The head of the party bowed low before the King and when asked what troubled him he explained that it was the state of London Bridge.
‘My lord King,’ said the man, ‘it has fallen into such a state of decay that it is scarcely safe.’
‘Then this must be rectified without delay,’ cried the King. ‘Why has it not been done?’
‘My lord, repairs are made from the revenue received from the custody of the bridge and have previously been done regularly that the bridge may be kept in good order.’
‘Then why has it not been done now?’
There was silence and the King urged them to continue.
‘My lord, the King your father gave the custody of the bridge to the Queen your mother that she might enjoy the revenues therefrom. Since then the lady Queen has collected the dues and careth nothing for the state of the bridge.’
Edward felt a surge of anger against his mother. He knew that he need not verify the statement. Was this not exactly what his mother had been doing since she had come to the country? Was this not the reason for her unpopularity and that of his father and would she never understand that it was deeds such as this which had brought them within sight of losing their crowns.
He restrained the outburst which rose to his lips and replied, ‘My friends, you may leave this matter to me. I can tell you this. The bridge shall be repaired and its upkeep shall in future be looked after from the dues received.’
Exultant by his quick grasp of the situation and believing in his promise, for he was already gaining a reputation of being a man of his word, the deputation left and among their friends sang the praise of the new King who would undoubtedly bring a return of just rule to the country.
The Queen Mother was with her daughter and she had just heard the joyous news from Beatrice that she was pregnant again.
As Edward entered she cried, ‘Dear Edward, do come and join us. I have such good news.’
Edward found it difficult to curb his temper. He had a share of that defect of the Plantagenets, but he had told himself that he must learn to keep it under control. It needed all his willpower to do this now.
‘Your sister Beatrice is going to have another child.’
He took Beatrice’s hand and kissed it. ‘Congratulations, sister,’ he said. ‘I’ll warrant John is pleased.’
‘Oh yes, but he always gets anxious. He says we have five and should be content.’
The Queen Mother laughed indulgently. Nothing pleased her more than to hear of the devotion of her daughter’s husband.
‘I wish I could keep you here, Beatrice, until the child is born.’
She looked at Margaret and they smiled, recalling the time when they had deluded the Scottish nobles and Margaret had stayed in England to be with her mother when her daughter was born.
‘If it is a girl,’ said Beatrice, ‘I shall call her Eleanor after you, dearest Mother.’
The Queen Mother laughed. ‘Not another Eleanor in the family! My dearest love, it is confusing enough now.’
‘Still, there is no one whose name I would rather my child had than yours.’
‘It was a good thing I named my girl Margaret,’ said the Queen of Scotland. ‘But I threaten that if I should ever have another daughter she will be an Eleanor too.’
The Queen Mother was gratified but anxious immediately. ‘My darling, I hope there will be no more. You suffered too much when David was born. If you girls only knew what I go through when you have your children you would vow never to have any more. I wait for the messengers … and they are always so tardy.’
‘Oh, my dearest mother,’ cried Margaret, ‘you must remember that we are no longer children.’
Edward was drawn into this family circle in spite of himself. They had all had a wonderful childhood, so different from most royal children. He must always remember – however exasperated he became by his mother’s fecklessness – that they had enjoyed a happy family circle.
Edward whispered to Margaret, ‘I have something of importance to discuss with our mother.’
‘I will take Beatrice with me to your lady wife,’ said Margaret. ‘She will want to hear about the baby.’
‘Yes, do,’ said Edward.
When he was alone with his mother he assumed a grave manner.
‘I have had a complaint, my lady,’ he told her, ‘from the citizens of London.’
‘Those tiresome people! How dare they complain at the time of your coronation! Have they not been given so much … free wine, banquets …’
‘Free wine and banquets will not repair London Bridge, my lady.’
‘London Bridge! What has that to do with the coronation?’
‘If it were to collapse it would be remembered as the outstanding event of this coronation for years to come.’
‘Collapse! Why should it?’
‘Because it is in need of repairs and the dues collected partly for that purpose have been used for other things.’
‘What things?’
‘You know that better than I for you have had them and misspent this money.’
‘I never heard such nonsense. In your father’s day …’
‘My lady, this is not my father’s day. It is mine, and I would have you know that I will not have money which is meant to repair my bridge spent on other things.’
‘Your father gave me the custody of the bridge for six years …’
‘And since that time the bridge has become a danger to the public. Will you never learn? Did the rising of the barons mean nothing to you?’
‘The barons have been defeated.’
‘The barons will never be defeated, my lady, while they represent the will of the people, and only when that is in his favour can a king rule.’
‘Your father did very well without it.’
‘That is not the verdict of the world, alas. My father tried to rule without it, and because of this only the greatest good luck kept him his crown and you will remember well, my mother, that he came within a very short distance of losing it. Have you forgotten those days when he and I were the prisoners of Simon de Montfort and you went to France as a begger to your sister’s court and tried to raise money for an army to free us?’
The Queen Mother wiped her eyes. ‘Do you think I shall ever forget the saddest time of my life when I and your father were separated?’
‘I trust you never will and that you will remember how easily it came about. The people would not brook your extravagance, your spending of money raised in taxation on yourself and your friends and relations.’
‘Edward! How dare you! And you my son! Whose side are you on? That of the crown or the rebel barons?’
‘There must be no sides, my lady. I am on the side of justice. I am going to see wrong put right. I am going to bring this country back to prosperity and belief in its sovereign. And I am going to begin by repairing London Bridge and taking the custody of it out of your hands.’
‘Edward … how can you do this to me!’
He went to her and laid his hands on her shoulders, for he loved her dearly and there were so many memories that stayed with him of childhood days when she had been his comfort and his solace and to be with her and his father had been the greatest treat of his childhood. ‘I can because I must. Dear Mother, you know of my love for you, but I am first a king and I mean to rule. I love you now as I ever did and never shall I forget your devotion to me and my dear father. But I cannot allow you to place my crown in jeopardy as you did that of my father. For that reason I act as I must and as I see it that is the right and just way to act.’
‘So you would humiliate me in the eyes of these rapacious Londoners.’
‘You will win only honour by discontinuing with this custody. And these Londoners are not rapacious because they wish to see their bridge repaired.’
‘If they want it repaired let them pay for it.’
‘It is exactly what they are doing. You know that part of the dues paid are for the upkeep of the bridge.’
‘I am disappointed in you, Edward.’
‘I am sorry for that but, if in pleasing you I must disappoint my subjects and deny them justice then, dear lady, I must perforce displease you.’
She looked at him – so handsome, so noble, and she suddenly forgot everything but her pride in him. She leaned against him and he put his arms about her.
He kissed her hair.
‘Dear Mother,’ he said softly, ‘I could not bear that we should be bad friends.’
‘You are a stubborn fellow, Edward,’ she said fondly. ‘Strange it is that I would not have you other than you are. But I miss your father so much, my son. I shall never cease to mourn.’
‘I know,’ said Edward. ‘I mourn him too.’
‘You are not like him. He was so fond …’
Fondness, thought the King, often went with foolishness and that was something a king could not afford.
* * *
Leaving his mother he went to his wife. He thanked God for Eleanor. How different she was from her mother-in-law. He could never have borne a domineering wife, but it was clear that a weak man needed a strong woman beside him. And he was now admitting to himself that his father was one of the weakest men he had ever known. A king must face up to the truth. He must learn his lessons and the first lesson of all was that until truth was looked straight in the face and admitted – however disagreeable – no progress would be made.
‘Edward,’ said the Queen anxiously, ‘you look a little distraught.’
‘An unpleasant matter.’ He told her of the bridge and how his mother had been using the funds for the wrong purposes.
‘I had to do what I did.’
‘Indeed you had.’
‘She was hurt. I think at first she thought I was some sort of traitor to the family.’
‘You, a traitor! That’s quite impossible. You are so wise … so strong. You always do the right thing.’
He smiled at her fondly. ‘I know that whatever I do I shall have the support of my wife.’
‘But that is only right and natural.’
He took her hand and kissed it.
‘I have something to tell you,’ she said.
‘Eleanor. You are with child?’
She nodded and he took her into his arms. ‘This time,’ he said, ‘let us pray for a boy. I’ll have prayers said throughout the churches.’
‘Not yet, I beg of you. It is too early. I am always afraid when I speak of it too soon that something will go wrong.’
‘My dearest, why should it?’
‘There was John and the little one at Acre.’
‘My dear lady, many children die. John was delicate. Some children are born that way. As for the little one at Acre, that was not to be wondered at after all the hardships. And what of young Joanna, eh? She was always lively enough though Acre was her birthplace.’
‘I wish she were with us.’
‘Your mother will not willingly part with her. And you will have this new one. We have our darling Eleanor. What a handsome girl she is becoming! And little Henry …’
The Queen was grave. ‘I worry about him a great deal.’
‘I thought he seemed better.’
She shook her head.
‘Oh come, my love, he is a bright little fellow.’
‘He is so breathless and he always seems to have a cough. Edward, I don’t care for the Tower of London. It’s so cold and draughty and there is an atmosphere of gloom about the place.’
‘It was built as a fortress of course,’ said Edward. ‘And it seems like it.’
‘The Palace of the Tower depresses me, Edward. I do not think that Henry will thrive while he is there. I want to find a place which is more healthy for the children and with the new baby I want to be especially careful. I keep thinking of little John and wondering whether if I had been here …’
‘Pray do not let my mother hear you say that. She dotes on the children and as you know will scarcely let them out of her sight. She is half elated, half apprehensive, about Beatrice’s news. She would love to have them all here under her care.’
‘I know of course that she did everything possible for young John and I don’t suppose there was anything I could have done to save him. But I do want to choose a home for the children and I want it to be a healthy place. Somewhere in the country.’
‘I will tell you what we must do,’ said Edward. ‘When all the coronation ceremonies are over we shall go down to Windsor. I have a fancy that that will be the place you will choose.’
‘Oh Edward, you are so good to me.’
Edward again took her into his arms and stroked her beautiful long dark hair. He compared her as he often had with his mother and thanked God for giving him such a wife.
* * *
The excitement of the coronation had not improved little Henry’s condition. Or it might have been that the disease which was robbing him of his strength was moving towards its climax. In any case there was an obvious decline in his health.
The Queen Mother was thrown into a state of great anxiety – even more so than the Queen, whose pregnancy seemed to have endowed her with a certain serenity. But the Queen Mother had now convinced herself that Margaret had not looked as well as she should, and she confided in the Queen that she had had a talk with Alexander who shared her anxiety.
The treatment Margaret had received when she had first gone to Scotland as a child bride had had an effect on her health from which she had never fully recovered. And now that little Henry showed signs of growing weaker the Queen Mother feared that God had turned His face from the royal family.
Death did not come singly, she said. Little John had been followed very quickly by her dear husband and ever since then she had been fearful for her darlings.
Edward ordered that several sheep should be freshly slaughtered so that the little boy could be wrapped in their skins. This was considered to be good for those who suffered from shivering fits because the animal heat was calculated to supply the warmth a sick person lacked.
More wax images of his body were made and taken to various shrines to be placed there and burned in oil. A hundred poor widows were engaged that they might perform vigils in the churches praying for his recovery. The physicians were on constant attention and either the Queen or the Queen Mother kept vigil at his bedside.
They talked of what it could be that ailed him. Little John had suffered in the same way. The child seemed to shrink and grow more and more listless every day.
‘Why does this happen to the boys?’ demanded the Queen.
‘It is almost like a curse,’ the Queen Mother said. ‘I wonder sometimes whether it has anything to do with the de Montforts.’
‘Why be so cruel to a little boy?’
‘Because that little boy could one day be King perhaps.’
‘I hate the Tower,’ said the Queen. ‘It fills me with dread. I cannot bear to think of my children living there. Edward has said I may choose where I like and we shall have our home there, but of course the King must move around and I believe it is well that we should all be together. I think I shall choose Windsor. Do you think that would be healthier for Henry?’
‘I am sure of it, my dear. Have you visited Windsor recently?’
‘No, but I mean to. It has been so necessary for us to be here in Westminster for the celebrations.’
The Queen Mother’s eyes were momentarily glazed as she recalled her own coronation. She had been brought to the Palace of the Tower and she had not noticed that it was gloomy; perhaps that was because her coronation had been more splendid than any and she had been well aware of the shining approval in her husband’s eyes. Oh, to be young again, to go back to all that glory, with the knowledge that she was clever and above all so beautiful that her husband adored her! This mild little creature – good as she was – could know nothing of the happiness which had come to Eleanor of Provence.
And now anxieties beset her. Edward was her dear son but he was stern with
her, reprimanding her for spending a little money. Edward had no idea how to live graciously. She did hope he was not going to develop parsimonious ways. And she was worried about little Henry who was going exactly as young John had gone, wasting away, and she knew that wherever they moved would make no difference. And what of Margaret who had never fully regained her strength; and Beatrice was pregnant, and she was always afraid when they had children. She was growing sick with worry.
She let the Queen talk about the advantages of Windsor over Westminster. There was no point in frightening the poor girl with her own fears.
She herself talked of Windsor and how her husband had loved it.
‘He strengthened the defences,’ she said, ‘and rebuilt the western wall. You must see the curfew tower, my dear. He had that built. He had a genius for architecture and how he loved it. If the people had not been so foolish and made such a nuisance of themselves whenever he wanted to spend a little money in beautifying castles, he would have done so much more.’
‘I like Windsor,’ said the Queen, ‘I like the river and I think the air will be fresh and good for Henry.’
‘I doubt it not. My husband always said it was. I think it was his favourite place. How we talked and grew excited about the changes he made there! He insisted on murals and they were always of a religious nature. He was a very pious man. Oh so good he was! He loved the colour green. He liked blue and purple too. You soon realise that when you go into those rooms. It was just after our marriage that he made such changes to the castle. “For you, my dear,” he said, “and if there is something you do not like you must tell me.” He made chambers overlooking the cloisters and he had a herb garden made for me … Oh yes, my dear, you will be happy at Windsor.’
‘I feel that I shall be. As soon as I feel that Henry is strong enough for the journey I shall take him there.’
Alas, each day the child seemed to grow weaker and the Queen was in a quandary. Should she take him away to the country or would it be wiser to leave him where he was? In the meantime she engaged more widows for the vigils and more images were burned in oil.
The Hammer of the Scots Page 6