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'
'No one invented her. Elizabeth Woodville did come out of sanctuary, and did accept a pension from Richard.
The pension was not only granted, it was paid. Her daughters went to parties at the Palace and she wrote to her other son-her first-marriage son-to come home from France and make his peace with Richard. Oliphant's only suggestion as to the reason for this is that she was either frightened of being dragged Out of sanctuary (did you ever know of anyone who was dragged out of sanctuary? The man who did that would be excommunicated -and Richard was a very good son of Holy Church) or that she was bored with sanctuary life.'
'And what is your theory about so odd a proceeding?'
'The obvious explanation is that the boys were alive and well. No one at that time ever suggested otherwise.'
Marta considered the sprays of mimosa. 'Yes, of course. You said that there was no accusation in that Bill of Attainder. After Richard's death, I mean.' Her eyes went from the mimosa to the portrait on the table and then to Grant. 'You think, then, you really soberly think, as a policeman, that Richard didn't have anything to do with the boys' deaths.'
'I'm quite sure that they were alive and well when Henry took over the Tower on his arrival in London. There is nothing that would explain his omission to make a scandal of it if the boys were missing. Can you think of anything?'
'No. No, of course not. It is quite inexplicable. I have always taken it for granted that there was a terrific scandal about it. That it would be one of the main accusations against Richard. You and my woolly lamb seem to be having a lovely time with history. When I suggested a little investigation to pass the time and stop the prickles I had no idea that I was contributing to the rewriting of history. Which reminds me, Atlanta Shergold is gunning for you.'
'For me? I've never even met her.'
'Nevertheless she is looking for you with a gun. She says that Brent's attitude to the B.M. has become the attitude of an addict to his drug. She can't drag him away from it. If she takes him away from it physically, he spends the time harking back to it in his mind; so that she mightn't exist as far as he is concerned. He has even stopped sitting through To Sea in a Bowl. Do you see much of him?'
'He was here a few minutes before you came. But I don't expect to hear from him again for some days to come.'
But in that he was wrong.
Just before supper-time the porter appeared with a telegram.
Grant put his thumb under the dainty Post Office lick on the flap and extracted two sheets of. telegram. The telegram was from Brent.
Hell and damnation an awful thing has happened (stop) you know that chronicle in Latin I talked about (stop) the chronicle written by the monk at Croyland Abbey (stop) well I've just seen it and the rumour is there the rumour about the boys being dead (stop) the thing is written before Richard's death so we are sunk arent we and I specially am sunk and that fine book of mine will never be written (stop) is anyone allowed to commit suicide in your river or is it reserved for the British
Brent
Into the silence the voice of the porter said: 'It's reply-paid, sir. Do you want to send an answer?'
'What? Oh. No. Not right away. I'll send it down presently.'
'Very good, sir,' said the porter looking respectfully at the two sheets of
telegram-in the porter's family a telegram was confined to one sheet only-and went away, not humming this time.
Grant considered the news conveyed with such transatlantic extravagance in the matter of telegraphic communication. He read the thing again.
'Croyland,' he said, considering. Why did that ring a bell?
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