what became of him. Killed, I suppose, in the battle?'
'Not at all,' answered Gysburne. 'Sheriff de Glanville was leading a division of men who were butchered by the rebels. All were murdered, save the sheriff, who was taken prisoner and is being held hostage. They promise to release him once our wounded soldiers are well enough to travel. Although, what is to become of him, I cannot say.'
'I see,' said Baron Neufmarche gravely. 'A bad business all around. Well, I bid you adieu and wish you safe travels.' He turned and summoned his commander to his side. 'See here, Ormand,' he said, 'my friends are travelling to Londein on an errand of some urgency. I want you to escort them through the town and see them safely to the borders of my realm. Let nothing untoward happen to them while they are with you.'
'To be sure, Sire.' Ormand, a capable and levelheaded knight who served as the baron's marshal, put out a hand to his new charges. 'Shall we proceed, my lords? After you.'
The baron, standing at the topmost gate, waved his unwanted guests away; he waited until they were lost to sight in the narrow street leading down from the castle. Then, hurrying to his chambers, he called for a pen and parchment to send a message to the baroness in Wales informing her of the uprising and instructing her to tell King Garran to gather his soldiers and be ready to step in should the revolt show signs of spreading.
'Remey!' he called, waving the small square of parchment in the air to dry the ink. 'I need a messenger at once-and see that he has the fastest horse in the stable. I want this delivered to Lady Agnes this time tomorrow and no later.'
CHAPTER 31
Londein
Cardinal Flambard pulled up the hem of his robe and stepped over the low rail of the boat and onto the dock. He dipped into his purse for a coin and flipped it to the ferryman, then turned and strolled up the dock, avoiding the gulls fighting over piles of fish guts some unthinking oaf had left to swelter in the sun. He raised his eyes to the Billings Gate and started his climb up the steep bank, stifling an inward sigh. It was his lot ever to run to the king's least whim and answer His Majesty's flimsiest fancy. Like two men sharing a prison cell, they were chained to one another until one of them died. Such was the price of standing so near the throne.
Standing? Ranulf Flambard occupied that gilded seat as often as ever the king sat there-considering that Red William remained in perpetual motion, flitting here and there and everywhere… stamping out rebellion, squabbling with his disgruntled brothers, resisting the constant incursions by the Mother Church into what he considered his private affairs. And when the king wasn't doing that, he was hunting. In fact, that was William: always at the sharp end of any conflict going or, failing that, causing one.
And the dutiful Ranulf Flambard, Chief Justiciar of England, was there at his side to pick up the pieces.
It was to William's side that he was summoned now, and he laboured up from the stinking jetty with a scented cloth pressed to his nose. The riverside at the rank end of summer was a very cesspool-when was it not? Proceeding through the narrow streets lining the great city's wharf he allowed himself to think what life might be like as a bishop in a remote, upcountry see. As attractive as the notion seemed at the moment, would all that serenity soon pall? It was not likely he would ever find out. Turning from that, he wondered what fresh debacle awaited him this time.
At the gate to the White Tower he was admitted without delay and personally conducted by the porter to the entrance to the king's private apartment, where his presence was announced by the chamberlain. Following a short interval, he was admitted.
'Oh, Flambard, it's you,' said William, glancing up. He was stuffing the voluminous tail of his shirt into his too- tight breeches. Finishing the chore, he started towards the door. 'At last.'
'I came as soon as I received your summons, Majesty. Forgive me for not anticipating your call.'
'Eh? Yes, well…' Red William looked at his chief advisor and tried to work out whether Flambard was mocking him. He could not tell, so let it go. 'You're here now and there's work to do.'
'A pleasure, Sire.' He made a tight little bow that, perfected over years of service, had become little more than a slight nod of the head with a barely discernible bend at the waist. 'Am I to know what has occasioned this summons, my lord?'
'It is all to do with that business in Elvile,' William said, pushing past the justiciar and bowling down the corridor which led to his audience rooms. 'Remember all that ruck?'
'I seem to have a recollection, Sire. There was some trouble with one of the barons-de Braose, if I recall the incident correctly. You banished the baron and took the cantref under your authority-placed it in the care of some abbot or other, and a sheriff somebody.'
'You remember, good,' decided the king. 'Then you can talk to him.'
'Talk to whom, Majesty, if I may ask?'
'That blasted abbot-he's here. Been driven off his perch by bandits, apparently. Demanding an audience. Screaming the roof down.' The king stopped walking so abruptly that the cardinal almost collided with his squat, solid form. 'Give him whatever he wants. No-whatever it takes to make him go away. I'm off to Normandie in a fortnight, and I cannot spare even a moment.'
'I understand, Highness,' replied the cardinal judiciously. 'I will see what can be done.'
They continued on to the audience chamber, discussing the king's proposed journey to Normandie, where he planned to meet with King Philip to challenge the French monarch's increasingly flagrant incursions beyond the borders of the Vexin. 'Philip is a low, craven ass. His trespasses will not be tolerated, hear?' said William as he pushed open the chamber door. 'Ah! There you are.' This was spoken as if the king had spent the better part of the day in a harried search for the petitioner.
'My lord and majesty,' said the abbot, once again resplendent in a simple white satin robe and purple stole. 'You honour your servant with your presence.'
William waved aside the flattery. 'What is it you want? I was told it was a matter of some urgency. Speak, man, let's get it done.'
'My lord,' said Abbot Hugo, 'I fear I bring unhappy tidings. The-'
'Who are you?' asked the king, turning to the young man standing a few steps behind the abbot. 'Well? Step up. Let me know you.'
'I am Marshal Guy de Gysburne at your service, Sire,' replied the knight.
'Gysburne, eh? I think I know your father-up north somewhere, isn't it?'
'Indeed, Majesty.'
'Are you the sheriff?'
'Majesty?'
'The sheriff I appointed to Elvile-or whatever the miserable place is called.'
'No, Majesty,' replied Guy, 'I am the abbot's marshal. Sheriff de Glanville is-'
'De Glanville-yes! That's the fellow,' said the king as the memory came back to him. 'Came to me begging the use of some soldiers. Where is he? Why isn't he here?'
'That is what we've come to speak to you about, Highness,' said the abbot, resuming his tale of woe. 'It pains me to inform you that the realm of Elfael is in open rebellion against your rule. The rebels have slaughtered most of the men you sent to aid in the protection of your loyal subjects.'
Abbot Hugo then proceeded to describe a realm under siege and a population captive to chaos and terror. He spoke passionately and in some detail-so much so that even Gysburne felt himself moved to outrage at the accumulated atrocities, though the abbot's description had parted company with the truth after the first few words. 'If that was not enough,' concluded Hugo, 'the outlaws have seized the throne and taken your sheriff hostage.'
'They have, eh? By the rood, I'll have their eyes on my belt! I'll hang the-'
'Your Majesty,' interrupted Cardinal Flambard, 'perhaps it would be best if I were to sit down with the abbot here and see what can be done?'
'No need, Flambard,' retorted the king. 'A blind man can see what needs to be done. Rebellion must be snuffed out swiftly and mercilessly, lest it spreads out of hand. These Welsh must be taught a lesson. I've too long