On the third day, we decided it was time to move on. We had covered most of the streets pretty well between us and in any case, I was anxious to start for home as the weather again seemed to be deteriorating. We were a little later setting forth than we had intended, and I noticed anxiously that the whole of the eastern sky appeared to be on fire, banks of grey cloud against the red which burned and smouldered as the sun rose. âRed sky in the morning, shepherd's warning,' my mother had often quoted to me when I was young, and frequently it had proved to be true. My companion appeared undeterred by these signs and portents, declaring himself firm in his resolve to get as far south as Bristol if he could.
As we approached the marketplace, wrapped warmly in our cloaks and hoods, we could hear the town crier's stentorian voice demanding our attention. We paused on the edge of the crowd that had gathered about him and so heard the first official confirmation of the rebellions that had broken out in the south-west and in Wales. But the news that sent me rocking back on my heels, that set my senses reeling, was the information that the Welsh uprising was being led by no less a person than the Duke of Buckingham himself.
Buckingham!
Henry Stafford, the one man who had done more than any other person to set the crown on his cousin Richard's head had turned against him, was even now raising his tenantry in rebellion against their lawfully crowned king.
As we left the town behind us and began to walk southwards, Oliver Tockney could barely contain his anger and bewilderment. What could possibly have provoked this act of betrayal and treachery from one on whom King Richard had heaped reward after reward for his loyalty and friendship? And when, on the second day, an itinerant ladies' tailor, whom we encountered sheltering in a barn during a heavy rainstorm, suggested that the duke's defection was because he had learned of the young princes' murder and was horrified by it, it took all my strength to prevent my travelling companion from attacking him with his knife.
âNever,' Oliver panted, picking himself up from the pile of hay where I had flung him and addressing the cowering tailor, âsay that to a Yorkshireman again! You may not be so fortunate next time to have someone to defend you. You'll be cut down like the lying bastard you are.'
âWell, it stands to reason â' the tailor was beginning hotly, but I signalled to him not to push his luck, so he subsided, muttering defiantly to himself, and took himself off as soon as the rain had eased.
âAnd good riddance to bad rubbish,' Oliver growled as we, too, made preparations to resume our journey. He eyed me severely as I humped my pack on to my back and took hold of my cudgel. âYou haven't passed an opinion, chapman. So what do you make of that idiot's slanderous theory?'
I grinned at him. âIf I said I thought there might be some truth in it, would you try to murder me, as well?'
He returned grin for grin. âNo, because I shouldn't believe you.' He followed me out into the rain and sleet, carefully closing the barn door behind him. âWould I be right?'
I staggered a little as a heavy gust of wind buffeted me and almost swept me off my feet.
âI think I've always distrusted Buckingham,' I said, raising my voice slightly to make myself heard above the storm. âI saw him back in the summer, riding along the Strand in King Richard's coronation procession, and he looked . . .' How had he looked? I struggled to recall the expression that had worried me. âHe looked,' I continued after a moment, âsullen. Resentful. Not like a man triumphing in the elevation of his kinsman and friend, knowing that he will be his right-hand man. I don't believe he ever envisaged Richard taking the crown. I think . . . I think he thought of the two of them, equal in importance, governing the young king. You see, he, too, is an uncle of young Edward, although only by marriage. Buckingham's wife is a Woodville, sister of . . .' I hesitated. How did one refer now to the former queen? â. . . the Lady Elizabeth.' I finished, before continuing. âI think, too, that the ease with which parliament and the nobility, both laymen and churchmen, accepted Duke Richard as king might have made him wonder if he couldn't have made a successful bid for the throne himself. As a direct descendant of one of Edward III's sons, he has a claim of sorts. Perhaps someone persuaded him . . .' I broke off as some words of the tinker's surfaced. âOf course!'
My companion grimaced as another gust of wind hit us in the face and tightened the strings of his hood. âOf course what?'
âThe king had placed the Bishop of Ely in Buckingham's charge, under house arrest. The tinker I told you about saw them at Gloucester and said that the duke was riding off to his Brecon estates, taking John Morton with him.'
âAnd this bishop? He's no friend of the king's?'
âA sworn enemy. Hates him. Richard is too straightforward for a man with such a tortuous mind.'
Oliver Tockney shrugged as well as he could with a pack on his back and a wet cloak clinging to his shoulders. âThat would seem to explain matters, then.'
âIt's possible,' I admitted cautiously. âIt's possible.'
After that, we let the subject drop, battling against the elements and each occupied with his own thoughts. I was growing increasingly worried at my failure to recognize any markers along the track we were following. No familiar wayside shrines, dwellings, churches, or ale-houses emerged from the veil of rain and mist to reassure me that we were on the road to Gloucester. And when Oliver and I finally stopped at a slate-roofed cottage â the first habitation we had encountered for some miles â to beg food and shelter for the night, and when the cottager addressed us in a strange language which I guessed to be Welsh, my heart sank. I knew without doubt that I had missed my way and instead of approaching Gloucester, we were travelling south on the Welsh side of the River Severn.
This fact was confirmed by the wife of our host who, providentially, turned out to be an Englishwoman.
âThen where, in the name of the Blessed Virgin, are we?' I demanded, struggling to rid myself of my sodden cloak and boots.
âAbout four miles north of Monmouth,' the goodwife answered, throwing more wood on the fire in an effort to heat up the pot of stew that hung above it. âOn foot, you should reach there by midday tomorrow. Perhaps sooner if you make an early start. Mind you,' she added, as the whole cottage was shaken by the wind, âthat depends on the weather. Never known anything like it in all the years we've lived here, have we, Huw?'
Her husband looked at her vaguely and she repeated the question in Welsh. Immediately, he broke into a spate of words, none of which Oliver and I could understand, accompanied by a wealth of gesticulation. The goodwife continued to stir the pot, not paying him a great deal of attention except to nod occasionally and grunt. When he eventually fell silent, she said, âHe blames it all on the English. Says we're a godless lot and that all the sins of the world are on our heads.' She laughed, a deep-throated, guttural sound. âDaresay he's right. What d'you think, gentlemen?'
We both joined in her laughter and agreed. As a race, we've never much cared what other people think of us: we imbibe the consciousness of our superiority with our mothers' milk. Foreigners down the centuries have upbraided us for our laziness, lack of personal cleanliness, inedible food and the unattractiveness of our habits in general, but we just raise two fingers and carry on our merry way. If anything, we rather relish the opprobrium.
A short time later, Oliver and I were warm, if not completely dry, and fed. In exchange for her hospitality, we regaled the goodwife with information about the outside world, although news of rebellion breaking out in other parts of Wales disturbed her. She said she wouldn't tell her husband as it was more than likely he'd want to go off and fight for Henry Tudor, something of which, as a loyal supporter of the House of York, she couldn't approve.
She herself was a Gloucester girl and I asked her if she knew a Juliette Gerrish.
A shake of the head preceded the fact that she hadn't lived in the city for many years. âAnd yet . . .' The goodwife paused, frowning. âNow you mention it, someone did pass this way a while back â a long while back â who mentioned her name. At least, I think that's what it was. I seem to have heard it before. Whoever it was said she'd had a child, but the talk was that it wasn't her husband's.'
âShe's no longer a widow, then?' I asked sharply.
Our hostess shook her head. âI wouldn't know. If she was once, she must have married again.' She regarded me curiously. âWhat's the lady to you?'
âNothing. Nothing at all,' I said, with just a little too much emphasis. âI met her a year or so back when I was working the Gloucester streets.' No need to say more than that. âA chance encounter, that's all. I just happened to remember her when you said you came from the city, but I didn't realize you'd been away from it so long.' I changed the subject abruptly and nodded at Oliver Tockney. âWe'll be off at first light, mistress. We'll retrace our steps to Gloucester and cross the Severn there. I hope we don't keep you and your goodman awake with our snoring.'
âIt won't bother us,' she answered, beginning to douse the fire. âWe sleep like logs. You'll find some old blankets and sacks and things in that chest over by the wall. You can see where our bed is. You're welcome to the other half of the room. And if you'll both look away while I take off my gown and shift, we shall get on tolerably well. We've no chamber pot, I'm afraid, so you'll just have to piss in the corner where the pile of straw is, or out of the door.'
The weather being what it was, we chose the straw, and half an hour later, in spite of the hardness of the cottage's beaten-earth floor, Oliver Tockney and I were both fast asleep.
W
e set out betimes the following morning â after a breakfast of oatmeal and warm ale provided by our hostess and watched in glum silence by our reluctant host â to retrace our path to Gloucester. We had not gone more than a mile or two, however, before we encountered a sour-faced cottager, driving his pig ahead of him.
He said something to us in Welsh.
Oliver and I both mimed our inability to understand him, whereupon he dropped into English with the ease that many borderers have. Most of them, of necessity, speak both languages. âI asked where you're bound for. Gloucester, is it?'
I nodded and he came to a halt, letting his pig wander off to rootle among the wayside bushes, their leaves still dripping from the previous night's storm. âYou won't make it then,' he announced lugubriously. âThere's a great tree uprooted not three or four furlongs up the track from here. It'll take a day or so before it's moved, I reckon. I was hoping to get my pig to Gloucester market and sell him. I need to buy provisions before the winter sets in. Just my luck! Now I've to leg it to Marstow to get help.' He glanced upwards, regarding the lowering sky, the full-bellied clouds pregnant with rain. âIf you've any sense, you'll turn around and head for Monmouth. Get under shelter before the next storm comes. Try again for Gloucester in a day or so. Maybe me and a few other boyos will have got the path cleared by then.'
âWhat about the sidetracks?' I asked, loath to abandon our journey and start in the opposite direction. The further south we went, the wider became the Severn and the more difficult its crossing.
âThe sidetracks!' The man was scathing. âThey're nothing but quagmires after all this rain. A lot of hamlets and settlements must be entirely cut off. I've been a countryman all my life and I tell you I've never experienced weather as bad as this. Rivers and streams are bursting their banks. It's like the Great Flood. If we'd any sense, we'd all be building arks.' With which, he hooked his pig out of the bushes with his long, curved stick and, cursing to himself, went on his way.
Oliver Tockney and I stood looking at one another.
âWhat do you reckon, then?' he said. âDo we take yon fellow's advice?'
âIt seems we don't have much choice,' I answered reluctantly. Heavy raindrops suddenly splattered the earth around our feet, sending up little fountains of mud. âIt seems as if it's starting up again.'
The Yorkshireman nodded and turned about. âWe'd better go back to the cottage and get directions and let the goodwife know about the tree.' He gave a sudden shout of laughter. âThe goodman will probably die of an apoplexy on seeing us again, just as he's heaving a sigh of relief at having rid himself of us.' We trudged in silence for a while, then Oliver asked curiously, âWho was this woman in Gloucester you were asking about? A friend of yours?'
âA woman I knew for a short period once. A woman I'd almost forgotten â certainly never expected to hear from again â but who suddenly resurfaced in my life earlier this year to make trouble for me.'
I sensed my companion's hesitation, but his curiosity got the better of his manners and the unwritten rule of the road that you don't enquire too closely into other travellers' affairs. âWhat sort of trouble?'
âShe claimed I was the father of her child.' The unspoken question fairly shouted at me. âNo, I was not,' I snapped. âWhat's more, at the time the child must have been conceived I was out of the country. First Scotland and then Paris.'
Fortunately for my patience and good manners, and for the sake of peace between us, this last piece of information drove all other questions from Oliver's mind. âYou've been to Paris?' he breathed. âParis? What's it like? Is it true that even the children speak French over there?'
âPerfectly true.'
Oliver furrowed his brow, and not just because a squall of wind and rain had buffeted him.
âBut how do they communicate with God and the saints, then? Everyone knows that God and the heavenly host all speak English.'