Here Be Dragons - 1
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148 She told Joanna of Henry's bitter quarrel with Thomas a Becket how Henry had sealed Becket's doom by crying out in a fit of rage, "Vtaj none rid me of this turbulent priest?" Told her the legend that the royai House of Plantagenet came from the Devil; told her, too, how her sons had laughed at their Angevin heritage, turning aside criticism with jest about the demon Countess of Black Fulk of Anjou. Some of her memories were tragic: her daughter Joanna's death ^ childbed at thirty-four; Richard's foolish and fatal bravery before the walls of Chalus. Others were fraught with menace: Eleanor's perilous journey from French territory into her own lands in Poitou after her divorce from Louis; two separate attempts had been made to ambush and abduct her, for landed women were often forced into marriage against their wills, and Eleanor was the greatest heiress in Christendom. And some of her stories were tales of horror, none more so than that of the massacre of the Jews the year before Joanna's birth: "Richard had forbidden all Jews to attend his coronation, but some wealthy merchants brought gifts to the banquet following. Members of his court, the worse for wine and having no liking for Jews even when sober, expelled them from the hall, and the citizens of London took this to mean all Jews in the city were fair game. Rioting broke out, the ghetto burned, and many died. Other cities were soon caught up in the same violence, as it swept like plague across the realm, but nowhere was the outbreak worse than in York. There the Jews had sought refuge in the castle keep, and when it appeared certain they'd be taken by the besieging mob, the men, women, and children trapped within, numbering in the hundreds, did kill themselves." Joanna, dutifully crossing herself, felt no real surprise; death seemed to follow her uncle Richard like a lover. The thought was not her own, of course, but had its seeds in a caustic comment once made by John, that Richard's lust was sated on the battlefield, not in the bedchamber. But in these weeks at Fontevrault, slowly another image of Richard was taking shape. Richard loomed large in his mother's memories. From Eleanor, Joanna learned that Richard, having to withdraw from the Holy Land, denied himself even a glimpse of Jerusalem from the heights of Nebi Samwil, saying, "Those not worthy to win the Holy City are not worthy to behold it." She learned of the celebrated exchange between Richard and Philip, the French King, over Richard's great fortress, Castie Gaillard, Philip boasting, "If its walls were made of solid iron, yet would I take them," and Richard's mocking rejoinder, "If its walls vvetf made of butter, yet would I hold them." Richard had indeed been2 great soldier, Joanna reluctantly acknowledged. But she did not under" stand why her grandmother should have preferred him above her othe'
249 Idren, and wished she could summon up the nerve to ask Eleanor h she spoke so often of Richard and so rarely of John W She never did, though, sensing that such a question would not be to . anor's liking As bedazzled as Joanna was by Eleanor, she was very ch in awe o^her, too, and uneasily aware of the fragile foothold she'd d m j^r grandmother's life There was indeed iridescent magic in Fleanor's spell, but no security Eleanor could be amusing, indulgent, tterly captivating She was also impatient, unpredictable, easily bored On any given evening, Joanna might find herself welcomed into Eleanor's presence with genuine pleasure, Eleanor would share confidences both intimate and adult in nature, tutor Joanna in the intriguing cornplexities of politics and statecraft, and at such moments Joanna knew happiness in full and abiding measure But on the morrow she might find her grandmother preoccupied, pensive, with no interest whatsoever in a child's companionship Joanna did not resent Eleanor's mercurial mood swings, her sense of self was too tenuous, too vulnerable, to allow for the indulgence of wounded pride She only tned all the harder to earn her grandmother's goodwill, and when she did not, she accepted the failing as her own On this particular night in late July, Eleanor was in markedly good spirits, relaxed and responsive to Joanna's eager queries about times long past and people long dead But as midnight approached, Joanna's energy began to ebb, she sought to stifle a yawn, was relieved when Eleanor said, "You'd best get to bed " Joanna rose obediently "May I go and light a candle first for the French Queen, Madame7" "If you wish " Joanna's impassioned partisanship for Philip's unfortunate Queen was a source of some amusement to Eleanor, but she was touched, too, suspecting that Joanna's pity for Ingeborg's plight could be traced to her own years of confinement, that it was the captive Eleanor whom Joanna was mourning as much as it was the hapless Ingeborg, whose luck had yet to change for the better Philip had held out against the Pope's Interdict for seven stubborn months, and then agreed to set aside his second wife, to recognize Ingeborg as his Queen But he d then confined her in Etampes Castle, and rumor had it she was not bemg treated kindly Joanna's sympathies went out to the Danish Princess, Queen of ranee in name only, being made to suffer for no sin of her own, and ed been lighting nightly candles on Ingeborg's behalf Now she astened back from St Magdalene's chapel, stripped, and crawled into he Pallet made up for her at the foot of her grandmother's bed Lights still burned, and the constant murmur of conversation Unded around her, Eleanor's ladies could not retire until she did But
350 Joanna had learned to block out background noises, and she fell at orc into a fitful sleep. Her dreams were troubled, reflecting the tenor of ^ waking hours. Eleanor had recently had a letter from John, in whi^ he'd told her that he'd broken Philip's siege of Radepont, just ten miles southeast of Rouen. But that was the only good news the letter held Isabelle's father, Aymer, Count of Angouleme, had died suddenly that past month, but John had not dared to risk her attendance at the funeralAngouleme bordered upon La Marche, and Hugh de Lusignan stil] nursed a bitter grudge over Isabelle's loss. Tossing and turning on the pallet, Joanna attracted the attention of the Abbess Matilda. Matilda was intrigued by her friend's unexpected rapport with Joanna; she'd never before known Eleanor to show more than the most perfunctory interest in children. It was, she decided, probably because Joanna was such a serious child. The questions she asked were invariably sensible, of the sort Eleanor had always encouraged in her own daughters; she had nothing but scorn for the prevailing viewpoint that women should abjure interest in such masculine concerns as power, policy, and tactics. Matilda was surprised, too, that Eleanor should suddenly evince a hitherto unexpressed interest in looking back, in dwelling upon yesterday; at last she attributed this to the twin crosses of age and illness, for Eleanor was not well, had not been well for months. Her spirit sti blazed so brightly that those around her did not always notice how frail the shell enclosing that spirit had become. Matilda did. For all that Eleanor was fiercely private about her ailments, Matilda saw with sorrowing eyes how easily she tired in this summer of her eighth decade, how she'd begun to lean upon a companion's arm when walking, to place a hand over her breast as if willing away the heart palpitations she'd not acknowledge. And as Matilda watched on recent evenings as Eleanor pieced together her past with the gossamer strands of memory while Joanna listened, intent and enthralled, she found herself wondering if Eleanor was not reaching out to right a wrong, seeing in this hazel-eyed, dark-haired granddaughter the son she'd never loved. This was sheer speculation, she knew; Eleanor was the least fanciful of women, little given to regrets. The thought lingered nonetheless, and she laughed soundlessly now, envisioning what Eleanor's reaction would be should she be so foolish as to confess what she suspected. Joanna sighed, mumbled something unintelligible, and Matilda stooped, touched her hand to the sleeping child's forehead. "She doe5 not feel feverish, but her sleep is not a restful one." Eleanor sat down on the bed. "She fears for her father." "As well she might, poor lass. She's utterly devoted to him." Eleanor looked up at that. "Need you sound so surprised?" she saW
151 "Or think you, as do John's enemies, that he is incapable of lovSr being loved?" "No, Madame, indeed not. I would not presume upon our friendto speak ill of your son. But I must admit to being troubled by some 5, £s acts, such as how infrequently he does partake of the Holy Sacraments." "That is rash of him, I agree, and I daresay he'll pay a high price for it-" "I would hope, Madame, that he will repent in time; God f
orbid that he should go unshriven to his Maker," the Abbess said with fervor, and Eleanor gave her a thin, ironic smile. "Indeed. But I was not thinking of his immortal soul, Matilda. I was thinking that history is chronicled by monks." Joanna had begun to whimper in her sleep, and Eleanor leaned over, shook the girl's shoulder. Joanna awoke with a gasp, eyes wide and staring. She had been dreaming of her father, abandoned and alone before Philip and Arthur, but she was reluctant to admit it; it seemed somehow disloyal to John, almost as if she'd be revealing his own fears. She hesitated, and then turned aside Eleanor's query with the first lie to come to mind. "Yes, a bad dream ... of Ingeborg." "You must not dwell upon her, Joanna. Hers is a sad fate, yes, but common to women of rank. Would you pity the swan that ends up swimming in gravy upon your father's table? Well, princesses, too, are bred to be sacrificed, as pawns in the marital game. That is just the way of it. Be grateful, rather, that you were spared such a fate, that you need not fear a foreign marriage in a far-off land. Unless, of course, you do yearn for a crown ..." Eleanor smiled, shrewdly certain that Joanna did not. Joanna had long been thankful that her tainted birth so severely reduced her value on the marriage market; her ambitions rose no higher than a manor and children of her own, a husband of respectable rank, ideally a knight of her father's household, so that they might be often at court. "No, I would not want a crown, Madame. I would that Papa had not one, either, would that he were still Count of Mortain. Mayhap then he'd be safe . . ." She was hoping for some sort of assurance from her grandmother, an expression of faith that all would go well for John. But Eleanor was turning away, frowning at the woman standing in the antechamber doorway. "Your Grace, Sir Aubrey is without, requests an urgent word with you." Joanna sat up on the pallet, pulling the sheet up to her chin. Aubrey
252 de Mara was the captain of her grandmother's guards, but Joanna had never known him to seek Eleanor out at such an hour. She watched uneasily as he entered the chamber, knelt before the Queen. "Madame, forgive me, but a courier has ridden in, sent by your son The King's Grace wants you to leave Fontevrault on the morrow, t0 withdraw with all speed into your own lands in Poitou." "Arthur and the de Lusignans?" "They've been encamped at Tours, not forty miles to the north, ate now known to be on the road south. The King has left Queen Isabelle in Rouen, is heading for Le Mans. But he fears for you, Madame, as well he should. You'd be a most tempting prize, in truth." Eleanor nodded slowly. "My son is right. We depart for Poitiers at first light. See to it, Sir Aubrey." THEIR journey south proved to be a slow, arduous one. The road was rutted and rock-strewn, the soil cracked and seared by weeks of burning sun, and their horses churned up clouds of thick red dust. Jolted from side to side in her swaying horse litter, Eleanor at last called for a halt. As her servants began to set up a tent so that the Queen might shelter a while from the heat of high noon, Joanna slid from her mare, hastened to join Eleanor in the shade of several elms. In addition to his midnight message for her grandmother, her father's courier had carried two letters for her, a brief dispatch from John instructing her to accompany Eleanor south for safety's sake, and a longer communication from her brother Richard. Clutching this letter, she settled herself in the grass next to Eleanor. "Shall I fan you, Madame? I've a letter from my brother; may I read it to you? Richard is serving as squire to the eldest son of Lord de Braose, is with his household in South Wales. He says there is trouble between the de Braose sons and a Welsh Prince, Gwenwynwyn of Powys, that Gwenwynwynwhat queer names the Welsh haveis set upon war." "I'd say, rather, that the de Braoses are the ones set upon war." Eleanor leaned back against the tree, closed her eyes. "Your father did grant them the right to any Welsh lands they could gain by conquest And they know that there has been a shift in our Welsh policy, that John has decided it is more to his advantage to back Gwenwynwyn's chie' rival, Llewelyn, Prince of Gwynedd." "Richard makes mention of him, too . . . Prince Llewelyn. He says Fulk Fitz Warm is still in rebellion against Papa, that he has taken refug6 at this Llewelyn's court. He says, too, that Llewelyn has been pulling r 253 nors. The familyde Hodnet, they're calleddid hold land of the rbets, and Robert Corbet, as overlord, refused to recognize the younde Hodnet's claim. Richard says all do know the Corbets were acting ^ Llewelyn's behest, he being kin." Joanna frowned. "I met Lord Corbet once, when we were at Worester two years past. Papa granted him the right to hold a weekly market at Caus. I do not think he should be so quick to do a Welsh Prince's bidding, not when that Prince is aiding men outlawed, men who are papa's sworn enemies." Getting no response, she glanced up, saw that Eleanor was no longer listening. Sweat was glistening at her temples; her face was bleached of color, as white as the linen wimple that hid her hair. "Two years ago," she said, bitterly amused, "I did ride a mule across the Pyrenees, and in the dead of winter, too. But who'd believe that, seeing me now . . ." "Madame!" Aubrey was coming toward them at a run. "Madame, our scouts report a large armed force on our trail. I'd wager my life it is the Duke of Brittany and the de Lusignans, that you are the prey." Joanna was amazed to see how rapidly her grandmother seemed to shake off her fatigue. She at once held out her hand for Aubrey's assistance, came quickly to her feet. "If my memory serves," she said coolly, "we are but a few leagues distant from Mirebeau. It's not much of a refuge, but beggars, as they say,
cannot be choosers." Aubrey nodded grimly. "Madame, can you ride astride?" "I shall have to, shan't I?" Some of her servants were struggling now to dismantle the tent they'd just erected, and Eleanor said impatiently, "For Jesti's sake, let it be!" Seeing Joanna still standing immobile, she gave the girl a push. "Go on, child, make haste to mount. Sir Aubrey . . . which of your men do you most trust?" Aubrey did not hesitate, beckoned to a slight bandy youth, one who looked to have been born in the saddle. "Edmund, take my stallion. Kill him if you have to, but get to Le Mans, get to the King." Edmund did not even pause to acknowledge the command. Vaulting up onto Aubrey's roan, he set off across the fields at a dead run, and within moments was lost from view. MIREBEAU was a walled town in the marches between Anjou and Poitou, having sprung up around a small border castle. It was little more than a village, and the sudden arrival of the Queen created a sensation. Men and women abandoned their daily labors, crowded into the street to strings in Shropshire on behalf of the rebels, that he did prevent a youn- catch a glimpse of the legendary Eleanor of Aquitaine. Aubrey at once ger brother of one of Fitz Warm's vassals from laying claim to his father s set about conscripting men to guard the walls, gave orders to bar the
154 town gates as the Queen and her party passed on into the castle bailey There the exhausted Eleanor was assisted from her mare, up into the keep. Relief at having reached Mirebeau was not long in giving way t0 dismay. Even to Joanna's untrained eye, it was all too clear that the castle was in a ruinous state. The moat was clogged with debris and weeds, silted and foul-smelling. The outer curtain walls were constructed of aging timbers, looked likely to tumble down in a stiff wind. The keep itself was a stone-and-mortar tower, but it, too, showed the effects of long neglect. Aubrey, assuming command in the name of the Queen, put the small garrison to work shoring up the walls as best they could, sent men into the town to appropriate food supplies. The women did what they could to convert the solar into a suitable bedchamber for the Queen. And then they waited for the inevitable to occur, waited to be found by the pursuing army, an army led by Eleanor's own grandson. They appeared before the town gates as summer twilight slowly darkened the Poitevin countryside, flying high the banners of Arthur, Duke of Brittany, Hugh de Lusignan, Count of La Marche, and his uncle Geoffrey, Lord of Vouvant. A peremptory demand for surrender was rejected with equal dispatch by Aubrey. Negotiations dragged on for a futile time under a perfect crescent moon, and then both sides settled down to pass the night. Soon after sunrise the next day, the negotiations resumed. Arthur and the de Lusignans wanted Eleanor alive, and she exploited that, her only advantage, to the fullest, feigning belief in their goodwill, playing desperately for time. They, in their turn, promised whatever
they thought likely to lure her out, swore she could continue unmolested on her journey, that she need only agree to cede Poitou to Arthur. Back and forth the lies flew, until Hugh de Lusignan lost patience and gave the command to assault the town walls. The townsmen, unwillingly impressed into a quarrel not of their making, put up only feeble resistance, and by day's end Mirebeau was in enemy hands. The ancient castle alone held out, ripe for the taking. The keep was stifling, its shuttered windows barring entry to cooler night air. Joanna huddled on a bench in the great hall, a plate of food untouched upon her lap. It was quiet now, but her ears still echoed with the cries of the wounded and dying, the screams of the women claimed as spoils of war by Arthur's jubilant soldiers. When the assault was first launched, she'd climbed with Eleanor up to the battlements atop the keep, had watched as the town's defenders sought to push aside the scaling ladders, as men plunged screaming to their deaths. Hours later, the horror of it was still very much with her; unable to sleep, she kept