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Authors: Jean Plaidy

BOOK: The Lion of Justice
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‘How firm is such friendship when a crown is at stake?' asked Turgot now.

‘Why, Turgot, Rufus knows I have no means of taking the crown from him.'

‘I hear there is dissatisfaction with his rule.'

‘There will always be dissatisfaction. His father instructed him for some years before his death. Rufus will never be the great leader the Conqueror was, but who could be that? Turgot, none knows more surely than I that the Norman rule has come to stay. I am concerned with restoring the Scottish crown to my nephew and I believe I can persuade Rufus to help me in this.'

‘You face a grave risk,' Turgot warned him.

‘Tell me, where else can we go? Or do you suggest that I leave my sister's children here to be murdered by Donald Bane?'

‘Nay,' retorted Turgot sorrowfully, ‘I see the situation is desperate.'

‘I prefer to trust Rufus rather than this uncouth Scot. I assure you I
know
Rufus. Once he is convinced that I shall make no attempts on his crown he will be my friend. We were boys together – he, and his brothers Robert and Henry. I was as another brother. They used to laugh at my Saxon ways, but all in good part. Well, Turgot, are you ready to set out for England?'

‘I see that there is no other way open to us.'

Rufus

WHEN WILLIAM RUFUS
heard what had happened to Malcolm of Scotland, he lay back on his couch and laughed heartily.

‘Our brother of Scotland was too clever,' he commented. ‘He thought to harry me while I lay on my sick bed, and look what it has brought him.'

Those young men whom it pleased him to honour laughed dutifully. William Rufus was a man of violent temper. So had his father been but the anger of William the First was scarcely unpredictable. All men knew that if they gave him absolute obedience and never encroached on the strict forestry laws they were safe. Not so with William II; his red face could grow purple with rage and the unfortunate man or woman responsible would often have no knowledge of why this should be so. So, all must walk warily with the new King.

Like his father, he loved possessions and looked in all directions in order to add to his wealth, but unlike his father he could be extravagant on occasion. That was, in pursuit of his own pleasure: when he wanted something he wanted it fiercely, and he was determined to get it.

Life had not been easy since his accession. There was certain to be trouble in the family. When he looked back over his childhood and remembered the stormy scenes in their various schoolrooms he laughed aloud. Robert would have run him through on one occasion but for the intervention of their father. Robert and he would always be enemies, because naturally Robert believed that he, as the eldest son, had more right to the crown of England than William Rufus had. It was true Robert was Duke of Normandy but it was a far better thing to be King of England than Duke of Normandy. And then there was Henry. Poor young Henry, who was left without land – only five thousand pounds of silver and his father's prophecy that one day he would be richer than either of his brothers.

Following this train of thought Rufus sighed and said, ‘It was unfortunate that our father had too many sons. It is a common failing that kings either have too many or not
enough. You see what a wise man I am, my friends, for I have no sons – not even a bastard or two. If all men were as I am how much more comfortable the world would be.'

‘It would not be over-populated, my lord,' said his favourite friend.

‘Oh, we'd keep a few studs for that purpose,' laughed Rufus.

‘My lord's young brother might be of use.'

The young man laughed.

‘What then?' asked Rufus. ‘Has he added another to his tally? I hear he was giving a good account of himself with the Lady Nesta of Wales.'

‘Exceeding good, my lord, and they say the lady grows larger each day.'

‘It keeps the young rake out of mischief,' said Rufus. ‘But I have to keep my eyes on master Henry. It may surprise you, my friends, but he occasionally takes his thoughts from the ladies' bedchambers and dreams of the battlefield.'

‘As my lord knows to his cost.'

‘We could have finished him at Mont St-Michel but for my elder brother. Robert is a fool. There was not a drop of water in the castle; they were dying in the fortress for lack of it, and what did my chivalrous brother Robert do? He sends him water – and not only water, but wine for his board. I could have killed him when I heard. “This is our brother,” he said, and he looked at me with those rather mournful eyes of his. He is very beautiful and he was my mother's favourite, you know. He was always vain and hates the fact that his legs are too short. My father used to jeer at him. Curthose he called him. My father thought there was only one perfect man in the world – himself. And those of us who did not resemble him were poor things in his opinion. But when Robert rebelled against him and Richard died he turned to me. Richard was the first favourite. He looked like a Norman, you see. The rest of us had the Flanders touch . . . except Henry. He has a Norman look – tall and with that fine curly hair. I doubt not it is that which brings him so much favour in the ladies' bedchambers. But I was telling you that we could have been rid of Henry but for Robert. And what has he ever done but bring trouble and bastards into the realm?'

The young man laughed obediently.

‘Come, my fine friend, what is there to laugh at? I am a man beset by brothers, and now Henry has squandered his patrimony and roams the countryside seeking consolation in robbing ladies of their virtue since he cannot rob me of my throne, and I doubt not his soul is stained purple with the sin of fornication. Listen.'

There was a commotion below the window. Riders were approaching.

‘Messengers, mayhap. What now?' said Rufus. ‘No evil news, I trust, to spoil the pleasant evening I had planned for us.'

The messenger was brought into his presence.

Rufus dismissed the man with the customary command, ‘Go and refresh yourself,' and read the dispatch.

Then he said, ‘Edgar Atheling has arrived in England with his sister's brood.'

‘What will you do, my lord?' asked his favourite friend.

‘That, my dear, remains to be seen,' he answered. He narrowed his eyes. ‘Rest assured I shall have them under close surveillance.'

William Rufus opened his eyes and sleepily surveyed his bedchamber. It had been a riotous night and, as usual after such festivities, morning came too soon. Sunlight filtering in through the narrow slit of a window shone on to the stone recess seat cut into the wall, but because this was a royal bedchamber it contained some modem luxuries such as the faldestol on which he sat when he entertained guests in his bedroom, letting them make do with the wall seats or the floor. A velvet drapery was thrown over it at the moment. His eyes went to the chest with its fine carving; in this were kept his clothes, and although he slept on a bag of straw this was placed on a bed the frame of which was elegantly carved.

In the early mornings he let his mind wander over state affairs. He was thinking at this time about the Atheling who had taken refuge in his country. Edgar had always amused him – pretty youth. He would never be a king though. He was not made of the right stuff. Still, the people could rally
to the Atheling if they hated the Norman enough, and he must face the truth: there had always been animosity towards the Normans.

Yet they could be persuaded, or could they? He had persuaded them once. That was when Robert had tried to take the crown from him. He had expected it. Naturally the eldest son wanted the greater prize.

But their father had nominated him, William Rufus, as his successor. What had he said to him on his deathbed, stern as ever? ‘What are you doing here? Why are you not claiming your kingdom?'

Rufus laughed. One had to admire the old man. He was the greatest they would ever know, and if he was without humour he was the finest soldier of his day, and for most of that which was his and his family's today they had to thank William the Conqueror, who had given it to them.

They could never be like him – any one of them. And did they want to? Not Rufus. He knew how to enjoy life – which he was sure his-father had not – and he intended to go on doing it.

But now his mind was straying from Edgar Atheling because that fellow's being in the country reminded him of the early days of his reign when Robert had come against him. Robert was a fool; he could be relied upon to fail in any military exercise.

Rufus laughed to think of those days when the Norman barons who owned estates in England had declared that they would not accept Rufus as the King of England, and prepared to set up Robert in his place.

Their uncle Odo had been Robert's general. Odo! That Bishop who had been in disgrace with the Conqueror because he had passed over much English treasure to Rome. The old fool had had a fancy to become Pope and believed that by bribing the Cardinals he could persuade them to elect him. Fortunately William had discovered this, and sent him back to Normandy, where he had languished in a dungeon until his brother Robert of Mortain (like Odo, the son of their grandmother's marriage after their grandfather's death, to Herlwin de Conteville) misguidedly persuaded the Conqueror, on the latter's deathbed, to set him free.

Free to come against the King whom William himself had chosen!

Rufus had been in danger then and he prided himself that he had acted with extreme astuteness. He had asked the people of England whether they wished to put their necks in the Norman yoke. This amused Rufus for it struck him as highly amusing that he, the Norman son of a Norman father, should be pleading thus. But there was some truth in it, for while Robert had remained entirely Norman, he, Rufus, had to some extent become Anglicized.

‘My good people,' he had declared, ‘rally to my banner; I swear to you that if you will stand beside me and thrust out the unwanted Norman, there shall be no more unjust taxation, every man shall enjoy his own hunts and chases in his own woods and wolds, and all abuses of the law shall be abolished.'

How they had cheered him! How they had rallied to his banner. And when Odo arrived he was set upon and taken prisoner, and it was not until Rufus had won the day that Robert, characteristically, put in an appearance. How typical of Robert! How had he ever thought he could outwit their father? That had been just another of his miscalculations, of course.

Rufus could not be hard on his captives. How could he be . . . on Normans? Moreover many of them had been friends with whom he had played in his childhood. More important was the fact that he might need their support in the future, for he knew that he would not be able to keep the promises he had made to the people; the taxation which the people called unjust, could certainly not be abolished; nor would he change the forestry laws, for nothing was going to be allowed to interfere with his pleasure in the chase.

So he and Robert made a pact. If death should overtake either of them, that one would pass over all his possessions to the other. Thus the survivor would have both England and Normandy.

It had been at this time that Henry had become so incensed against his brothers. He said they ignored his existence; they forgot that he also was their father's son, and he demanded to know what his inheritance would be.

‘The ladies of England,' retorted Rufus. ‘And I doubt Robert would debar you from enjoying the Norman ones when you visit his Duchy.'

‘And I'll leave the men to you,' answered Henry, and for a while they hurled insults at each other. But Henry was indeed resentful. He had set himself up in the fortress of Mont St-Michel, with the intention of making himself a nuisance to both his brothers.

It was not possible to enjoy a peaceful reign. There would always be conflict. It was looming now in yet another spot. The Church! The Conqueror had been a deeply religious man and he had lived in harmony with his Archbishop of Canterbury, Lanfranc. Rufus lacked his father's devotion to the Church. Often he blasphemed against it and he did not suffer from those twinges of conscience which had beset the Conqueror when he considered his reception in heaven. Rufus had an inherent dislike of churchmen. Many of them were rapacious, a characteristic he understood perfectly, being well endowed with it himself, but whereas he admitted this they hid their avaricious natures under a guise of hypocrisy. At least Rufus was not a hypocrite. In private Rufus could laugh at himself and did. Very few people of his time could do that; many of his intimates had whispered among themselves that it was only this characteristic which made him tolerable.

He could not accuse Lanfranc of hypocrisy. There was a man of great integrity and Rufus had never had any intention of removing him from his post. Death had done that. The See of Canterbury was very rich and Rufus had made a habit of keeping the abbeys and bishoprics under his own control whenever the occasion arose. He found this highly profitable; so when Lanfranc died he added Canterbury to those over which he held sway and was in no hurry to find a successor to the Archbishop.

Since he had been ill, however, even he had experienced a few qualms. His priests had shaken their heads over him as though they feared his future in Heaven if he did not repent and, although had he been in good health he would have laughed at them, it was not so easy with Death lurking not far distant.

It so happened that Anselm, the prior of Bec in Normandy, was visiting England and because of this man's qualities, Rufus decided that he should become Archbishop of Canterbury.

When the offer was made to Anselm, he thanked the King but shook his head. ‘My home is in Normandy,' he told him. ‘I have lived so long at Bec that I could consider no other.'

Rufus smiled grimly. We shall soon see about that, he told himself.

Craftily he ordered that Anselm should visit his sick-room where he had ordered the leading churchmen to assemble. When the bewildered Anselm entered, a crozier was thrust into his hands and a Te Deum was sung to celebrate his election.

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