Добавить в цитаты Настройки чтения

Страница 71 из 80



Petronel Brocart replied that he had foreseen it but had not trusted what he saw and put it down to being a dream and not true foresight. The odds were so overwhelmingly against the English that it could only have been a last minute miracle, decided on in one moment by the powers either of good or evil —it remained to be seen which.

Joa

Brocart made sure that he was kept up to date with the latest events which often meant he was able to prophesy a certainty; he kept messengers, whom he paid handsomely, and their duty was to give him the latest information as to

what was happening at the Court of Brittany.

Therefore he had news for the Queen; and it was not pleasant news.

*It does not surprise me/ said Brocart, 'that you feel this lack of ease. There is ill news coming to you, my lady/

Joa

Tray tell me the worst. My son .. .*

'The Duke is well/ replied Colles. *He did not take part in the fighting but wisely remained neutral.'

'Your daughter's husband, the Due d'Alen^on, has been killed/ said Brocart.

Joa

'Your brother Charles of Navarre was wounded in the battle.'

'He has since died of his wounds,' added Colles.

'And my son ... Arthur?' asked Joa

'He is Henry's prisoner.*

*Oh my God, what will become of him?*

'He will remain in England at the King's pleasure, my lady.'

'And shall I see my son?*

'Ere long, my lady.'

'It grieves us to give you such news, dear lady.'

'I know it,' replied Joa

'We have told you all, my lady.'

Joa

She had pleaded with the King. He must allow her to see her son. She knew that he had broken the allegiance which as Earl of Richmond he owed to England. But she was his mother and she had not seen him for eleven years when as a boy he had come to England. Perhaps she had been wrong to remind the King of that occasion for it was when he had received the investiture of Earl of Richmond.

The King replied that her son was a traitor. He had been found with England's enemy and had been taken in battle. He could not expect to be received in honour in England; he

was a prisoner, a danger to England, and Henry could see no reason why he should be treated otherwise even though his mother had been a Queen of England.

Joa

Arthur was to come, under guard, to Havering after which he would be taken back to the Tower of London. When she heard that he would soon be with her Joa

*I must try not to weep,' she said. *Oh, it is a sad state of affairs when children are lost to their mothers at an early age/

'Compose yourself, my lady,* advised John Randolf. Trayer will be a solace to you. I would suggest Madam that it is unwise to rely so much on those charlatans, Brocart and Colles. They can bring no good to you.'

'They foresaw that my son would be a prisoner. They warned me in advance.'

'It is dabbling in evil powers, my lady, and will do you no good with God and his saints.'

Joa

But this was no time to consider rivalries.

Arthur was coming and she must be prepared for him, so she knelt with Randolf and together they asked for God's blessing and that the King's heart might be softened towards Arthur.





He was on his way. Soon he would be with her. She was trembling with excitement.

She said to one of her ladies, 'Do sit in my chair so that when he comes in he will think you are his mother. 1 will watch him for a while before I reveal myself.'

*He will know you for the Queen, my lady, by your very bearing.'

'Nay,' said Joa

And so she was seated on a footstool at the feet of her lady attendant when her son entered. He was handsome, young, all that she could have wished him to be ... except that he was a prisoner. The guards were standing at the door to remind her of that sad fact.

He approached her lady-in-waiting and knelt at her feet. Joa

'My mother,' said Arthur, 'this is a sad meeting. But I rejoice to see you.'

They embraced.

'I will present you to my ladies,' said the substitute Queen, but at that moment Joa

'My son, my son,' she cried, 'do you not know me?'

Arthur looked in astonishment from the lady-in-waiting to the Queen.

'Yes,' said Joa

1 see it now,' cried Arthur.

*I had to wait awhile,' said Joa

They embraced warmly, then looked at each other search-ingly. 'You were but a boy when you went away,' said Joa

*Oh, Mother, so much has happened since then.'

*I was so proud of you, my Earl of Richmond.'

'Alas, Mother.'

'Henry will treat you well. I would I could keep you here with me.'

*I come as a prisoner, my lady.*

Joa

'Come, tell me of home. Tell me of your brother and your sister ... She has lost her husband.'

'Agincourt was disastrous for us.'

'And such a victory here. They are still having their pageants and their revelries, their thanksgiving services. The bells are ringing all over the country.'

'One King's victory must be another's defeat. Mother.*

'And you were on the ^vTong side.'

'It seemed so impossible that the English could triumph.*

'Nothing is certain in war/ said Joa

She was right.

That day Arthur was taken back to his prison in the Tower. The brief reunion was over.

The King kept Christmas at Lambeth.

He was restive. He had won a brilliant victory at Agincourt but all it had brought him was Harfleur. He was no nearer to the crown of France than his predecessors had been.

After Agincourt it would have been the utmost folly to have marched to Paris. Wretched and defeated as it was, what was left of the French army could have stopped him. If the French were in a sad state so were the English. Many of his soldiers were suffering from dysentery. They had fought magnificently but they were in no shape to endure another battle for a while. Good general that he was he had seen there was only one thing he could do and that was return home and get together more men and more stores before he began another campaign.

He could be proud of the achievement. The French had suffered a shattering defeat and they would be demoralized. No more barrels of te