loss?”
Margaret leaned closer and saw that, indeed, Mary did weep. Great tears rolled down her cheeks.
Mary stared ahead, as if looking at someone. “Is he dead? Is he?”
“Madam!” Margaret grabbed Mary’s hand between both of hers, and squeezed as tightly as she dared.
Mary continued to stare ahead, then she gasped, and cried out softly. “No! No!”
“Mary!” Margaret was beside herself, wondering what to do. Had the potion been too strong? Was it murdering Mary instead of aiding her? She half turned, meaning to wake thewomen who slept at the foot of Mary’s bed, but just then Mary whipped her head about on the pillow and stared at Margaret.
“You are not all you would have me believe, are you, Margaret?”
Margaret opened her mouth, not knowing what to say.
Mary’s mouth grimaced in a frightful rictus, her breath odorous due to the potion she’d imbibed and the dryness of her tongue.
“Margaret,” she whispered, “why do so many people lie to me?”
And then, suddenly, she was asleep, and breathing easy.
Her hand relaxed away from Margaret’s.
VII
Friday 17th May 1381
“ W hat clearer sign could you hope to have, my lord, than that of Exeter’s revolt?”
The son of the Earl of Northumberland, Sir Henry Percy, commonly called Hotspur, slouched in the chair, staring at Prior General Richard Thorseby with dark, unreadable eyes. The Prior General had joined his household six months ago, just after Bolingbroke had himself crowned. And for six months the Prior General had been whispering and arguing and pleading: King Henry was an evil man who had murdered Richard and who would drive England into the mud of ignominy should he be allowed to keep the throne.
And who else was to act if not Hotspur?
“Exeter’s revolt lasted an afternoon, Prior General,” Hotspur said, “and ended in his death and those of his allies. I do not call that a ‘clear sign’.”
“People resent Bolingbroke! The country will rise up against him if you lead!”
Hotspur sprang out of his chair, snatching a pike from a surprised man-at-arms guarding the doorway of the chamber, and threw it down at Thorseby’s feet. “If you think the country so ready to rise, then lead it yourself!”
Thorseby took a deep breath and composed his face. He folded his hands inside the voluminous sleeves of his habitand affected a righteous air, not realising that it only antagonised Hotspur further.
“Bolingbroke must be overthrown. He is the devil’s spawn.”
Trying to keep his temper, Hotspur strode to a shuttered window, unlatched one of the shutters, and drew it open. Outside there was nothing but cold, grey fog, with here and there the bare black branches of wind-blasted trees reaching into the low sky like the skeletal fingers of a corpse.
Lord God , Hotspur thought, I do not know which I hate more — the damp climes of these northern lands, or the ever-whining voice of the Prior General.
He stood a few minutes, allowing the still grey landscape outside to calm him, then he closed the shutter and turned back to Thorseby.
“I can understand your dislike of Thomas Neville,” Hotspur said, “but why your sudden hatred of Bolingbroke? Do you profess to hate him, and thus beg me to dislodge him from the throne, only so you can once more claim Neville?”
Thorseby took his time in answering. In truth, he did loathe Bolingbroke because of his protection of Neville…but that was not all. Sometimes, over these past few months, he’d had strange visitations from shadowy, cloaked figures who had whispered that they were the messengers of the angels, and it was heaven’s wish that Bolingbroke be torn down and destroyed. In his more lucid moments, Thorseby feared these shadowy, whispering visitors were but figments of his imagination. But these moments were few and far between, and generally Thorseby knew he had God, the angels and all of heaven behind him on this issue.
Bolingbroke must go. Neville must be brought to