Wolf Wood (Part Two): The Dangerous years (23 page)

Read Wolf Wood (Part Two): The Dangerous years Online

Authors: Mike Dixon

Tags: #heresy, #sorcery, #magic, #historical, #family feuds, #war of the roses, #witches, #knights, #romance, #middle ages

BOOK: Wolf Wood (Part Two): The Dangerous years
11.14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

He resolved to see it through to the bitter end. He would ingratiate himself with the palace toddies. He would tell them what they wanted to hear and do what they wanted him to do. In the process, he would learn enough to destroy the whole stinking lot and bring the House of Lancaster to its knees.

 

 

Interlu
de
 

O
n October 13th 1453, Queen Margaret produced a healthy infant who was named Edward after King Henry's favourite saint, Edward the Confessor. The boy's arrival solved one problem for the House of Lancaster and created another.

Henry's blessing was needed before the child could be declared a true and legitimate heir to the throne of England. The king's failure to appear in public and acclaim Edward as his beloved son plunged the nation back into crisis. Rumours began to circulate and were encouraged by enemies of the court party.

The king's abhorrence of sexual relations was well known. Henry even encouraged married couples to restrict their sexual encounters to a minimum. Margaret had waited seven years to become pregnant. It seemed likely that she had found a more willing companion to share her bed.

A new year dawned and the king's mental state could no longer be kept secret. Parliament sought an end to the crisis. Margaret declared her willingness to become regent and that was firmly rejected. The thought of a petticoat government, run by a domineering French woman, was enough to send the squabbling lords to London.

Parliament was convened and Duke Richard of York was elected as regent and empowered to rule as
Protector of the Realm
during the king's illness.

 

 

Chapter 31
 

Lord Protector

 

T
he stones of Ludlow Castle held their heat well. That was one thing Henriette liked about living there. Even on the coldest day, it was warm inside. The wood for the fires came from across the border in Wales. While much of England had been cleared for sheep and agriculture, the nearby mountains of Wales were thickly wooded.

Rain was beating against the windows. She looked through the small, diamond-shaped panes of glass and saw a carriage enter the inner court. The first of the girls had arrived for their needlework class. They came with their aristocratic mothers who would sit with them for a while before retiring to Duchess Cecily's private quarters for conversation and sweetmeats.

On holy days, they would join the duchess for one of the many services held in the castle chapel. Henriette had got to know the duke's wife well during the four years she and her family had lived at Ludlow. At thirty-nine, Cecily Plantagenet was eleven years older than Henriette. Despite the difference in age and background, they got on well.

Henriette made no secret of the fact that her parents were Breton pirates and she had not known a word of English until she was twelve. Cecily once remarked that while neither she nor Henriette had studied at Oxford or Cambridge, like some members of their families, they had attended the university of life and grown wiser as a consequence.

Cecily was the daughter of Ralph Neville who had made himself one of the most powerful men in England by marrying into a succession of leading families and putting his young wives to work bearing children. His second wife was Joan Beaufort who was a granddaughter of Edward III. Cecily was Joan's ninth child and Ralph's twenty-second.

Ralph not only sired children. He adopted them and was prepared to pay a top price for a child with a top pedigree. Richard Plantagenet was such a child. His royal father rebelled against his cousin, Henry V, and paid the ultimate price for failure. He was executed and four-year-old Richard was placed in the care of the Crown and sold to Ralph for the princely sum of 3,000 marks.

Cecily grew up in the same household as Richard and was espoused to him at the age of nine. Their first surviving child was born when she was twenty-four. With so many powerful relatives, she was an important woman in her own right. Their support was crucial if Richard was to maintain his grasp on power. He was
Protector of the Realm
with the consent of his wife's relatives. If they turned against him, he would be forced to step down.

It was not an enviable position. Henriette had a lot of respect for Duke Richard. Robin was totally committed to him. He saw the duke as devoted to the good of the nation and was proud to be taken into his confidence and treated as a valued companion.

Like Henriette, Robin made no secret of his humble origins. The duke jokingly referred to him as a
ploughman's son
. That wasn't true. Robin's father was a tailor but it didn't matter. Duke Richard liked it to be known that he kept the company of ordinary people. He also liked people to call him York and that was the name he was usually given.

Robin was with York in London. As captain of the duke's personal guard he was with him all the time and responsible for his security.

***

R
obin left his office in Baynard's Castle and walked to the outer court. The building got its name from the Norman knight who built it three centuries earlier following the Norman Conquest of England. Over the years it had suffered from civil insurrection and fire and had undergone a lot of rebuilding.

York was allocated the castle when he became Protector of the Realm. It had once belonged to Duke Humphrey of Gloucester who lost it when he was arrested on false charges of treason. It then became the property of the Lancastrian Crown.

York had his headquarters in a building that belonged to his enemies and was almost certainly riddled with secret passages. Robin's sappers had located one and suspected there were others. He found them at work beside a flagstone that had been lifted to reveal a flight of stairs.

A sergeant emerged from below, dressed in heavy leathers and carrying an oil lamp. He held up a blackened finger.

'Someone has been down here recently, Captain. That's fresh soot. You can feel the fat. It won't be more than a few days old.'

'You think there are more tunnels?'

'Aye, Captain.'

The sergeant blew out his lamp.

'If we go up the tower, I'll point them out. We're certain of some and you can wager your life that there'll be others ...'

The tower was hexagonal and dated from Norman times. They went to the top and looked down onto the maze of streets below. The castle fronted Thames Street and stuck out into the river. Luxury townhouses flanked it on either side. They were of timber construction and stood on piers driven into the river bed. The sergeant pointed at one.

'That belongs to Somerset.'

'It belongs to the Crown,' Robin said.

'Yeah. But Somerset decides who lives there.'

'Not anymore,' Robin grinned. 'As we now speak, Duke Edmund of Somerset is being conveyed to the Tower of London, where he will reside at the Lord Protector's pleasure.'

'Struth. That changes a thing or two.'

'Certainly does. York has made it clear that Crown property will in future be used for the benefit of the nation. Its purpose is to provide revenue for government.'

'Yeah,' the sergeant nodded. 'It belongs to the people. It doesn't belong to the nobility for them to use like they want.'

'That's right.' Robin placed a hand on the man's shoulder. 'York is going to see to that and that's why we support him.'

'I'll say
Amen
to that, Captain.'

'The house is occupied by the Earl of Norfolk,' Robin said. 'He gets it for free. From now on, he'll have to pay rent and it won't be cheap. There's no shortage of rich merchants who will bid against one another and push up the price.'

'That won't please the earl.'

'It will please a lot of ordinary people.'

'Aye, Captain. York is popular with folks round here. You don't have to change out of uniform when you go for a drink, like you do up north. Everyone wants to stop and shake your hand. And it's not just the ordinary folk. I've had ladies in expensive gowns give me a coin for a mug of ale.'

'That could be because you're such a good-looking fellow, Tom.' Robin slapped the sergeant on the back. 'Maybe they want to know you better.'

They both laughed.

'You were going to tell me about the tunnels,' Robin reminded him.

'Aye, Captain. If I'm not mistaken, there's one that runs from the house to the castle. Duke Humphrey is said to have used it to visit his mistress. It can't be very deep or it would get flooded at high tide. That means we can probe for it.'

As the sergeant spoke, a barge came into view. Robin saw the royal standard and wondered if the queen was on board. She would have heard that Somerset had been arrested and taken to the Tower. Maybe, the silly woman thought she could go and rescue him.

***

T
he air was cold but the sun was shining. Alice strolled beside Harald in the park and watched the squirrels chasing one another in the branches of the trees. Spring was in the air and the small animals had got a taste of it. The females would soon be receptive to the males even if they pretended run away from them.

Life had changed. The soldiers, patrolling beside the river, now wore the uniforms of the Earl of Warwick. Somerset's men had gone and he was in custody in the Tower of London. According to Harald, Margaret went ballistic when she heard about it. She stormed into the administration building, where he was working, and demanded an explanation.

He gave a light hearted account of what had happened. Alice hadn't seen him so relaxed for a long while.

'She was like a loose cannon on the deck of a warship,' he chuckled. 'People scattered in all directions. They couldn't get away fast enough. She wanted to know why something hadn't been done to stop it. No one was prepared to tell her that, short of taking on Warwick's men, there was nothing they could have done.'

'You've always said that the pen is mightier than the sword,' Alice reminded him.

'Not in this case. She called for the royal barge. If we couldn't save Somerset then she would. She would go down to the Tower and order his release.'

'She's rescued him in the past.'

'Aye. But that was different. York didn't have the support of Warwick and Salisbury then. They've got twenty thousand men in the London area and can call on more if the need arises. York has the backing of Parliament. No one is going to challenge him.'

'At least for the present,' Alice sounded a note of caution. 'Things could change. York might be popular in London but not everyone is rushing to his side.'

'Aye,' Harald nodded. 'I'll grant you that he has offended some very powerful people. He's got involved in Salisbury's disputes with the northern lords and that has made him very unpopular in that part of the country.'

'How is this going to affect us?'

'We'll go on doing our work. At least we are now being paid. York is determined to stamp out the corruption of the old system. We'll get a fixed wage. We won't be dependent on presents from above and bribes from below.'

'But who are we working for?'

'The king, my darling, as we always have.' He squeezed her arm. 'The difference is that Henry is no longer at the beck and call of Queen Margaret and Edmund Somerset. He is now in the care of the Lord Protector of the Realm in the person of Richard Plantagenet, Duke of York, and I shall be reporting to him.'

'You will be reporting to the Duke of York?'

'Yes, my love, to him or one of his officers ... who could be Sir Robin Perry for all I know.'

Harald saw the pained expression on Alice's face.

'I thought you would be pleased.'

'I'm scared, Harald.'

'Why?'

'I never wanted to get involved in this. Henriette and Robin joined York and we ended up here in Westminster with the House of Lancaster. While we were apart, it didn't seem so bad. Now we have come together, it's impossible to ignore that we are on different sides.'

'No. We are not.'

'How can you say such a thing?'

'We are serving England through the person of the king.'

'Harald. That is lawyers' language. England is sliding into civil war. The royal cousins will fight just like they did in France. The nation will be torn apart …'

She was interrupted by the arrival of Steven who came running up the river bank, waving and shouting.

'The queen is coming!'

He pointed to the royal barge, which was sailing towards them on the incoming tide.

'I'm going up to the jetty … see what's happened.'

He ran ahead and Harald followed.

Other books

Double or Nothing by Belle Payton
The Good Father by Marion Husband
The Priest by Gerard O'Donovan
Land of the Dead by Thomas Harlan
Red House by Sonya Clark
The High Missouri by Win Blevins