by Terry Deary
THE PRINCE THE COOK AND THE CUNNING KING
THE PRINCE THE COOK AND THE CUNNING KING
Illustrated by Helen Flook
A & C Black • London
This book is dedicated to the memory of Perkin Warbeck, another young man who claimed Henry VII’s throne, but who paid for it with his life–Terry Deary
Reprinted 2004, 2008, 2010
First published 2003 by
A & C Black Publishers Ltd
36 Soho Square, London, W1D 3QY
www.acblack.com
Text copyright © 2003 Terry Deary
Illustrations copyright © 2003 Helen Flook
The rights of Terry Deary and Helen Flook to be identified as the author and illustrator of this work have been asserted by them in accordance with the Copyrights, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
eISBN 978-1-40811-865-8
A CIP catalogue for this book is available from the British Library.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means–graphic, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, taping or information storage and retrieval systems–without the prior permission in writing of the publishers.
This book is produced using paper that is made from wood grown in managed, sustainable forests. It is natural, renewable and recyclable. The logging and manufacturing processes conform to the environmental regulations of the country of origin.
Printed and bound in Great Britain
by CPI Cox & Wyman, Reading RG1 8EX.
Table of Contents
Chapter One: The Cold Kitchen
Chapter Two: The Shivering Servant
Chapter Three: The Scratching Straw
Chapter Four: The Midnight Meeting
Chapter Five: The Crafty King
Chapter Six: The Cruel Cook
Chapter Seven: Ellie’s Revenge
Chapter Eight: Greedy Guts
Chapter Nine: The Terrible Truth
Afterword: Lambert’s Story
Chapter One
The Cold Kitchen
We stood at the palace door and shivered. The wind was wintry, the grey walls gloomy. I was afraid.
My mother was just about to knock for a second time when the door was tugged open and I found myself looking into the castle kitchen.
A dozen dirty faces stared at me. The servants were sitting round a large table with wooden bowls in front of them.
“Shut the door!” someone moaned. “It’s cold!”
My mother pushed me into the kitchen and the door slammed behind us with a boom like the sound of doom.
The dozen pairs of eyes followed us into the cold kitchen.
There was a huge fireplace with copper pots, iron pans hanging down alongside dead rabbits and geese, and a shrivelled side of bacon. In that fireplace a miserable fire smoked under a small black pot full of pale and pitiful porridge.
A man lifted the pot off the fire and placed it on the table. The servants passed it round and spooned out the watery mess. They ate silently.
The man turned to look at me. He was the fattest man I’d ever seen. Folds of fat almost hid his little, watery eyes and his neck was like a bull’s. When he smiled, his teeth were yellow-green and broken. His greasy apron smelled nearly as bad as his breath. He put a hard hand under my chin and tilted my head up. “So, you’re the new kitchen maid?”
“This is Eleanor–Ellie,” my mother said. “Say hello to Cook, Ellie.”
“Hello to Cook, Ellie,” I muttered.
The clatter of wooden spoons in the sloppy food stopped. Twelve servants at the table held their breath. Cook’s eyes almost vanished in a scowl. Then he grinned.
“A lively lass, eh? Makes a change from this miserable lot!” he said, looking round at the servants who started eating again.
He nodded to my mother. “Leave her with me and I’ll take care of her.”
My mother left the bundle with my spare clothes and hurried to the door. She opened it and looked back, worried.
“Shut the door!” someone moaned. “It’s cold!”
She left me. Alone.
Chapter Two
The Shivering Servant
The cook looked round the table. “Lambert Simnel,” he hissed.
A boy rose to his feet. He was as thin as the porridge in the pot and twice as pale.
“Yes, Cook?” he said, and he shivered.
“Look after young Ellie. Show her where she sleeps. Show her what to do.”
“Yes, Cook.”
The boy looked back longingly at his half-full bowl of mush. He left the bench and moved towards me, walking almost sideways like a crab. As he passed Cook, the fat man lashed out at Lambert and the boy ducked.
“He didn’t do anything!” I cried.
Cook turned his fat face on me. His lips curled back to show those green teeth.
“Lambert has been a wicked, wicked boy, haven’t you, Lambert?”
“Yes, Cook.”
“He doesn’t deserve a smack on the head!” I said, and my face was hot in that cold kitchen.
“No,” Cook said softly. Then a dirty finger prodded me in the shoulder and he exploded with stinking breath in my face, “He deserves an axe on the back of his scrawny neck.”
Suddenly, he picked up a meat-axe from a table and shook it wildly. “He deserves to be executed. Don’t you, Lambert?”
“Yes, Cook,” the miserable boy murmured.
“Now take her to the room over the stables and show her where she’ll be sleeping.”
Lambert nodded, gave me a quivering smile, picked up my bundle and nodded for me to follow him. I stopped at the door and looked back to see one of the servants emptying Lambert’s porridge bowl.
Chapter Three
The Scratching Straw
“I have to sleep here?” I asked Lambert.
He nodded and dropped my bundle on to a pile of straw in the loft.
“Sleep on the straw,” he said. “Use the blanket to cover you. It’s warm with the horses below you in the stable.”
I was staring at my bed.
“The straw moved,” I whispered.
Lambert laughed. “That’ll just be a rat. I have a special friend rat,” he said.
Suddenly he darted to the top of the stairs and looked down. “People listen at doors here, you know?”
He scuttled back to me. “I call my rat Henry. After the King!”
“The King would be furious, if he knew,” I said.
“The King is the biggest rat of all,” he said wildly. “Why do you think everyone in the palace is so miserable? Because the King is so mean. We eat the cheapest food. Even his wife, Queen Elizabeth, is made to patch her dresses. She has tin buckles on her shoes when a queen should have silver!”
I sat down on the straw. “Cook looks fat enough,” I said.
Lambert dashed to the top of the steps and back again. “He steals the King’s food. If we did it we’d be whipped. But Cook has the key to the pantry.”
“Why did Cook call you ‘wicked’?” I asked.
Lambert ran to the top of the stairs and back for the third time. He spoke quickly.
“King Henry stole the crown of England. The real king should be Prince Edward, but he was locked in the Tower of London by King Henry Tudor.”
“I’ve heard the story. He’s still locked away there, isn’t he?”
Lambert shook his head so hard I thought it would fall off on to the rat-filled straw. “Edward escaped!” he squeaked.
“How do you know, Lambert?” I asked quietly.
“Because it’s me! I’m Edward, Earl of Warwick. I’m the real king
of England!”
Chapter Four
The Midnight Meeting
That day, I learned my duty as kitchen maid.
I scrubbed pans with sand and I swept the floor. I made bread till my arms ached and I carried buckets of water till my shoulders were numb.
We had bread and cheese for lunch–but Cook didn’t eat with us. He disappeared into the pantry for two hours and came out with food dribbling down his chin, looking sleepy. Then it was time to make the evening meal for the King and his court.
Cook breathed over me. “If you work hard, one day you may become a serving maid and get to see the King.”
One day.
I saw him sooner than that. I sank into my straw that night as the clocks struck eleven.
I dozed a little. I heard the bells chime midnight.
That was when guards came for me. They came quietly with a horn lantern that barely lit the bat-black night.
One of the men, the tall one, pressed a hand over my mouth as a sign that I should make no sound.
The horses stirred in the stable below as I groped my way down the stairs into the freezing courtyard.
We entered the kitchen into air that was thick with stale food and smoky smells. The guard opened the lantern and led me up the stairs.
I was so tired I could hardly drag myself on. At last we came to the massive doors that led into the great hall.
The room was warmed by a log fire and that lit the room, too. The high, carved thrones were empty. But a man in a dressing gown sat in front of the fire and smiled a thin-lipped smile into the flames.
The tall guard spoke for the first time. “Your Grace? We’ve brought you the girl.”
The man turned and waved a hand for the guards to leave. He grinned at me. His teeth were a little black with rot. It wasn’t a pleasant smile. “Come in, Eleanor, and warm yourself.”
I dropped a low curtsey to Henry Tudor, King Henry VII of England. “Thank you, Your Grace,” I said humbly.
He gave a short laugh. “Eleanor, my dearest niece. You must call me Uncle Henry!”
Chapter Five
The Crafty King
“How was your work in the kitchen?” King Henry asked.
“It nearly killed me, Uncle,” I groaned.
I stretched and yawned wearily as I sat on a bench at the fireplace.
He nodded. “But no one suspects you? They all believe you’re just a common serving girl?”
“Yes, Uncle, we’ve fooled them,” I said. “No one could guess I’m Lady Eleanor Tudor of Pembroke in Wales.”
“Good,” he said, rubbing his hands in front of the fire. “Then you are the perfect spy. We Tudors must stick together. I can trust no one outside of my family. There are thousands who want me dead, you know. Dead as a duck’s toenail!”
The King stroked the fur collar on his gown and the collar moved. It was a small brown monkey. It looked at me, then went back to sleep.
“There are rebels and traitors everywhere.”
“Yes, Uncle, I know,” I said.
Mother had told me of the danger. If Henry Tudor lost the throne, then our family back in Wales would suffer, too. They might even kill us the way they killed the Princes in the Tower.
“Have you met Lambert ‘Simple’ Simnel?”
“Yes, Uncle.”
“Did your mother tell you about him?”
“Yes, Uncle. Lambert says he’s Prince Edward, but really he’s an organ-maker’s son from Oxford,” I said. “The real Prince Edward is still locked in the Tower of London.”
The King stroked his long chin. “He may look a little bit like Prince Edward.
The trouble is, my enemies put a crown on Lambert’s head and sent an army from Ireland to kill me!”
“But you won the battle and captured Lambert. You made him a kitchen boy to show what a good, kind king you are,” I said.
“I did! There are still people who think Simple Simnel could take my throne. There’s only one person who knows for sure who that boy in the kitchen really is … and that’s the boy in the kitchen!”
My Uncle was quivering with so much rage the monkey on his shoulder stirred.
“Now he’s afraid so he says he’s not Edward. First he is–then he isn’t. What’s the truth?”
“I’ll find out for you, Uncle,” I promised. “What will you do if he is the true king?”
Uncle Henry blinked in surprise. “Why, have him killed, of course!”
Chapter Six
The Cruel Cook
I worked in the kitchen till my fingers bled and my nails cracked.
My fair skin was roasted when I turned the meat over the fire and my bare feet were black with dirt.
When I got home to Wales I’d make sure servants had a better life than this.
On the fourth day I struggled to carry a leather bucket of water from the well in the yard.
Fat Cook told me to hurry and swung his boot at my backside. I stumbled and spilled the water.
“Stupid girl,” he snarled. “You’ll have to do it all over again!”
I sighed, picked up the empty bucket and trudged back to the well. Lambert helped me carry it back to the door.
“He’s a bully,” Lambert said.
“Then I’ll have to teach him a lesson,” I snapped.
Lambert stopped and looked at me carefully. “You’re a kitchen maid–what can you do?”
I almost blurted, “The King is my uncle and I can have Cook executed with his own meat-axe!” but I had to keep my secret. I still had to fool Lambert into telling me the truth. I said, “There is some yellow-dock plant in the pantry, isn’t there?”
Lambert nodded.
“Can we get some?”
“It’s locked by Cook,” he said, “but I can open locked doors.”
I grinned. “How did you learn that?”
“My father made organs in Oxford and I helped with the locks on the lid. I know all about them.”
I stopped in the freezing yard. “I thought your father was the Duke of Clarence and you were the true king?”
Lambert laughed. “That’s right. But I was switched when I was a baby to save me from being done away with. The organ-maker’s son was brought up as Edward … and I was brought up as the organ-maker’s son! I still think of him as my father. The rebels knew that–but they died in battle.”
“But does Unc–er … King Henry know that?”
“No! If he did he’d execute me. I’m a bit simple–but I’m not mad. Of course, no one knows the truth,” he laughed.
“Except me,” I said.
“Except you–and you’re not going to tell the King, are you?”
Chapter Seven
Ellie’s Revenge
The kitchen was quiet. The servants watched us, open-mouthed.
Cook had locked himself in the pantry for lunch. I put my ear to the door and heard him snore. I stood aside and let Lambert work on the lock with a knife. In a few moments it clicked open.
The leather hinge creaked. I peered round the door. Cook snored on. His wine sat on the bench beside him.
The pantry was full of cooked meats and pastries, cheeses and bread, wine, honey and herbs. It was like a treasure chest. I passed a large cheese out to the servants and they hurried to a corner to carve it and eat it before Cook woke up.
The stone jar of yellow-dock leaves scraped as I lifted it from the shelf. Cook stirred. He snorted. He belched. He smiled in his sleep.
I rubbed the leaves between my hands and let the powder fall into his wine cup.
Lambert gasped. “But …”
“Shhhh!”
I put more powder in the cup.
“But he’ll …”
“Shhhh!”
I put the empty jar back on the shelf. We crept out and Lambert locked the door.
We waited.
An hour later, Cook came out, red-faced and shouting orders. We scuttled around the kitchen like the rats in my hayloft, making dinner for the royal
family and their guests.
King Henry was mean with his money, but he always put on a good feast when he had guests. We baked a fish pie, roasted pheasants and a baby pig, boiled dishes of peas and made cups of rose-flavoured custard. Six o’clock chimed. Dinner was ready to serve.
Cook clutched his fat gut–that was the yellow-dock powder starting to work.
Lambert chewed a knuckle nervously. “Yellow-dock makes you run to the jakes,” he whimpered.
“Yes, Cook will need the toilet very soon–and for a long time,” I said. “That’s my revenge for him kicking me.”
Cook rubbed his gut and tried to smile.
“A feast fit for a king!” he cried. “I will lead the way,” he told the serving men. “King Henry can tell me to my face how great I am!” He turned on us. “You stay here and start clearing up or I’ll whip you raw!”
But when he left we followed the procession to the great hall.
Chapter Eight
Greedy Guts
Lambert and I looked through a crack in the door. Uncle Henry sat at the top table with his guests from France. Their rich robes of crimson and gold, peacock blue and leaf green, were as fine as the ones I’d left at home.
And now I had Lambert’s secret I could set off for Wales very soon. But first there was the business of Cook to finish.
“My Lords!” Cook cried.
Silence fell on the great hall. Suddenly the smile slid from his face like jelly off a plate. He clutched his gut and let out the loudest and most disgusting sound I have ever heard.