‘Wait,’ he commanded and he felt them settle – all but brother Edward, of course, who muttered and fretted on his right. Bruce looked at the wild, swirling mêlée, men hammering one another with blunted weapons, howling with glee, breaking off to bring their blowing horses round in a tight circle and hurl themselves back into the mad knotted tangle of fighting. ‘Now,’ Edward growled impatiently. ‘There he is …’ ‘Wait.’ Beyond the mud-frothed field loomed the great, dark snow-patched bulk of the castle, where the ladies of the court watched from the comfort of a high tower, surrounded by charcoal braziers, swaddled in comforting furs and gloved, so that their applause would sound like the pat of mouse feet. ‘Now,’ Edward repeated, his voice rising slightly. ‘Wait.’ ‘Aaah.’ Bruce heard the long, frustrated growl, saw the surge of the powerful destrier and cursed his brother even as he signalled the others to follow the spray of kicked-up mud. With a great howl of release, Bruce’s mesnie burst from the cover of the copse of trees and fell on the struggling mass.