Read The Reckoning - 3 Online

Authors: Sharon Kay Penman

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Historical, #Historical Fiction, #Great Britain, #History, #Medieval, #Wales, #Wales - History - 1063-1284, #Great Britain - History - 13th Century, #Llywelyn Ap Gruffydd

The Reckoning - 3 (34 page)

BOOK: The Reckoning - 3
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"I've a joyful surprise for you, my lord," he declared, "a visitor!" And he stepped aside to reveal a grey-robed friar standing behind him ^ the shadows.
Amaury was delighted. But as he came forward to welcome the friar, the man pulled his cowled hood back, and his gasp was as audible as it was involuntary. "FriarHugh!"
It was a quick recovery, but needless; Hugh was grinning widely. "Bertram knows I'm no friar," he said breezily, and then found himself blinking back tears, for Amaury, the aloof, the proud, was embracing him like a brother.
Bertram deposited the tray, collected the chamber pot, and headed for the door, warning that they had only till the Vespers bells sounded. They squandered a few of those moments listening to the receding echoes of his footsteps on the stairs. Then Hugh said regretfully, "I'd hoped there might be some way to set you freeuntil I drew rein before the outer bailey walls. It would take a Merlin to contrive an escape from Corfe, my lord."
"I know, Hugh, indeed I know. I am astounded that you were even able to talk your way in to see me. That Franciscan disguisevery clever!"
Hugh grinned again. "Well, in truth, it was Prince Llewelyn's idea," he confided, fumbling under his robes.
"You've seen Llewelyn?" Amaury was incredulous. "By God, you truly are a marvel!"
Having untied the burlap sack knotted about his waist, Hugh now brought it out with a flourish. "Even if I cannot offer the keys to your prison, I do not come empty-handed, my lord." Reaching into the sack, he withdrew a small prayer book and a coral rosary. "I've a psalter and pater noster for you.
Bertram balked at the razor, but he agreed to bring you a washing laver on the morrow. I have a hairbrush for you, and some soft Bristol soap, too. And there's a change of clothing, a tunic, chausses, a shirt, and several pairs of braies."
Amaury had resolutely refused to let himself think that far ahead, to the time when his clothes would become too ragged, threadbare, and (torty to be worn.
"You've thought of everything, Hugh," he said, and when he looked into the sack, he saw that was, indeed, true. There Were extra candles, monkshood root to kill rats and mice, and a larkspur seed powder for lice and fleas. An ink horn, several quill pens, and rolled sheets of parchment. Dried figs. Even a packet of needles and 'ttead. "What prisoner could ask for more?" he said softly, and Hugh, ssing the irony altogether, gave him a sunlit smile.
"There is more," he said, holding out a small, leather pouch;

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Amaury heard the clinking of coins. "We thought this might come in handy, since most gaolers are more money-minded than Bertram. Ah I almost forgot . .
. there are some books, too, in the bottom of the bag "
Amaury was puzzled by his own emotions. He ought to be elated for Hugh's bounty was a genuine godsend. And he was grateful. But at the same time, there was a curious sense of letdown, too, for the gift of these basic necessities, items he'd always taken utterly for granted
I served to bring home to him his impotence, his outcast status as a
| prisoner, dependent upon others for even the most simple needs. But there was nothing in the least ambivalent about his reaction to the word books. "Ah, Hugh, bless you for that!"
"I wish I could say it was my doing, but alas, it was not," Hugh confessed cheerfully, for although he was proud of his literacy, reading for pure pleasure was an alien concept to him. "It was Prince Llewelyn who thought books might help to banish boredom. Shall I see what we've got for you?"
Drawing out a book bound with thin wooden boards, he held it up for Amaury's inspection. "Chretien de Troyes's Yvain, the Knight of the Lion. And here is
Geoffrey of Monmouth's History of the Kings of Britain. The Song of Roland. I
was fretting that you might have read some of these already, but Prince
Llewelyn assured me that it is not unheard-of to read a book more than once!"
Amaury was watching so avidly as the books piled up on his bed that Hugh began to laugh. "I feel as if I'm pouring gold coins out for the counting! I know you are fluent in Latin, so we included the Roman poet Ovid's Metamorphoses, and Robert Grosseteste's Dicta."
Amaury reached out, picked up the last-named book. "My father had so many of
Bishop Robert's books," he said, and only then did Hugh remember that Simon de
Montfort and the Bishop of Lincoln had been more than friends; they had been political allies, spiritual soulmates who'd shared a vision of a new England, one in which the cleansing flames of a Christian chivalry could burn free and pure.
"Passing strange," Amaury said, "that there should be so many men who see both my father and Bishop Robert as saints. They pray to the Bishop, too; did you know that, Hugh?"
Hugh nodded. "The monks at Evesham used to tell us of a family who had brought their ailing child to pray at the Bishop's shrine. The lad swooned, and when he came to his senses, he said that the Bishop was not in his tomb, that he'd gone to be with his brother Simon, who was to die on the morrow at Evesham."
Amaury said nothing, but there was such an odd, distant look upon his face that, for the first time, Hugh found himself wondering what it was like to be the son of a legend. "Do you ever wish," he askeo

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'tantly, "that men did not see your lord father as ... as St Simon . cyesham?
It must be strange at times, sorting out your memories, ° aking sense of it all . . ." He'd begun to stammer a bit, self-conscious, ring he might inadvertently have offended.
No one had ever asked Amaury that before. "I think," he said lowly/ "that sometimes I feel . . . cheated, as if I'd been robbed of something that was mine . . . my family's." Hearing his own words, he smiled thinly. "Does that sound utterly mad to you?"
"No, of course not," Hugh said, uncomprehending but invariably polite. "There is one more book in the bag. This one has a right interesting history. Your kinsman, the old Earl of Chester, bought it whilst on his way to the Holy
Land, later gave it to his nephew, John the Scot, who was the husband of
Llewelyn Fawr's daughter. John gave it to Llewelyn, and eventually it ended up in the hands of his grandson, our Lady Ellen's Llewelyn. He thought you might find it diverting, for it is all about alien lands, written by a Christian pilgrim. He relates some truly marvelous adventures, even includes a vocabulary of foreign words, mostly Arabic, I think."
"I suppose learning Arabic is as good a way to fill the hours as any. Have you ever heard of Robert, the Duke of Normandy? No? He was a distant kinsman of mine, a son of William the Bastard, first of the Norman Kings. He was the eldest, but his younger brother Henry ended up on England's throne and he ended up in an English prison. For a while, he was held here at Corfe. But then he was moved to Cardiff Castle in Wales, where he learned to speak Welsh.
Of course he had all the time in the world for study. You see, he was caged until he died, nigh on thirty years, if my memory serves."
It occurred to Hugh that education could be a dubious blessing. For certes, it would have been better, he thought, if Prince Llewelyn had never heard of
Eleanor of Brittany and Lord Amaury knew naught of this Robert of Normandy. He was determined, though, that their visit would not end on such a bleak note, and he said, as heartily as he could, "I've something else for you, my lord.
Ale was never to your liking; I remember you saying you'd sooner swill goat's piss. Well, I have a full flask here of spiced red wine, and I thought we might celebrate my twentieth birthday together."
"Your birthday?" Amaury echoed, and Hugh nodded, although it was actually still a few days hence. "I'd wager this is the oddest setting for any birthday you'll ever have, Hugh!"
"No," Hugh said and grinned. "When I turned fifteen, your brother wan took me to a whorehouse in Siena!"
"Did he for true?" Amaury almost laughed. "That does sound like wan. He always was a lad for"

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He heard it before Hugh did, the sound of footsteps nearing th door. Bertram poked his head in, then tactfully withdrew, after alerting them to "say your farewells."
"Quick, my lord." Hugh shoved a parchment across the bed. "From here I am going to Windsor, and if you write to Lady Ellen, I may be able to get it to her."
As Amaury wrote, Hugh took this opportunity to inspect his prison L He'd not expected the chamber to be so bare, so stark, for he knew men if of Amaury's rank were often confined in considerable comfort, even allowed their own servants to tend to their needs.
"I do not understand," he said suddenly, "why the English King is so set upon punishing you like this. Surely he cannot still believe you played a part in that killing at Viterbo. Jesii, the Bishop of Padua himself swore you'd never left the city!"
"Edward well knows that I am innocent," Amaury said, and signed his name with deliberation. "Have you never heard of a scapegoat, Hugh? According to
Scriptures, it is an unfortunate animal that shoulders the sins of others ere being banished into the wilderness."
He saw that Hugh did not yet comprehend, and said quietly, "It is true that my cousin Hal betrayed our father, but he did not deserve to be hacked to death in a church. My brother Guy will never admit it, mayhap not even to himself, but he knows that to be true. God pity him, so did Bran. Hal died, not for his own sins, but for Edward's."
"You are saying, then, that King Edward is punishing you because he cannot punish Guy? But . . . but there is no justice in that!"
"Ah, but there is, Hugh," Amaury said trenchantly, "royal justice."
"And what exactly is royal justice?"
"Whatever the King says it is," Amaury said, with a cynicism that took Hugh's breath away. But when he opened his mouth to protest, he found himself unable to refute Amaury, for Edward was not his cousin and Corfe was not his gaol.
AFTER encountering so many obstacles in his attempts to breach the defenses of
Corfe Castle, Hugh approached Windsor with some trepidation. But he was to discover that his qualms had been needless. Corfe was a state prison and, of necessity, virtually impregnable. Windsor Castle proved to be far more accessible, a royal palace that comprised no less than three baileys, two half-timbered King's Houses, several chapels, numerous stables, kitchens, a bake-house and buttery, a great hall, an almonry, kennels, and gardens, all of this in addition to the circular castle keep and fortified towers, spread out over thirteen full acres of ground, an area even larger than that of the Tower of London.

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lust twenty miles from Westminster, Windsor had long been a orite royal dwelling, and while Edward was not currently in resi-
, CSi some of his children were, and the nurseries in the upper haileV resounded with their squeals, with the scolding of their harried urses. Amidst the comings and goings of tradesmen and servants j guards and townsmen, no one looked twice at a lone Franciscan friar.
Unlike monks, who were not supposed to stray far from their monasteries, friars were expected, even obligated, to remain in the world, preaching God's
Word in the streets and marketplaces. Hugh's presence, therefore, seemed not at all untoward, and he was able to wander at will about the castle grounds, prudently avoiding those buildings where security-minded sentries might be inclined to challenge him.
There was not a stable groom, not a kitchen scullion, who did not know that
Simon de Montfort's daughter was the King's unwilling guest, and they were all quite willing to gossip about her. Hugh soon learned that Ellen was lodged in an upper chamber of the Round Tower, that she was being treated with the deference due the King's kinswoman, and that more than a few pitied her plight. But the most useful information came from old Emo, the royal gardener.
Emo was vastly proud of the gardens and vineyards that lay beyond the castle walls; more than five flowering acres, he boasted, enclosed within hedges of blackthorn and alder. But the poor lass would not get to see his masterwork.
She was only allowed to walk in the small garden plots safely set within the castle baileys, would miss the glory of his roses in full summer bloom.
King Henry had built a chapel in the northeast corner of the lower bailey, separated from the new royal apartments by a spacious cloistered garden. It was here that Hugh took up his post, safely hidden within the deep shadows of the silent chapel, watching the cloisters, waiting. His were virtuesa calm, steady nature, courage, and an enduring optimismthat were well suited for surveillance, and on the second day of his vigil, his patience was rewarded.
Just before noon, a young Anight escorted Ellen and Juliana into the garden.
Ellen was carrying the most exotic-looking dog Hugh had ever seen. The size of a small cat, with tufts of soft, milk-white fur, it put Hugh m mind of a walking powder-puff. As she bent down to put it on the Brass, he slipped through the chapel doorway and drew back his hood from his face.
Juliana saw him first. She was the most spontaneous free spirit he'd *ver known, yet now she did not even blink, turning casually and touchm8 Ellen's arm. Ellen's response was equally circumspect; she gazed acr°ss at Hugh without a flicker of recognition. And then, in so smooth

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a maneuver it might have been choreographed between them, Julian focused the full seductive power of her smile upon Sir Nicholas, dravvin him aside, and
Ellen tossed her dog's toy up into the air.
It landed almost at Hugh's feet, a small strand of braided rope, w,^ the puppy in panting pursuit. Scooping them both up, he sauntered across the cloister garth. "Is this your dog, my lady?"
"Yes, thank you. She was a gift from my cousin, the King, cornes
, from Bologna in Italy, he says ..." Ellen sounded quite normal, even nochalant, but had no idea what she'd just said. From the corner of her eye, she saw that Juliana had lured Sir Nicholas out of earshot, and she expelled a shaken breath. "We thought you were dead!"
"Brian helped me to escape. Hold out your hand."
Puzzled, she did, not comprehending until she felt something smooth and metallic hidden under the rope. Cupping it cautiously, she found herself looking at a heart-shaped topaz pendant.
"Prince Llewelyn said to tell you that there are many who think topaz guards against grief. He does not know if he believes so himself, but he said that even if it is no talisman, it is a pledge, and that you can rely upon, my lady."
Ellen's fingers closed around the pendant, gripping it so tightly it would leave an imprint in the palm of her hand. "You've seen Llewelyn?" she whispered, once she was sure she could trust her voice, and Hugh nodded.
"Yes . . . and Lord Amaury, too. We were able to talk briefly at Corfe."
"Amaury? The truth, Hugh, please! How is he faring? How are they treating him?"
"His chamber is right Spartan, I'll not deny that. But it could be far worse, my lady. He has candles for the dark and blankets for the cold and two full meals a day. Fortunately, the King has agreed to pay for his keep"
"Oh, has he?" Ellen all but hissed the words. "How very magnanimous of him!"
"Ah, no, my lady, you do not understand. We could not take that for granted.
It is customary for the Exchequer to pay for the maintenance of hostages, and sometimes, but not always, for Crown prisoners like Lord Amaury. But for other prisoners, there are no provisions. When a man is arrested, his family must pay for his food, candles, all frs needs. God pity the poor soul who is friendless. It is not unheard-of fc>r men to starve in the King's gaols. If
King Edward had not . . "
But Ellen was no longer listening. Although standing in the gl316 of high noon, she still could not suppress a shiver. "Thank God I neve' knew that!"
Reaching down, she cuddled the puppy in her arms, walk6

BOOK: The Reckoning - 3
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