I had shaken my head; I couldn't explain without incurring his further anger. Indeed, I had felt angry with myself for quibbling because I could clearly understand the necessity for Hastings's removal. (One of the things I had noticed since my arrival in the capital that morning was how many of the Lord Chamberlain's retainers were thronging the London streets. They constituted a small army and could undoubtedly, if called upon, pose a serious threat to civic stability.) All the same, there seemed little difference to me between condemning a man to the block out of hand and letting him stand trial when the verdict had been prearranged.
âRoger!' I realized with a start that the duke had extended his hand and I dropped to one knee to kiss it. It was icy cold in spite of the warmth of the evening. He laughed. âYou were miles away, my friend.'
I glanced up guiltily and wondered how many other princes of the blood royal would dismiss such negligence with a smile. But his always unexpected sense of humour shone through to lighten what, for me, could have been a very nasty moment.
âYour Highness, forgive me,' I said, rising to my feet. âYou must blame my rudeness on lack of sleep. I only arrived in London this morning after a night spent in a very indifferent wayside inn.'
He nodded. âI hear from Timothy that you insisted on going to Minster Lovell before coming here. Did your visit offer up any resolution to this mystery?'
âNot that I'm aware of at the moment, my lord.' I saw him arch his eyebrows and added, âI can never tell what might prove to be useful in time.'
âNo, I suppose not.' He waved me towards a cushioned stool with armrests and resumed his own seat in a carved armchair. âI can only ask you to do your best and to do it quickly. However, that's not the reason I summoned you here.'
At this point, he turned his head and glanced at someone whose presence I had so far failed to notice, and I was somewhat disconcerted to find that the duchess was also in the room.
I had not seen the Her Grace of Gloucester for some time, and then only at a distance when the duke's sister, Margaret of Burgundy, had visited London two years previously. Like her older sister, Isabel, the long-dead Duchess of Clarence, she was a delicate, almost childlike woman, and I reflected yet again how strange it was that the line of that mighty, vigorous man, Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, had run to seed in these two fragile daughters. I had once, more than a decade ago, done the Lady Anne, as she then was, a service, and she smiled at me now in instant recognition.
âI'm happy to see you again, Master Chapman.'
âAnd I you, Your Grace.' I got clumsily to my feet and made my obeisance.
âOh, sit down, man. Sit down.' Her husband waved an airy hand. âWe're not standing on ceremony this evening. This is a meeting strictly off the record. It's never taken place. You hear me, Roger?'
âI do, Your Highness,' I said, wondering what on earth was coming.
There was a protracted pause; so protracted that although it was not my place to do so, I felt obliged to fill it.
âI trust Prince Edward is well, Your Grace,' I said to the duchess.
A shadow crossed her face. âWe think him a little better now that the warmer weather is here, I thank you, Master Chapman. He has had a nasty cough this past winter, as indeed have I, but we look to the pure air of the Yorkshire moors to cure it. He will stay at home for the present.'
âSweetheart, the boy's strong enough if he isn't coddled into ill health by you and that nurse of his.' The duke spoke with all the irritation of someone who knows full well that what he is saying is what he wishes to believe and not what he knows to be the truth. He turned towards me and cleared his throat. âRoger, when you went to France for me last year, on that . . . that mission. When you spoke to . . . oh, I forget her name. The Frenchwoman married to the English soldier . . .'
âMistress Gaunt. Yes, Your Grace?'
The duke was twisting the ruby ring on his right-hand little finger even more rapidly than before, but quite unaware that he was doing so. He went on, âShe told you the story of my two eldest brothers' christenings. What . . . what did you make of it?'
âWhat did I make of it, Your Highness?'
âYes, man, make of it?' Agitation and impatience were blended in equal measure.
âIn what particular, my lord?' I was confused, groping my way down an as yet blind alley. What was it he wanted me to say? In my experience, the duke rarely showed exasperation with underlings, but I sensed that at this moment he was close to losing his temper.
The duchess took pity on me, leaning forward in her chair. âMaster Chapman,' she said in her low, sweet voice, âdo you believe that the story of those two Rouen christenings â that of the younger child being so much grander and better attended than that of the elder â is proof of my mother-in-law's ancient claim that the late king was her bastard child by the archer Blaybourne?'
I drew a deep breath. I was on quicksand here and had to tread carefully. I addressed the duke. âMy lord . . .' I hesitated, then plunged. âYes, I believe that the story does in some measure support the Duchess of York's claim. But it is not even proof, let alone proof positive. There could be other valid reasons why the lord Edmund's christening was made so much more of than the lord Edward's.'
âSuch as?'
I thought quickly. âThe duchess may have been unwell after the late king's birth and not in the mood for a great celebration.'
The duke looked sceptical. âMy mother was never unwell after giving birth to any of us. But let's presume your theory's true. Why would she and my father not wait until she was in better health to hold the christening? Edward was the much longed-for son; a healthy boy following the early death of an older brother at Hatfield before my parents left for Normandy. And why was my father always so much fonder of Edmund than of Edward? They went everywhere together â until they died together, at the battle outside Wakefield.'
I grimaced. âWhen Your Grace puts it like that . . .' I glanced imploringly at the duchess.
She did not fail me. âI think, sweetheart, that what Master Chapman is saying is that while the story is a very strong indication that you are the rightful king, and have been ever since George was executed, it isn't sufficient proof in itself. And didn't you tell me that this woman, this Mistress Gaunt, is dead?'
The duke nodded, his naturally thin lips compressed to an almost invisible thread. âShe was murdered by a Woodville spy. Isn't that so, Roger?'
âUnfortunately yes, my lord.'
âFurther proof, wouldn't you agree, of the story's significance?'
For answer, I asked him again, as I had asked him on various occasions the previous year, âIs there no possibility of persuading the dowager duchess either to confirm or deny what she said at the time of the late king's marriage?'
The duke sighed. âAs I've told you before, my mother refuses to discuss the subject. One can see why, of course. For a start, she is a very different woman to the one she was nineteen years ago. She has embraced the religious life and would no longer find it acceptable to be seen as a woman who once cuckolded her husband. And then again, young Edward is her grandson, even though he is half Woodville.'
Duchess Anne said bitterly, âMy mother-in-law is a very obstinate and difficult woman, Master Chapman.' She coloured and gave a little gasp, realizing the magnitude of her indiscretion.
The duke laughed. âJust be thankful, my love,' he admonished her, âthat your very unwary opinions were expressed to someone as trustworthy as Roger. But it wouldn't do to make them generally known.' He looked across at me. âAnd now, my friend, I am going to be equally indiscreet because I know you can keep your mouth shut. I must tell you that in spite of her steadfast refusal to repeat her words concerning my brother Edward's bastardy, my mother does consider that . . . that I should lay claim to the throne.'
âMy-my lord?' I felt as if someone had punched me in the guts.
âParticularly,' the duke continued as if I hadn't spoken, âin view of Bishop Stillington's testimony.'
Robert Stillington, Bishop of Bath and Wells! How that man kept cropping up in the family history of the House of York. His friendship with the late Duke of Clarence had been marked, and his imprisonment in the Tower at the time of Clarence's downfall and execution â a downfall undoubtedly brought about by the Woodvilles â had suggested some kind of collusion between the two. And a few weeks earlier, during my first journey to London in pursuit of Adela, the bishop had arrived at Reading Abbey, late one night while Jack Nym and I were lodging there, in a flurry of agitation and self-importance. He and his retinue had also been highly visible, riding around the streets of the capital during the days that followed. And now it seemed he possessed knowledge which could bolster my lord Gloucester's entitlement to the throne. If so, it must be secret knowledge that he had shared with the Duke of Clarence in the past; knowledge that had led to that rash young man's undoing.
Yet again I hesitated, unsure of what I was supposed to say. But the duke's expectant look encouraged me to ask the necessary question.
âWhat â er â testimony is that, my lord, if I'm not being too presumptuous?'
The duke smiled. âIt will be common knowledge in a day or two, in any case, but until then, Roger, I trust you to keep silent, at least, to outsiders. My own people know what's in the wind.' He glanced at his wife, who nodded her approval, and then went on, âBishop Stillington informs me that the late king's marriage to the Widow Grey wasn't legal. Edward had already secretly plighted his troth to, and solemnly promised to marry, the Lady Eleanor Butler, daughter of the Earl of Shrewsbury. No one knew of this except my brother, the lady herself and Bishop Stillington who conducted the ceremony of betrothal.'
âAnd as you must be aware, Master Chapman,' the duchess put in, âa betrothal, in the eyes of the Church is as binding as are the vows of marriage. The children of my late brother-in-law's so-called marriage are therefore illegitimate, and as my nephew Warwick is barred from the throne by his father's attainder, my husband is undoubtedly king. I tell him that he must immediately claim what is rightfully his.'
I was more than a little surprised at how forcefully the duchess spoke. She had always struck me as so self-effacing a person as to be almost a cipher, as having no existence beyond her husband's shadow. I suppose I had failed to realize that under her gentle exterior she was her father's daughter. During his final years, Warwick had fought and died so that one of his girls might be consort to England's king, and she could see the present opportunity only as the vindication of all his hopes. And her son â Warwick's grandson â would one day wear the crown.
I was startled by the duke's voice cutting across my tumultuous thoughts.
âWell, Roger, has the cat got your tongue?'
âYour Grace, I . . . I . . .'
âDon't know what to say, is that it?' He looked disappointed. âI had hoped that your reaction would give me some indication of how the world in general would regard my assumption of the crown.'
âThe country will be safer â' again it was the duchess who spoke â âwith a strong man to rule it than with a young king who will be at the mercy of his squabbling relatives, all vying for power.'
âI-I suppose so,' I answered feebly, my head reeling from the impact of the news.
I thought of that angelic-looking, fair-haired, blue-eyed child riding to St Paul's and also of the way the women in the crowd had drooled over him, their maternal instincts at fever pitch. I wondered how they would accept his being put aside, his being proclaimed a bastard, in favour of a man of whom the Londoners knew so little. And what would happen to him and his brother and numerous sisters once their uncle had usurped the throne? Some detached part of my mind noted with interest my choice of phrase. Did it mean that I didn't believe Bishop Stillington's story? That I thought it a fairy tale concocted between him and Duke Richard?
And yet the story had logic to it. Had not King Edward's marriage to Lady Elizabeth Grey been a secret known only to themselves and the Woodville family for many months? The king's closest advisers, his own mother, brothers and sisters had been kept in the dark until his betrothal to Bona of Savoy had been arranged and he could no longer conceal the fact. So was it not possible that Edward had gone through an earlier equally secret ceremony with another woman? Except, on that occasion, he had persuaded her into bed without actually having to marry her. But if he had promised marriage, it was true that the Church would regard it in a serious light.
But serious enough to depose a king by declaring him and all his siblings bastards? I wasn't at all sure about that.
âYour Highness could refer your argument to an episcopal court,' I suggested. âTo Rome, if necessary.'
The duke shook his head. âThere isn't time, Roger. This dilemma needs resolving as soon as possible.' There was a moment's silence before he added, âI must admit your attitude saddens me. I had hoped, knowing what you do, that you would be glad that I can rightfully claim what you surely must feel is really mine.'
âYour-your Highness,' I stammered, âI'm sorry. It-it's just that I wasn't prepared . . . It's been a shock . . .'
He got up and I rose with him. He put a hand on my shoulder. âNo, don't apologize, my friend. For I count you as my friend, you must know that. We share more than just the same birthday: we share trust, you and I. I shouldn't have used you like this, as a sounding board, when I haven't even come to a final decision, myself. Now, sit down again and tell me how your enquiries are progressing. This unfortunate affair must be resolved before . . . Well, let's say as soon as possible. It's not the sort of cloud I want hanging over me at present. I refer, of course, to the disappearance of Master Fitzalan and the murder of his tutor.'