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  ‘Yes indeed. I couldn’t resist.’ He stepped into the hall and bent over her hand.

  ‘Is it still Major?’ she asked, looking at the rich feather in his hat and the shining leather of his boots.

  ‘Ah no!’ he said with a flourish. ‘I am a general now, Mrs Tradescant. And before I have done I shall sit in Parliament and bestow a baronetcy on you for your services to gardeners. Or a dukedom. Whatever you would wish.’

  Hester giggled. ‘Come and see the tulips then,’ she urged. ‘They are lovely this year. My husband came back last spring and he has many new species which you will want to see, some beautiful plants from Virginia. You will never resist our tulip tree.’

  ‘I beg your pardon?’

  Hester laughed. ‘I promise. A most beautiful tree which bears white flowers shaped exactly like a tulip. I’ve not seen them yet because we have only two saplings but we have taken cuttings and my husband swears they will thrive.’

  John Lambert followed her through the house and paused on the terrace to look out over the garden. It was the first time he had seen it properly weeded and pruned and looking its best.

  ‘This is a little piece of paradise,’ he said, his eyes going over the nodding blossoms of the fruit trees and the flowerbeds and nursery beds before the house. ‘It was well-named when you called it the Ark. It has been like a flood of terror outside these walls and yet here it always seems to be like peace.’

  Hester stood very still and absorbed the compliment like a blessing. ‘I have spent my whole life trying to make it so,’ she said. ‘I am glad you can see it.’

  He glanced at her as if they understood each other very well. ‘If we can make the country as peaceful and fertile as this garden, Mrs Tradescant, then it will all have been worth while. If I can make every cottage garden a safe place like this, and every hardworking man in the country with a legal right to his cottage and his garden, then I will have done my duty as well as you have done yours.’

  She looked curiously at him. ‘Aren’t those Leveller sentiments?’ she asked. ‘I thought the Leveller cause was stamped out?’

  He smiled but he did not disagree. ‘Not out of the hearts and minds. I think that any man who has seen how the poor suffer in this country, and has seen the way that poor men fought for their rights, would want to see the great wastes and parks opened up so that homeless people could build themselves houses, and hungry people could grow food. I’m a landholder myself, Mrs Tradescant. I don’t want my garden walls pulled down. But I don’t want huge parks enclosed to feed and shelter deer while men and women outside go hungry.’

  Hester nodded and led the way down the garden path towards the blaze of colour that was the tulip beds. She glanced back with a half-smile at John Lambert’s transfixed expression.

  ‘They’re good, aren’t they?’

  ‘They are superb,’ he breathed. ‘I must, I must have some of those.’

  ‘I’ll fetch a pen and paper for your order,’ Hester said with satisfaction. ‘And you must come again next month and see the roses. They are going to be wonderful this year. I like our roses even better than our tulips.’

  He shook his head, and something in that gesture alerted her that he was not as carefree as he had suggested. ‘I’m afraid I will be busy elsewhere in June,’ he said.

  Hester understood what John Lambert had meant when the day after his visit the news came of royalist bands mustered in every town and village in every county. Men who had put away their pikes thinking the battle was over were running and riding up and down the country lanes again, calling men to fight for the king, who needed only one battle to be won against a demoralised and divided Parliament and army to come to his own. The navy suddenly declared for the king and sailed into harbours all along the south coast, and declared every port as royalist. All over the country the retired royalist officers were out again, calling men to arms. Each county, each town, each village had its own royalist headquarters and royalist troop. The nation was at war once more, spontaneously, naturally, and the prize was to release the king and restore him to his throne in a great heave of nostalgia for the days of peace before the war.

  Men who had stood by and watched Cromwell’s army take the victory in the first king’s war were now seized with such an impatience for peace that they turned out for Charles, certain that only by restoring him to the throne could the kingdom find peace. Men who had been indifferent soldiers under Cromwell turned their coats and hoped for pay and a victory under the command of the royalists. And those who had fought for the king over the long four years of the king’s war and suffered and feared in the two years since, prayed that this one last chance might restore them to their former fortunes.

  They were not summoned by a message. They responded almost individually, spontaneously, in an uprising which was as much an irritated demand for a return to more peaceful days, as a struggle of principle about the existence of bishops.

  It was incredible to Hester that the king could be the centre of a second catastrophe, even while he was in his prison. Without even being at liberty his mere presence could be the focus of unrest, and the country which had been at peace for nearly two years was suddenly at war again. It was a full-scale war fought in a hundred different pitched battles all over the kingdom, and then news came to Lambeth that Lord Norwich was besieging the City of London itself and was likely to take it for the king. If London fell then Parliament itself would be taken, and then the war must be over and the king would be the victor.

  Hester caught Johnnie sneaking a saddle on to the horse in the stable yard, a pack at his side. Her steady temper suddenly broke. ‘And where the devil d’you think you’re going?’

  He turned to her. ‘You can’t stop me. I’m going to fight for the king.’

  ‘You’re a child.’

  ‘I’m nearly fifteen, old enough to fight.’

  It was that spark that fired the charge. Hester sprung on him and seized him by his shirt collar and marched him, like a schoolboy, down the garden path, past the glorious rose beds where waves of perfume billowed in their wake, to the orchard where John was up a ladder disbudding apple trees.

  ‘The king needs fools!’ Hester exclaimed. ‘A fools’ army for a fool of a king.’

  ‘I will go!’ Johnnie proclaimed, struggling out from her grip. ‘I will not be under your command. I’m a man, I shall play a man’s part.’

  Hester thrust him at his father. ‘He’s fourteen,’ she announced baldly. ‘Says he’s a man. I can’t rule him any more. You will have to decide. Is he to go to serve the king or not?’

  John stepped slowly off the lower rungs of the ladder and looked at his son. ‘What’s this?’

  Johnnie did not look away but faced his father like a young stag facing the leader of the herd. ‘I want to do my duty,’ he said. ‘I want to serve the king.’

  ‘The king is not served by riots and uproar and Englishmen killing each other in the streets of Maidstone and Canterbury,’ John said slowly.

  ‘If that is what it takes –’

  John shook his head. ‘Making peace in a kingdom is done by ceaseless work, ceaseless working towards agreement,’ he said. ‘Haven’t you lived your childhood through a war and seen that at the end there is nothing agreed, nothing is any further forward?’

  ‘I want to do my duty!’

  John put his hand on the bough of the apple tree as if he would draw strength from it. ‘Your duty is to your God and to your father and mother,’ he said.

  ‘You don’t even believe in God,’ Johnnie shot back. ‘You don’t believe in anything. You have not done your duty by me as a father – you left us for years. You’re the king’s man but you don’t fight for him, you’re in the pay of Parliament and you joke about being a Parliament gardener. You’re a Virginia planter but you stay at home in Lambeth. I won’t be told my duty by you!’

  Hester started forwards to protect her stepson against the blow that must come, and then forced herself to pause, and h