Read Philippa Gregory 3-Book Tudor Collection 1 Online
Authors: Philippa Gregory
Anne did not raise her glass and she did not smile at him. âNext time,' she observed, âyou will serve me first.'
âWhat?' he asked, confused.
âWhen you pour a glass of wine, it comes first to me. When you open my bedroom door you ask me if I want to admit the visitor. I am going to be queen, George, and you must learn to serve me as a queen.'
He did not flare up at her as he had done when he was freshly home from Europe. Even in that short time he had seen that Anne had great power. She did not care if she quarrelled with her uncle, or with any of the men at court that could have been her allies. She did not care who hated her, as long as the king was at her beck and call. And she could ruin any man she chose.
George put his glass down on the hearth and crawled up on the bed so that he was on his hands and knees, with his face just inches from hers. âMy little queen in waiting,' he purred.
Anne's face softened at his intimacy.
âMy little princess,' he whispered. Gently he kissed her on the nose and then the lips. âDon't be a shrew with me,' he begged her. âWe all know
that you are the first lady of the kingdom, but be sweet to me, Anne. We'll all be so much happier if you are sweet to me.'
Unwillingly, she smiled. âYou must show me every respect,' she warned him.
âI will lie beneath your horse's hooves,' he promised her.
âAnd never take liberties.'
âI would rather die.'
âThen you can come here and I will be sweet to you,' she said.
He leaned forward and kissed her again. Her eyes closed and her lips smiled and then parted. I watched as he pressed closer, and his finger went to her bare shoulder and stroked her neck. I watched, quite fascinated and quite horrified, as his fingers went into her smooth dark hair and pulled her head back for his kiss. Then she opened her eyes with a little sigh. âEnough.' And she pushed him gently off the bed. George returned to his place at the fireside and we all pretended that it was nothing more than a brotherly kiss.
The next day Jane Parker was as confident as ever. She smiled at me, she curtsied at Anne and handed her cape as Anne was about to go out walking by the river with the king.
âI would have thought you would have been displeased this day, my lady.'
Anne took the cape. âWhy?'
âThe news,' Jane said.
âWhat news?' I asked, so that Anne did not appear curious.
Jane answered me, but she watched Anne. âThe Countess of Northumberland is divorcing Henry Percy.'
Anne staggered for a moment and went white.
âOh!' I cried, to draw the attention to me and from Anne. âWhat a scandal! Why should she divorce him? What an idea! How very wrong of her.'
Anne had recovered, but Jane had watched her. âWhy,' Jane said, in a voice like silk. âShe says that their marriage was never valid at all. She says that there was a pre-contract. She says that all along he has been married to you, Lady Anne.'
Anne's head went up and she smiled at Jane. âLady Rochford, you do bring me the most extraordinary tidings. And you do choose the strangest of times to bring them to me. Last night you were creeping and listening at my door, and now you are as filled with bad news as a dead dog with maggots. If the Countess of Northumberland is unhappy in her marriage
then I am sure that we all grieve for her.' There was a little murmur from the ladies, more like avid curiosity than sympathy. âBut if she wants to claim that Henry Percy was betrothed to me then it is simply not true. In either case, the king is waiting for me and you are delaying me.'
Anne tied her own cape and swept from the room. Two or three of her ladies followed her, as they should all have done. The rest held back, circling Jane Parker for more scandal.
âJane, I am sure the king will want to see you attending Lady Anne,' I said spitefully.
At once she had to go, she followed Anne from the room and the others trailed behind her.
I picked up my skirts and ran like a schoolgirl to my uncle's apartments.
He was at his desk, though it was early in the afternoon. A clerk stood at his elbow, writing memoranda as my uncle dictated. My uncle frowned when I put my head around the door and then motioned me in and gestured that I should wait.
âWhat is it?' he asked. âI am busy. I've just heard that Thomas More is unhappy with the king's matter against the queen. I didn't expect him to like it but I was hoping his conscience could swallow it. I'd give a thousand crowns not to have Thomas More openly against us.'
âIt's something else,' I said tersely. âBut important.'
My uncle waved the clerk from the room.
âAnne?' he asked.
I nodded. We were a family business now and Anne was our goods for sale. My uncle knew, without me telling him, that if I ran to his rooms first thing in the afternoon, then it was a crisis in our trading.
âJane just said that the Countess of Northumberland is to petition for divorce against Henry Percy,' I said in a rush. âJane said that she is arguing he was pre-contracted to Anne.'
âDamnation,' my uncle swore.
âDid you know?'
âOf course I knew she had it in mind. I thought she was going to plead desertion or cruelty or buggery or something. I thought we had moved her away from the pre-contract business.'
âWe?'
He scowled at me. âWe. Doesn't matter who, does it?'
âNo.'
âAnd how does Jane know?' he demanded irritably.
âOh Jane knows everything. She was listening at Anne's door last night.'
âWhat could she have heard?' he asked, the spymaster in him always alert.
âNothing,' I said staunchly. âGeorge was there and we were doing nothing but talking and drinking a glass of wine.'
âNo-one but George?' he asked sharply.
âWho else could it be?'
âThat's what I'm asking you.'
âYou cannot doubt Anne's chastity.'
âShe spends her life spinning her toils around men.'
Even I could not let this injustice go. âShe spins her toils around the king, as you ordered.'
âSo where is she now?'
âIn the garden with the king.'
âGo to her straightaway and tell her to deny everything with Henry Percy. No betrothal of any sort, no pre-contract. Just a boy and a girl in springtime and a green affection. A pageboy making eyes at a lady in waiting. Nothing more than that, and never returned by her. Just him. Have you got that?'
âThere are those who know different,' I warned him.
âThey're all bought,' he said. âExcept Wolsey, and he's dead.'
âHe might have told the king, back then, before anyone knew that the king would fall in love with Anne.'
âHe's dead,' my uncle said with relish âHe can't repeat it. And everyone else will fall over themselves to assure the king that Anne is as chaste as the Virgin Mary. Henry Percy quicker than anyone. It's only that damned wife of his who is so desperate to get out of that marriage that she'd risk everything.'
âWhy does she hate him so?' I wondered.
He gave a sharp bark of laughter. âGood God, Mary, you are the most delightful fool. Because he
was
married to Anne, and she knows it. Because he was in love with Anne, and she knows it. And because losing Anne turned his head to melancholy and he has been a man destroyed ever since. No wonder she doesn't want to be his wife. Now go and find your sister and lie your head off. Open those beautiful eyes of yours and tell lies for us.'
I found the king and Anne at the riverside walk. She was talking earnestly to him and his head was inclined towards her as if he could not risk missing a single word. She glanced up when she saw me coming. âMary
will tell you,' she said. âShe was my bedfellow then when I was nothing more than a girl new to court.'
Henry looked up at me and I could see the hurt in his face.
âIt's the Countess of Northumberland,' Anne explained âSpreading slander about me to save herself from a marriage that she has grown tired of.'
âWhat can she be saying?'
âThe old scandal. That Henry Percy was in love with me.'
I smiled at the king with all the warmth and confidence I could muster. âOf course he was, Your Majesty. Don't you remember what it was like when Anne first came to court? Everyone was in love with her. Henry Percy among them.'
âThere was talk of a betrothal,' Henry said.
âWith the Earl of Ormonde?' I asked quickly.
âThey couldn't agree the dowry and the title,' Anne said.
âI meant between you and Henry Percy,' he persisted.
âThere was nothing,' she said. âA boy and a girl at court, a poem, a few words, nothing at all.'
âHe wrote three poems to me,' I said. âHe was the most idle page that the cardinal ever had. He was always writing poems to everyone. What a shame that he has married a woman with no sense of humour. But thank God she had no love of poetry or she would have run away even sooner!'
Anne laughed but we could not turn Henry off his course.
âShe says there was a pre-contract,' he persisted. âThat you and he were betrothed.'
âI have told you we were not.' Anne contradicted him with a little edge to her voice.
âBut why should she say it if it is not so?' Henry demanded.
âTo rid herself of her husband!' Anne snapped.
âBut why choose that lie, rather than another? Why not say he was married to Mary here? If she had his poems too?'
âI expect she will,' I said wildly, hoping to delay the explosion from Anne. But her temper was rising up in her and she could not stop it. She pulled her hand from the crook of his arm.
âWhat are you suggesting?' she demanded. âWhat are you saying of me? Are you calling me unchaste? When I stand here and swear to you that I have never, ever looked at another man? And now you â of all people in the world â accuse me of being pre-contracted! You! Who sought me out and courted me with another wife still living? Which of us is the more likely to be a bigamist, think you? A man with a wife tucked away in a beautiful house in Hertfordshire, fawned on by her own court, visited
by everyone, a queen in exile, or the girl who once had a poem written to her?'
âMy marriage is invalid!' Henry shouted back at her. âAs every cardinal in Rome knows!'
âBut it took place! As every man, woman and child in London knows. You spent enough money on it, God knows. You were merry enough about it then! But nothing took place for me, no promises were made, no rings were given, nothing nothing nothing! And you torment me with this nothing.'
âBefore God!' he swore. âWill you listen to me?'
âNo!' she screamed, quite beyond control. âFor you are a fool and I am in love with a fool and the more fool me. I will not listen to you but you will listen to every spiteful worm that would spit poison in your ear!'
âAnne!'
âNo!' she cried and flung herself away from him.