is not for us to decide this matter,” David, Bishop of Moray objected.

“Only a parliament may change the succession. With your royal approval.”

“True. But a parliament will need guidance. I believe the next

parliament would approve the decision of this Council.”

“If, as God forbid, our liege lord was to be taken from us,” Lamberton observed, “would not a strong regent serve the Queen and the realm almost as well as a strong king?”

“No!” Edward barked.

“There is a world of difference.”

“Admittedly, my lord. But that difference need not be to the hurt of the realm. Or to the hurt of an already much-wronged young woman!”

“Aye! Aye!” That evoked considerable agreement.

“She may marry. What then? How would the Queen’s husband esteem a

regent over them? There would be factions, divisions, parties. This

kingdom is sufficiently divided. I say only a king’s strong hand can

unite it.” “With all respect to the Earl of Carrick,” James Douglas

said, “I hold that it is wrong, shameful, even to consider this change. The throne is the Lady Marjory’s birthright-unless a son be born to His Grace. What right has any, save God, to take it from her?”

“Well spoken, Sir James!” Hay supported.

“Nevertheless, it could be the kindest course,” Sir Alexander Comyn, Sheriff of Inverness, pointed out reasonably, an elderly grave-faced man.

“The princess might well be the happier. Would the position of a young and inexperienced queen be so enviable?

This kingdom will not be a sure and settled one for many a year.

Let us hope King Robert is spared to see it so. But, if not, how would it be for the Lady Marjory? Even with a strong regent. She might thank you to be spared the crown, I think.”

Men considered that, thoughtfully.

“Surely, above all, the desires of two persons require to be considered in this,” the Earl of Moray put in.

“Those of the lady herself, and of His Grace. Lacking that knowledge, how may we decide?” He looked at his other uncle.

Thus appealed to, the King sighed.

“It is a hard matter. My personal desires, my love and affection for my daughter, my duty to the realm-all are here at odds. My daughter has suffered terribly.

I would now deny her nothing. And yet-could her hand steer this realm? As to her wishes, it is too soon to have put it to her. For my own desire, then I would say-if she marries and bears a son, I would wish that one day he wore my crown.”

A murmur of understanding and sympathy greeted that.

“It could be so,” Edward took him up.

“The Act of Succession passed at a parliament could be so written. Myself as king. The Lady Marjory’s son, if such should be, thereafter king.”

“And if you had a son, brother?” The King did not add the adjective ‘lawful’, there, as he was tempted to do-for Edward had indeed recently had a son by the Lady Isabella Ross, whom he had omitted to many. The wronged lady’s father’s snarling noises from down the table made the point for him, however.

“My son would, by decree, take second place to hers.”

Many looked at him doubtfully, wondering how likely any of them were to see such a thing happening.

“Let us leave it so, then,” the King suggested.

“I will ask my daughter her wishes. Consider this matter well, my lords, before the next parliament. Remembering that all must be decided for the best weal of this realm which we have fought so long to free and save.” He drew a long breath.

“Is there other business, my lord Abbot?”

“Only this of the awards, appointments and grants of lands, following upon the recent victory, Sire. The forfeited lands and positions available for distribution,” the Chancellor said.

“A long list” “Ah, yes. Long, indeed. As is only fit and proper, since so many fall to be rewarded. But, happily, it is all set down, is it not? But requires reading over. My will in this matter. Do so, my lord, for this Council’s approval-and let us be out of here, this warm summer day …”

That evening, in his private quarters of the castle, Bruce broached the matter with his daughter.

“As my only child, lass, you have all along been heir to Scotland’s throne,” he told her.

“Now that you are a woman grown, and home again-how do you esteem it?

How do you feel?”

“Feel? I feel no different than ever I have felt, Sire. I pray that I

may never have to be queen.”

“M’mmm. Why, my dear?”

“You would be… dead.”

“Aye. But death comes to us all, one day. It may be a long while yet.

But, in that day, you should be queen.”

“Unless I die before you!”

“Marjory!” Elizabeth protested.

“Such a thing to say, at your age! Not yet twenty years. At the

beginning of your life.”

“Many a time I wished myself dead. In London Tower,” the girl said.

Hollow-cheeked, pale, she looked a sad creature.

“But that is all past now, my dear. You must try to forget it.”

“Yes. I am sorry. But it is not easy. To forget. So long …”

“To be sure, lass,” her father said.

“We know. We will do all in our power to help. But meantime you are heir to Scotland.”

“Must I be so? Could it not be … another, Sire?”

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