Then came the discovery of the plot. It was only after the danger had passed that it came to light, when one of the conspirators betrayed what had happened.
I was filled with horror when I heard, for I saw it might so easily have succeeded, and failed only by chance. There happened to have been a fire at the house in Newmarket where the King and Duke were staying for the races, which meant that they left the town earlier than they intended to.
The conspirators were determined on the exclusion of the Duke of York from the throne; the King would not agree to this; therefore both King and Duke were to die.
On their way back to London from Newmarket, they would pass along the high road near Hoddeston in Hertfordshire. On that lonely road was a dwelling known as the Rye House. It was owned by a maltster named Rumbold, who was in the plot, and there at the Rye House the conspirators would lie in wait.
What distressed the King more than anything was that the Duke of Monmouth’s name was mentioned in connection with the plot. Moreover, the leading figures in this conspiracy were not men such as Titus Oates, but important people headed by William, Lord Russell, the Earl of Essex and Algernon Sidney.
They were arrested and found guilty.
Essex died rather mysteriously in his cell, and it was believed that he had killed himself. Sidney and Russell were executed.
There remained Monmouth.
When he came and begged an audience with the King, I asked Charles if I could be present, and he said I might be there.
Charles was clearly perplexed. This was his own son. He had loved Monmouth, though it was not the first time he had suspected him of treachery; but that could not completely change his affection.
Monmouth threw himself at his feet.
“My son,” said Charles. “Your yearning for the crown is even greater than I thought.”
“Sire, Your Majesty…father…it is not so.”
“Do you think you would be wearing it now but for that tiresome fire at Newmarket which drove me out of the town before my time? I’ll say your looks would become it well…but there is more to being a king, Jemmy, than a handsome face under a golden crown.”
“Sire…I swear…”
The King had turned to me. “He swears,” he said. Then to Monmouth: “You look foolish sprawling there. Tell me the truth. Do you want my crown so much?”
“I swear I would never be involved in a plot to kill you. You are my father.”
“And you, Jemmy, remember, are my bastard. It is a simple fact. It is not pleasing to you, I know full well, but one which it is very dangerous for you to forget.”
“I know. I listened to them. Yes, I was there one time when they plotted. But I had to know. I had to stop them from harming you. I had to find out what they were going to do…to make sure they were not going to harm you.”
“Fate was kind to me on that occasion, Jemmy…taking me from Newmarket before the appointed time. Bad luck for those who were working against me, but we must understand that Fate cannot please everyone all the time.”
“You must believe me…”
“Should the King be told by his bastard what he must do?”
Monmouth winced every time the King used the term. But I knew why Charles repeated it. It was to impress on this young man who he was and that he, the King, insisted that he should be known as such.
“If you will not believe me,” said Monmouth pathetically, “I must ask your leave to retire from court.”
“A sojourn abroad would be preferable to one in the Tower, I doubt not. And there is one other with whom you should intercede — your uncle, the Duke of York.”
“I will go to him if he will receive me, but it was to you I came first.”
The King was smiling at me. “He is a pretty boy, is he not?” he said. “He pleads well…so well, that he has an air of truth about him.”
“It is because I speak the truth,” said Monmouth. “Father, I beg of you. I have been foolish. I have been reckless. But never…never…I swear, in my life would I have harmed you.”
Charles was silent.
He said: “You should see the Duke of York. He is as concerned in this as I am. See if you can make your peace with him.”
“I will,” said Monmouth earnestly.
“And then,” said the King, “bring him here to me. As we were both to be the victims, it is only fitting that we should decide this matter between us.”
Monmouth knelt and kissed the King’s hand and, after doing the same to me, he went off to seek an audience with the Duke of York.
I knew of course that he would be forgiven.
Charles saw him again when the Duke of York was present. As I had predicted, Monmouth was forgiven, but as it was clear that he had been aware of the plot and had remained silent about it, it seemed desirable that he should stay away from the court for some time.
No charges were brought against him and after a while he set sail for the continent.
THERE WAS A MESSAGE from Portugal. My brother Alfonso had died at Sintra. Although it was many years since I had seen him, and he had been living in a kind of shadow land for so long, I was sad, remembering our childhood when he and Pedro had been little boys playing happily together; and I was sad thinking of my mother and what she would have thought of one of her sons taking the other’s throne…and his wife.
I believed Pedro must be remorseful now that his brother was dead, but at least Alfonso would be at peace.
The court went into mourning for my brother; and when it was over we slipped back into the old way of life.
Charles was as enamored as he had ever been of Louise de Keroualle. The fascination she exerted over him amazed me. The playactress Nell Gwynne was still important to him; and now that I was no longer in danger, I saw less of him.
The winter at that time was one of the harshest any living person remembered. The cold was intense. Never before had the Thames been frozen so hard. An ox was roasted on it and people crowded onto the hard ice to watch the spectacle.
Of course, the weather brought great hardship to the poor. Transport was impossible and ships could not get into the ports. There were prayers for relief in the churches, but it seemed that the frost continued for a very long time.
But spring was with us at last. Charles had not been very well for some time. He had always been so strong that he had been able to shrug off minor troubles, and so accustomed to perfect health that he was impatient with ailments. He hated to admit that he was feeling less than well and it seemed an affront to him that he should be so.
I could see that he had lost some of his vigor during that cruel winter.
Charles had not seemed well during the day. However, he supped as he often did with the Duchess of Portsmouth.
The following morning Lord Aylesbury, one of the Gentlemen of his Bedchamber, called on me in agitation.
“Your Majesty,” he said, “the King is unwell.”
I stood up in alarm, for Aylesbury looked very grave.
“What is wrong?” I asked.
“Dr. King is with him now. He has bled him.”
“Bled him?” I repeated blankly. “But…why?”
“The King was up early, as was his wont, Your Majesty. He went to his closet and was there longer than usual, and we became uneasy. When he came out he seemed to stagger…and then fell.”
“What was it? A fit?”
“I cannot say, Your Majesty. Dr. King seemed upset and said that bleeding was necessary without delay.”
“I must go to him at once,” I said.
When I reached his bedchamber I saw Charles sitting in a chair. He looked unlike himself…and when I came near I saw that his features were distorted.