The Beast of Buckingham Palace. David Walliams
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The Lord Protector smiled and sighed. “Please forgive me, Your Majesty, but you are quite wrong. This is not my doing. Your arrest is a direct order from your husband, the King.”
Neither the Queen nor the prince could believe what they were hearing.
“Father,” called out the boy.
But the man did not respond.
“FATHER!”
The King’s black eyes came to some semblance of life and fixed on his son.
“Alfred?” he asked. “Is that you?”
“Yes, Father. It’s me, your son, Alfred!”
It had been days since he’d seen his father, and he seemed more distant than ever. “What are you doing, Father? Mother is being taken away by the guards. And the Lord Protector says it is on your direct order!”
The King gathered his thoughts and began. He spoke slowly and softly. “The revolutionaries struck again tonight. St Paul’s Cathedral has been destroyed.”
“A place of worship,” sighed the Lord Protector. “Cruel and callous even by the standards of the revolutionary scum.”
“What on earth has that got to do with me?” demanded the Queen.
The Lord Protector’s mouth twitched into a ghoulish grin, but he said nothing.
The King continued, refusing to look his wife in the eye. “It has everything to do with you.”
“This is nonsense!” she protested. “UTTER NONSENSE!”
The King’s eyes flickered again, and he turned away. He couldn’t bear to look at his wife as he spoke. “For some time, I am sorry to say, you have been under suspicion.”
“Me?” she demanded. The lady was incredulous. “But I am the Queen!”
“You have been spied upon. And the All-Seeing Eye sees everything,” added the Lord Protector.
“Intelligence information has been brought to my attention,” continued the King, still unable to look at her, “that points to you being in direct communication with the revolutionaries.”
The Queen glowed red and began spluttering her innocence. “But… I…”
“You don’t deny it, Your Majesty?” pressed the Lord Protector.
“No, I, er…” the lady stuttered. “Of course, I deny it!”
“Then,” began the Lord Protector, “why did you have this hidden in your bedroom?”
He lifted a cloth to reveal an old-fashioned radio crouched guiltily on a metal table. It had a microphone, a speaker and an aerial, and looked as if it dated back nearly two hundred years to World War Two.
“I have never seen that before in my life!” protested the Queen.
“It was found hidden in a secret compartment in your dressing room.”
The radio crackled into life. A muffled voice on the other end said,
The Queen bowed her head.
Alfred thought he recognised that voice, but he couldn’t be sure. A voice from his dim and distant past, perhaps.
“Regina. The Latin word for Queen,” began the Lord Protector. “Hundreds of coded messages going back and forth over the last few weeks. Here, in the throne room, we intercepted them all. Then tonight, moments after your last message, KABOOM! Another precious building in flames. Sickening. Absolutely sickening.”
Alfred couldn’t believe it, didn’t want to believe it, but he knew from the look on his mother’s face that it was true.
“Mama? How could you? The revolutionaries are evil! They want to kill us all!” he exclaimed.
“I can explain,” she spluttered, turning to the King. “My darling husband, you’ve changed. Something has happened to you, something very wrong, and I don’t know what. Please, I beg you. Don’t do this!”
The Lord Protector turned to the King. “Your Majesty, what would you like me to do with the traitor?”
Alfred was stunned into silence as that dreaded word sank in. TRAITOR.
“Take her to the Tower,” ordered the King.
“NO!” screamed the Queen. “Henry, it’s me, your wife. The mother of your child. I love you. Why are you doing this to me? Or is this really all the work of the Lord Protector? He has you under some kind of spell!”
On the Lord Protector’s nod, the royal guards seized her arms tightly and began dragging her out of the room.
“MAMA!” cried Alfred, and he reached out to grab her hand. But, before he could, a guard shoved him away.
“ARGH!”
The boy fell to the floor.
THUD!
“You are now the kingdom’s only hope,” said the Queen. “Goodbye, Lionheart!”
Alfred watched as the huge metal doors to the throne room slid open…
WHOOSH!
…and closed behind her.
His mother was gone. Perhaps forever.
The Lord Protector paced over to the prince. “There, there,” he said, reaching out to comfort him.
“No. I don’t want you. I want Mama back. PLEASE! I BEG YOU!”
“Your Royal Highness, I realise this is deeply upsetting news, that your mother, the Queen, is a traitor. But I want you to know that I am always here for you. I am, and will forever be, your loyal servant. If you need to talk about your feelings, you know my door is always open, as it has been for your father.”
“Please leave me now,” said the King, still staring off into space. “I need to be alone.”
“Of course, Your Majesty,” replied the