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I mean, was the boy separated from all the people he had been growing up with?'
'Oh, no. His tutor, Dr Alcock, came on to London with him, for one.'
'So there was no panic clearing-out of everyone who might be on the Woodville side; everyone who might influence the boy against him.'
'Seems not. Just the four arrests.'
'Yes. A very neat, discriminating operation altogether. I felicitate Richard Plantagenet.'
'I'm positively beginning to like the guy. Well, I'm going along now to look at Crosby Place. I'm tickled pink at the thought of actually looking at a place he lived in.
And tomorrow I'll have that copy of Comines, and let you know what he says about events in England in 1483, and what Robert Stillington, Bishop of Bath, told the Council in June of that year.'
10
WHAT Stillington told the Council on that summer day in 1483 was, Grant learned, that he had married Edward IV to Lady Eleanor Butler, a daughter of the first Earl of Shrewsbury, before Edward married Elizabeth Woodville.
'Why had he kept into himself so long?' he asked when he had digested the news.
'Edward had commanded him to keep it secret. Naturally.'
'Edward seems to have made a habit of secret marriages,' Grant said dryly.
'Well, it must have been difficult for him, you know, when he came up against unassailable virtue. There was nothing for it but marriage. And he was so used to getting his own way with women ? what with his looks and his crown - that he couldn't have taken very resignedly to frustration.'
'Yes. That was the pattern of the Woodville marriage.
The indestructibly virtuous beauty with the gilt hair, and the secret wedding. So Edward had used the same F formula on a previous occasion, if Stillington's story was true. Was it true?'
'Well, in Edward's time, it seems, he was in turn both Privy Seal and Lord Chancellor, and he had been an ambassador to Brittany. So Edward either owed him something or liked him. And he, on his part, had no reason to cook up anything against Edward. Supposing he was the cooking sort.'
'No, I suppose not.'
'Anyway, the thing was put to Parliament, so we don't have to take just Stillington's word for it.'
'To Parliament!'
'Sure. Everything was open and above board. There was a very long meeting of the Lords of Westminster on the 9th. Stillington brought in his evidence and his witnesses, and a report was prepared to put before Parliament when it assembled on the 25th. On the 10th Richard sent a letter to the city of York asking for troops to protect and support him.'
'Ha! Trouble at last.'
'Yes. On the 11th he sent a similar letter to his cousin Lord Nevill. So the danger was real'
'It must have been real. A man who dealt so economically with that unexpected and very nasty situation at Northampton wouldn't be one to lose his head at a threat.'
'On the 20th he went with a small body of retainers to the Tower - did you know that the Tower was the royal residence in London, and not a prison at all?'
'Yes, I knew that. It got its prison meaning only because nowadays being sent to the Tower has one meaning only. And of course because, being the royal castle in London, and the only strong keep, offenders were sent there for safe keeping in the days before we had His Majesty's Prisons. What did Richard go to the Tower for?'
'He went to interrupt a meeting of the conspirators, and arrested Lord Hastings, Lord Stanley, and one John Morton, Bishop of Ely.'
'I thought we would arrive at John Morton sooner or later!
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