Ysonde looked hard at her, and nodded. ‘And all his books with poetry in, no-to-touch-wi-sticky-fingers. Wynliane’s in a poetry book,’ she announced proudly, ‘and so’m I. But you’re not to go in.’ Beside her, Wynliane shook her head and her mouth framed a silent No.
‘We only want to sweep and dust,’ said Jennet.
‘There’s a good lassie, taking heed to what her da said,’ announced Nan. ‘You come wi me now, poppets, and we’ll see what there is for your dinner.’
‘No,’ said Ysonde. Wynliane shook her head again. Nan was just holding out her hand when there were hasty steps at the house door, and Andy’s nephew John appeared in the hall. Behind him Kate heard distant shouting, and the tuck of a drum, and then a fanfare.
‘Here’s a great procession coming down the High Street!’ John said in excitement. ‘There’s horses, and trumpets, and folk in velvet and satin, and fancy livery. Come and watch!’
‘My!’ said Nan. ‘A procession! I’ve not seen a good Glasgow procession in years. We don’t get them the same in Dumbarton,’ she confided. ‘Will you come and help me watch the procession?’
‘No,’ said Ysonde.
Kate, seated on a newly brushed tapestry backstool, reached for her crutches and said, ‘We’ll all go and watch the procession. Every one of us.’
John, hovering in the doorway, took in the situation and added his mite: ‘They’re saying it’s the King. Come and see!’
By the time they reached the gate the outriders had already passed, drum and trumpet briefly silent. They were followed by what seemed like an endless, clattering, richly dressed cavalcade, silks and velvets glowing in the afternoon sunshine, jewels glinting on hats and gowns, the horses draped in dyed leather and turkey-work. The inhabitants of Glasgow, drawn by the fanfares, watched and commented, dogs and small boys ran alongside in excitement. The outriders raised their instruments and put up another resonant blast, but from further up the street over the noise Kate could hear cheering and shouts of, ‘Guid bless the King! Jamie Stewart! Guid save the King’s grace!’
The trumpeters had reached the Tolbooth and were blowing another fanfare as the King drew abreast of Morison’s Yard. Kate, who had seen the late King and had also, as a little girl, been presented to Margaret of Denmark, had no difficulty in recognizing the young man at the centre of the group, and Alys, used to the comings and goings through the town, identified some of the others for her.
‘That’s the Archbishop, you can see his ring, and that’s my lord of Angus — ’
‘I ken him.’
‘Those two are Boyds, I think, are they your cousins?’
‘Sandy and Archie, that’s right.’
‘That is my lord Hume, and there is Maister Forman.’ Alys paused to curtsy as the King drew level, and the men around them pulled off hats and bonnets and flourished them in the air. Ysonde clapped her hands in excitement on Andy’s shoulders, and even Wynliane, held up in Babb’s arms, smiled and waved.
‘I think,’ Alys continued, ‘that may be the Abbot of Cambuskenneth. And Kate, could that be my lord Treasurer? With that badge it must be, surely!’
‘Aye,’ said Kate, looking at the blue-jowled, smiling man with the eight-pointed cross on his cloak. ‘I think it must be.’
The procession clattered onwards, and was greeted further down the street by another blast of the trumpets. The outriders had rounded the Mercat Cross and were working their way back up the High Street. The denizens of the lower town were to get two opportunities to hail their King and his government.
By the time the King had passed the gates the second time, Kate had had enough. The day had begun early, she had had two broken nights in succession and a third in a strange bed, and she was extremely tired.
‘Time for dinner,’ she said.
‘I want to see!’ objected Ysonde.
‘Let her see the last of it,’ said Andy tolerantly.
‘What’s going on up-by?’ asked Babb, staring up the street past the child in her arms. ‘They’ve stopped by the Greyfriars Vennel.’
‘Someone’s spoke to the King, I think,’ said one of the men.
Babb narrowed her eyes, peering over the heads. ‘You’re right,’ she said. ‘It’s that Mall Anderson again.’
‘What’s she up to?’ demanded Andy.
‘Stepped into the procession and caught hold of the King’s stirrup,’ reported Babb.
As the riders round the King halted, those behind them caught up and also halted in a trampling, disorderly crowd. Someone’s horse backed in a circle and onlookers shouted as an apprentice narrowly avoided being stepped on. Other voices, from up the street, were commenting adversely on the delay. Beside Morison’s Yard a rat-faced cleric on a piebald horse said sourly, ‘What’s holding us up now?’
‘Some lassie wanting justice,’ pronounced a rider from nearer the King. A name was called. ‘Here, William, you’re wanted.’
‘Oh, aye,’ said the rat-faced man. ‘No doubt of that. All the tiresome tasks for William Dunbar. Gie me room, there.’ He spurred his horse forward through the crowd, with some difficulty, and by the time the procession set off again Mall was perched on his saddlebow.
‘Well!’ said Babb.
‘My, the effrontery!’ said Ursel at Kate’s elbow. ‘And what will it gain her?’
‘Trouble,’ said Andy.
‘After this morning,’ said Kate, ‘she likely thinks it’s her only hope of justice.’
‘She’s in it as deep as he was,’ objected Andy.
‘She may not realize that,’ said Alys. ‘Now, I believe it is dinnertime. Then we may do a little more cleaning, and after that surely the water will be hot enough.’
Kate turned herself, to go back into the yard. Beside her Babb straightened up from setting Wynliane on the ground, and met her mistress’s eye.
‘It may no be for Mall Anderson,’ she said grimly, ‘but there’s trouble in that for somebody, my leddy, or I’m Kate Bairdie’s coo.’
Chapter Ten
This attack was rather more professional.
They were making good speed round the flank of the Pentlands, with Edinburgh town under its pall of coal-smoke on their left, the castle at one end and Arthur’s Seat outlined against the hills of Fife at the other. In the fields below them, the hay had been cut, and in places was still being turned; here and there was a field of wheat, sheared and stooked and waiting to be carried home, and everywhere the barley stood golden and rustling in the August afternoon like the grain they had seen by Linlithgow.
Gil was ruminating on what they had learned so far, but at his side, Maistre Pierre rode watchful, and the Hospitaller sergeant brought up the rear with his hand on the hilt of his sword. Socrates was ranging on either side of the track again, alarming the rabbits.
‘I’ve kin in Edinburgh,’ remarked Luke. ‘My sister’s man has a cousin that’s a journeyman saddler on the High Street. Or so he claims,’ he added darkly.
‘There’s a mony saddlers,’ began Rob. His voice cut off, and he choked.
Johan shouted, and Gil turned in the saddle to see his man clutching at his throat, bright blood spurting between his fingers.
‘Rob!’ he exclaimed, and made out the cold blue end of a crossbow quarrel in the midst of the blood. He kneed his horse about, looking for the source of the bolt. Luke had already drawn his whinger, and Tam was reaching left-handed for his cudgel, staring at his colleague with a bemused expression.
‘Da!’ said Johan. He was pointing with his sword to the hillside above where a flock of sheep scattered bleating. A big man in black was leaping down across the rough grass, his long-hafted axe whirling in a double loop before him, and after him one, two, three other men rose from the ditch where they had hidden and rushed downwards, long swords gleaming in the light over their heads.
The party on the road had just time to group, the three trained swordsmen to the fore with Johan in the centre, Luke behind them with the two injured men, before the axeman reached them. His rush had carried him well in front of his fellows, but this did not seem to deter him. Gil knotted his reins on the saddlebow and drew his own sword and dagger. Well aware both of what such a weapon could do if it made contact and of the fact that this very knowledge was the axeman’s greatest strength, he tried to ignore the bubbling, choking sounds Rob was making, and concentrate on the feel of his sword in his hand and the likelihood of controlling this horse in a pitched fight. He had to admit it was not good.