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I don't.'
'Yes. It was the Yorks' town house. It stood on the bank of the river just a little way west of St Paul's.'
'Oh. Well, he stayed there until June the 5th, when his wife arrived from the North and they went to stay in a house called Crosby Place.'
'It is still called Crosby Place. It has been moved to Chelsea, and the window Richard put into it may not still be there - I haven't seen it lately - but the building is there.'
'It is?' Carradine said, delighted. 'I'll go and see it right away. It's a very domestic tale when you think of it, isn't it. Staying with his mother until his wife gets to town, and then moving in with her. Was Crosby Place theirs, then?'
'Richard had leased it, I think. It belonged, to one of the Aldermen of London. So there is no suggestion of opposition to his Protectorship, or of change of plans, when he arrived in London.'
'Oh, no. He was acknowledged Protector before he ever arrived in London.'
'How do you know that?'
'In the Patent Rolls he is called Protector on two occasions - let me see - April 21st (that's less than a fortnight after Edward's death) and May the 2nd (that's two days before he arrived in London at all).'
'All right; I'm sold. And no fuss? No hint of trouble?'
'Not that I can find. On the 5th of June he gave detailed orders for the boy's coronation on the 22nd. He even had letters of summons sent out to the forty squires who would be made knights of the Bath. It seems it was the custom for the King to knight them on the occasion of his coronation.'
'The 5th,' Grant said musingly. 'And he fixed the coronation for the 22nd. He wasn't leaving himself much time for a switch-over.'
'No. There's even a record of the order for the boy's coronation clothes.'
'And then what?'
'Well,' Carradine said, apologetic, 'that's as far as I've got. Something happened at a Council ? on the 8th of June, I think - but the contemporary account is in the M茅moires of Philippe de Comines and I haven't been able to get hold of a copy so far. But someone has promised to let me see a copy of Mandrot's 1901 printing of it tomorrow. It seems that the Bishop of Bath broke some news to the Council on June the 8th. Do you know the Bishop of Bath? His name was Stillington.'
'Never heard of him.'
'He was a Fellow of All Souls, whatever that is, and a Canon of York, whatever that may be.'
'Both learned and respectable, it appears.'
'Well, we'll see.'
'Have you turned up any contemporary historians -other than Comines?'
'Not any, so far, who wrote before Richard's death. Comines has a French bias but not a Tudor one, so he's more trustworthy than an Englishman writing about Richard under the Tudors would be. But I've got a lovely sample for you of how history is made. I found it when I was looking up the contemporary writers. You know that one of the things they tell about Richard III is that he killed Henry VI's only son in cold blood after the battle of Tewkesbury? Well, believe it or not, that story is made up out of whole cloth. You can trace it from the very time it was first told. It's the perfect answer to people who say there's no smoke without fire. Believe me this smoke was made by rubbing two pieces of dry stick together.'
'But Richard was just a boy at the time of Tewkesbury.'
'He was eighteen, I think. And a very bonny fighter by all contemporary accounts. They were the same age, Henry's son and Richard. Well, all the contemporary accounts, of whatever complexion, are unanimous in saying that he was killed during the battle. Then the fun begins.'
Carradine fluttered through his notes impatiently.
'Goldarn it, what did I do with it?
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