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The Silver Bride by Isolde Martyn (13)

Chapter 13

‘No lusty comets at his Highness’s passing. You would think we should have seen some portent,’ mused Miles, a widower still, passing Harry the calendar, as the duke’s close councillors swiftly reassembled in Harry’s chamber. Rhys ap Thomas was with them (it would have been difficult to deny him) and Myfannwy, unwed and quivering-lipped, was being soothed by Cat and Lady Haute. The marriage could wait.

‘Ha! Why bother with a dead king when we may concern ourselves with the new one?’ retorted the duke.

‘Lord Hastings writes that the queen is sending two thousand men to fetch her son from Ludlow,’ Miles read the letter through again. ‘We ought to swell the retinue.’

It was difficult to stay calm. At last, his dream of high office might come true. Hastings was asking for Harry’s help against the queen.

‘Should you not see which way the winds of power blow?’ ap Thomas suggested. ‘I am told, see, that Gloucester has little liking for the queen and her kinsmen.’

‘Exactly,’ the duke chuckled, ‘there could be rich pickings.’

Yes, thought Miles, and if the queen and Gloucester could be encouraged to destroy each other, the House of Lancaster might rise again and Harry claim the throne.

‘Here, Miles.’ With a scatter of sand across his broad scrawl, the duke folded and sealed his letter. ‘I am sending a pledge of support to my Cousin Gloucester,’ he informed the others, swiftly grinding his signet into the soft wax. ‘Pershall shall ride with you, Miles, in case of mishap, and take this too.’ He tugged off a smaller ring. ‘Convince Gloucester of my loyalty. Convince him that he is in mortal danger if the Woodvilles seize the kingdom. Tell him to bring an army – where is that map again? Tell him I shall meet him at … at Northampton.’

*

Crossing the bailey was dangerous with horses being led out and couriers mounting, and Miles, fastening his sword belt across his riding doublet, nearly collided with Heloise. She had Ned in her arms, watching the preparations, but no doubt lying in wait for him. Well, he was not rid of her yet but …

‘Is it so certain the king is dead?’ she exclaimed, hastening after him. ‘What did the letter say?’

‘Infection of the lungs. From fishing, I believe. And now we have a child for king!’

‘Huzzah!’ Ned flung his arms up.

‘Exactly,’ muttered Miles, with feeling. ‘Enjoy the reprieve, madam.’ He caught the reins of the posthorse from his groom, sprang into the saddle and slid his feet into the leather messenger guards. ‘I am for Yorkshire to my lord of Gloucester.’ He could have said more but there was no privacy.

‘Sir—’ Heloise longed to beg him to bear her love to Dionysia and Lady Margery but there were greater matters for him to deal with. ‘Go safely,’ she said, a wife’s concern tender in her voice.

‘I pray so! We may well be on the verge of war. God keep you, my little lord, and you, too, my lady! Stand aside!’ And he spurred the posthorse through the gate.

*

At Middleham in Wensleydale, Miles, with a three-day beard untidying his chin and his eyes gritty from weariness, knelt before the Duke of Gloucester. His grace, sombre in mourning, his sorrow for his much-loved brother writ large upon his face, read Harry’s letter with stern concentration; perhaps the promise of alliance was unlooked for; the two dukes had always been polite to one another but never close.

‘My lord suggests you bring as many men as you can hastily array, your grace, and meet with him at Northampton to escort the Prince of Wales to London.’

The ivory complexion of Duke Richard creased, displeased. ‘Holy Paul! I trust my cousin of Buckingham is not suggesting I arrive with an army at my back to escort a twelve-year-old boy. That will seem a trifle aggressive!’

Miles was almost too tired to argue. ‘My lord, Lord Hastings wrote to his grace that the queen is sending two thousand Woodville retainers to escort the prince.’

‘And so he wrote to me.’ Golden-brown eyes, longer-lashed and warmer than Harry’s, examined him.

‘My lord, his grace of Buckingham believes that the queen intends to crown the prince with all speed and make herself the power in this land. He fears for your future and his own if she prevails.’ He held his breath as Gloucester arched an eyebrow at his henchmen.

‘Most considerate of your duke, Sir Miles,’ Frances, Lord Lovell folded his arms, ‘but how do we know this is not some enticement to lure his grace of Gloucester into danger? After all, Buckingham is brother-in-law to the queen.’

Miles turned his dusty face again to the duke and stood up at his bidding. ‘I think you know my lord’s mind where the queen is concerned, your grace. He has no love for her or any of her kin. He is willing to support you as Lord Protector in whatever path you take.’

‘Harry’s message is timely, thanks to you, for we were about to leave early tomorrow.’ Gloucester’s coppery red-brown head bent consideringly over the letter again before he looked up at Miles. ‘However, Sir Miles, it seems to me that making good speed is better than delaying to gather a larger force, and I trust we go to welcome a king, not to make war. But, given these uncertain times, your master’s warning is accepted right gladly. I shall send a fresh messenger posthaste to tell him so. Ride with us south tomorrow, Sir Miles, if it pleases you.’

Like a chance to spend eternity in Hell! Miles bowed his willingness, but all he wanted was anywhere horizontal where he might sleep and sleep.

*

‘Sir Miles Rushden?’ A noble lady intercepted him as he followed the steward across the great hall. Maybe she thought him befuddled for he was scarcely able to confront the wide blue gaze, and he disliked the sense that he was being weighed in her balance.

‘I am Margery, Lady Huddleston, sir, half-sister to the duchess. Her grace craves forgiveness for her curiosity but she believes she may be acquainted with your wife and desires news of her.’

His tired mind was neither into careful phrases nor did his clouded sight focus on the female blur of yellow hair and gauzy veil hovering behind her. ‘Madam, I crave her grace’s pardon. I have no wife. I am … betrothed to a Welsh demoiselle.’

The lady frowned, drew breath to make some comment, then changed her mind. ‘There must be some mistake then. Goodnight to you, sir,’ she replied coldly and drew the younger girl with her.

For some reason he was too tired to fathom, his answer had not pleased Lady Huddleston. Nor, when it came to the truth, did it entirely please him.

*

Northampton, which stank of tanned leather on a still day, boasted smithies, horsedealers, wheelwrights and alehouses of sufficient standard to please the fussy traveller. For a Tuesday afternoon – and such a modest town, decided Miles, as he rode in through North Gate in Gloucester’s retinue – there was an excessive amount of horse dung being cleaned up from the road. Evidence of the new king’s arrival? If so, why were there only townsfolk to greet them?

Yes, gasped the mayor, panting as he headed the crowd of welcome on the steps of the Queen Eleanor Cross. The prince had passed through Northampton with Lord Rivers, and, yes, their retinue had filled the entire main street before departing for Stony Stratford, some fourteen miles ahead.

So the Woodvilles had not bothered to wait for Gloucester as promised. Fourteen miles! Miles groaned at the thought but Duke Richard, too, was weary. He sent a messenger to Stony Stratford to advise of his arrival and, with a mutter to Miles, that he hoped Buckingham was still of the same mind, dug himself in at the cleanest inn.

And where was Harry? worried Miles, downing a jack of ale outside my lord of Gloucester’s lodging. Surely Harry had not broken his word and gone on to Stony Stratford with the prince? The aldermen, hanging around Gloucester’s hostelry like dogs waiting for a she-dog on heat, were not much help. There had been so many pennons earlier, they told Miles apologetically.

His fellow travellers, Gloucester’s men, had suddenly developed short leashes on their tempers. It had been three days’ hard riding since Nottingham and before that, the long, pressured journey down from York with the road constantly beneath their smarting eyes. And it was not just saddlesores that made them terse; two thousand men loyal to the queen lay but an hour’s hard riding south and Buckingham and his retinue were inexplicably missing. Godsakes, thought Miles, more of this and he might end up manacled in the prison at the gate by nightfall.

It was not until after the town bells chimed two that a horseman in the Stafford livery was sighted and Miles with relief led Ralph Bannastre in to kneel at Gloucester’s boots. At last! His grace of Buckingham would be in Northampton by sunset. If Gloucester huffed a sigh of relief, it was not audible. Oh Christ, he does not trust us yet, thought Miles.

When Harry finally blessed Northampton with his coming, Miles had reason to be proud. It was not just the silken knots and collared swans aflutter on the sarsynett banners, and the company of some three hundred men in scarlet and black. It was because, astoundingly, and with a surge of ingenuity, Harry had Ned across his saddle before him. He presented the epitome of a friendly lord bringing his little son to meet the young king – certainly not with any treacherous thought of raising a sword against anyone, no, not at all! It was as good as rolling belly up.

With a flourish of sleeves and manly hugs, the two dukes greeted one another. The White Boar men whistled with relief. Miles was the one who tensed, pleasure and displeasure curdling as the child’s governess located him like a foraging bee.

Heloise, her saddle calluses hidden beneath a dusty riding kirtle, accosted her astonished, haggard husband at the rear of the crowded outer chamber with a blend of sparkle and caution. ‘I give you good day, sir.’ Her curtsey was knee-deep; his armoured bow was less than deferential. ‘The duke has brought Traveller for you and Myfannwy is all forgiveness and sends her greetings.’

‘Good God, madam,’ he answered honestly. ‘I thought I had seen the last of you.’

‘I can see you missed me.’ Her dry answer reached out to nettle him. ‘It was Ned’s insistence. Your duke thought it seemed like a good idea.’

‘I cannot think why.’ Rushden’s mouth held firm but his strained gaze was reasonably forgiving as he allowed her to isolate him. ‘Or maybe I can,’ he murmured, the steel in his eyes turning molten as he examined her for fingermarks and creasing. ‘Do reassure me that Harry has been too preoccupied,’ his gaze lingered on her breasts, ‘to press you into other duties.’ A double-layered concern, no doubt.

‘Oh, you still hold the key,’ she retorted, and caught her breath, the hot blood flushing her skin, ‘but – but I quit Brecknock by the skin of my teeth. After you left, I sent Martin to Hay so he might alert me when the real Lady Haute arrived there, you see. She had and he did, so it was fortunate that Ned threw a splendid tantrum.’

‘I see,’ lied Rushden, glancing round to make sure that they were still out of earshot. ‘Well, this is no place for you, believe me.’

‘Why, what are you up to, sir?’ she asked. ‘Improving Buckingham’s fortunes?’ The wicked serpents on his breast glinted at her murderously.

‘It is not a woman’s matter.’ He rubbed a hand across his weary forehead.

‘Is it not the queen’s,’ she retorted, and risked adding, ‘half of England is made up of women. Why should we not be interested in who rules u—’ But the loud jingle of harness outside distracted him.

‘Godsakes, changeling, not now,’ he muttered as the White Boar men’s hands hovered at their swordhilts. Jesu! Heloise would have asked for news of Middleham but the buzz around them had changed its timbre.

‘Sir!’ She was scared now, seeing the alert soldier in Rushden take control. His mouth thinned and he scanned the Stafford men, making swift contact with each.

‘For your own safety, Lady Haute,’ he said grimly, as de la Bere brought Ned to her, ‘just play at nursemaids and keep the boy from harm. The Woodvilles have double the men and the situation is delicate.’ Then he tensed like a drawn bow as a tall lord, fair and handsome despite his harvest years, clad in a brocade doublet worthy of an emperor, entered, looking utterly incongruous – an iridescent beetle surrounded by armoured ants – and proud of it.

‘Who on earth is that?’ she whispered, tiptoeing behind him to see better.

‘Lord Rivers! He must have come back from Stony Stratford to kiss hands or else … Bring Ned and be wary!’ Urgently taking her by the forearm, Rushden pushed through the throng to Buckingham’s side.

A Woodville! The queen and Duchess Catherine’s brother! Heloise sensed Buckingham’s hackles rising beneath his broad collar as the newcomer with an urbane laugh stretched out his arms to the two dukes, like a clever tumbler who had just landed on his feet. They did not applaud. An emerald of roseleaf proportion flashed on the cool hand that clasped Buckingham’s fingers and sea-green eyes smiled cleverly into Gloucester’s with a hard brilliance. For an instant, Heloise glimpsed misapprehension brush like a moth’s wings swiftly across the latter’s face. Was he wondering if Rivers and his brother-in-law, Buckingham, were dissembling allies out to disarm him with a main course of words and a dessert of daggers? Were they? But Buckingham set his heel upon any fuses by summoning Ned. The child made a bow to his maternal uncle, clearly disliking the scrutiny he was receiving.

The eldest Woodville sprawled himself across the chair they offered him, his grin lazy and apologetic. ‘Yes, yes, I know I arranged that we were to meet you both in Northampton, my lords, but there simply would not have been room for all our retinues, so we are just up the road at Stony Stratford. The prince and my other nephew, Grey, send you their greetings and are looking forward to meeting with you both tomorrow et cetera.’ That done, Rivers flashed a shiny smile at Buckingham. ‘I hope Northampton does not hold too many ghosts for you, Harry?’

Buckingham for an instant missed the ball. Heloise did too, until she remembered Sir William explaining that Ned’s great-grandfather had been slain in a battle at Hardingstone Fields, outside the town, fighting against the Yorkists. Was Rivers being tactless? The unexpected verbal scratch after the handshake of courtesy drew its own ambiguous response:

‘No ghost that will bother me, Rivers. Loyalty to one’s king is nothing to be ashamed of, as you know well.’

Interesting, thought Heloise. Parry and thrust! She knew that Lord Rivers had supported the House of Lancaster until his sister became the Yorkist queen.

‘Shall we dine?’ said Gloucester diplomatically and there were uncertain glances and tactful hesitations among the retinues. Who would be dining with these great lords? Rushden, summoned by Buckingham’s nod, gave Heloise a reassuring glance.

‘You are better out of this.’ He tweaked Ned’s nose. It surprised all three of them. ‘Remember what I said,’ he admonished her.

‘Oh, I keep a commonplace book of your utterances, Sir Miles. Come, my Lord Stafford, let us leave these grown men to their games.’

*

After supper, listening to the sparkling confidence of Rivers, which put the less learned Buckingham and his quieter cousin in the shade, Miles wondered how, without the numbers, they could seize the initiative from this smooth courtier. He read the answer in Harry’s face, the hate nailed down like a coffin lid. Gloucester, in contrast, still mourned, his chin resting on his hand, watching the swirling depths of his wine as he moved the cup back and forth, making wet circles on the wood. Fatigue hovered in the dusky shadows about his eyes and his chestnut hair looked lank in the candlelight.

‘I heard a good story the other day,’ Rivers was saying. ‘There was a man who heard that his wife had drowned in the nearby river. He set out to search for her body. “Why are you walking upstream?” asked his neighbours. “Surely you know that the body will be carried downstream by the current?” The man answered, “Of course, I know that, but when my wife was alive, she always acted contrary to my wishes. That is why I am looking upstream. Even though she’s dead, she probably is doing the opposite of what she should.”’

‘What are the arrangements for the morning?’ asked Harry, letting the laughter lapse, and instantly every man present held his breath for Rivers’s answer.

‘I suggest the three of us shall ride together to Stony Stratford. I have told them to expect us around noon if that suits you, my lords?’

‘And how is the prince?’

‘The king,’ corrected Rivers loftily as if he were issuing an official proclamation, ‘has a nagging tooth and is not accustomed to so much travelling, but is looking forward to seeing his mother and the rest of his family again. One does wish the weather was better. I do not like the look of the sky tonight.’

‘Poor little prince,’ Harry laughed. ‘Three uncles bearing down on him.’

‘There must be a word for it. I really ought to be able to think of something.’ Rivers snapped his fingers, ‘Ah, I have it, a triangle of uncles.’ With that he rose and bowed to Gloucester. ‘Would you be offended if I leave you now? I simply must go to bed. What with travelling and the king’s grace so full of questions – only to be expected, I dare say, but one feels one must answer them – and it does wear one out.’

Gloucester pushed back his chair to escort him out; Miles’s duke did not rise.

‘Goodnight, Harry,’ Rivers said pointedly before he ducked beneath the lintel. Buckingham raised his winecup in valediction.

‘What o’clock is it?’ asked Gloucester, returning to the room.

‘Almost nine,’ replied Sir Richard Ratcliffe, rising unbidden to refill his master’s cup but the duke spread a hand over the rim.

‘Rivers has left me with a gift. Let us see what it is.’

Lord Lovell slid a leather-wrapped parcel from its travelling box out onto the board. Miles stood up with the others and went to look over his lord’s shoulder. A printed book – still a rarity – manufactured by Caxton under the Red Pale in the precincts of Westminster Palace. Lovell undid the fastenings and opened the embossed leather cover. Rivers’s personal translation of The Dictes and Sayings of Philosophers.

‘Generous,’ sighed Gloucester wearily and Miles could see that, although he valued the book, there was pain in the acceptance of it.

‘A very learned man, your grace,’ Miles remarked, narrowing his eyes urgently at Harry. There had to be some strategy for the morrow and his duke needed to be part of it, not a passive witness.

Harry brought the grit to the surface. ‘There is a matter I should like to discuss with you, cousin, but perhaps it should wait until morning.’

Gloucester was gazing into the tired embers, his foot resting upon the andirons of the hearth. ‘I have no inclination to go to bed yet. I would not sleep anyway.’ Perceptively, he dismissed all of his henchmen save Lord Lovell, and glanced questioningly at his cousin. Harry nodded to Miles and Knyvett to remain.

And so at last.

Harry’s fingers brushed against the pigskin bookbox as if it might help him find the phrases. ‘Cousin, I did not come laden with costly books, but only – only words of another nature – promises.’ He timed the pause and added a caveat, ‘But I need to discover what you believe of me. You may have always thought that I was one of the Woodville faction. I never have been.’ A pensive finger stroked the grained oak. ‘When I was a boy at Westminster, they never lost an opportunity to humiliate me.’

‘You do not have to go through this.’ Gloucester glanced at Miles, who had set a comforting hand upon his lord’s shoulder.

‘No, cousin, there are things that have to be said now.’ Harry’s blue eyes rose, seeking absolution. ‘You have not seen me since your brother Clarence’s trial. I want you to know that although I had to pass judgment on him, it was not my wish to deal out such a verdict. The Woodvilles wanted him dead.’

The skin of Gloucester’s smile was taut as he moved back to the board, and emptied the jug into Harry’s goblet. It was some moments before he spoke. ‘It was the king’s doing as much as the queen’s.’ He took a sip from the goblet and watched his kinsman thoughtfully over the rim.

‘There is more. Your brother never gave me the opportunity to serve him. I want you to know that I am prepared to work tirelessly on your behalf if you will give me the chance.’ Harry put it so well, a blend of humility and plea that twisted compassion into Gloucester’s lips.

‘Yes, you deserved better, Harry. I do not think my brother treated you fairly.’

‘I want my rights, cousin. I have waited long enough.’

‘You might achieve more by offering the kiss of peace to your wife’s family.’

Harry rose, finally taking the risk of dwarfing the shorter man. ‘You know the tale about my marriage. I was ten years old when I spoke out against them, and not one of the Woodvilles ever forgave me for it.’

‘Even Rivers?’

‘Even him,’ Harry exclaimed bitterly. ‘You saw how condescending he was to me.’

Gloucester rubbed a hand across his chin where a dark shadow of stubble was beginning and at last came to the business between them. ‘By Holy Paul, he took a risk riding back to make merry with us. He must be feeling confident. Why is he feeling so confident?’

‘He wants to rule England with the queen,’ Harry replied curtly.

‘Must you be right, cousin? He is more brilliant than the others. There is a quality about him …’ Miles saw that Gloucester was probing.

‘Oh come, cousin.’ Miles’s duke sidestepped the snare. ‘Let us not delude ourselves. He is as grasping as the rest. Why, he is virtually master of Wales.’

‘That hurts?’ asked Gloucester unkindly.

It was then Harry forgot all the lessons, the advice that Miles and Knyvett had crammed into him, for he slammed his cup down and swung full face upon Richard of Gloucester. ‘Listen, I do not know how much convincing you need, but in my opinion unless you act the soldier tomorrow, you and I shall be caught in a snare like a pair of helpless rabbits. The times are hurly-burly. You are going to have to fight for survival, cousin. If the queen crowns the prince within the month, you will not make old bones and neither will your son.’

Miles saw mischief flicker in his grace of Gloucester’s eyes and Harry let out a sigh, realising belatedly that the other duke had already thought it all out.

‘I am tired,’ Richard Plantagenet said, rubbing the heels of his hands against his high forehead. ‘Yes, of course, I have to act soon, but it must be just. I must not appear the aggressor or I shall lose the support of the Royal Council. Do not look so disappointed, all of you. You must understand that to be ratified and remain as Lord Protector, I need men like Suffolk and Howard behind me too. You will see. It is not so easy.’ He paced to the window and glanced through the shutters. ‘I have to have a good reason to arrest Rivers.’

At last Miles was at the throat of history, listening to the Lord Protector discussing arresting the queen’s brother in such a matter-of-fact way. Oh excellent! And at last Harry had found a strong ally and all Miles’s own plans to edge his lord into the council chamber at Westminster were coming to fruition.

Harry’s tail was wagging. ‘Arrest him? What, tonight, while he has so few men with him?’ and then he blanched, along with the rest, as they heard the sound of hooves in the yard outside.

‘God ha’ mercy,’ exclaimed Lovell, his right hand going to the handle of his sword. Only Gloucester, peering out the chink in the windowboards, was calm.

‘Perhaps I have my reason,’ he said grimly, moving across to open the door. His henchman, Ratcliffe, thrust back the curtain and a weary horseman followed him in. ‘Cousin, this is Sir Richard Huddleston, banneret, husband to my lady’s sister.’ He bade the knight abandon courtesies and sit. Lovell passed him a cup of ale. The newcomer drank thirstily and wiped his thin lips with the back of his hand.

‘It is as you thought, my lord. The young king’s men are all packed up for an early start with orders to leave at daybreak. Word is they plan to have the boy crowned straightway in London and prevent you becoming Lord Protector.’

‘And numbers, Richard?’ asked Gloucester. That was the crux.

‘Sir Richard Grey has brought a large force from London. Far greater than ours but by how much we could not tell in the darkness.’

Miles turned exultantly to his lord. ‘Now the wind blows cold.’

Gloucester thrust his fist against his palm and swung round on Ratcliffe. ‘Dick, set a cordon about Lord Rivers’s inn and make sure it is done quietly. I do not want him to suspect anything tonight. No one is to leave. At any sign of movement within there, wake me, whatever the hour. Are you happy to leave this to me, Harry?’ Buckingham nodded and Miles knew a sense of relief. If matters went awry, Buckingham’s men might wriggle out from beneath the mêlée with their political virginity intact. ‘So be it.’ Pleased, Gloucester turned to Lovell. ‘Post guards on every road and footpath out of Northampton. Not one of Rivers’s men must have a chance to warn Grey.’ His hand fell on the seated man’s shoulder. ‘Richard Huddleston, to bed with you!’ Then he gave his hand to Harry, Miles and Knyvett in turn. ‘Good night to you all. We need to rise early to be at Stony Stratford before light.’

The walk back to their inn and the sharp smell of danger in the smoky air cleared Miles’s head of wine. Harry was seething with excitement; if the street had not been as quiet as a tomb, he might have whooped.

‘We still need to be careful.’ Miles tried to poker the enthusiasm.

Knyvett grunted assent, adding, ‘You know what I would do, Harry. Take Ned with you tomorrow. That way if things go amiss at Stony Stratford, you have some cover of good will if Grey orders your arrest. Let Gloucester take the blame.’

‘That is good advice. Wake Lady Haute now, and warn her.’

‘Pah, not I!’ Knyvett answered. ‘Had too much plaguey wine to tiptoe. Don’t want to wake the town, do I? Might alert old Rivers.’

Which was how Miles found himself creeping upstairs like an unfaithful husband. Benet was snoring loud as a hog across the doorway. A poor watchdog! Miles leaned across without waking him and lifted the latch quietly.

Heloise lay fast asleep with the boy curled at her back, their heads silver and gold upon the pillow. No sadness rose in Miles as he stood lonely in the darkness, only the thought that should Heloise have a son, he might one day lie against her back just so like a squirrel kitten. And if their marriage had been otherwise, that son would be his. Gently, Miles stroked a fingertip lightly across her cheek and watched a slender arm free itself from the bedclothes. The glint of light on her eyes told him she had wakened.

He crouched, his fingers hushing her lips. ‘There is no panic. I have a message from his grace.’ She glanced over her shoulder crossly to see if he had woken Ned. ‘Heloise, listen. You are to have the boy ready to leave at two hours before dawn. Try to keep him as quiet as possible. We do not want the entire town to hear his tantrums. Sir William will come for you.’

‘If he must.’ With an oath, she carefully hoisted herself onto one elbow, brushing her hair back behind her ear, her face close enough to kiss. If he had hoped to see a silken shoulder bared, he was relieved by the undershift; there were enough decisions being made for one night. ‘Oh, I am so weary of travelling. Keeping him contented is no jest.’ It was awkward to draw the covers up across Ned’s tiny chest but she managed.

‘Weary! But, changeling, there is a Northampton coven meeting before lauds. If you are interested, we can share a bonfire. They are initiating the new cauldron.’

‘And you have been ladling from it already, I think. What o’clock is it now, sir?’

‘Midnight.’ The lady cursed him.

‘Ah, but I could entertain you until you rise. The bed is warmed and all the lice have already found you and …’

‘Enter—’ And then she realised he was jesting. ‘Away with you! Away before you lose your virtue, sir. If I said yes, you would—’

‘Run a mile? In the dark? Perhaps my virtue might be worth the sacrifice. You look extremely desirable.’

‘Go to!’ she chided softly, glancing at Ned again.

‘Whatever happens tomorrow, Heloise, take care of the child. Stay with him.’

‘You are being ambiguous, sir. What danger will there be?’

‘You have had no dreams then, lady? I am right glad of that.’ He wanted to peel back the sheet and look at her in the starlight – there might be no tomorrow. Only the child’s presence kept him sane. ‘If Rivers should take us all prisoner tomorrow, best to not tell anyone of our handfasting. The Woodvilles are greedy enough to attainder me and take Bramley into their own hands on such a pretext. And if any misfortune happens to me, and well it might, I … upon my soul, changeling, I want you to know I am sorry for the suffering your father and I have put you through, and I have written to my sire, urging him to let you take Bramley for a second dowry without dispute. It will help you find a husband by honest means.’

‘You have had too much wine.’ Warm fingers touched his forehead. ‘Thank you.’

His hand rose to waist her fragile wrist and hold it back. ‘I am not jesting.’ Then he raised her hand to his lips. ‘God keep you, lady.’