he had looked so petrified. Earl Edmund had hoped that Piers would have produced something rock-solid on which he could plan, but no. Just the same old hints and things of no value, like the news that Despenser hated him and could plot to have him killed. As if he didn’t know that already!
Edmund was no fool, but there were times when life was truly confusing. Just now, he knew that all he did must be circumspect and cautious, because otherwise, he could well lose his head. Literally. The messages he had been receiving from Piers left him with no doubts.
The realm needed strong government. The populace were sheep to be herded carefully, and shorn in due season. There were the three classes of man, as all knew: the
bellatores
, the clergy, and the commonfolk. The
bellatores
were the men who had a duty to protect all others; the clergy existed in order to maintain the souls of the rest of society; and beneath both were the commoners, who were there to labour and, by their efforts, feed all others. It was the way of all communities. It was how they functioned.
He had been loyal – no: devoted. All his life, he had fought to support his half-brother, the King. Edward II demanded ever more devotion from his men, even when his household was splintering and his own knights were leaving him to join Thomas of Lancaster, before Edward removed
his
head. When Edward had needed help inallowing the Despensers back into the country after they had been exiled, who did he turn to? Edmund. When he wanted Leeds Castle besieged and Bartholomew Badlesmere captured? Edmund. When he wanted loyal men to take Thomas of Lancaster’s chief residence? Edmund. When he wanted his own men to hear Andrew Harclay’s trial and judge him? Edmund. He, more than anyone else, had repaid the wealth and honours given to him. God’s eyes, he had
earned
his rewards.
All the time he’d felt the sneering, though. Christ Jesus, yes. All the while, while he worked his ballocks off to help the King, he had known that they’d all looked down on him. No matter that he had successfully completed many active battlefield campaigns, they still looked on him as a lesser man. Bloody Despenser, with his airs and graces – when all was said and done, he was nothing more than a knight. Edmund was born the son of a
king
, the son of Edward the Hammer of the Scots. He was a man of honour and breeding.
He heard the mutterings all the more now, of course. Yes, while courtiers reckoned that his star was descending, they all started to show their callous disregard for him. And he knew full well that many of them laughed at him behind his back. He didn’t need Piers to tell him that. Christ’s bones, it was obvious enough. It wasn’t only the Despensers, either. There were some whom he had always looked upon as friends who now were all too content to make his life a misery.
If that were all, he’d not be too worried, but it wasn’t. He knew as well as any that among those who laughed at him was his own brother, the King. And his other brother.Thomas of Brotherton, the older by one year, had never quite enjoyed Edmund’s successes. And truth be told, Edmund had always had that feeling that he was the least of all Edward I’s sons. He was but six when his father died, and it had left him wondering what sort of a man he had truly been. Perhaps little better than any other. Certainly his brother, Edward II, was scathing enough about him. But then, King Edward I had exiled his son’s great friend, Gaveston, and Edward never forgave his father that.
This grudge-bearing trait was one with which Edmund was all too familiar. Ever since he had signed that truce with the French last year, he had found himself marginalised, an embarrassment. And all the others seemed to think that they could manage not only Guyenne, but the whole Kingdom better without him.
‘My Lord Kent.’
The suave voice shook him from his reverie. Fitting a grin to his face, Edmund turned and took the
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