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第19章 (第1/3页)
' he asked, leaning back in protest against her urgency. 'What has happened? Is it something so awful that you can't tell me here !'
She swept him into the schoolroom and shut the door.
'It's Edward!'
'Edward? Isheill?'
'No! Scandal!'
'Oh,' said Richard, relieved. Scandal and Edward were never far apart. 'What is it? Has he a new mistress?'
'Much worse than that! Oh, much, much worse. He's married.'
'Married?' said Richard, so unbelieving that he sounded calm. 'He can't be.'
'But he is. The news came from London an hour ago.'
'He can't be married,' Richard insisted. 'For a King marriage is a long affair A matter of contracts, and agreements. A matter for Parliament, even, I think. What made you think he had got married?'
'I don't think,' Anne said, out of patience at this sober reception of her broadside. 'The whole family is raging together in the Great Hall over the affair.'
'Anne! have you been listening at the door?'
'Oh, don't be so righteous. I didn't have to listen very hard, anyhow. You could hear them on the other side of the river. He has married Lady Grey!'
'Who is Lady Grey? Lady Grey of Groby?'
'Yes.'
'But he can't. She has two children and she is quite old.'
'She is five years older than Edward, and she is wonderfully beautiful-so I overhear.'
'When did this happen?'
'They've been married for five months. They got married in secret down in Northamptonshire.'
'But I thought he was going to marry the King of France's sister.'
'So' said Anne in a tone full of meaning 'did my father.'
'Yes; yes, it makes things very awkward for him, doesn't it; after all the negotiating.'
'According to the messenger from London he is throwing fits. It isn't only the making him look a fool. It seems she has cohorts of relations and he hates every one of them.'
'Edward must be possessed.' In Richard's hero worshipping eyes everything Edward did had always been right. This folly, this undeniable, this inexcusable folly, could come only from possession.
'It will break my mother's heart,' he said. He thought of his mother's courage when his father and Edmund had been killed, and the Lancastrian army was almost at the gates of London. She had not wept nor wrapped herself in protective veils of self-pity. She had arranged that he and George should go to Utrecht, as if she were arranging for them to go away to school. They might never see each other again, but she had busied herself about warm clothes for their winter voyage across the Channel with a calm and dry-eyed practicality.
How would she bear this; this further blow? This destructive folly. This shattering foolishness.
'Yes,' said Anne, softening. 'Poor Aunt Cecily. It is monstrous of Edward to hurt everyone so. Monstrous.
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