He closed his eyes for an instant, feeling an old pain. He had visited Henry at the Palace of Fulham further along the river, praying for hours with him and trying to understand the young man and his weakness. In all their years of dispute, York had never spent enough time with Henry to truly know the king’s character. He felt his eyes tighten at the thought of killing him. It would be the murder of a true innocent, the most terrible of sins, no matter how he brought it about. He would be damned, without a doubt, though being damned would make him king. Dredging for the will to see it through, he remembered again how mercy had nearly cost him his life and his house. York opened his eyes once more, the decision made. For propriety, he would do nothing for a time. Parliament would make him heir and before the year was out, Henry would slip silently into a sleep, never to wake. York would be king, as his great-grandfather Edward had been. His son would be king after him.
A further thought came as he drew in a breath, filling him with joy. His son would not be damned for the murder of an innocent. Edward would rule the house of York and all England—and what father would refuse to make such a gift, no matter what it cost? York told himself he would write to Cecily that very day, busy at Ludlow with repairs and overseeing hundreds of craftsmen. He smiled as he imagined her reaction. One more Act of Parliament and they would have everything they had ever wanted. The world would have been put right, after too many years with a weak house on the throne. He might even take back the lost lands in France. Who could refuse his right, when he was king? York felt his mind fill with glorious imaginings and it took Salisbury’s sharp elbow jabbing into his side to bring him back and make him listen to William Oldhall and the discussion still going on.
“. . . there is as yet no news of Queen Margaret or her son, no, Lord Gray. I have a report that they were seen passing into Wales, but their whereabouts now are unknown.” Oldhall showed his discomfort as he glanced over at York. “There are absences today in these benches, empty spaces that speak loudly enough. If my lord York is made heir, I do not doubt we will hear from those noble lords who have not come to London, to this chamber.”
York looked down, not caring to hear. He knew the names of those who would support the queen well enough: Percy, Somerset, Clifford, Exeter. It gave him more pleasure to think of men like Buckingham and Egremont who could no longer trouble him.
The news of a new heir to the throne would make Margaret tear her hair in rage when she heard. The image of it twitched at his lips, after all he had endured with Attainder. It was a pleasure as simple as a childhood summer, to think of his tormentors suffering in turn. Margaret had lost her husband. When the vote was passed, she would lose her son’s inheritance as well. He chuckled aloud at that thought, interrupting an elderly baron so that he stopped and stared. Salisbury laughed in turn. He had watched York closely as he mused, almost able to follow the meanderings of his mind and enjoying every moment.
—
MARGARET BLUSHED, pleased at the attention and the compliments. Jasper and Edmund Tudor may have been made earls by her husband, but they still stood in respectful silence in the presence of their father.
Owen Tudor took her hand to lead her in, smiling with such amused devilment that she could well believe he had charmed a French queen once before. He was thirty years her senior and though he was bald and white-haired, he had kept a rare vitality, his good health showing in tanned skin, clear eyes, and a firm grip. He looked like a gentleman farmer, with little sign of the soldier he’d once been.
Prince Edward ran past them all, exclaiming in delight at the feast laid out before them. He bobbed and jumped around as Margaret was seated at the head of the table, coming to his own chair with enormous reluctance. He was nearly seven years old and saw the ride into Wales as an adventure. As one who had grown up in Kenilworth, he had not been overawed by Pembroke Castle. He’d spent the morning racing around at high speed and bothering the servants, who already seemed to dote on him.
Pembroke had been King Henry’s gift to Jasper Tudor, but he took a seat one place away from the head of the table, deferring to his father with cheerful good grace. Margaret could see the three Welshmen liked one another. She felt something unclench within her as she sipped her wine and eyed the steaming haunch of lamb brought in as a centerpiece of the table.
“It does my heart good to see a family who are not at each other’s throats,” she said. “If I had not been able to come here, I don’t know what I would have done.”
Owen Tudor looked over at her, his eyes crinkling in pleasure at having such a beauty in his presence. He could not resist smiling at the young queen, despite the disasters that had brought her into his son’s lands.
“Your Highness . . .” he began.
“Margaret, please.”
“Very well. Margaret. I am glad you remembered you have friends here. My family owes your husband a great debt. It cannot be repaid with wine and lamb—even Welsh lamb, which is the best in all creation.”
She smiled, and he signaled for another thick slice to be passed to her plate, dripping with juices.
“When my wife passed, Margaret, news of our marriage and my lads got out. I was captured, did you know that? Oh yes. I was taken to Newgate prison for a time, on the orders of Speaker William Tresham. It was only a few months, but I tell you I have never been happier to feel the sun on my skin as when they let me out.”
“Why were you taken up?” Margaret replied, interested despite her own worries.
Owen Tudor shrugged.
“They were angry about my marrying King Harry’s bride. That was all it took to send soldiers after me. I could have disappeared into the hills, I suppose, but I could hardly see how they’d imprison me for marrying a queen, not after her first husband was in the ground. Yet I think I would still be there if your husband hadn’t signed an order for my release, God’s blessings be on him. He did right by me and held no grudge against one who loved his mother as much as he did himself.” The old man shook his head in memory. “She was the finest part of my life. My Catherine gave me these scoundrels for my sons, and your husband made them earls. I have been blessed beyond anything I could have dreamed when I was young and foolish, though I miss her still.”
To her surprise, Margaret saw a line of tears brighten his eyes, quickly rubbed away. It was hard not to like the man.
“I wish I had known her,” she said.
Owen Tudor nodded.
“And I wish your husband had kept his strength. I am more than sorry to hear of his illness. Every year brings worse reports. It is a cruel thing he has endured, hard for any man, but much worse for a king. I know, Margaret, how dogs will gather around a wounded deer. They can be cruel.”
It was Margaret’s turn to feel tears sting her eyes. She looked away, fiddling with a cup of wine rather than allow her grief to turn to sobbing at the pity she could see in him.
“They have been,” she said softly. “Henry was captured and good men were killed trying to save him. York has him now, hidden away. It breaks my heart . . .” She made herself stop before the grief overwhelmed her.
“And yet you could have stayed in Kenilworth, my lady,” Owen went on.
Margaret sensed his sons leaning in, their interest sharpening.
“I am pleased and more honored than you know that you came here to us, but I do not yet know why.”
“You do,” Margaret said, dabbing at her eyes with a cloth. “If I had stayed where I was safe, it would have meant giving up. It would have been the end. Instead, I came to you for an army, Owen. It is like a hot iron against my skin to have to ask, but if you feel a debt, I must call it in.”
“Ah. There is the heart of it,” Owen Tudor murmured, his gaze unblinking. “Though it is no choice at all, for me or my sons, my lady. We’ve talked before and there was never any doubt, not if you asked. Is there, lads?”
“None at all,” Jasper Tudor
said firmly.
His brother Edmund echoed his agreement, the three men made grim by her grief. Prince Edward had fallen silent, staring around him at the serious adult voices. One of the servants stepped in with cut fruit for him to enjoy and he tugged his mother’s sleeve to show her. Margaret smiled down at him through tears that would not stop coming.
“I am grateful to you all,” she said. “I hoped for it when I thought to come here, but you must know that York and Salisbury, Warwick and March, all threaten my family. I will need to find and raise every man in England and Wales—and beyond—to stand against them.”
“Beyond, my lady?” Owen Tudor asked.
“If you will provide the ship, I have thought to sail to Scotland and speak to King James there. He has supported York’s cause in the past, but I think I can make him an offer he’d find hard to refuse.”
The Tudor sons waited for their father to consider this development. At last, he spoke, nodding.
“I would not like to see Scots come down from their highlands, my lady. They are a fierce race, right enough, and they will certainly be a terror on the battlefield. You must know their king will drive a hard bargain for his aid though. Whatever you have in mind—and I will not ask such a private thing—he’ll want all that and a penny more, if you understand me.”
“There is no price too high to pay to see my husband’s enemies broken,” Margaret replied.
“I wouldn’t say that to him, my lady, or King James will ask for London—and a penny more,” Owen Tudor replied.
She saw his eyes twinkle and smiled back despite herself. She had no doubt then that Queen Catherine had loved him, the bluff and solid Welshman who had eased her grief over the death of her first husband.
“I’ll have a ship made ready for you, my lady,” Jasper Tudor said. “The storms can be terrible later in the year, but while the summer ends, you should be safe enough. I’ll send twenty of my own guards with you as well, to impress the Scots.”
“Good lad,” his father said. “We can’t have the queen and our prince turning up in the wilds of Scotland alone. King James will expect a fine show. Now don’t you worry. I’ll bring the men of Wales out, my lady. I might even ride with them myself, to show these young pups what an old dog can do.”
Jasper snorted and Margaret was touched at the visible affection between them. It was something she had never known and it seemed to bring her close to tears at every moment until she was exasperated with herself. It had probably not hurt her chance of winning their support to have wept at their table, she understood that much. Some men will move heaven and earth to aid a woman in distress.
“You give me hope, Owen,” she said, her breath coming in shudders. “I pray my husband will be able to thank you as you deserve.”
“It would be my honor,” Owen Tudor replied. “He is a good man. The world doesn’t need more cunning devils, Margaret. We have enough of those. Are you listening, lad?” He addressed the last to Prince Edward, who nodded in reply, his eyes wide. “I said we need good men to rule. One day, it will be you as king, did you know that?”
“Of course,” the boy replied scornfully, making the old man grin.
Margaret reached out and twisted Edward’s ear, so that he yelled.
“Be respectful, Edward,” she said. “You are a guest.”
“Your pardon, sir,” the boy replied, rubbing his ear and glaring at his mother.
CHAPTER 28
Derry Brewer wondered if the Earl of Northumberland was going to have a fit of apoplexy. The wind soared and sobbed around Alnwick Castle, whistling falling notes like a horn blowing retreat. At the head of the dining table, Henry Percy had grown darker and darker, his face swelling like a child holding his breath until he fainted.
“Lord Percy, we have common cause,” Derry reminded him. “The queen must find her army where she can, if we are ever to see peace restored.”
“But, the Scots! She might as well deal with the devil himself!” Henry Percy said. His mouth stayed open as he shook his head, giving him a foolish aspect that made Derry want to smile. He merely waited for the young earl to find calm. To his surprise, it was Somerset who spoke then, a man who could hardly understand the ancestral resentment of those who guarded the borders.
“My lords, Master Brewer, I would accept any force of men, aye, even the French, if it gave us a chance to right these wrongs. I accept my part of the blame for Northampton. If I had known York’s supporters would come north, I would have been there to break them. We all took a debt that day, a responsibility for King Henry’s capture.”
“My brother Thomas died there,” Henry Percy snapped. “Do you not think I feel the pain of that? Because of York, I lost my father. Because of attainted traitors, I lost my brother as well.” He paused. “Perhaps I have suffered enough to endure the Scots in England, Master Brewer. Though I am only grateful my father did not live to see it.” He shook his head in wry bitterness. “I think it would have killed the old man.”
“I do not know they will even come,” Derry said. “Though I would truly deal with the devil if I thought—”
To his irritation, Baron Clifford snapped a reply, talking over him before he had finished speaking.
“Don’t say that, Brewer. Not even in jest, or foolish boast. The devil listens to such airs and promises—and he acts on them.”
Derry clenched his jaw.
“—if I thought it would bring us victory. My lords, I have seen York, Salisbury, and Warwick turn disaster into triumph. I have lived to see King Henry captured and held prisoner.” He included Baron Clifford in the look he swept over them. “You three lost fathers at St. Albans—and brothers or friends since. All the while, these traitors have grown strong, with every coin-toss falling well for them. The Attainders have been torn up by Parliament. York has made himself the heir to the throne—and how long will King Henry live now that he is a stone in York’s boot? I tell you, my lords, this is the bitter heart of it. We will need every loyal man and, if we fail, the house of York will rule forever. There will be no Northumberland, or Somerset or Clifford. They will not forgive the Attainders against them if they ever have you at their mercy. Mercy is not a Neville trait, my lords, when they are strong. You know that is the truth. So I would welcome Scots and Welsh, even French . . . by God, even Irish to these shores if they could restore the rightful king and queen to the throne! I would risk my soul and the last breath in my body to see York beaten. Nothing else will do.”
The three lords could only stare at the strong emotion revealed in the man before them. Derry Brewer was filthy from weeks on the road. They knew he had traveled to Wales and all over the country, passing word for men to gather. He had been urbane and amused throughout the discussion, but for one moment, he had allowed them to see his anger and his determination.
“Do you know yet where they have the king?” Somerset asked him.
“Not in the Tower,” Derry replied. “It is still being repaired, after that fool Scales let the mob blow down a wall. I am only surprised Salisbury allowed him to surrender, with all of London calling for his blood. There’s one man whose death I will not grieve, though I fought at his side, once. Using wildfire and cannon on the people of London! I’m told Scales was found with his throat cut in his cell. I’d buy a pint for the men who did it, if they ever find them.” He shook his head in disgust. “No, my lord, they’ll have the king somewhere close by. I have lads looking, but there are a thousand different houses and no way to know which it is.” A memory came to him of racing through the Palace of Westminster, searching for William de la Pole years before. He did not share it with those present, knowing that they would not understand, or care.
“My lords, I think sometimes I have given my whole life to the lamb, to keeping Henry safe from his enemies. It is like a burr under my skin to know they have him and that his life is as fragile as a glass.” He closed his eye
s for an instant, his brow furrowing. “Perhaps we cannot save him now. But I will see York dead by the end, if I have to climb his towers and knife him in his sleep!”
Earl Percy chuckled, enjoying the spite in Derry Brewer’s expression. It echoed his own feelings on the matter perfectly and he gripped the king’s spymaster by the arm to show his support. A cloud of road-dust rose around them both.
“We have twelve thousand, Master Brewer. True soldiers with pike and cavalry and cannon. If the queen can bring a few more great hairy Scots as well, I do not think it will come to you climbing any towers. We’ll put York’s head on a city wall yet.”
“I pray for it, my lord,” Derry replied.
—
MARGARET PULLED HER CLOAK more tightly around her shoulders, feeling a bite to the wind that she had not known before. The sea voyage had been almost pleasant at first in the late summer sun, a week of sailing up the coast with nothing to do but plan and watch Prince Edward scamper about the deck on bare feet. His skin had reddened at first and then grown gold with the exposure, though she had kept her own well covered. As they went north, it seemed to have become colder with every sea mile. Margaret had been astonished to see sleet spatter the waves as they came into dock.
She found a country in mourning, with no gaiety at her arrival. The lairds of three clans met her on the docks, bowing deeply as they explained King James had been killed just a week before. She heard no more details as they escorted her deeper into the lowlands, with Jasper Tudor’s troop of soldiers bringing up the rear in polished mail. The Scots had not seemed impressed by those men, though she thought it was no accident that they outnumbered her small force four to one, a party of more than a hundred riding away from the border with England.
It took three days to reach a huge castle still being built on the coast, with black crags on one side and screeching gulls in the air all around it. Margaret felt stronger, though her back ached after so long spent in the saddle. She had eaten with the lairds each evening in roadside inns, making light conversation that never strayed into her reasons for coming. They looked on her with pity in their eyes and she had grown angry with them as a result, feeling almost as if she was heading into battle. Time and again she had asked about King James and been gently rebuffed, with sighs and shrugged shoulders, as the lairds fell silent and called for whisky to toast the dear departed.