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The place is just lousy with Woodvilles.'
'Yes, I know. Go on. Where was Richard?'
'On the Scottish border.'
'What!'
'Yes, I said: on the Scottish border. Caught away off base. But does he yell for a horse and go posting off to London? He does not.'
'What did he do?'
'He arranged for a requiem mass at York, to which all the nobility of the North were summoned, and in his presence took an oath of loyalty to the young Prince.'
'Interesting,' Grant said dryly. 'What did Rivers do? The Queen's brother?'
'On the 24th of April he set out with the Prince for London. With two thousand men and a large supply of arms.'
'What did he want the arms for?'
'Don't ask me. I'm only a research worker. Dorset, the elder of the Queen's two sons by her first marriage, took over both the arsenal and the treasure in the Tower and began to fit up ships to command the Channel. And Council orders were issued in the name of Rivers and Dorset ? "avunculus Regis" and "frater Regis uterinus" respectively ? with no mention of Richard. Which was decidedly off colour when you remember ? if you ever knew ? that in his will Edward had appointed Richard guardian of the boy and Protector of the Kingdom in case of any minority. Richard alone, mind you, without a colleague.'
'Yes, that is in character, at least. He must always have had complete faith in Richard. Both as a person and as an administrator. Did Richard come south with a young army too?'
'No. He came with six hundred gentlemen of the North, all in deep mourning. He arrived at Northampton on April the 29th, He had apparently expected to join up with the Ludlow crowd there; but that is report and you have only a historian's word for it. But the Ludlow procession ? Rivers and the young Prince - had gone on to Stony Stratford without waiting for him. The person who actually met him at Northampton was the Duke of Bucking-ham with three hundred men. Do you know Buckingham?''
'We have a nodding acquaintance. He was a friend of Edward's.'
'Yes. He arrived post haste from London.'
'With the news of what was going on.'
'It's a fair deduction. He wouldn't bring three hundred men just to express his condolences. Anyhow a Council was held there and then - he had all the material for a proper Council in his own train and Buckingham's, and Rivers and his three aides were arrested and sent to the North, while Richard went on with the young Prince to London. They arrived in London on the 4th of May.'
'Well, that is very nice and clear. And what is clearest of all is that, considering time and distances, the sainted More's account of his writing sweet letters to the Queen to induce her to send only a small escort for the boy, is nonsense.'
'Bunk.'
'Indeed, Richard did just what one would expect him to do. He must of course have known the provisions of Edward's will. What his actions suggest is just what one would expect them to suggest; his own sorrow and his care for the boy. A requiem mass and an oath of allegiance.'
'Yes.'
'Where does the break in this orthodox pattern come? I mean: in Richard's behaviour.'
'Oh, not for a long time. When he arrived in London he found that the Queen, the younger boy, the daughters, and her first-marriage son, Dorset, had all bolted into sanctuary at Westminster. But apart from that things seem to have been normal.'
'Did he take the boy to the Tower?''
Carradine riffled through his notes. 'I don't remember.
Perhaps I didn't get that. I was only - Oh, yes, here it is. No, he took the boy to the Bishop's Palace in St Paul's Churchyard, and he himself went to stay with his mother at Baynard's Castle. Do you know where that was?
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