Josephine Tey - The Daughter of Time

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Alan Grant, Scotland Yard Inspector (who appears in five other novels by the same author) is confined to bed in hospital with a broken leg. Bored and restless, he becomes intrigued by a portrait of King Richard III brought to him by a friend. He prides himself on being able to read a person’s character from his face, and King Richard seems to him a gentle and kind and wise man. Why is everyone so sure that he was a cruel murderer?

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‘Like Richard.’

‘Like Richard. How have you been getting on with our own particular Tonypandy?’

‘Well, I still haven’t managed to find out why Henry was so anxious to hush up that Act as well as repeal it. The thing was hushed-up and for years it was forgotten, until the original draft turned up, just by chance, in the Tower records. It was printed in 1611. Speed printed the full text of it in his History of Great Britain .’

‘Oh. So there’s no question at all about Titulus Regius. Richard succeeded as the Act says, and the sainted More’s account is nonsense. There never was an Elizabeth Lucy in the matter.’

‘Lucy? Who’s Elizabeth Lucy?’

‘Oh, I forgot. You weren’t on in that act. According to the sainted More, Richard claimed that Edward was married to one of his mistresses, one Elizabeth Lucy.’

The disgusted look that the mention of the sainted More always caused on young Carradine’s mild face made him look almost nauseated.

‘That’s nonsense.’

‘So the sainted More smugly pointed out.’

‘Why did they want to hide Eleanor Butler?’ Carradine said, seeing the point.

‘Because she really had married Edward, and the children really were illegitimate. And if the children really were illegitimate, by the way, then no one would rise in their favour and they were no danger to Richard. Have you noticed that the Woodville-Lancastrian invasion was in Henry’s favour, and not in the boys’ – although Dorset was their half-brother? And that was before any rumours of their non-existence could have reached him. As far as the leaders of the Dorset-Morton rebellion were concerned the boys were of no account. They were backing Henry. That way, Dorset would have a brother-in-law on the throne of England, and the Queen would be his half-sister. Which would be a nice reversal of form for a penniless fugitive.’

‘Yes. Yes, that’s a point, all right; that about Dorset not fighting to restore his half-brother. If there had been a chance at all that England would have accepted the boy, he surely would have backed the boy. I’ll tell you another interesting thing I found. The Queen and her daughters came out of sanctuary quite soon. It’s your talking about her son Dorset that reminded me. She not only came out of sanctuary but settled down as if nothing had happened. Her daughters went to festivities at the Palace. And do you know what the pay-off is?’

‘No?’

‘That was after the Princes had been “murdered”. Yes, and I’ll tell you something else. With her two boys done to death by their wicked uncle, she writes to her other son, in France – Dorset – and asks him to come home and make his peace with Richard, who will treat him well.’

There was silence.

There were no sparrows to talk today. Only the soft sound of the rain against the window.

‘No comment?’ Carradine said at last.

‘You know,’ Grant said, ‘from the police point of view there is no case against Richard at all. And I mean that literally. It isn’t that the case isn’t good enough. Good enough to bring into court, I mean. There, quite literally, isn’t any case against him at all.’

‘I’ll say there isn’t. Especially when I tell you that every single one of those people whose names you sent me were alive and prosperous, and free, when Richard was killed at Bosworth. They were not only free, they were very well cared for. Edward’s children not only danced at the Palace, they had pensions. He appointed one of the crowd his heir when his own boy died.’

‘Which one?’

‘George’s boy.’

‘So he meant to reverse the attainder on his brother’s children.’

‘Yes. He had protested about his being condemned, if you remember.’

‘According to even the sainted More, he did. So all the heirs to the throne of England were going about their business, free and unfettered, during the reign of Richard III, the Monster.’

‘They were more. They were part of the general scheme of things. I mean, part of the family and the general economy of the realm. I’ve been reading a collection of York records by a man Davies. Records of the town of York, I mean; not the family. Both young Warwick – George’s son – and his cousin, young Lincoln, were members of the Council. The town addressed a letter to them. In 1485, that was. What’s more, Richard knighted young Warwick at the same time as he knighted his own son, at a splendid “do” at York.’ He paused a long moment, and then blurted out: ‘Mr Grant, do you want to write a book about this?’

‘A book!’ Grant said, astonished. ‘God forbid. Why?’

‘Because I should like to write one. It would make a much better book than the Peasants.’

‘Write away.’

‘You see, I’d like to have something to show my father. Pop thinks I’m no good because I can’t take an interest in furniture, and marketing, and graphs of sales. If he could actually handle a book that I had written he might believe that I wasn’t so hopeless a bet after all. In fact, I wouldn’t put it past him to begin to boast about me for a change.’

Grant looked at him with benevolence.

‘I forgot to ask you what you thought of Crosby Place,’ he said.

‘Oh, fine, fine. If Carradine the Third ever sees it he’ll want to take it back with him and rebuild it in the Adirondacks somewhere.’

‘If you write that book about Richard, he most certainly will. He’ll feel like a part-owner. What are you going to call it?’

‘The book?’

‘Yes.’

‘I’m going to borrow a phrase from Henry Ford, and call it History is Bunk .’

‘Excellent.’

‘However, I’ll have a lot more reading to do and a lot more research, before I can start writing.’

‘Most assuredly you have. You haven’t arrived yet at the real question.’

‘What is that?’

‘Who did murder the boys.’

‘Yes, of course.’

‘If the boys were alive when Henry took over the Tower what happened to them?’

‘Yes. I’ll get on to that. I still want to know why it was so important to Henry to hush up the contents of Titulus Regius.’

He got up to go, and then noticed the portrait that was lying on its face on the table. He reached over and restored the photograph to its original place, propping it with a concerned care against the pile of books.

‘You stay there,’ he said to the painted Richard. ‘I’m going to put you back where you belong.’

As he went out of the door, Grant said:

‘I’ve just thought of a piece of history which is not Tonypandy.’

‘Yes?’ said Carradine, lingering.

‘The massacre of Glencoe.’

‘That really did happen?’

‘That really did happen. And – Brent!’ Brent put his head back inside the door. ‘Yes?’

‘The man who gave the order for it was an ardent Covenanter.’

13

Carradine had not been gone more than twenty minutes when Marta appeared, laden with flowers, books, candy, and goodwill. She found Grant deep in the fifteenth century as reported by Sir Cuthbert Oliphant. He greeted her with an absentmindedness to which she was not accustomed.

‘If your two sons had been murdered by your brother-in-law, would you take a handsome pension from him?’

‘I take it that the question is rhetorical,’ Marta said, putting down her sheaf of flowers and looking round to see which of the already occupied vases would best suit their type.

‘Honestly, I think historians are all mad. Listen to this:

The conduct of the Queen-Dowager is hard to explain; whether she feared to be taken from sanctuary by force, or whether she was merely tired of her forlorn existence at Westminster, and had resolved to be reconciled to the murderer of her sons out of mere callous apathy, seems uncertain.

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