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The Princess Joan threw down her wine cup and set up a wail, clasping Richard feverishly to her dishevelled bosom. "I'll not let him go out to those fiends again. How dare you ask it, my lord? See how white he is and how he trembles. Jesu, would you kill your King?"

"Nay, Mother," said Richard wanly, struggling out from her smothering embrace. "I'm weary, of course, and sick at heart, but there's no cause to fear them. They love me," he said with a faint proud smile.

"God's passion!" cried Thomas of Woodstock, clenching his hairy hand on his sword. "That we were strong enough to wipe them all out now, and have done with them!"

Richard gazed distastefully at his uncle, whom he loathed, and thought that if his eldest uncle, John, were here, matters might not have gone so badly for them as they had. But that it was equally fortunate that Edmund had sailed for Portugal before the uprising, for Edmund was a muddle-headed ass.

"We might risk open fight," said Sir Robert Knolles, knitting his jutting grey brows, "but 'twould be safer to put it off a day or two until we can raise more men. This has come to us so fast-" He shook his head.

"Blessed Virgin, but how fast!" cried the Princess, beginning to weep again. "Only two days of this terror and it seems - dear God, I can scarce remember when it started."

She wrung her hands, remembering the first moment that she had felt fear, Thursday morning, when she had looked from her turret window in the Tower and seen the Savoy on fire, and then fires everywhere - in Southwark, in Clerken-well, in Highbury.

"Ay, Your Grace," said Salisbury decisively to the King. "You must meet the rebels again, this afternoon. We'll tell them to come to Smithfield this time, 'tis nearer."

That afternoon Wat led his men towards the new rendezvous at Smithfield. He had been temperate these past days when he knew so much depended on clear thinking, but now, with complete victory all but won, he had been lustily celebrating, drinking mug after mug out of a cask of rich vernage that some of his men had taken from a Lombard's cellar.

It had been impossible to continue enforcing the prohibition against all thievery, or to keep a watchful eye on so many men. Besides, the Lombards like the Flemings didn't count. They were lucky if they kept their heads, let alone their wine.

Wat had made himself fine for this second interview with the King. He had donned a fashionable red-and-blue-striped tunic that had belonged to one of the decapitated merchants and a golden velvet cap furred with ermine, such as only lords were allowed to wear; and he carried in a jewelled sheath at his girdle a nobleman's dagger. For now that all men were to be free and equal, a tiler could dress as he pleased to do honour to his King, and his own leadership.

Wat and John Ball rode from the rebel camp at the head of their forces, but Jack Strawe lay sodden in a tavern and did not appear. Wat traversed the blood-soaked pavement of the

Chepe and turned up towards Aldersgate and Smithfield. The sun beat down hot, and his face dripped beneath the velvet cap, but the wine bubbled pleasingly in his veins and he began to sing:

The mill is now alight!

It turneth full o' might

Wi' will and wi' skill

We swinked at our mill

Till it goeth right, right, right!

"Good times be a-coming for all, m'dear," cried Wat exuberantly, turning his flushed face on John Ball, who rode silently beside him.

"Ay, as God hath willed it," said the priest solemnly. "Wat, ye're something drunk. Have a care now how ye handle yourself with the King."

Wat grinned. "King and me's good friends. We understand each other. Mayhap King'll dub me a lord this day. Lord Wat I'll be. Lord Walter o' Maidstone." He chuckled happily.

The priest shook his head and said nothing.

They rode on into Smithfield, where horse markets and tournaments were usually held, and the peasant forces poured in after them to line up in rows along the western side.

Cob was in the vanguard. He shinned up a little apple tree that stood on the edge of the great parade ground, for he was determined to see all that took place this time, and have a good look at the King. That would be something to tell them in the alehouse at Kettlethorpe. With luck he'd be the first one home with the glorious news. "You're free, men, all o' ye, and I saw the King twice when he said so!" To be sure, nobody from the northern counties had got any charters yet, but Cob didn't see the need of writing to confirm the King's word. He had almost started for home last night, but had waited to see the meeting today when Wat was going to get for them a lot more liberties. Game and forest laws were to be abolished, so everyone could hunt where he pleased; all outlaws were to be pardoned, and a lot more wonderful things that a man had never dared to dream of.

Richard had sixty men with him today, knights and lords in flashing armour, and as he rode to the east side of the field near St. Bartholomew's walls, his heralds' trumpets sounded with a flourish. Then the King, wasting no time, rode out to the centre of the field, accompanied by Mayor Walworth and a squire. The mayor beckoned to Wat, who trotted up blithely and, dismounting, bobbed his knee to Richard, before seizing the boy's hand in his great hairy workman's paw and shaking it vigorously.

On the edge of the field the watching lords stiffened at this effrontery, and the mayor tightened his grasp on his sharp three-edged cutlass.

"Brother," cried Wat, beaming up at the King, "be o' good cheer, lad, here's near forty thousand commons I've brought to ye, for we be staunch comrades, you and me."

Richard withdrew his pale small hand from the tiler's sweating clasp and said with childish earnestness, "Why won't you all go home to your own places?"

Wat drew back and swaggering a little said, "By God's skin and bones, how can we go home till we all get our charters? For sure ye see that, King, don't ye? And there's more grants we must have too!"

"What are they?" asked Richard quietly.

The tiler drew himself up and ticking each off on his stumpy fingers rehearsed all the demands that he and John Ball had been discussing for weeks.

When he had finished, Richard inclined his small, crowned head and said quickly. "You shall have all this. 'Tis granted."

Wat drew a great exulting breath, yet uneasiness penetrated his fuddled wits. The King's young face was unsmiling, the bright blue Plantagenet eyes were narrowed, and not as friendly as Wat had thought them.

"Now I command that you shall all go home," said Richard sternly.

"Sure, sure we will," said Wat, but he was dismayed. The comradeship, the equality had somehow disappeared, and he tried to recapture them. He mounted his horse, so that he should be on a level with the King. "Me throat's dry as a bone, King," he cried. "How about a spot o' wine, how say ye? Shall we share a drink to seal the pact?"

Over Richard's delicate face hot colour flowed. He gestured to his squire, who ran and dipped water from a well near the priory and bringing the dipperful back to Wat, held it out to him with sneering insolence.

"Water? Phaw!" cried the discomfited tiler, seeing that the King had drawn away from him. Wat glared at the squire, slobbered up a great mouthful and with a vulgar noise squirted it out again on to the dust.

"By God!" cried the young squire. "This greatest knave and robber in all Kent, look at the respect he shows the King's Grace!"

Wat started and his hand flew to his dagger. "What was that ye called me?"

"Knave and robber!" shouted the squire.

Wat pulled his dagger, and kicking his horse, charged - not at the King as it might seem - but past him towards the squire, who ran.

The mayor had been waiting for a chance. He spurred his horse, crying, "So, ribaud, you'd draw steel against your King!" and with his cutlass slashed sideways down at Wat, carving deep into his shoulder. The tiler staggered, plunging his dagger blindly at the mayor but it glanced off the coat of mail.