At Pontefract, Lancaster had been waiting with an army― men who should have been beside their King at Bannockburn and Lancaster could not hide his satisfaction at the sight of the fugitive King.
An army! Why had he assembled an army? It was because, he had implied, he believed that if Edward had been successful in Scotland he would have turned his victorious army against Lancaster and those earls who had not been with him at the battle.
Then Edward must ride, side by side, with Lancaster to York, where a parliament had been called. Was there no end to the humiliation an unkind fate was heaping on him?
In York he was made aware of his subject’s contempt. He wanted to shriek at them when they continually invoked his father’s name. Great Edward, they called him as though to differentiate between him and his ineffectual son.
I will be revenged on them all one day, Edward promised himself.
He was clearly told what he must do, and it was maddening to realize that he had no alternative but to obey. He must confirm the ordinances; he must receive back into favour those earls with whom he had recently been at cross purposes.
That meant the murderers of Perrot and most humiliating of all, he was informed that his allowance would cut to ten pounds a day.
He listened quietly but inwardly seething with rage.
Lancaster was contemplating him blandly. Edward was King in name but Lancaster was in command now.
Lancaster faced the King. Edward was thinking: Perrot has always hated you. He knew you meant me no good, my cousin though you might be. But perhaps it was because you were my cousin and so close to the throne that you always believed you would make the better king.
Lancaster was indeed thinking how feeble Edward was and he was still exulting in the defeat at Bannockburn. Surely that showed the people the kind of man they had as King. How many English were saying this day: ‘If only Lancaster had been the son of Edward the First.’
It mattered little now. He was in command. Edward was aware of that for it was obvious.
‘My lord,’ said Lancaster, ‘there will have to be some change of office. I have long felt— and others share my view― that those who hold the highest posts in the country are not worthy of them.’
Edward wanted to scream with rage. He controlled his anger and said coldly:
‘It is not an unusual state of affairs for those who would rule to dislike a king’s friends.’
‘Ah, if they were but your friends, my lord, none would rejoice in them more than I. It is as you know, dear lord and cousin, my earnest wish to serve you.’
‘I am glad to hear that,’ answered Edward grimly.
‘So, my lord, it is agreed that Walter Reynolds having bestowed on him the high office of Canterbury should relinquish the Great Seal. One cannot expect him to serve two such great offices in the manner demanded of them.’
So Walter was going now. Thank God he had given him Canterbury. They could not oust him from his archbishopric.
‘And whom would you bestow the Great Seal, cousin?’
The sarcasm was lost on Lancaster. He had never been a man to look for subtleties. He had the answer promptly.
‘I― and others agree that John Sandale should have the Seal.’
Sandale. A good churchman and one of Lancaster’s men.
What could he say? It was true Walter held both offices and many could agree that he had not the qualifications to do so. In fact, a great many thought it was unfortunate that such a worldly man should hold the office of Archbishop of Canterbury. Edward knew he dared not protest.
Lancaster triumphantly went on to mention other members of the King’s household whom he thought it would be better to replace.
Inside, Edward writhed with shame. Yet what could he do? Who was there to stand with him now? Those who had supported him at Bannockburn were no longer esteemed by the people. They shared the shame of defeat. Pembroke and Hereford had emerged from the battle it was true, but shorn of the honours they had won in the past. Gloucester who might have stood beside him was dead. He would never forgive Warwick for the part he had played in Perrot’s murder and any case, Warwick’s health had deteriorated so much that he was a sick man. He could not be sure of Warenne, whose loyalty fluctuated. His political life reflected his domestic affairs which were invariably in a turmoil. His marriage with Joan of Bar, the only daughter of Edward the First’s daughter Eleanor and the Count of Bar, was unhappy and he was at this time living with Matilda de Nerford, the daughter of a Norfolk nobleman— a fact deplored by her family and the Church itself; and the Bishop of Chichester had threatened to excommunicate Warenne if he did not mend his ways. He was attempting to get his marriage with Joan annulled on the time-worn pleas of nearness of kin.
Meanwhile he continued to live with Matilda who had already borne him several sons.
No he could hardly look for help to a man in Warenne’s position. There was nothing he could do but give way.
Very well, let them do as they would. He would forget them. He would give himself up to contemplating the burial he would give to Perrot.
Dear Perrot. He had always comforted him. He was comforting him now.
Lancaster left the King and rode back to Kenilworth well-pleased with life.
He could see that what he had always hoped for was failing into his hands. That Edward was not worthy to be King, most men knew. Strange to think that he was still drooling over Gaveston. He was thinking of giving him a grand burial.
Let him. It would keep him quiet while weightier matters went ahead.
King in all but name. The position could not be better. For if Edward were deposed there would still be the young Edward, King of England, and who better to guide him than his royal kinsman Lancaster. Yes, let Edward concern himself with showering honours on his dear dead friend. It would keep him occupied and remind people— if they needed to be reminded— of that liaison which had played a strong part in bringing him to his present humiliating position.
He rode into the castle. Grooms hurried forward to take his horse.
He was momentarily depressed thinking pleasant it would have been to have found a devoted wife waiting for him, eager to hear of his triumphs.
Alice was there, as good manners demanded, to greet her lord, but her gaze was as cold as ice. It had always been so for him, he remembered. Alice was beautiful, dignified as would be expected of the daughter of Henry de Lacy, Earl of Lincoln and Salisbury. Impious Gaveston had called him Burst Belly because of his girth, but that could not detract from his standing in the country as one of the first earls of the realm— rich and powerful. And Alice was his heiress.
Something she never forgot.
The marriage of Lincoln and Salisbury with Lancaster, Ferrers and Derby should have been an ideal one― and it was in one sense. But Alice had quickly shown that she had little regard for him and that she knew it was the titles of Lincoln and Salisbury which had been her great attraction. Perhaps if they had had children― But they never had and never would now. Alice had made it perfectly clear that even for the sake of handing down these high-sounding titles, she would not resume a relationship from which children might result.