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TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFACE
1
I:
AMBUSH
3
II:
RHUDDLAN 9
III. FORBIDDEN FRUIT 18
IV.
A CHASTISEMENT 26
V.
THE WEIRD SISTERS 32
VI.
SALWYN 35
VII. THE CHURCHYARD 40
VIII. EARL GODWINE’S RETURN 50
IX. MALCOM'S RETURN
63
X. BATTLE OF DUNSINANE 72
XI.
HEREFORD
92
XII. HAROLD’S CHRISTMAS CAMPAIGN 111
XIII. A TIMELY WARNING 122
XIV. EXILE OF GRUFFYDD AP LLEWELYN 134
XV. A SHORT REPRIEVE 139
XVI. ALAIN LE ROUGE OF BRITTANY 150
XVII.
ISABEL 164
XVIII. WILLIAM'S CAMPAIGN IN
BRITTANY 179
XIX. A
BETROTHAL 190
XX. A CHANGE OF WEATHER 197
XXI.
PEVENSEY 210
XXII. THE FIELD OF HASTINGS 222
XXIII.
VICTORY 234
XXIV.
DUNFERMLINE 247
XXV. THE SAXON EXILES 262
XXVI. MARGARET AETHELING 272
XXVII. CAMPAIGN INTO
NORTHUMBRIA 294
XXVIII. THE KING’S OATH 308
XXIX.
A PLACE OF
HONOR 321
XXX. WILLIAM RUFUS 335
XXXI. DEATH OF KING MALCOLM 344
XXXII. THE SIEGE OF DUN
EDIN
351
EPILOGUE
363
BIBLIOGRAPHY
367
PREFACE
It is of legends that I write in this story, rather than
facts; for after almost a thousand years of
history, what can we call truth out of the tiny scraps that
survived? When men claimed descent
from a bear, and people believed that dragons roamed the earth,
who is to say what is fact
and what is fancy?
Hence, with this thought in mind, I give you the origin of the royal
Stewarts,
as it was handed down to Shakespeare.
It all began with the witches'
prophecy.
Macbeth's friend Banquo was
with him when the three witches appeared on the heath –
strange, weird creatures with seductive words.
"All hail, Macbeth!" the first
had said, "Hail to thee, Thane of Glamis!" – calling him by his true
title.
"All hail, Macbeth!" quoth the
second, "Hail to thee, Thane of Cawdor!" – giving him a title
belonging to another.
"All hail, Macbeth," cried the
third, "that shalt be King hereafter!" – giving voice to his secret
desire.
Macbeth did not know it yet,
but the second witch had spoken the truth; already King
Duncan had declared the Thane of Cawdor traitor, and awarded the
title to Macbeth for his
courage in battle.
Then the witches spoke their
prophecy to Banquo. They said:
"Lesser than Macbeth, and
greater."
"Not so happy, yet much
happier."
"Thou shalt 'get kings, though
thou be none."
The witches vanished, leaving
the pair with gladsome prospects.
All might have gone well, but
Macbeth's ambitions were too strong to wait for chance to
bring them about. King Duncan's life stood in his way; before
long, King Duncan was
murdered. The true heirs, Malcolm and Donald Bain, fled the
country, thus leaving the throne
empty for Macbeth to mount.
Only Banquo had reason to
suspect that Macbeth was the murderer.
As of yet, however, good Banquo
showed no signs of betraying his friend's secret. But as
time went on, the king brooded – hating him – begrudging Banquo's
every breath.
It really wasn't treachery
Macbeth suspected; rather, his anger had sprung from the
futility of his own position. Although he was king, he had thrown
away his peace of mind –
jeopardized his very soul – so that Banquo's heirs would sit on the
throne he had bought so dearly.
Having gone so far, there was
only one thing to do. Banquo had to be dealt with...
and his son, Fleance. To that end, Macbeth ordered a great feast
to be prepared, and
commanded their presence as guests of honor...
I
AMBUSH
Fleance barely slowed his step as Banquo stopped again, removing a rock
from his shoe.
He and his father were already late to the King's banquet, and a
half-mile still stretched
between them and the castle gate. It had seemed like a fine idea a
couple of hours ago –
taking a walk to get away from that hostile environment. There had
been too many
uncomfortable pauses in conversation – too many unfinished phrases
– too many sideways
glances. But now, dusk was quickly deepening into night, and it
was getting difficult to
see into the forest. There was probably a spy in every tree, for
all he could tell.
The young man’s curly hair blew
about his face as he looked up at the treetops. High
cheekbones accentuated dark brown eyes as he raised his brows to
see better through the
shadow. His fine square chin gave him a profile he was proud of,
and he went beardless,
disregarding the current fashion. But his mouth, usually so prone
to laughter, was
pursed tonight in frustration.
"Blast this uphill
climb," he grumbled as Banquo adjusted his cloak-clasp. He glanced
at his father wryly; this reticence was most unusual for him. His
father grunted a response,
but finally shifted his belt, shaking off his lethargy. Picking up
their pace, father and son
strode deep into the forest.
It was a quiet night,
punctuated by the crunch of stones underfoot. Not a cricket was
heard – nor birds – only the sigh of leaves rustling far overhead.
"It shall be rain tonight,"
Banquo said.
From behind came the cry: "Let
it come down!"
In an instant, three dark forms
were among them. Banquo was their main target, and
two of them fell upon him, slashing the startled man in the face.
The worthy lord was blinded
by his own blood even as he shouted, "Villains, Murderers! Fly,
Fleance, Fly!"
Though past his physical prime,
the old warrior still was more than a match for both
opponents. With a practiced motion, Banquo swept his sword from
the scabbard, aiming
an overhead cut at his nearest attacker's head. If the blow had
hit, he would have cleaved
the man's skull. But the blood was flowing so fast into his eyes
that his aim was flawed.
The blade only glanced off the other's shoulder, eliciting a howl
of pain.
Enraged, the murderer dived at
Banquo, catching him in the throat with a dagger.
Letting go the knife, the man stepped back, clutching his arm; he
was astounded that
Banquo was still on his feet. For a moment, it seemed that their
victim would respond
with a last lunge. Then he staggered, gurgling, and collapsed into
the arms of his murderers.
Fleance was already in motion
before his father had shouted. Shoving his
torch into the third assassin's face, he set the man's mask
aflame. Screaming, clawing
his face, the murderer went down, his feet kicked out from under
him.
Fleance allowed himself a brief
sneer. Then, wasting no more time, he moved
toward the others when he saw the killers slashing Banquo's face.
The boy
hesitated, reluctant to abandon his father. But the assassins were
too good at their work.
Even from this distance he could tell that Banquo was already
finished; his body gave
no more sign of life.
It was also clear that their
companion’s screaming made no impression on them; the
assassins must have assumed that the victim was himself. Cursing,
Fleance took advantage
of the confusion. He stamped out his torch, kicked his assailant
once more as the man was
struggling up, and ran for his life.
Murder gave the forest a
sinister cast. The trees seemed to bend their limbs before him,
seeking to block his way. Fleance's breath came in short gasps,
heightening the pain in his side
as he ran frantically the way he had come.
His first thought was to go to
Macbeth and raise a search party to ride down these outlaws.
Then, a deeper, more telling conviction assailed him, though he
knew not whence it came:
perhaps the murderers were not there by chance. Perhaps they were
paid assassins – in
which case he could trust no one.
He considered, leaning against
a tree and catching his breath. He wasn’t going anywhere
without a horse, and both horses were still stabled at the castle.
Going any closer to that accursed
place was the last thing he wanted to do; however, he reminded
himself that no one besides the
assassins would know that there had been any trouble.
It was a risk. Perhaps they
would lie in wait for him near the stables and finish the job.
But he had a feeling that they would be too busy tending their
wounds. Despite himself,
Fleance smiled grimly.
He looked slowly around the
tree and up the path. Everything was quiet. He took
one step then another, resisting the urge to break into a run.
This was no time to panic.
He needed to keep his senses about him. He looked one more time in
all directions, then
began striding quickly toward the castle, hand on his dagger.
No one stopped him at the
castle gate and Fleance went directly to the stabler’s door.
He knocked quickly then stepped back, looking around. There was no
indication he was
being followed yet.
The stabler took his time
answering, his face breaking into a scowl when he recognized
Fleance; he hadn’t expected anyone to leave for some hours yet.
But when the youth held
out a coin, his mouth curled into a greedy sneer and he quickly
came out, making the coin
disappear as he passed.
Fleance watched him go into the
stable, resisting the urge to shout at the other to hurry up.
The man seemed to take an inordinately long time, then he came out…
alone.
“What about t’other?”
“I only need one now. Is he
ready?”
The man shrugged. “Whatever
you want.” He opened the stable door and Fleance
sighed with relief to see that his horse was saddled. Without
another word he mounted,
offering no explanation for his hasty conduct and rode off, leaving
the man scratching his head.
Fleance took the road away from the castle grounds. He followed unused
paths through
the forest, traveling all night. At first, he rode just to get
away. Then, feeling safer the farther
away he rode, he knew he needed a plan. If they were truly set on
by assassins, home
would not be safe. No where was safe. What would Banquo do?
Banquo. Left dead in the
forest like a wild animal.
Fleance brushed away a tear
with the back of his hand. Now was not the time to cry.
Nor could he bring himself to go back. To what end? His father
had used his last breath
to tell him to fly. His father had sacrificed himself to save the
son.
But why did it happen?
By afternoon, Fleance was
relieved to find himself at his destination: a small, thatched-
roof cottage well back from the road along the shore of Loch Lochy.
A thin line of smoke
rose invitingly from the chimney. Fleance unsaddled and brushed
his horse, hoping to draw
the inhabitant from the house, alone.
The noise did that very thing.
The door burst open and a tall, balding man came out,
wiping the back of his neck with a brown rag. He strode across the
yard, breaking into a
run as he recognized his visitor. They embraced tightly; Fleance
clung to the man as
relief flowed through him. They hadn’t seen each other in years,
but boyhood friendships
lasted a lifetime.
“Donald,” Fleance gasped as his
friend squeezed him too hard, like he had always
done when they were boys.
Donald pulled away, grinning.
But his smile of welcome changed to a frown. Fleance’s
tunic was torn, his hair was twisted with twigs and leaves, his
eyes looked haunted.
"For God's sake, man, what has
happened? Come inside," he said, pulling Fleance's arm.
The other stopped him, shaking his head; he looked worriedly at the
house.
Donald's eyes followed his.
"We are alone. She's fixing dinner. Don't worry. There
is enough for three."
Fleance wanted nothing more
than a warm meal. But he couldn't share his misfortune
with anyone else but Donald...not just yet. Donald put an arm
around his shoulders, leading
him to the lake.
In a torrent, Fleance poured
out the story he barely believed himself, but for the terror
of the thing. Donald listened carefully.
"Stay with us a few days," he
said when the other had finished. "I'll ride out and find
what's behind all this. I swear, the villains will pay."
Comforted in his friend's good
hands, Fleance permitted himself to be fed, undressed, and
put to bed. He slept until the next afternoon. When he awoke,
Fleance sat in his bed, rubbing
his eyes. For a moment, he didn't realize where he was; then the
horrible memories of the
day before rushed back. He almost wished he had stayed asleep
forever.
Getting heavily to his feet,
Fleance pushed aside the curtain divider, running his fingers
through his hair and smiling self-consciously at Donald's wife.
She smiled back, pouring some
milk.
"Did he make it back yet?"
She shook her head, offering
him a cup.
Sighing, Fleance accepted it.
"Perhaps his news will not be all bad."
He busied himself chopping
wood, feeding the animals. Near dark, the brisk sound
of hooves announced the long-awaited arrival.
Fleance came outside, uneasily
watching the other dismount, and accompanied him in
silence to the barn. Donald took a long time brushing the horse,
avoiding his eyes. It was
easy to tell there was something wrong, but Fleance held his
tongue, waiting for Donald to
come up with the right words.
Finally, the other
straightened, putting a hand on the horse's back.
"I know you are innocent," he
blurted.
"Innocent!" Fleance gasped.
"Innocent of what?"
Donald hesitated. "The word
has spread that you killed your own father. The accusation is
absurd; I know that."
Fleance turned away, stunned.
"It comes from the stabler,"
Donald continued after a moment. "He mentioned something
about your taking only one horse away, shortly after you and your
father left both of your
mounts with him. You didn't say anything, yet you were in a
terrible hurry."
Fleance began pacing, his face
filled with alarm.
His friend went on,
apologetically. "I know, Fleance. What were you supposed to do, tell
him you were running from your father's murderers? He could have
been one of them."
He coughed, embarrassed. "There is something else you should
know. Macbeth, at the feast
that very night, acted strangely. He kept talking to an empty
chair, of murder and rising from
the dead. One of the things he said was 'Never shake thy gory
locks at me.' Men thought he
was mad. Later, they said he was suffering from guilt." He looked
sidelong at Fleance.
“So you see...perhaps with time...”
Fleance sighed – a heavy
rattling sound.
"I think," Donald hurried,
"most honest men suspect the King's hand in this. Fleance,
I think that Macbeth had your father murdered, and intended to
murder you, too. Though
God knows why."
He stepped away from the horse,
putting a hand on Fleance's arm.
"And yet, you must flee the
country. You are no longer safe here."
Fleance shook his head
vehemently, though no words could come forth. Anxiously,
Donald's grasp tightened, communicating his tension better than
words could have done.
"Listen to me," he said through
clenched teeth. "If you stay, you are a dead man. How
long can you hide?"
Fleance knew Donald was really
saying that he was afraid to give him shelter. If
Donald was discovered hiding a fugitive, his own life would be
forfeit.
Tears falling from his eyes,
Fleance nodded. "I will go."
"I will accompany you to the
port, and pay your fare." Donald sounded ashamed, but relieved.
But that meant nothing to
Fleance. He was alone...more alone than ever in his life.
And he was leaving his father unavenged.
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