His eyes narrowed. He did not think for one moment that this emotion which was obviously between them could possibly be the result of physical love. Eleanor would have too much sense. Any child she bore could be a king or queen of England and she was enough a queen to know that child could have only one father and he the King. Even so, there was no doubt that she liked this pretty fellow with his delicate beringed hands. He wondered whether Eleanor had given him the rings he was wearing.
He watched and listened and he remembered that very soon he would have to bring his bastards to court. For Avice’s children that would be easy, for they had been born before he had known Eleanor. But young Geoffrey, Hikenai’s son, would need a little explaining because he had been born after their marriage. For all Eleanor’s lively past she had been a faithful wife, which was surprising. But she had been fully occupied with childbearing. No sooner was one child born than another was on the way and there had been little time for any extra-marital adventures as far as she was concerned. He could see by her fondness for these poets who sang of a love which never seemed to reach any physical fulfilment that she was living in some romantic dream and that meant that it would be difficult for her to accept the needs of a man such as himself. He was no romantic. He was a realist. Women were important in his life and he had no intention that it should be otherwise. It was something she had to come to terms with, and she would on the day he brought young Geoffrey to court and had him brought up in that special manner reserved for a king’s bastards. His grandfather Henry I had had enough of them. William the Conqueror had not it seemed. He had never heard of a single one of his. But no one could hope to be like the Conqueror who had only lived to conquer and rule. These were good enough matters but not enough to fill a man’s life. And Eleanor would have to be made to understand.
He saw in this Ventadour affair a means of making his task easier when the moment came to confront her with young Geoffrey.
He rose suddenly in the middle of one of Bernard’s songs and left the company. Eleanor looked after him with amazement but she remained seated until the song was finished.
Then she said: ‘It seems that the King was not pleased with your little piece, Bernard.’
‘And my lady?’
‘I thought it excellent. If the lady you sing of really is possessed of so much beauty and virtue she must be a goddess.’
‘She is,’ replied Bernard fervently.
‘And your recital of her virtues clearly bored the King.’
‘I care not for the King’s boredom if I give the Queen pleasure.’
‘Be careful, Bernard. The King is a violent man.’
He bowed his head. How graceful he was! How gallant! And how she loved his poetry!
When she was alone with Henry he decided to begin the attack.
‘That oven girl’s bastard will have to leave the court,’ he said.
‘Bernard! Why he is reckoned as one of the greatest poets in the country.’
‘A slut’s bastard to give himself airs!’
‘His talent makes him equal to an earl.’
‘Not in my eyes,’ said the King. ‘And I like not the insolent manner in which he regards you.’
‘Insolent! He is never that. He respects none as he does his Queen.’
‘By God,’ cried Henry, ‘it seems the fellow aspires to be your lover.’
‘Only in his dreams.’
‘Dreams! The upstart dog! Tell him that I shall send him back to the ovens where he belongs.’
‘No great poet belongs working at an oven. You have some learning, Henry. You have a respect for talent … one might say genius.’
‘And I say insolence,’ shouted the King. ‘I’ll have his eyes put out.’
‘The whole of Aquitaine would rise against you. A great poet … one of our greatest … and simply because he writes a poem …’
‘To the Queen,’ cried Henry, ‘to whom he suggests … what does he suggest? By my mother’s blood; if words were deeds he would be in your bed. I swear it.’
‘But words are not deeds and I trust I know my duty.’
The King seized her by her shoulders and threw her on to the bed.
‘Know this,’ he said, ‘if ever I heard that you had deceived me I would kill your lover. Do you know that?’
‘And rightly so. I would not blame you.’
‘So you would not have blamed Louis if he had killed your lovers.’
‘Talk to me not of Louis.’
‘Indeed, I am no Louis.’
‘Would I have loved you, borne your children if you had been?’
‘You bore Louis children.’
‘I was younger then. I was trapped and I had not then found the way out of the trap.’
‘I like not this dalliance with your poet.’
‘Why do you fear I should prefer him to you?’
The king picked up the stool which stood in the room and threw it against the wall.
Through the castle there was hushed silence. The King was in one of his tempers. He was showing his anger and jealousy and suspicion against Bernard de Ventadour and the young poet was warned that he should slip quietly away until the storm had blown over.
Henry raged about the apartment accusing her of infidelity but there was something lacking in this bout of rage.
Finally he flung himself on to the bed where Eleanor had lain watching him.
He seized her with sudden passion and declared once more that he would run his sword through any man who dared to make love to her.
Eleanor accepted his embraces; Ventadour retired from the court although he was to return later; and very soon after that incident Eleanor discovered that she was once more pregnant.
Since Henry’s appearance in France the situation there had become more peaceful and he felt it was time that he returned to England.
He had no intention of leaving Eleanor behind in France. He decided that she and the children should travel back to England ahead of him. The new child should be born there.
She missed Aquitaine and her troubadours for although there were many poets and singers at her court they did not seem the same as those of Provence. Often she thought of Bernard de Ventadour who had been driven from the Castle of Ventadour because of his verses to the Countess and now had displeased the King because of his devotion to Eleanor.
Bernard was a man who must have a lady to whom he could address his poems. No doubt by this time he had found another castle and another lady.
She shrugged aside romantic thoughts and gave herself up to the matter of preparing for another birth. My destiny, she thought! Is there to be no end of it? If I get another son I shall call a halt to this pattern.
She dreamed of a son. She wanted a son this time. She was fond of her children but young Henry was too overbearing, and already looked like his father. He bullied Matilda who did not show the spirit of the grandmother for whom she had been named.
This son would be different, she promised herself. Tall and handsome as Raymond of Antioch, as great a ruler as his father, in truth a king. But how could he be, when he had an elder brother?
It pleased her to dream of this son who had been conceived in the warmth of Aquitaine. Aquitaine should be his. She patted her body and whispered: ‘I shall bequeath it to you, little son.’
The child moved within her and she laughed delightedly. He must have understood her. She was convinced this one was going to be no ordinary child.
She had travelled to Oxford for she had decided that in this neighbourhood the child should be born. Just outside the walls of the city, close to the northern gate was Beaumont Palace with its serene views of green meadows beyond which rose the turrets of Oxford Castle from which years ago Henry’s mother had escaped on the ice. Here her child should be born.