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The Arrow Page 33
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Leaving about a hundred men in the forest nearby—the bulk of the army had remained at Dundee Castle, which was taken by Bruce the previous winter, to maintain the illusion of a retreat and not alert the English spies—the small party of warriors approached the north end of the city where the castle was located. There were several gates into the city, including the Red Brig Port, Turret Brig Port, Southgate Port, and Spey Port, but their plan was to cross the lade near the castle, scale the wall, and open the small gate at Curfew Row to admit the rest of the army and take the garrison by surprise. Once the castle fell, the city would be theirs.
It was well after midnight when the score of warriors approached the icy black waters of the lade, carrying only the rope ladders fashioned by Douglas that they’d used for the first time at Berwick and very light weaponry. Not coincidentally, it was a moonless night and the skies were dark as pitch. With the soot and seal grease blackening their faces, the men were hard-pressed to recognize the man standing next to them. For the soldiers standing watch on the rampart they would be nearly impossible to see. Hearing them was unlikely, as even from outside the wall the sounds of revelry were unmistakable. Apparently, the garrison and townsfolk were celebrating their victory. A bit prematurely—not that Gregor was going to complain, particularly if it meant the soldiers were not keeping good watch.
Bruce was the first man in the water, much to the shock of a French knight who’d recently joined Douglas’s retinue and was unused to seeing a king lead his men from the front. Chief followed closely, with Gregor immediately behind him.
Murky, and cold enough to freeze your bollocks off, the lade was about twenty yards of oozy, smelly, slimy hell. At times the water was high enough to nearly reach their mouths, and, given the pungent scents coming from it, Gregor was glad it didn’t.
When they finally reached the far side of the lade, they had to crawl on their bellies up a bank of mud and rock at the foot of the wall. Once the others had made it across, the two Island chieftain cousins, MacSorley and MacRuairi, began tossing the grappling hooks of the rope ladders.
No one spoke. They didn’t need to. They all knew their roles. Any necessary communication was done by hand signals.
Chief had won one small victory before they’d left. Bruce would not be the first man up the ladder; MacRuairi would go ahead of him. Gregor would be the first man up the second ladder to take his position along the wall.
Slowly—silently—no more than two men on the ladder at one time, they started to climb. MacRuairi was about five feet from the top, with the king a few steps behind him, when disaster struck. The rope on one side of their ladder snapped near the top. Both men barely managed to grab hold of the remaining side of rope as the boards under their feet dropped sideways, and they went careening into the wall—which was a hell of a lot better than landing on the rocky bank about twenty feet below.
The clatter of wood and metal against stone was enough to attract the attention of even the most lax of guards. From below, Chief whispered, “Arrow, on your right.”
Over halfway up the second ladder, Gregor didn’t have time to think. A soldier on one of the turrets had stopped to investigate. He was about twenty yards away, looking in their direction—a faint blur of a target in the darkness. Wedged against the wall with only his feet for balance, Gregor let go his grip on the ladder, notched an arrow, and sent it careening into the darkness in seconds. The shot was more prayerful than realistic, and given that one wrong move would have him careening backward off the ladder, one of the most difficult he’d ever attempted. But there was no way in hell he was going to let this attack fail. Before the soldier could shout out a warning to the rest of the watch, he fell harmlessly to the ground.
MacRuairi had managed to pull himself to the top. The king was still hanging from the broken ladder with the men in position below to catch him if necessary. But Bruce didn’t fall. Like MacRuairi, he climbed the broken ladder up and over the wall. Thanks to Gregor, disaster had been averted.
With Chief cursing the whole time, in the kind of valiant act that earned Bruce the heart of the people and the admiration of his men, the king led the small party of warriors in a surprise attack. Though Gregor wanted nothing more than to go in search of Cate, he held his position at the wall overlooking the bailey to ensure that no one was able to alert the rest of the garrison before the castle could be taken and the gate opened.
Gregor didn’t have to notch another arrow. The garrison was woefully unprepared, and Bruce’s men met little resistance. Within the space of a half-hour the castle and city were theirs, and Robert the Bruce had added one more improbable feat in an improbable reign that was quickly becoming legend.
But Gregor wasn’t ready to celebrate yet. Unable to wait a moment longer, he turned to Campbell. “I’m going to find Cate.”
“I’ll go with you.”
He nodded. “We’ll check the guard towers first.”
They had just started down the stairs of the rampart when Gregor heard a shout. Recognizing the voice as Bruce’s, he turned to the bailey below. In one glance, Gregor took in the situation and cursed. Bloody hell, one of the English soldiers was using a woman as a shield, and Bruce—who never could forget his knightly roots—was going to go to her damned rescue and get himself killed!
Not hesitating, Gregor notched his arrow, raised his bow into position, and drew back his hand. It wasn’t a difficult shot. The bailey was lit with torches and the soldier was only about twenty yards away. As soon as the woman got out of the way …
His gaze flickered back to the woman, and his stomach dropped. Bloody hell. It wasn’t just any woman; it was Cate.
Cate recognized the man coming toward them an instant before Fitzwarren did. Most of his face was hidden behind a helm, and his skin seemed to have been darkened with something, but the arrogant swagger and aura of confidence and authority were the same as they’d been the last time she’d seen the handsome young Earl of Carrick ambling away from their small cottage fifteen years ago.
For fifteen years she thought she’d hated him. But all it took was one look—one moment when their eyes met—for her to realize that no matter what her father had done, she would not be the instrument used to destroy him. Instinctively she knew that was exactly what Fitzwarren would try to do.
Frustration and rage tangled inside her. By all that was holy, it never should have come to this. She’d been ready. All day she’d been waiting in her chamber for someone to come so she could put her plan into motion. She would have had plenty of time to find Fitzwarren and exact her vengeance before attempting to escape the city.
She’d even had a backup plan. If escape proved impossible, she’d intended to take sanctuary in a church. Sir William’s honor as a knight would not let him violate it—as the Earl of Ross had done when taking Bruce’s queen, sister, daughter, and the Countess of Buchan—or trick Gregor into surrendering without having her as leverage.
But her anxious pacing all day had been for naught. For the first time since her imprisonment, no one had come to take her on her walk or even to bring her food. From the sounds of revelry outside, they were too busy celebrating.
Of all the days to be forgotten! She’d banged her fists on the door, cried out, and pleaded for someone to come for her until her voice was hoarse. She’d almost given up hope when the door had finally opened—well after midnight—and the very man she’d hoped to find came bursting in.
Shocked to see the elder Fitzwarren standing there, it took her a moment to react.
“You didn’t think I would forget you, did you?” He laughed cruelly. “It took me a while to remember Bruce’s whore and her mongrel.” Frozen with shock that he knew who she was, Cate gasped as he stepped toward her. For a moment she was the young girl in the cottage again, seeing her mother raped and then murdered by this evil man. “Did you climb out of your tomb? I should have let them fill it with water as they wanted. But I thought it would be more fun for you to starve.” He shrugged