Michael Jecks - Dispensation of Death

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Only in this instance of the murder, there was something that had caught at Eleanor’s imagination, a kernel of truth that shrieked at her.

Many were already whispering that the King might have conspired with his ‘brother’ Despenser to remove the Queen because she could be such an embarrassment. If she were to go to France as the Pope had asked, she could cause untold problems for the English King.

Eleanor thought that the motive to remove her could be simpler, though. Isabella found the King’s infatuation with Hugh to be frankly, disgusting. And as the daughter of a King of France, and sister to the present French King, she saw no reason to acquiesce to any philandering with Hugh. Perhaps she could have understood and accommodated a female lover, but not a man. If the King sought to kill her, it was to remove the woman who could bruit news of his affair abroad. His sodomy. Were she to do so, Edward II could be excommunicated for heresy.

Eleanor herself had suspected their affair, but she preferred to close her eyes to it. She was no queen. She was a lady, and had some pride, but she was also a realist. A knight had once told her about Sir Hugh’s nocturnal visits to the King’s bedchamber, and she had laughed at him. ‘What of it? He is my husband, and the King his friend enriches us both in return.’

It was true, but tears of shame scalded her cheeks afterwards. She knew that men in the household discussed her husband and the King, and in the same breath, made lewd conjectures about her. Perhaps Eleanor was too frigid, they would say. Perhaps she could not make her old man’s tower rise.

When she had first realised that Hugh was being unfaithful, it had never occurred to Eleanor that it might be with another man . Then, sadder and wiser, she had swallowed her pride, accepting that such things could happen, but hoping that it would be a passing fad of the King’s, and that soon her husband would be free of this foul stain on his soul. But then the affection between them grew, and they became more demonstrative in public, and that was when she faced Hugh with it.

‘What of it, woman?’ was all he said, looking at her as if she was simple.

She had been lost for words at that. As though it mattered not a jot that he was doing something that was declared a vile sin by the Church. And when he laughed at her, she had burst into tears of humiliation. That was when he had suggested that she might like to join him and the King together in bed — that she could add spice to their love-making — and she had fled at that, hearing his bellows of laughter follow her all down the corridors. Perhaps he had made the same suggestion to her mistress, the Queen.

Eleanor had a new and terrifying thought: if the King and Hugh could think of removing Isabella the Queen so that they might more easily indulge their love … it was as likely that they could think of removing another — Eleanor herself. Or perhaps Hugh still desired Isabella, and felt that Eleanor was a barrier to his possessing the Queen.

‘No!’

It was ridiculous. Why, apart from his irrational outburst the other day, she had never seen her husband look at her with anything other than love or desire in his eyes.

But the thought was there, snagged in her mind. What if … what if he wanted her removed?

The Temple

Sir Hugh le Despenser knew nothing of his wife’s doubts. He sat sprawled in his comfortable great chair in the large solar block of his newest acquisition and looked about him with satisfaction.

‘Wine,’ he murmured. There was no need to shout. His servants knew better than to miss his commands. Will Pilk looked at him as soon as he spoke and hurried from the room.

Even the King’s own servants were not so attentive. Not to the King, anyway. They tended to obey Despenser, however.

He had returned here late, after a meal with Edward in his private chamber, and although the other man had wanted him to remain, he had gently but firmly rejected his demands. At first the King had been amused, thinking that this was merely some sort of play-acting to taunt and tease, but when he understood that Hugh was serious, he threw a little tantrum. This was developing into a habit now, and it was tedious. If it was anyone other than King Edward, Sir Hugh would have made them appreciate in no uncertain terms, how boorish that behaviour was.

‘I must return,’ he gave as his excuse. ‘My wife is not well after the events of last night.’

‘What of me , Hugh? I may need your protection. The killer could return, couldn’t he?’

‘I think the man who stabbed a lady-in-waiting is unlikely to try to prove himself as a regicide as well, my Lord.’

‘Oh, do you? And how do you get to have such detailed knowledge of the man’s mind?’ the King had snapped.

‘My Lord, surely you understand, in the circumstances, I have to ensure first that my wife is comfortable?’

‘You try to tell me that you could have misdirected the blow?’

And there it was. In his eyes, in the way that he stood and walked away from Hugh, the way that he averted his eyes from his companion and lover. He was as sure as he could be that Hugh was responsible for the attempt on the ladies. No denial would work here, he had seen immediately, and the two parted on civil, but less than amicable terms.

And the worst of it was, Hugh had absolutely no idea who had killed Mabilla, nor who had executed Jack. Jack was an old comrade, when all was said and done, and his loss was hurtful. Sir Hugh did not like to lose his servants. It was the sort of thing that could easily get out of control if people thought that they could kill his men with impunity.

‘Where is Ellis?’ he asked as soon as the servant returned with his wine.

‘I think he is in the main hall,’ Pilk said.

‘Bring him to me.’

Ellis was soon with him. Pilk had brought another horn for him, and once Ellis was standing before Sir Hugh, Pilk passed him the drink, retreating almost immediately to the door.

‘I was looking for you today, Ellis.’

‘I was busy,’ his henchman said shortly.

Despenser peered into his goblet. His voice was mildly pensive, as though he was ruminating on a new idea. ‘I had thought you worked for and served me. Perhaps I misunderstood. When I want my servants, I expect them to be there for me. But you were “busy”.’ He looked up from his drink and stared at Ellis.

Pilk felt that look in his bowels. No man came here to work for the Despenser without realising that he was entirely ruthless. Pilk could kill — he often had — but always there was a faint feeling of remorse afterwards. It felt as though each death niggled away at him, and someday there must be a reckoning.

Not so with Sir Hugh le Despenser. When he killed a man, there was no compunction at all in his face. Pilk had seen it. He had been there when Madam Baret had been captured by Despenser. The reason was simple: her husband had died and Despenser wanted to acquire all his lands. That meant Madam Baret must give them up, for she was not powerful enough, now her husband was dead, to demand compensation. Not that such a demand could have helped her.

She had been savagely tortured, to the extremity of sanity, and in the end her mind had been broken along with her body. And what had Despenser done? He had found the sight of her ruined figure stumbling away extremely funny — had laughed out loud. All he cared about was his own purse, and nothing and no one else.

‘I went to see my sister’s body, Sir Hugh.’

‘Who?’ Despenser appeared genuinely surprised. ‘Oh, the wench. I had forgotten she was your sister.’

‘Mabilla, yes. She married Sir Ralph Aubyn some years ago.’

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