Out November 21
Showing posts with label tower of london. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tower of london. Show all posts
Friday, November 1, 2013
Friday, October 4, 2013
A Young King and His Enemies
As
he bent over the book on his table, James lay down his quill and ran a finger
across a bright illustration that filled half the page. A wheel held a woman in
finery at its height but had flung a king in ermine and a ragged peasant onto
the ground. Kings, princes and beautiful ladies awaited their turn on the wheel.
He was chewing his lip and frowning over it when a sharp thud on the table made
him jump.
The
black-robed monk, Brother Odo, rapped the thin birch cane on the table again
and James looked up into his piercing stare. The monk was a small man, no
taller than James, slender and quick, with sharp features and threads of gray
in his dark hair. The tonsure atop his head shone as though he polished it.
James bit the inside of his cheek to stop his grin, which hurt less than that
rod would have had it smacked his hand.
“You
were not given Boethius to daydream over.”
“Aye,
Brother. I only wondered wha’ the wheel meant.
”
“The
wheel means a wheel. Consolatio
Philosophiae is but a story that that Boethius wrote whilst imprisoned, as
are you. Now you are to use your time more productively than staring at pretty
pictures.” He pointed a narrow finger at a word. “Tell me what those four lines
mean—in English.”
A
word of his own Scots often earned James a stinging rap on the knuckles or
sometimes a caning, so James sighed and examined the line the brother was
pointing to. His Latin was mainly that of the church prayers and Boethius’s
book made him struggle. He took a deep breath, and licked his lips. He could
grow to hate this foul tome, though the illustration made him think--perhaps
too much.
“Who formed my studious numbers,” he
translated aloud from the Latin,
“Smoothly once in… happier days,
Now helpless
in tears and sadness
Learn a
mournful tune to.… to…” He sighed, bracing himself. “attollo…
I don’t remember.”
“Raise!”
The birch whistled when the rod slashed across James’s shoulders. “Learn a
mournful tune to raise.”
It
was only the sound that made James wince. The cane stung but was nothing to a
blow from Gruffudd’s practice blade. His knuckles were skinned from sword
practice the day before and his shoulders were bruised from being knocked from
his horse riding at the quatrain. Besides, even Bishop Wardlaw said that the
sting of a cane was a fine aid to memory.
Brother
Odo made a disgusted sound in his throat and motioned to the parchment, much
marred where James had sanded out errors. “Write it out. Cleanly, boy.” He
thumped the cane down on the table. “I expect the next ten lines written out when I
return in the morning.”
“Aye,
Brother Odo,” James said, meekly keeping his eyes on the parchment until the
door thumped closed behind his tutor.
Smoothly
once in happier days…
But
there was no point in thinking of happier days. Those days were done, though
later he would give more thought to that wheel. James thought Brother Odo might
be mistaken about it having no meaning when it cast men from the heights to the
depths. The tutor always wanted to talk about the translation of
the words and never what the story meant. He suspected the monk had no imagination at all. Shaking his head,
James closed the book. He would write out all the lines even if it meant
burning down his last candle, but for now in the practice yard, he would find Gruffudd
and William and perhaps some of the other prisoners and something fun to do. He
jumped up, checked both in the corridor ways to be sure Brother Odo was out of
sight and hurried down the narrow stairs, out into the sunlight.
He gaped at a
line of riders streaming through the open gates, two dozen in polished steel.
And there rode the earl of Albany in the middle with Master John Lyon who had
brought word of King Robert’s death. James did not know the big man beside
them, red-faced under his dark, wiry beard and belly straining against his
embroidered doublet.
Orkney
vaulted from his horse and tossed his reins to a sergeant who was muttering a
protest which the earl ignored as he strode toward James. “Your Grace. I have
news I would give you privily.”
The stranger was climbing heavily from the
saddle. “He’s no more ‘grace’ than I am. Less than my lord father,” the man
rumbled.
James
looked past Orkney who was slowly shaking his head and took a slow deep breath.
“Murdoch?” James asked Orkney in a carefully controlled tone. If he had ever
seen his cousin before, James could not recall it.
Orkney
jerked a nod.
Murdoch
Stewart, earl of Fife, eldest son of the Duke of Albany, swaggered across the
bailey yard. “If it isn’t my little cousin, James.”
Thrusting
his trembling hands into his armpits, James narrowed his eyes at the man. “Aye.
As was my brother, Robert.” His face felt scalded with heat. “Were you at
Falkirk Castle when he was murdered? Cousin.”
Murdoch
threw back his head and laughed, exposing trembling jowls under his beard.
“Aye. And I was there when parliament voted that we had no fault in his death.”
His laugh broke off like a snapping branch and he scowled. “Before the Battle
of Homildon Hill when I was taken prisoner.”
James
drew in a slow, steady breath and then another. He swallowed down the tears of
fury at Murdoch’s laughter. He had no doubt that his brother’s murder was at
least partially Murdoch’s doing, but screaming at him or weeping like a lass would gain nothing. “Well, my lord…” he forced the words out. “We are both
prisoners now. Whether you think I am entitled to be ‘graced’ or nae. Our
differences must wait until we regain our freedom.” A pulsing pain began to
throb behind one eye at having to speak to the man he must acknowledge as
cousin.
“My
father will ransom me. You may be sure.” Murdoch glowered at James and then at
Orkney and back to James from eyes that were bloodshot. “But do not expect him
to agree to any ransom for you to be freed. Whelp.”
“Your
father is not the only noble in Scotland,” Orkney said.
“But
he is the regent.” Murdoch shoved past Orkney. “Bring my supplies. I am
thirsty,” he called over his shoulder. A servant, who James realized had a
badge of the Albany Stewart’s on his shoulder, hefted a tun of wine onto his
shoulder and plodded after Murdoch. Orkney squeezed the bridge of his nose and
let out a long breath.
“His
being moved here from Nottingham Castle was part of my news for you. From wha’ I
have heard he spends much of his time drinking so, I doubt his presence will be
something you are forced often to suffer.”
“I
suppose I knew I would see him one day.” James looked at Orkney’s thin lipped
face. “Part though? You said that was part of your news?”
The
bailey yard was raucous with noise, men-at-arms talking and leading away their
horses to the stables and a couple of sumpter horses being unloaded whilst
William and Gruffudd stood near the armory watching. Orkey took James by the
arm and led him into a corner where a wall met the tower.
“My
ransom has arrived. I was allowed to return only to bid you farewell.”
James
felt his stomach lurch. Once Orkney left, he would be truly alone.
“Don’t
look so, lad. William will remain with you and I convinced King Henry to allow
you a chaplain, so Master Lyon will remain. He can arrange messages between us.
Once in Scotland, I’ll do everything for you that I can. There is nothing I can accomplish here.”
“But
my ransom…?”
“Albany
has--” Orkney took a pained sounding breath. “He has stolen your lands. All
your regality. You have nae funds for ransom, if King
Henry would agree to it.”
“If?”
“Henry has sworn you’ll be released is if you
swear fealty to him. Fealty as King of the Scots.”
Orkney scrubbed at his face
with one hand. “If you agreed to it, I have no doubt he would give you an army
to take Scotland. The damned English have done such before. The Balliols, Toom
Tabard and his son, both of them, were put on the throne by English armies.”
“But—wha’
would that mean? If he put me on the throne? Would he throw down the Albanys?”
James’s
heart gave a lurch at the thought of destroying his enemies. If they would kill
him, why should he not use the English against them?
“It
would mean that you owed King Henry obedience, and how much power true power he would allow you, I cannot say. All Scotland would be under his heel. And never—never would our parliament accept such
an agreement. Nor would I.”
“So…
I would be king at his pleasure and Scotland defeated. And make enemies of my few friends.” James tried to wrap his
mind around the idea. “And if he didn’t like wha’ I did, wha’ then? If I did
the best for Scotland and not for him?”
“If
we already weren’t under their heel, we soon would be because there is no way
we would win against him or even more against Monmouth. You would--” Orkney
shrugged. “Probably you would lose your throne although he might let you keep
it if you knelt at his feet.”
“He has put no such proposal to me,” James
said. “Did he to you?”
Orkney
nodded. “Though he says that you are yet too young to lead an army. But others
might in your name in a year or two—especially once they have put down the
rebellion in Wales. I told him no. Eventually, the demand will be put to you
directly.” Orkney grabbed his shoulder and gave him a shake. “And you must tell him no.”
James
swallowed. “Though it will mean they keep me locked up.”
“It
will cost you dear, lad. But saying yes would cost us all more—including you.”
“But…
How do I regain my freedom?” Too many thoughts were spinning through his head.
“In Scotland, I can work toward freeing
you along with Bishop Wardlaw and the Lauders. You have other friends there as well. But you must take my oath.”
Smiling a little, Orkney knelt on the ground and held up his clasped hands.
“Take my hands between yours.”
He clasped his
ink-stained hands around Orkney’s larger ones.
“I
do liege homage to you, my lord, James, king of Scots, and I will keep faith
with you against all creatures, living or dead, and I will defend you and all
your successors against all malefactors and invaders, as God help me and his
saints.”
Blinking, James knew he should say something. He was sure he had seen his father do this, though it was long ago. James
licked his lips and said, “I—I take you as my man and will keep faith with you
and defend you and your heirs as is my duty as--as your liege lord.”
James
raised his eyebrows for Orkney’s approval and the earl gave him a brisk nod of
approval. He stood, and for a moment, he grasped James’s arm. “Do not lose heart, Your Grace.
However long it takes, we will free you.”
Friday, September 6, 2013
A Captive Prince
More of my current Work-in-Progress:
A week later:
A week later:
Through
the high, narrow window of James’s Tower room, morning light spilled across the
floor, bars laying dark stripes on the threadbare carpet. His straw-stuffed bed
was hard and uncomfortable. James thrashed and kicked off the light coverlet.
In his bare feet, he ran to the little garderobe and pissed into the hole as William,
on his pallet on the floor, muttered complaints before he rose.
On
the little table next to the door, a slab of dark oak with iron bands, William
filled their basin from the flagon of water. James washed his face and hands, donned
clean hose, shirt and doublet from the chest that had been brought from the
ship the week before and pulled on his boots. Then he climbed to stand on his
bed to look out the window past its iron bars. He took a deep breath and leaned
his forehead against the rough stone. Sunrise was a wash of red across cloud of
smoke that never seemed to clear from above London. He absently rubbed at the
strange pressure in his chest as he wondered when he would ever see a blue sky
again.
“That
bed will nae be fit to sleep in,” William said. “With you standing on it like
that in your boots.”
In
the yard below, James spotted a man-at-arms, following a dark haired man who
sauntered across the patch of ground within view. It was certainly not Sir
Thomas. Possibly another prisoner of this foul place? A roar nearby made him flinch and was
answered with another. He turned to look
around the bare chamber, with its narrow bed, small table and two stools, a
thin carpet on the floor. But a fire burned on the hearth, they had been
brought food by a gaoler every day, and the lions in the menagerie were only a
sound in the distance. William said he had never heard of prisoners being given
over to the beasts, but he looked nervous every time they split the air with
their roars.
William
looked up from pulling on his own clothes. “The English will allow you to buy more
comforts when you receive moneys from Scotland. Your lands will…” William’s
comment died off at an echo of voices from down the corridor. He kicked at the
edge of the carpet with a sneer. “We will use it to send for thick carpet and hangings
to stop the draft and decent plate for your table.” Even in the summer’s heat,
behind thick stone walls the air was chill.
James
propped up the wall with his back. “I don’t care about that. I just want out of
this room. I want to see the earl and to know if there is news.”
“The
king said you were to have tutors. I’m sure they don’t mean to keep us locked
up forever.”
James
flopped down onto his bed. There was nothing to do here. He threw his arm over
his eyes and bethought of sitting high on the tower of Rothesay Castle whilst
his mother still lived, the land green all around until it slanted down to the
rolling sea. Masts bobbed on the horizon, men in the fields scythed oats, a
little goosegirl poured out grain for her flock. He tasted capercaillie stuffed
with apple and pine nuts and thyme with sweetened caudle to wash it down. He
could still hear the sound of the chapel bell, his brother’s laughter as he
rode out the gate, his mother’s lilting voice. She wore the green that she
loved, and it set off the red gleam of her hair and the gold of her coronet. He
saw his sire’s drawn, pallid face when they put her in her tomb. And he felt
gooseflesh as the cold sea splashed over his feet as he waited that dark night
for the ship Maryenknyght. The
memories made his throat ache so he sat up with a sigh.
“It’s
near time to break our fast,” William said.
James
didn’t answer but he supposed William was right and the clatter of feet in the
corridor made him slide to the edge of the bed. His belly rumbled, ready for the
bread that would stave off their hunger until dinner. There was a noise of the
bar being lifted and the locks rattled and the door creaked open.
James
stood up in surprise when Sir Thomas Rempston stepped through the door. “Lord
James,” he said with a neutral sort of nod. “I have found a tutor for you, a
monk from Eastminster Abbey well recommended by the abbot. He has both French
and Latin I am told. And the king has provided some coins for your upkeep so if
there is aught that you require for your wellbeing…”
“My
freedom!” James exclaimed. At Sir Thomas’s raised eyebrows, James lowered his
voice. “Surely, Sir Thomas, I need not be constantly confined so.”
“It
is not my intent. Once I am assured that you understand your position here, I
will give you the freedom of the keep. But if you abuse that in any way, I shall confine you as is my duty.” He crossed his arms and held James’s gaze. “Do you understand?”
James
knew his eyes widened but he tried to keep his face blank. “Aye, sir, I do. I
mean no abuse. I shan’t challenge your authority.”
“Good.
There are others in the Tower who will be company for you.” He snorted. “I have
no doubt you’ll soon make the acquaintance of Gruffydd Glendwr. He’s the
nearest in the Tower to your age.”
“Then
I may leave this room? Go outside?” James couldn’t help the eagerness of the
questions. Why should he be grateful for being let out of a cage he should never have been locked in?
“Except
for the walls, the deeper dungeon and chambers that are barred, I grant you and
your squire freedom of the keep.” Sir Thomas scowled at him. “In time long
past, one of the Glendwrs tried to escape by jumping from the wall and fell to his
death. Stupid! Since then prisoners are forbidden there. You’ll be escorted by
a guard, but he’ll not impede you unless you try to escape. But do not doubt
--if you cause any problems I shall be told.”
James
fiddled for a moment with a loose thread on his doublet, looked at the floor,
and then nodded. “I understand you, Sir Thomas. I have no desire for durance
more than I must suffer.”
“Good.”
“The
earl of Orkney? Will I be able to see him? I must need speak wi’ him.”
Sir
Thomas let out a breath. “He displeased the king with his impudence, but. . . I
suppose there is no harm whilst he awaits his ransom.” He gave James a somewhat
kinder look than before. “The menagerie will entertain you, I believe. We have
five lions and a leopard for the nonce. Your confinement need not be so
terrible.”
James
knew very well how terrible a confinement could be. He still dreamt of Robert
in an oubliette, desperately gnawing his fingers as he starved to death in the
dark. But this was better and James tightened his mouth into a line to hold back a smile of relief to
be outside if only for a few hours. “I ken it could be worse, Sir Thomas.”
“Sensible
boy.” Sir Thomas nodded and turned on this heel to leave.
Behind
him, a gaoler carried in a tray with a loaf of hot bread and a flagon of fresh
water. James muttered a word of thanks
as it suddenly occurred to him that it was a good idea to keep the gaolers
sweet. He decided to mend his manners though the gaolers were rough men and his
inferiors. The man grunted and tromped out.
Grinning,
James broke off half the loaf and tilted his head to William who grabbed up the
rest.
“Let’s go!” He strode fast, not allowing himself to run, out the door and
down the corridor. Flickering torchlight touched the granite
slabs underfoot and shifting shadows danced across the rough walls. The winding
steps down were narrow and slick with wear and damp, but James barely slowed
his tumultuous rush.
He
pushed the heavy door open and stepped into the most precious sunlight he had
ever seen. That it was dimmed by the ever-present London smoke mattered not. He
was in the light and the air. He gaped at the high gray walls and the bailey
yard. A guard in glittering steel paced atop whilst another with halberd in
hand stood at a corner.
The
door crashed closed and he looked over his shoulder to see that they were
indeed shadowed by one of the gaolers in the livery of the Tower rather than
armor, but he had a sword at his waist. His heavy shoulders and thick neck
below a blunt face made James assume he could use the weapon. James decided that he should
give him no reason.
A laugh came from around the bend of the tower and a lithe figure
wearing a battered helm and armor sauntered into view. When the man saw James,
he pulled his helm off and held an arm wide in welcome. He examined James
through large, dark eyes under arched brows.
“Well met, my lord,” the man said in a strong singsong accent. “I heard
we had new companions in this charming abode.” His black curling hair was
dripping with sweat.
James
blinked at him and after a moment nodded in greeting. Obviously not a guard,
the man was mayhap twenty with a sarcastic twist to his narrow lips.
“Forgive
me. I am Gruffydd ab Owen Glendwr, eldest son of Prince Owen Glendwr.” He
snorted a wry laugh. “And fellow ‘guest’ in this fine English Tower.”
James was reminded a bit of Robert Lauder. At
least there might be fine company in this dour place. “I’m James.” He shrugged.
“Earl of Carrick and son of King Robert of Scotland, if any of that matters
here.”
Gruffydd
threw a casual arm around James’s shoulder. “Aye, it does, lad. You’d not want
to be a villain in this place, stuck in the lower dungeons. Though my lack of
coin makes my stay less pleasant than some.” He looked past James to William
and nodded a greeting.
“William
Giffart, my lord,” Will said. “Lord James’s squire.”
But
James was moving back from Gruffyd. He reached for the blunted practice blade
in his new friend’s hand. Bouncing on his toes and turning the blade in his
hand, he said, “They let us practice in the yard?”
“With
blunted blades, certes, but we may practice at sword and even tilt at the
quatrain when Sir Thomas feels kindly.”
James’s
face split in a grin, but then his face fell a little. “My sword work isn’t as
good as I would like, Gruffydd.”
“Then the three of us shall practice together.”
The Welshman winked. “They call me a fair hand with a blade, so I’ll teach you
what I know. It will keep us from dying of boredom.”
Saturday, August 24, 2013
A King Uncaged -- To the Tower with You!
From my WIP following young James's capture by the English pirate Hugh-atte-Fen:
The
bile-green Thames flowed in ripples around the ship. They sailed past a square,
gray keep that rose like a growth above a dreary marsh. Was that the Tower of
London where so many ended their lives, James wondered? Orkney made a strangled
sound in his throat. When James looked at him from the corner of his eye, the
earl just shook his head and glanced toward scar-face. The man had his arms,
thick as tree trunks, crossed but his sword was on his hip. His pig eyes never
left them and three other pirates had hands on their hilts as they stood guard.
Beyond the grim keep was a jumble of buildings that stretched out of sight on a
reed choked shore. The wind smelled of horse shit and sweat and smoke and
rotting fish. All cities smelled, but none other so strong that it closed his throat.
Dozens
of wharves thrust into the water and masts rose around them as thick as trees in
a forest. Hugh-atte-Fen called out a command and lines were thrown to the
nearest. There were shouts and the ship was hauled in and lashed to the quay.
James
craned his neck from one side to the other. On the shore, he made out nothing
but a muddle of buildings with reeking chimneys, alleys, spires, and belfries
hunched under a canopy of dark smoke that covered the sky. But the quays were
all noise and confusion. Crates were being carried off ships. Wagons were being
loaded and men shouted, cursed, laughed. Everyone was in an uproar to be somewhere
other than where they were.
“My
lords.” Hugh-atte-Fen swaggered in their direction and gave another of his
taunting bows. “I must go ashore to arrange a greeting suitable to such lofty
and honored guests. I shan’t be long.”
Orkney’s
lips were pressed together so hard they were white. James wanted to ask him
what to expect. But the earl had cut him off with narrow eyed looks at their
captors whenever he tried to ask. He looked back at that grim tower and his
heart tried to beat its way out of his chest. James gripped his fists so hard
that his nails cut into his palms. It hurt but helped him to be quiet. His
heart raced. He couldn’t return to Scotland, not until he was a man grown and
able to fight his murderous uncle. But he couldn’t stay in England. To be locked in a dungeon. He couldn’t!
The
sun was near its zenith and sweat dripping down James’s back in the wet heat when
Hugh-etta-Fen strutted down the quay and up the gangplank, a score of
men-at-arms, halberds over their shoulders, at his back. The man patted a fat
purse hanging from his belt, his teeth flashing in a taunting grin. “You have
been profitable guests, my lords, so I wish you good luck with your new host.”
“Enough
chatter.” The sergeant jerked his thumb toward the gangplank. “We’ve orders to
move you lot and better things to do.”
“Move
us where?” Orkney demanded and Sir Archibald crossed his arms, glowering.
The sergeant motioned to his men and the long weapons were lowered so that they bristled toward the
two men.
Orkney rubbed his dark-circled eyes before he stepped forward.
“Keep Lord James between the two of you,” he said over his shoulder as he paced
down the gangplank. With William on one side and Sir Archibald on the other,
James followed close behind. The men-at-arms formed in a square around them.
The guards shoved their way between two wagons
where men were piling casks and crates.
A broad shouldered man didn’t get out of the way and a blow from the staff
of a halberd knocked him to his knees. He shouted curses behind them as they
marched past and into the warren of narrow streets.
The
cacophony assaulted James like hammer blows. From everywhere seemed to come
shouts, laughs, screams, bells tolling, distant hammering, horses whinnied and
it all mixed with the clanking of armor of their guards. The street squelched
with filth under his feet. The upper stories of the buildings jutted out,
almost meeting overhead letting through dim shafts of murky light. “MiserĂ©re
mei, Deus…” James muttered under his breath.
The
streets milled with crowds: a legless man yelled for alms, drunken soldiers
staggered out the door of a public house, hawkers shouted their wares, whores
lounged in doorways making offers to their guards as they passed. Everywhere he
looked, anywhere he looked, there were people. Vast seas of people and no one
he knew. Fiercely, he jammed his hands into his armpits and kept trudging along.
When a man carrying a barrel on his shoulder got in the way, two of the guards
grabbed him to shove head first into a wall. The barrel leaked ale in a puddle
as the man knelt and moaned.
On
a street corner a Grey Friar in a soiled robe was praying loudly for Prince
Henry, but the crowds paid him no more mind than if he were a yapping dog. They
passed four men struggling to work a pushcart free, its wheels stuck in the
muck. An acrobat in ragged motley tottered on stilts to the delighted shouts of
a drunken throng.
Walking
through the streets of the huge, strange city surrounded by armed guards, James
gaped at everything, yet he hardly drew a glance. He was glad, but what kind of
city was it where prisoners were so common? The Tower of London was out of
sight now and they were going in the wrong direction to go there. “Where do you
think they’re taking us?” he asked William in an undertone.
William
shook his head and from the glazed look he gave James, he was no less confused.
The bells of the Angelus began to chime
and James looked up to see the gray stone of a minster rising before them. He
nudged William with his elbow.
It
wasn’t a great castle. In fact, it was no castle at all but an old abbey, though the entrance porch was new polished stone with elaborately carved faces and splendid flying buttresses on the
sides supported the building.
Men-at-arms threw open the carved, arched doors.
As
they were escorted through chamber after chamber, nobles in fine dress,
servants in livery and clerics turned to stare, nothing James hadn’t seen
before. But the rooms were a jumble of multicolored carpets, statues, tapestries,
carved benches, and burnished armorials beneath crossed swords. James had never seen rooms so awash in colors
and furnishings. When he realized he was
gaping, he snapped his mouth closed.
At
last they came to the open doors of the audience chamber. The sergeant whispered to a page who gave Orkney a grudging bow and escorted them into the great vaulted chamber. It was flooded with
noonday light from immense, arched windows.
James blinked in the sudden light, trying to make sense of the sudden chaos
in the vast chamber. Overhead, the beams
soared to an unbelievable height, and around James and his little retinue, men
bellowed laughter and shouted to be heard. They churned in a sea of colorful
silks and James could see no more than a few feet into the hall awash with
courtiers. He chewed his lip and slid his gaze to look from the corners at the
earl. Orkney was white to the lips, his mouth pressed in a thin line.
James
took a single step forward and squared his shoulders. One of the Englishman,
fine as a peacock in blue satin, nudged his neighbor with and elbow and sneered
in their direction. James dug his nails into his palms as he forced himself to
look through the beautifully dressed rabble as though they weren’t there.
Trumpets
blew at the far end of the hall and the babble quieted to a murmur. “Our most dread lord, Henry, King of
England,” a strong voice shouted.
Orkney
laid a hand on James’s shoulder and squeezed so hard James it hurt, but James
gave a little nod. He kept his eyes straight ahead.
The
men around them were bowing low and at last James caught a glimpse of a throne
on a far dais. The chamber was huge, he thought, bigger than any he’d ever
seen. But then his breath caught. A burly man with a plain gold coronet
encircling his dark hair and a neatly trimmed short beard paused half way to
the dais. He bent his head as a prelate in a crimson robe dusted with jewels
put a hand on his shoulder and said something into his ear. In his rich black
tunic and cloth of gold cloak, he threw his head back and hooted a
laugh. James’s stomach twisted in his
gut.
Henry
Bolingbroke, king of England, laughed hard for a few more moments before he
strode to the gilded throne and threw himself down in an inelegant sprawl. His
squinting blue eyes fastened on James and he called out, “Come. Bring my new guests
before me.”
An
usher stepped forward. He motioned to the four of them. Orkney nodded and side
by side with him, James approached the throne. Sir Archibald and William
followed on their heels.
A
few strides from the throne, Orkney halted and Orkney’s hand halted James. They
bowed deeply to his captor. The king grinned as he looked James up and down,
paying no heed at all to the others.
“A
whelp of Scotland.” He snorted. “James
they call you?”
“Aye,
your grace. James, earl of Carrick and prince of Scotland and this is my
household.” He motioned to the grim-faced earl of Orkney. “Sir Henry Sinclair,
earl of Orkney, Sir Archibald Edmonstone, and my squire, William Gifford.”
“You were fleeing to France, I am told, to be
educated and properly schooled in French.” King Henry leaned forward with his
elbows on the arms of his throne and pondered James for a moment and grinned. “Your father should have sent you to me
straight away. I am after all the rightful king of France and well able to
teach you the language.”
James gritted his teeth as his face flooded with heat. "Son
Altesse Royale, vous me feriez trop d'honneur."
King
Henry looked at him. There was silence as though the men around them held their
breaths. When the king snorted back
laughter, chuckles rippled through the chamber. “C'est vrai, mon enfant. I have no time for
schooling a child, but we shall see that you have a tutor who is suitable to
your rank.” His glance slid over William. “And you have a squire. That is
seemly, but you have no need for a larger household in the Tower.”
“Your
grace!” Orkney’s hand tightened on James’s shoulder. “You can’t mean to send
the lad to such terrible…”
“Silence,”
the king said, rising from his seat, his voice heavy with annoyance. “We did
not give you leave to speak. You will be allowed ransom, sir earl, you and the
knight with you. Until then I shall hear nothing further from you.” Silence
fell and he glowered at around the great chamber. “Now where is Thomas Rempston?”
James
glanced back and saw a slight, middle-aged man, dressed in rich blue, with a
bald head and a beak of a nose threading his way through the press. When he
reached the dais, he bowed deeply. “Your grace?”
The
king took his seat on the throne and nodded amiably. “Sir Thomas, as you see we have more guests to join the other Scots in the Tower. Young James here must have tutors and be kept in
reasonable comfort.” He eyed James and his companions with a smile on his lips.
“Allow the earl messengers to arrange ransom for himself and the knight—as
quickly as possible. I don’t intend to support a large household for the boy.”
Orkney’s
fingers were digging into his shoulder so hard, James was sure they would leave
bruises. The man made a strangled noise in his throat and words seemed to burst
from him, “Your grace. Surely a boy of such tender years--you cannot mean to
send to…”
“By
the mass, I bade you be silent!” The king pointed a finger at Orkney. Orkney clamped his lips in a thin line under the king's glare and then King Henry turned
to Thomas Rempston with a narrow-eyed look. “As my Constable of the Tower, you
will see to them.” He flourished a dismissive hand.
It
was a stiff and shallow bow that Orkney offered the English king. James gave
the earl a doubtful glance from the corner of his eye and followed suit. Sir
Thomas Rempston motioned for them to follow him, and outside the chamber, they
were once again surrounded by guards.
“It
will take much time for arranging ransom’s, lad,” Orkney said through gritted
teeth. “Much time…” Nothing else was said through the chaos of the London
streets with its high overhanging houses and milling crowds. At last they came
to a long, open marketplace of tents and stalls of every color. On one side,
cattle were lowing and bawling in an enclosure. Poultry honked and cackled
inside pens, adding to the cacophony of farmers shouting their vegetables,
women bargaining, and bakers’ boys calling out, “Bread. Fresh bread.”
Their
guards yelled, “Make way!” People grumbled and cursed as they were shoved aside
so the guards could march them through to the other side. James sucked in a
deep breath when he saw a moat. A bloated body of a dog and brown bits that
James refused to consider floated in the stinking water. James reluctantly raised his eyes to the
high, crenellated, gray wall where armored guards paced. Their footsteps
reverberated like drumbeats on the wooden drawbridge as they paced across. The
heavy gate screeched open and James shuddered. Within the outer walls, on a
rise, soared the stern, implacable face of the keep.
He
went cold and his vision swam. The next step was the hardest he had ever taken.
James forced his legs to move. He walked through. The gates of the Tower of
London crashed closed behind him.
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