Authors: Nigel Green
âAnd what is that?'
âAll our actions, whether right and wrong, were designed to help Richard. In this instance, your marriage plans for him are to benefit yourself. You and the Woodvilles want to control and manipulate the king which, without Anne Neville, Ratcliffe and myself in the way, you would be able to do.'
I glanced down at Catesby.
âSo, for that reason, not only will I not agree to the wedding, I will do everything I can to prevent it.'
He did not respond. I decided I needed to provoke him further.
âA lot has been said about the sinful nature of the proposed marriage of Richard to his niece,' I told Ratcliffe. âIn reality, I'm not so sure that the actual union would have been so terrible. After all, as Catesby pointed out, a greater good would have arisen as a result of it, so perhaps God might have overlooked it. But, do you know, I rather think that all this talk of it being sinful has obscured the far greater sin.'
âWhich is what?' Ratcliffe asked curiously.
I pointed at Catesby.
âHis motivation in proposing the marriage.'
Catesby rose with surprising speed and strode furiously towards the door. When he reached it, he turned to glare at me.
âIt will be impossible for you to stop the marriage!' he hissed. We will not let you influence the king or prevent that which is planned.'
He smiled maliciously.
âThere is one further point of which you are unaware â the king himself believes the marriage should proceed.'
With that parting shot, he was gone, followed a moment later by Ratcliffe.
I sat down wearily. Plainly it was my duty to protect Richard from what would be on all counts a wrongful marriage, but how?
I mulled over various alternatives but rejected them one after the other. At last I was left with only one.
The more I thought about it the more I hated it, but I had no choice.
I got up abruptly; I could not be a coward when Richard needed me.
A
s chamberlain, theoretically at any rate, I controlled access to the king. In practice, Richard saw whom he wanted, when he wanted. But for all that, it was a simple enough matter to arrange for his private chambers to be closed off and suitable guards posted to discourage visitors. I arranged matters carefully before I saw him. I wrote the letters myself, trusting no one else with their content.
It was late when I entered Richard's chamber. At the sight of me, he jumped up anxiously from his chair by the fire and demanded to know what was amiss.
âNothing! I merely wished to talk to you.'
âI can think of more suitable times.'
I ignored him and returned to the door. I closed it firmly and slid the bolt across.
âNow we won't be disturbed,' I told him. âNot that there is much chance of that; I've put my own men off guard duty tonight.'
He eyed me coldly.
âLeave me, Francis!'
âI want to talk to you about this proposed marriage. You've been ignoring me because you don't want to hear my view. Unfortunately for you, I'll not be silenced because I believe that, as a friend and servant of yours for many years, what I have to say is important.'
He resumed his seat and shrugged.
âI take it you object to the proposed marriage?'
âOf course I do!'
âI did too,' he volunteered surprisingly. âLike you, I viewed the matter as unnatural. But then it was put to me that my own views were unimportant since, where duty is concerned, how can a king's own thoughts matter? The marriage of Edward's daughter denies Tudor the support that she would have given him. If he cannot gain her support, he cannot invade. If he cannot invade, England has peace and security.'
He rose and stood in front of the fire.
âGiven that it's the duty of the king to provide his country with peace and stability, what do my own feelings matter? The king is always to be the servant of his country. Hence for the sake of my country, I must marry my brother's daughter.'
âYou could always marry her off to a third person. That way
neither
Tudor
nor
you get to wed her.'
âAnd their child? Their brat would always be a threat to my heir.'
He pulled off his topaz ring and began to slowly roll it between thumb and forefinger.
âNo, Francis. As it has been explained to me, it is essential that I have an heir or else England slides into anarchy and, for reasons that are obvious, my brother's daughter is the best person to provide such an heir.'
He eyed me earnestly.
âGiven that you have never known me to shrink away from duty, surely you must recognise that my forthcoming marriage is the correct course of action?'
I felt great sadness as he advanced the corrupt arguments of others.
âThe only thing I recognise, Richard, is incest.'
His mouth tightened.
âIf your king is prepared to make such a sacrifice for his people, who are you to disagree?'
Dear God, how malleable he was without Anne Neville!
âListen, you fool, it's not just going to be me who objects; it's going to be everyone. Who's going to support a king who marries his niece? Who's going to acknowledge his son who is also his great nephew? Can't you see for a moment that that which you're planning â or, to be precise, what is being planned for you â is morally wrong by any standard and loathsome to all your countrymen?'
He moved towards the door in anger, but I hauled him back to face me. He struggled furiously in my grip, but for all his strength he lacked both my size and weight. I pushed him firmly back into his seat and stood over him.
He made to rise, so I bent over and pushed his shoulders back; our faces were very close now.
âMarry the girl and how many of your subjects will follow you?'
He squirmed in my grasp.
âThe people of the Northâ¦'
âThey will follow me!'
He ceased struggling and looked up quickly.
âWhat do you mean?'
I let go of him and gazed down at the man whom I had promised myself that I would always serve.
âI'm leaving you, Richard.'
âYou're leaving me?'
âTo join Henry Tudor.'
âYou traitorous bastard!'
âAnd when the invasion comes, Tudor can head south to join his supporters there. I'll go to the north country. When I get there, I'll tell men how you planned to marry your own niece, while your wife â the daughter of their great Earl of Warwick â lay dying close by.' I gazed down at him. âBelieve me, Richard, men will come flocking to my standard.'
He leapt up reaching quickly for his knife.
âYou, of all people â a traitor!'
I slapped him as hard as I could across the face; he staggered, dropping his knife as he did so.
âThen ask yourself why. Have the courage to look at yourself and see what you've become.'
Apart from a vivid mark on one cheek, his face was very pale and his mouth worked furiously.
âI'll have you hunted down and destroyed!'
âThat wouldn't change a thing! I've already arranged to have letters sent to friends in the North telling them exactly what you've been planning and how you've treated their own Anne Neville. Once they know that you've had me killed for speaking the truth, I imagine that they'll raise the North against you.'
Richard glared at me.
âYou wouldn't dare to do all these things!'
I bent down and picked up his dagger; his eyes widened for a moment in fear.
âI'm not going to kill you,' I reassured him, âalthough it would probably make life a lot easier for Henry Tudor. But believe me, Richard, I'm completely serious in all that I've said. Unless you swear, here and now, to give up this obscene plan to marry your niece, I'm leaving you. What's more, I'll use whatever skills I have to defeat you.'
His mouth tightened as we stared at each other; then slowly he moved to his seat by the fire and sat down. Watching his narrowed eyes and slow hand movements as he rotated his ring, it was obvious that he had not considered the possibility that I would desert him and was hastily calculating the threat that such a departure posed.
I guessed his immediate reaction would be to judge that I was bluffing. I was faithful Francis, after all, and had served him loyally all these years â surely I wouldn't really contemplate leaving? But then to his knowledge I had always completed everything I had set out to achieve.
He had to consider how my defection would cause men to question their current loyalties to him. Possibly he thought he could accommodate my loss to him as a soldier as he thought there would be other men to take my place. But were they up to my standard?
Also the king had to consider the threat from the North. Catesby might have assured Richard that everyone in that part of the country would ultimately accept the marriage to his niece for the sake of peace and stability, but the king knew that I knew the fighting men there better than Catesby. Equally, if it came to a test of honesty, Richard would believe me rather than his other advisors.
âSo what happened to your famous loyalty?' Richard mocked me bitterly. âFaithful Francis, the king's own dogge!'
âYou should be grateful that I showed you enough loyalty to come here tonight. At least I proved sufficiently faithful to come and tell you that what you're planning is wrong.'
âYou came here to threaten and blackmail me!'
I was beginning to grow angry.
âOnly because I'm not prepared to just sit by while you let yourself be manipulated and used for the benefit of others!'
âI'm not being used!'
I bent down and hauled him to his feet.
âCome on, Richard; all your life you've been used by others â sometimes it even suited you! It benefited both King Edward and yourself that you made a success of the North; then it suited both you and Anne Neville to marry. Although I grant you that her manipulation of you in the North was for your own benefit as well as her own.'
He struggled furiously in my grip, but I ignored him.
âBut what happened after the North, Richard? Whose idea was it for you to become king? Your wife's, I believe. Now why should that be?'
Furiously he tried to move his arms, so I tightened my grip.
âIt was to prevent civil war!' He gasped.
I bent my face to him.
âAre you sure?' I asked cynically. Yes, I agree that is what we all believed at the time, but do you know I have recently come to wonder if that was truly the case.'
I glanced down sadly at his white face.
âYou see, with the benefit of hindsight, I have started to think that perhaps you becoming king owed far more to Anne Neville's ambition than the true needs of England at the time. Possibly, just possibly, she saw the opportunity when King Edward died and used you, along with the rest of us, to take advantage of the situation.'
He opened his mouth to speak, but I was determined to make him see sense.
âThen think of all the others who have used you. Buckingham, Northumberland and Norfolk all supported you to become king because they all stood to gain personally, not because they believed in you. They used you as Catesby has.'
âThe princes were killed to prevent civil war.'
âAnd more recently the Woodvilles have done the same.'
âThe proposed marriage will make the country secure!' he protested.
I pushed him back into his chair in disgust.
âYou're just repeating what you've been told!' I said contemptuously. âTry thinking for yourself for a change! Doesn't common sense tell you that civil wars are avoided and peace and tranquillity gained through good leadership, not infanticide and incest? Can't you see how the Woodvilles are using Catesby, who's misleading you for his own advantage?'
He sat in silence studying the flickering fire. He made no movement, nor for once did he play with his rings. He simply sat and gazed into the flames. In the half light, he looked a solitary figure and, for all his jewels and rich apparel, a strangely vulnerable one. For a moment, I thought to cushion the harshness of my words with a comforting phrase; in my frankness, I must have hurt him. But then I hardened my heart as matters were too far advanced now. Either Richard faced up to the truth or I could no longer serve him.