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suppose, once you know, you can see it, but off-hand it wouldn't occur to you. 1 mean, that he was a crook. He's die spit of old Halsbury, come to think of it, and if Halsbury had a fault at ail it was that lie was too soft with the blighters in the dock. He used to lean over backwards to give them the benefit in his summing-up.'
'Do you know how die Princes were murdered?'
'I don't know a thing about Richard III except that his mother was two years conceiving him.'
'What! Where did you get that tale?'
'In my school history, I suppose.'
'You must have gone to a very remarkable school. Conception was not mentioned in any history book of mine. That is what made Shakespeare and the Bible so refreshing as lessons; the facts of life were always turning up. Did you ever bear of a man called Tyrrel?'
'Yes, he was a con. man on the P & O. boats. Drowned in die Egypt.'
'No; I mean, in history.'
'I tell you, I never knew any history except 1066 and 1603.'
'What happened in 1603?' Grant asked, his mind still on Tyrrel.
'We had die Scots tied to our tails for good.'
'Better than having them at our throats every five minutes. Tyrrel is said to be the man who put the boys out of the way.'
'The nephews? No, it doesn't ring a bell. Well, I must be getting along. Anything I can do for you?'
'Did you say you were going to Charing Cross Road?'
'To die Phoenix, yes.'
'You could do something for me.'
'What is that?'
'Go into one of die bookshops and buy me a History, of England. An adult one. And a Life of Richard III, if you can find one.'
'Sure, I'll do that.'
As he was going out he encountered The Amazon, and looked startled to find anything as large as himself in. nurse's uniform. He murmured a good-morning in an abashed way, cast a questioning glance at Grant, and faded into the corridor.
The Amazon said that she was supposed to be giving Number Four her blanket bath but that she had to look in to sec if he was convinced.
'Convinced?'
About the nobility of Richard Cceur-de-Lion.
'I haven't got round to Richard the First yet. But keep Number Four waiting a few moments longer and tell me what you know about Richard III.'
'Ah, those poor lambs!' she said, her great cow's-eyes soft with pity.
'Who?'
'Those two precious little boys. It used to be my nightmare when I was a kiddy. That someone would come and put a pillow over my face when I was asleep.'
'Is that how it was done: the murder?'
'Oh, yes. Didn't you know? Sir James Tyrrel rode back to London when the court was at Warwick, and told Dighton and Forrest to kilt them, and then they buried them at die foot of some stairs under a great mound of stones.'
'But it doesn't say that in the book you lent me.'
'Oh, that book is just history-for-exams, if you know what I mean. You don't get really interesting history in swot books like that.'
'And where did you get the juicy gossip about Tyrrel, may one ask?'
'It isn't gossip,' she said, hurt. 'You'll find it in Sir Thomas More's history of his time. And you can't find a more respected or trustworthy person in the whole of history than Sir Thomas More, now can you?'
'No. It would be bad manners to contradict Sir Thomas.'
'Well, that's what Sir Thomas says, and, after all, he was alive then and knew all those people to talk to.'
'Dighton and Forrest?'
'No, of course not. But Richard, and the poor Queen, and those.'
'The Queen? Richard's Queen?'
'Yes.'
'Why "poor"?
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