South of the armory of Westminster
Palace lay the gardens, and here, on the third day
following the King’s affront to De Vac, might
have been a seen a black-haired woman gowned in a
violet cyclas, richly embroidered with gold about
the yoke and at the bottom of the loose-pointed sleeves,
which reached almost to the similar bordering on the
lower hem of the garment. A richly wrought leathern
girdle, studded with precious stones, and held in
place by a huge carved buckle of gold, clasped the
garment about her waist so that the upper portion
fell outward over the girdle after the manner of a
blouse. In the girdle was a long dagger of beautiful
workmanship. Dainty sandals encased her feet,
while a wimple of violet silk bordered in gold fringe,
lay becomingly over her head and shoulders.
By her side walked a handsome boy
of about three, clad, like his companion, in gay colors.
His tiny surcoat of scarlet velvet was rich with embroidery,
while beneath was a close-fitting tunic of white silk.
His doublet was of scarlet, while his long hose of
white were cross-gartered with scarlet from his tiny
sandals to his knees. On the back of his brown
curls sat a flat-brimmed, round-crowned hat in which
a single plume of white waved and nodded bravely at
each move of the proud little head.
The child’s features were well
molded, and his frank, bright eyes gave an expression
of boyish generosity to a face which otherwise would
have been too arrogant and haughty for such a mere
baby. As he talked with his companion, little
flashes of peremptory authority and dignity, which
sat strangely upon one so tiny, caused the young woman
at times to turn her head from him that he might not
see the smiles which she could scarce repress.
Presently the boy took a ball from
his tunic, and, pointing at a little bush near them,
said, “Stand you there, Lady Maud, by yonder
bush. I would play at toss.”
The young woman did as she was bid,
and when she had taken her place and turned to face
him the boy threw the ball to her. Thus they played
beneath the windows of the armory, the boy running
blithely after the ball when he missed it, and laughing
and shouting in happy glee when he made a particularly
good catch.
In one of the windows of the armory
overlooking the garden stood a grim, gray, old man,
leaning upon his folded arms, his brows drawn together
in a malignant scowl, the corners of his mouth set
in a stern, cold line.
He looked upon the garden and the
playing child, and upon the lovely young woman beneath
him, but with eyes which did not see, for De Vac was
working out a great problem, the greatest of all his
life.
For three days, the old man had brooded
over his grievance, seeking for some means to be revenged
upon the King for the insult which Henry had put upon
him. Many schemes had presented themselves to
his shrewd and cunning mind, but so far all had been
rejected as unworthy of the terrible satisfaction
which his wounded pride demanded.
His fancies had, for the most part,
revolved about the unsettled political conditions
of Henry’s reign, for from these he felt he might
wrest that opportunity which could be turned to his
own personal uses and to the harm, and possibly the
undoing, of the King.
For years an inmate of the palace,
and often a listener in the armory when the King played
at sword with his friends and favorites, De Vac had
heard much which passed between Henry III and his intimates
that could well be turned to the King’s harm
by a shrewd and resourceful enemy.
With all England, he knew the utter
contempt in which Henry held the terms of the Magna
Charta which he so often violated along with his kingly
oath to maintain it. But what all England did
not know, De Vac had gleaned from scraps of conversation
dropped in the armory: that Henry was even now
negotiating with the leaders of foreign mercenaries,
and with Louis IX of France, for a sufficient force
of knights and men-at-arms to wage a relentless war
upon his own barons that he might effectively put
a stop to all future interference by them with the
royal prerogative of the Plantagenets to misrule England.
If he could but learn the details
of this plan, thought De Vac: the point of landing
of the foreign troops; their numbers; the first point
of attack. Ah, would it not be sweet revenge indeed
to balk the King in this venture so dear to his heart!
A word to De Clare, or De Montfort
would bring the barons and their retainers forty thousand
strong to overwhelm the King’s forces.
And he would let the King know to
whom, and for what cause, he was beholden for his
defeat and discomfiture. Possibly the barons would
depose Henry, and place a new king upon England’s
throne, and then De Vac would mock the Plantagenet
to his face. Sweet, kind, delectable vengeance,
indeed! And the old man licked his thin lips as
though to taste the last sweet vestige of some dainty
morsel.
And then Chance carried a little leather
ball beneath the window where the old man stood; and
as the child ran, laughing, to recover it, De Vac’s
eyes fell upon him, and his former plan for revenge
melted as the fog before the noonday sun; and in its
stead there opened to him the whole hideous plot of
fearsome vengeance as clearly as it were writ upon
the leaves of a great book that had been thrown wide
before him. And, in so far as he could direct,
he varied not one jot from the details of that vividly
conceived masterpiece of hellishness during the twenty
years which followed.
The little boy who so innocently played
in the garden of his royal father was Prince Richard,
the three-year-old son of Henry III of England.
No published history mentions this little lost prince;
only the secret archives of the kings of England tell
the story of his strange and adventurous life.
His name has been blotted from the records of men;
and the revenge of De Vac has passed from the eyes
of the world; though in his time it was a real and
terrible thing in the hearts of the English.