273 demand, that he should be assessed for the expenses of an army to ravage his own lands "I serve the King's pleasure," he said at 56 with such bitter irony that John smiled "fust so," he said softly It was a warning as oblique as it was ecomical, but there was no need to say more De Braose understood all his grandfather's castles, Will de Braose liked Abergavenny the t He'd been born there, and had recently celebrated his twelfth birthday within Abergavenny's massive stone walls On this Tuesday in late Apnl, he was alone in the uppermost chamber of the polygonal tower The chamber housed the de Braose family chapel, but Will was not there to pray, he was leaning recklessly out of the unshuttered window, watching the road that wound off toward the north, toward Hereford, where his grandfather was meeting with the King He'd sent word that he would be returning this Tuesday noon, and Will had been keepmg an impatient vigil as the day dragged on Down m the bailey he saw his father, Reginald de Braose, conferring with his uncle, William de Braose the younger His young cousins were playing a rough-and-tumble game of ball with an inflated pig's bladder, under the watchful eye of their mother, Matilda There'd been a full gathering of the de Braose clan at Abergavenny, only Will's Aunt Margaret and his Uncle Giles, Bishop of Hereford, were absent, Margaret having sailed for Ireland to rejoin her husband Walter, Lord of Meath, and Giles having gone into foreign exile in obedience to the Pope's Interdict All were waiting anxiously for word from Hereford Will did not share their concern, he could not imagine any man getting the better of his grandfather Moreover, he knew that his grandmother fully expected the King to restore her husband to favor, and Will needed no greater guarantee than that As far back as he could remember, his grandmother had been the family linchpin Imperious and earthy and blazmgly outspoken, she'd always utterly eclipsed the Lady "facia, Will's mother, a timid, passive personality who was reduced 0 wraithhke incompetence in the presence of her formidable motherin law Now Will decided to seek her out, to renew his faith in Maude's reassunng certainty that the bad times were over The disgrace that had suddenly come upon their family had been hard on Will Since the 5 ot seven, he'd been serving as a page m the household of Lord Fitz ' ar>d when he was taunted by the other pages about his grand'ather's f,n r__ , , , . ., , , ,, , 8otten r s fall from favor, Will had responded with hot, heedless rage, had to a mt° so many bloody brawls that his training at Clun Castle came n abrupt end His father had been predictably furious, Will could not
274 recall a time when he and his father had not been at odds. But his gran, mother once again came through when it counted, saying cutting] "Christ Jesus, Reg, let the boy be. Just be thankful he has the pluck t stand up for himself, that he has the backbone you too often lack!" ^C acerbic intervention had spared Will a beating, but added yet one mo ' drop of poison to a relationship already soured beyond salvaging. Will was remembering that as he entered the great hall, saw Maud sitting upon the dais, attended by the submissive daughters-in-law vvh never dared stray out of beckoning range. She frowned at sight of him gestured for him to approach. "I saw your cousin Jack's eye; your handiwork?" Will was not fazed by the scowl. "He ran into my fist," he said, saw her mouth twitch. "Do not make a habit of it," she said, but when Will grinned, she grinned back. Settling down on the steps of the dais, Will began to occupy himself in carving a whistle. Within moments he'd attracted an admiring audience, his little cousin Philip. Will was quite contemptuous of his cousin Jack, whom he considered a weakling and a tattletale, but he liked Philip, who was only seven. Now he made room on the steps for the youngster, and turned obligingly so Philip could watch him whittle. "Will . . . was it truly in this very hall that Grandpapa killed that Welsh lord and his men?" Will nodded, cast Philip a sideways, searching look. Philip's eyes were wide; he was looking about him as if still expecting to see the floor rushes soaked in blood, the walls splattered with gore. Will understood, for he remembered his own confusion when he'd first been told of the Abergavenny massacre. Will had given to his grandfather all the love and respect he did not give to his father, and he'd been shocked to discover that his grandfather had so violated every tenet of the chivalric code. There was no way he could reconcile what his grandfather had done on that December day in 1175 with the accepted standards oi knightly conduct, with the tales told by minstrels and bards of Roland and Arthur and the Knights of the Table Round, for his grandfather had lured his enemies to Abergavenny under the guise of friendship, murdered them while they ate and drank at his table, then abducted SeisyU s wife and put her young son to death before her eyes. Will had been troubled enough to go to his father with his qualm' but his father had laughed at him. Apparently the Welsh were not cff> ered by the chivalric code. That was not good enough for Will. H often heard his family jeer at the strange ways of the Welsh, heard called "reckless" and "untamed" and "half mad." By Norman s | dards he supposed they were, but those were the very qualities
275 t appea^ec^to ^*m' Wales was to Will a wild, mystical land of legend ^ A blood feuds and stark grandeur, and he loved it as if it were his 3 Most of his twelve years had been spent within its borders; he ke fluent Welsh, had friends named Rhys and Ifor and Garwyn. He jed a better explanation for the killings at Abergavenny than merely that the victims were Welsh. He'd gotten that explanation from his grandmother. "Those men ,ere your grandfather's enemies, Will. The enemies of our House. We do not forgive a wrong done us, not ever. You are old enough to underhand that, lad, to learn that in this world we have to look after our own, to do whatever be necessary to safeguard what is ours. Learn that if you learn nothing else, and never forget it." Now Will gave his young cousin the same bleak, uncompromising answer his grandmother had once given him, saying tersely, "They were the enemies of our House, Philip." An answer that said all that needed to be said, that he had long since taken to heart. He handed the completed whistle to the boy. "You can have this if you like." And then, because Philip was so young, because there was time yet before he had to learn the lessons of being a de Braose, Will drew Philip's thoughts away from that long-ago and bloody December day. "Life must have been right lively back then, Philip. Seisyll's surviving sons besieged Abergavenny seven years later and burned all but the keep; luckily for Grandpapa, he was elsewhere at the time of the attack! And then, some years after, Gwenwynwyn attacked our castle in the Machawy River valley, the one the Welsh call Castell Paen. Our grandmother put up so successful a defense that people started calling it Castle Maude!" Philip laughed. "Which Welsh Prince is Gwenwynwyn, Will? I can never keep them straight." "You'll have to learn; you're old enough now. Gwenwynwyn is nince of Lower Powys; he's the whoreson who's been making raids upon our manors. South Wales is divided now between the sons of the ord RhysMaelgwn and Rhys Gryg. And the North is ruled by the an Grandpapa says is the most dangerous one of the lot, Llewelyn ab "verth, who is married to a bastard daughter of King John." As soon as John's name had crossed Will's lips, he swallowed, gri- n ed as if he'd tasted something sour. In the past year he'd come to "Ure a deep and abiding hatred for the English King who was giving c * amily such grief. He started to speak, and then stopped, head nddecl expectantly to the side. "Philip, you hear? Grandpapa has just
276 WILL'S excitement congealed at first sight of the men accompanying ^ grandfather: Thomas Erdington, Sheriff of Shropshire, Gerard d'Athie Sheriff of Gloucestershire, and Falkes de Breaute, to whom William d Braose had been forced by John to yield up Glamorgan and GwyllWg The first two had, in the past fortnight, led an army onto de Braose lands; the third was a bitter and open enemy of their House. Will knew his grandfather would never have chosen their company of his own accord. He ran for the nearest window, looked out to find the bailey filie(j with men-at-arms, men who wore the red and white colors of the King Maude had risen, was staring at her husband in dismay. "Will? Will, why are they here?" Will knew his grandfather was no longer young, was in his sixties but he was so energetic, so fit that Will never gave his age any thought He was shocked now to see how haggard his grandfather suddenly looked, exhaustion etched into the smudge
d hollows under his eyes, impotent and embittered fury in the rigid set of his mouth. "Not now," he snapped, giving his wife a look that would have daunted all but the most intrepid or reckless, a look that made no impression whatsoever upon Maude. "Name of God, Will, what has happened? Did you not see the King?" "I said not now!" But his unlikely escorts were not so reticent. It was Falkes de Breaute who told Maude what her husband would not, saying with conspicuous relish, "Ah, indeed he saw the King, Madame, and made many and varied promises to the King's Grace, amongst them to make payment of six thousand marks." "Six thousand!" Maude's eyes narrowed, cut sharply toward her husband. "We do not have it," she said flatly, defiantly, and de Breaute grinned. "You'll be relieved, then, Madame, to know you need not pay it all at once. A thousand marks are due today, but the balance may be paid in installments. Of course, you will have to surrender to the Kings Grace your castles at Hay, Brecknock, and Radnor as a pledge for payment" ''Jesus God!" Maude whirled around to confront her husband. "What have you done, Will?" "What I had to do!" he snarled. "But we're damned well not going to talk about it here ... or now!" "Hay Castle is mine, to me! I'll not give it up!" "Your husband has already done that, Madame." Gerard d'A"1 spoke up for the first time. Sounding as if he was enjoying himself ^ less than de Breaute, he said cheerfully, "He gave the order two <* ago to turn them over to the King's constables. We are here only
277 iiect the thousand marks and the hostages, of course Not sur singly/ the King feels that your husband will be more likely to keep faith if he 1S keePmg your grandsons'" Maude gasped, and her husband took two swift steps forward But en as he warned, "Maude, no1" she was swinging back toward Gerard d'Athie, her face flushed, mouth contorted "Are you mad7 Do you truly think I'd ever agree to that7 Give my randsons up to the man who murdered his own nephew7 Never in this lifetime1" Will's throat had closed up, cutting off an involuntary cry of protest But his fear lasted only until Maude began to speak He found himself blinking back hot tears, never had he loved anyone as much as he loved his grandmother at that moment, his grandmother who would dare to defy the King of England for his sake And then he became aware of the utter and absolute silence, then he saw the looks of horror on the faces of the adults His grandfather had gone grey under his tan, even his lips were bloodless His grandmother was standing very still Will could not see her face But he could see the faces of Falkes de Breaute and Gerard d'Athie Astonishment had given way to exhilaration, they both wore the jubilant gnns of men unable to believe how fortune had favored them William de Braose at last turned away from his wife, turned fathomless grey eyes upon Erdmgton, d'Athie, and de Breaute All three men reacted as one, dropped hands to sword hilts Falkes de Breaute said coolly, "We'll be rejoining our men You do remember the men-at-arms awaiting us in the bailey7 You need not offer us your hospitality for the night, after all " De Braose said nothing They departed the hall with enough haste to compromise their dignity, hands still on sword hilts Only then did William de Braose move Crossing the space that separated him from his wife, he struck her across the face Maude's head rocked back, she stumbled, put up a hand to stanch e sudden gush of blood No one spoke Her sons looked away Will al°ne took a shocked step toward her You stupid bitch " William de Braose's voice was low, raw with a8e, but it carried clearly to all in the hall "Know you what you've Hi,,6 anc' your accursed unbridled tongue, you've destroyed us
24 SHREWSBURY, ENGLAND October 120& UOOl^ kJooN after Maude de Braose publicly accused John of murder, William de Braose and his sons made a desperate attempt to regain possession of the castles de Braose had surrendered to John. Failing in these assaults, they plundered and burned the market town of Leominster. John proclaimed de Braose a traitor to the crown, and on September 29 he freed de Braose's vassals from all allegiance to their fugitive lord. Gwenwynwyn, Prince of Lower Powys, at once sought to take advantage of the resulting chaos by launching raids upon the de Braose lands and those of neighboring Norman lords. John responded with more force than the Welsh Prince could hope to equal. The two agreed to meet at Shrewsbury to discuss peace terms. SHREWSBURY Castle had been held by the crown for more than two hundred years, and the great hall had been rebuilt in stone by John's father. John's son was thinking of that as they awaited the arrival of the Welsh Prince, wondering if his grandfather would have done what John meant to do. Probably so, Richard decided; his father's lessons in cynical statecraft had been learned under Henry's tutelage. Now he glanced about the hall, at the other men: Ranulf de Blundeville, Earl of Chester; Thomas Erdington, Sheriff of Shropshire; Lord Robert Corbet and his son Thomas; Robert de Montalt. There was no one else in the hall; Chester had cleared it of retainers, servants, ana men-at-arms. Richard knew why, knew Chester was seeking to ma*6 Gwenwynwyn's capitulation as painless as possible. No easy task, giye the surprise they were about to spring upon him. But he gave Ches credit for trying; tact was an attribute Richard appreciated.
279 Richard had only recently joined the knights of Chester's houseId but the past weeks had caused him to revise his earlier unfavoruie opinion of the Earl He was not a particularly likable man, was of a erved and taciturn nature, but he was an astute judge of character, hrewd and surprisingly subtle, and he had soon won Pilchard's respect Richard knew this coming confrontation with Gwenwynwyn had to be wkward for Chester, the two men had once been allies But nothing showed in Chester's face or demeanor There was in his manner only the dispassionate resolve of a man set upon doing his duty, upon carrying out the King's command however little he might like it pochard wondered if the Corbets shared Chester's reluctance to do what John wanted done Theirs was an even more awkward position, for Gwenwynwyn had taken Robert Corbet's daughter to wife But they'd voiced no protests, raised no objections With the fate of William de Braose still uppermost in all their minds, few of John's barons were eager to incur his displeasure in this, the tenth year of his reign "Pilchard7" Thomas Corbet was looming over him Without waiting to be asked, he sprawled down beside Pilchard in the window seat Richard retreated as far as he was able, but not in time to avoid Thomas's elbow in his ribs He was not comfortable with such close physical proximity, even with those he liked, and he did not like Thomas Corbet For all his self-professed contempt for Llewelyn, Thomas was showing himself quite willing to trade upon Llewelyn's marital connection with the crown and his own tenuous connection with the Welsh Prince to establish an unwelcome familiarity with Llewelyn's brother-in-law, and his sensitivity was such that he was utterly oblivious to Richard's measured recoil "Have you had further word on de Braose's whereabouts7" Richard was tempted to deny Thomas the pleasure of being one of the first to know But all would know soon enough, and he said grudgingly, "De Braose and his family fled to Ireland on Thursday last, are seeking refuge with his son-m-law, the Lord of Meath " "Indeed7 And will your lord father the King now " But Richard was spared further conversation by the arrival of Gwenwynwyn Richard had never met the Prince of Powys, but he was quite curious about '"is man who was Llewelyn's avowed and embittered rival, and he watched with considerable interest as Gwenwynwyn was escorted into e hall He was a good ten years older than Llewelyn, appeared to be in 15 middle to late forties, a short, dark-complexioned man, stocky and newy, he bore a surprising resemblance to the swarthy, thickset Earl of ster And like Chester, Gwenwynwyn had black eyes ablaze with er> intelligence, sharp with suspicion Chester was advancing to greet him Gwenwynwyn's eyes flicked
280 past the Earl, encompassed the hall. "I was summoned to meet with King John," he said, in fluent Norman-French. "Why is he not here?" "The King's Grace has instructed me to act on his behalf." Chester's voice was neutral, matter-of-fact. "He has been grievously affronted by your recent incursions into Norman lands in South Wales. No man, be he Welsh or Norman, may violate the King's Peace with impunity. The King has therefore directed me to take you into the custody of the crown, to detain you here in Shrewsbury Castle." Richard saw the looks of incredulous outrage upon the faces of Gwenwynwyn's Welsh followers, saw hands drop to sword hilts Gwenwy
nwyn looked no less outraged, but he showed now that he resembled Chester in more than coloring, showed himself to be the same sort of hardheaded realist. Having walked trustingly into John's trap, he could accept defeat with as much dignity as he could muster, or he could cast his life away in a gesture of grand defiance. He chose the former, snapped a command to his men, and then turned back to face Chester. "I came here in good faith," he said, with such scalding contempt that suddenly none of the Normans could meet his eyes; even Thomas Corbet looked somewhat discomfited. "You came here to answer charges brought against you by Marcher lords like Peter Fitz Herbert, that you've been raiding Norman manors, running off livestock, and burning crops," Chester said, quite flatly, and Gwenwynwyn's lip curled. "Yi ci a fyner ei grogi dywedir ei fod yn lladd defaid," he said scornfully. Even Marcher border lords like the Corbets had never bothered to learn Welsh; Chester alone spoke the language. It was he who translated for the benefit of his companions. " 'The dog we would hang is said to devour sheep.' If, by that, you mean the King has contrived an excuse to seize your lands ..." "What else would I think? I would like to know, though, where this pretty plot was first hatched . . . Westminster? Or Aber?" "Aber? You think the King is obliging Llewelyn ab lorwerth in this?" Chester shook his head, even smiled faintly, as though at Gwenwynwyn's naive misreading of English aims. "Your suspicions are understandable, but unwarranted. I assure you the King has no desire to see Powys fall under Llewelyn's control. Royal couriers are even now on their way to Gwynedd and to the courts of Prince Maelgwn and Prince Rhys Gryg in South Wales, forbidding them to take advantage of y°ur troubles with the King, telling them to keep out of Powys." "And you truly think Llewelyn will heed such a command?" Gwenwynwyn was staring at them in bitter disbelief. "You fools. You p°°
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