Read The Uncrowned Queen Online
Authors: Posie Graeme-Evans
Once free of the city, Brother Agonistes closed his eyes with confidence; prayer might warm his freezing fingers as he told off the beads on his rosary. As if to reassure him, the little donkey moved tirelessly ahead, along the road beside the river, its neat hooves clicking on the last stretch of cobbled roadway before the path reverted to winter-frozen mud.
They had a long, long way to go together.
At last they could see
the battlements and towers in the distance and each man in the cold and hungry party allowed anticipation to create the mirage of a good meal and a warm bed. Perhaps there was even a willing woman in that bed as well. They picked up pace as fresh energy flowed into weary, freezing feet.
“So, Brugge it is for all of us, master mariner. Perhaps you'll find news there of your wife.”
Leif paused for a moment, leaning on his long staff. Could he
face this? What if there was no news of Anne? “I hope so, de Plassy. My wife has many friends in the city. As do I.”
The Frenchman turned to his companions and winked. “My friend, I am certain you do, married or not. And now, my boys, if we hurry, we'll be within those walls long before last light. Plenty of time to find new friends and playmates. Brugge has always been kind to such as us.”
It was the best thing the men had heard since the scrape of the key in their prison-cell door, and they were all for it. Whoops and cheering swept the group in around a long bend in the road, and they saw the great gate of the Kruispoort in the distance.
Leif let them stride ahead for a moment as he pulled his hood down over his eyes. The mercenaries had become his friends and companions and were chattering happily as girls, despite the sleet driving into their faces. He trudged on to catch the party up, falling in beside Julian de Plassy. The Frenchman pointed into the distance.
“Here's an encouraging prospect to put a little coin money in our pockets, captain. Just what we need.”
Coming toward them on the path was a skinny monk riding a donkey. He was wrapped to the eyes in a stained cloak and his head nodded in time with the short gait of his little mount.
Leif laughed. “Ever the optimist, de Plassy. Why would you bother to rob a monk?”
The Frenchman narrowed his eyes. “Ah well, they all lie, you know, clergy. They're rich, every single one of them. They pretend to be the opposite just to fool us. See, this one has a saddlebag. A nice, fat new one.” At that moment, distantly, the noise of drums banged out from the city, and many voices rose together, cheering.
De Plassy raised his eyebrows at the Dane. “So⦠a little conversation starter for our new friend.”
The Frenchman strode ahead of the group and planted himself in the path of the donkey. Haltingly, he spoke with the little Flemish he had. “Your blessing, Brother. Today's festivitiesâwhat do they honor?”
The donkey balked and stopped. The monk's eyes opened as
he stopped telling his beads. He scowled at the sight of the men crowding the path in front of him. “I do not speak your language, sir.” Unwittingly, he replied in English. Brother Agonistes's frown deepened; it was an odd thing to do after speaking and thinking in French for so many years.
Leif was also perplexed that this emaciated and filthy manâno doubt extra holy because of such privationsâspoke English. He called out, “I speak English, Father. Can you tell us what festival is taking place today in Brugge?”
The monk crossed himself before hawking phlegm and spitting. He just missed the seaman's boots. “No honest celebration, certainly, though it is Saint Stephen's day. The former king of the English has come to Brugge to see the duke. That is all I know. Let me pass.”
Julian de Plassy smiled. “Edward Plantagenet? Is that who you mean?” He exchanged a delighted glance with Leif.
The monk sniffed. “Yes. His evil deeds are his undoing, as all men will now soon see.”
The Frenchman signaled for his men to back away from around the donkey. Brugge was suddenly as precious as Jerusalem for what it contained, and far, far nearer. He would free the monk who had given them this good news.
Agonistes spoke up angrily, to mask fear. “Yes! Clear my path. I am about God's work. For the salvation of your blackened souls, do not think to delay me.”
Julian bowed. “Do not be fearful, honored Father. We respect men of the cloth as we do our own mothers.”
He uttered the airy lie without shame and Leif coughed to avoid laughing. De Plassy's men stepped back smartly from the crown of the road to allow the monk on his way. Agonistes kicked the donkey in its flanks and the bony little animal lurched into its customary trot. Leif Molnar and Julian de Plassy wasted few moments watching the monk on his way. They strode out together toward the distant city, setting a brisk pace for their followers.
“Our luck is turning, my friend, I am certain of it. I must remind the English king of the service my men performed for him. He will be gratefulâif one can ever count on the gratitude of
kings.” He glanced at Leif. The Dane was gazing at the city also, but his face was somber. “Do not despair, Leif. Have courage. I feel your wife waits for you, somewhere very close. Believe me, when these feelings come to me, they are never wrong.”
Leif smiled but said nothing, and swung on down the road at a steady pace. His “wife.” If Edward was in the city, was she with him⦠or was she dead?
Anne needed a wash and to sleep, but she needed information even more.
By the light through one high window, she could tell that a night and a day and some of another night had passed, but with the exception of food she'd been given nothing else. Certainly no news, though she'd tried hard to get the guard to talk to her.
He was young, her guard, little more than a boy, but his fear was plain when he brought coarse bread and a porridge of barley and flaked stock-fish to his prisoner. He'd never met with a witch before and when Anne tried to thank him, the youth backed away, silently crossing himself as if the Devil himself had addressed him personally. Anne would have laughed at the memory, except it made her anxious. How could anyone look at her, a girl with tangled hair and, no doubt, a dirty face, wearing a slept-in dress, and think she was a servant of darkness? Surely selling your soul to the Devil should guarantee cleaner clothes, for a start!
Anne paced up and down, skirts swishing. It was time she took a hand in her own fate, instead of waiting for help that might not come. That thought squeezed her heart, but she banished it. She would not allow panic to cloud her judgment. It was just a matter of time. To calm herself she recited, almost like a prayer, the things she knew. Margaret and Charles of Burgundy were her friends, and she was in their castle. Margaret had gone to get help. Margaret
would not desert herâshe was certain of that fact. It was just taking a little longer than they'd both thought.
Also, Edward was somewhere in the city even now; she'd heard the clamor of the bells this morning at his entry. She'd tried to climb up to the one high window to see the procession, but even by putting the stool onto the seat of the cathedra and balancing on the very ends of her toes, it had been impossible to see out. But Edward would know of her situation by now. And Edward loved her. Yes, certainly, he would know where she was and was just waiting for the right time toâ¦
She might be an optimist, but there was another voice in Anne's head also, a companion born of fear and lack of sleep that she tried to ignore, tried not to hear. He won't come, said that voice. He's had what he needs of you. Once he's with Charles, and making plans, why would he bother what happens to you or your son? He's forgotten you already. Why wouldn't he? He's got a proper, legitimate boy of his own now, a real princeâ
“No!”
The guard outside heard the girl shouting in the empty room. It gave him the creeps. Was she raising spirits in there, yelling like that? Unwillingly, he stepped a little closer to listen, but her voice had sunk to a whisper. What was she saying now?
“He'll come. He'll come. You'll see.” Tears choked Anne's throat. “And I'll see you soon, too, my baby. Very soon⦔
Women are such foolish creatures
, said the voice in her head.
Hoping, believing, where a man would have courage enough to face the truth. You have been deserted and will die here, Anne de Bohun. Alone. Duke Charles knows everything; he has prevented Margaret from coming back to you because she's told him about the death of the bishop. He's sent her away, to a convent, just as Odo said he would. And Agonistes is, even now, dropping poison for all to hear. Listen carefully. Can you hear? They are building your pyre in the Markt Square. The king of England and the duke of Burgundy must support the burning of witches. That is their duty
.
“No! Get away from me. I will not hear you. I will not die here. They will never burn my body!”
The guard clapped his hands over his ears and marched away
to the end of the passage, the farthest point of his post. He would not listen to the witch's ravings any further. He was too frightened of who she was talking to.
Anne, in her cell, ran to the door and pounded upon the bare, unyielding wood. She had to have news! “Guard! I must speak with the duchess.”
But the guard was reciting the Pater Noster, fingers stuffed in his ears.
“I know you're still there. I can hear you!” Anne shouted the words, but then she broke. “Answer me! Oh, please answer me. Have pity.” Anne slid down to the floor of her cell. Her prison was in an old and remote part of the palace, high up beneath the battlements. Did they mean to keep her here until she went mad, or died? Was that what the future held? Was that better than burning?
Tears fell before she could stop them. “Deborah. Can you see me? I can see you. And my baby. My little boy. Mummy's watching over you, my darling. I'll be home soon⦔
You'll never go home⦠your cause is lost and you are abandoned. You'll never, ever see them again in this lifeâ¦
And there, on the floor of her cell, terrified and alone, Anne cried herself to sleep like a child lost in the night.
The feast of welcome in the Prinsenhof finished very late and it was long after midnight before the king, Richard, and William Hastings returned to their opulent lodgings: the town palace of the sieur de Gruuthuse. Tomorrow would bring another long day of meetings, discussions, and wrangling, but at least real negotiations between Duke Charles and the English had begun.
It was there, in a luxurious suite of rooms on the second floor of Louis's mansion beside the substantial Onze-Lieve-Vrouwekerkâsuch a handsome church with its recently completed Gate of Paradise portalâthat Edward Plantagenet and his brother closed the door upon the world.
Their host had supplied his guests with fashionable new clothes to wear to the evening's entertainment, however, the brothers had rejected the offer of servants to help them undress on their return. Now was the first moment they'd had to themselves since their ceremonial entrance into the city that morning.
“Thanks be to all the gods that are, brother. We're alone!” Richard tore at the many tiny gold buttons of his tight court jerkin. His belly was distended from rich food and too much wine after many Spartan weeks. He felt bilious, but welcomed that unfamiliar feeling back into his life; it was a positive sign.
“Hush!” Edward flashed a glance at his brother. Kicking off his soft dress boots, he strode barefoot to the door and listened, even
dropped his eye to the large keyhole. Richard giggled at the sight. The giggles ended in hiccups.
“What do youâ¦
hic
⦠want to do now?
Hic
. Sorry.”
He looked so penitent that Edward strode back across the room, smiling, and ruffled Richard's hair. It was easy to forget just how young the duke actually was. “Do? Nothing, until this house is properly asleep. I can still hear movement on the other side of the door.”