Gideon’s direction. ‘Watch that one! He’s a heart-breaker.’
‘The quiet ones are the worst!’ The young woman, who was not
quite
as young as Gideon had first supposed, looked unfazed by the warning. ‘And you are another pretty hero,’ she simpered at Lambert shamelessly.
‘Oh, I am handy at push of pike!’ he replied, with open innuendo, twirling the blond moustache against which Gideon had taken so badly.
‘Your wife will hate to hear you have been flirting, Lambert!’ As soon as Gideon spoke, he felt that this was mean-spirited. He noticed that Lambert hardly reacted. Nor did the cheese-bearer.
‘Lambert!’
she noted.
‘And
Gideon!’
said Lambert, who had always been more generous than his brother deserved.
Lambert had left her free to choose between them, but the dynamics had changed. Two men in play was more than the woman wanted; she lost interest in both. The elder brother now seemed too cocky to tolerate, the younger too shy to educate. There were twenty-four thousand troops here and she let herself believe that her role was congratulating them. She moved off.
Lambert seemed disinclined to follow, though Gideon spotted that his brother watched which way she went. Had Gideon been older, more experienced, less inhibited by his companions, he might have gone along with her: offered to carry her basket, engaged in harmless conversation, waited to see what might happen. Inexperienced though he was, he felt it would have worked to his advantage.
He did not know how to manage this. He was not even sure that such an encounter was what he wanted. Gideon favoured what the
Grand Remonstrance
had called ‘comfort and conversation’ between men and women — even though his loins told him ‘comfort’ could have a wide meaning. With his partner, his apprentice and his brother all gawping like costermongers, it was easiest to remember he had been brought up in decent morality.
The pie in his hand was not as good as those his mother baked. He knew Parthenope would have sent provisions to the troops. Some other lucky bastard must be munching those. Like a true soldier already, he enjoyed the moment of repose and did not allow regret to linger.
The bloodless encounter at Turnham Green had saved London, though it solved nothing. The civil war had barely started yet.
Chapter Six
Oxford: September, 1642
When Edmund Treves was nearly killed by the head of the Virgin Mary he took his first step towards marriage.
In truth his first step was very shaky. The soldiers’ pot-shots had cracked into the stone Virgin, shearing off her veiled head. That smashed down on to the pavement, narrowly missing him. Oxford townspeople shouted with delight at the decapitation; their applause mingled with mutters of horror from robed university men. Treves saw in confusion that a stone shard from the statue had sliced across his wrist, causing blood to flow Another shot rang out. It was his first time under fire. The familiar wide main street called the High, with its ancient university buildings, suddenly became a place of terror. As Treves realised the danger, his knees buckled and he nearly fainted.
Among the noisy onlookers, one man watched in silence. Orlando Lovell weighed up how the old feuds between town and gown festered with new complications. Freshly returned from the Continent after some years away, he saw with astonishment that tradesmen were openly jeering at frightened dons. Buff-coated troops had clustered in the gateway of Oriel College, threatening to manhandle gawping college servants and then firing at the University Church.
He knew it was the second wave of soldiers. These Parliamentarian hooligans had driven out a Royalist force only a few days previously, each group finding a welcome in some quarters but each fearing reprisals. Barely controlled by their officers, the newcomers were skittish. Already some had mutinied at a muster in the University Parks; dragoons had gone armed to church on Sunday,