Philippa Gregory 3-Book Tudor Collection 1 (137 page)

BOOK: Philippa Gregory 3-Book Tudor Collection 1
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We were married as soon as my gown and my linen were washed and dried since I refused absolutely to go to the church in his breeches. The priest knew William, and opened the church for us the very next day and performed the service with absent-minded speed. I didn't mind. I had been married first at the royal chapel in Greenwich Palace with the king in attendance and the marriage had been a cover for a love affair within a few years, and had ended in death. This wedding, so simple and easy, would take me to a quite different future: a house of my own with a man that I loved.

We walked back to the farmhouse hand in hand and we had a wedding feast of freshly baked bread and a ham which William had smoked in his chimney.

‘I shall have to learn how to do all of this,' I said uneasily, looking up to the rafters where the three remaining legs of William's last pig were hanging.

He laughed. ‘It's easy enough,' he said. ‘And we'll get a girl in to help you. We'll need a couple of women working here when the babies come.'

‘The babies?' I asked, thinking of Catherine and Henry.

He smiled. ‘Our babies,' he said. ‘I want a house filled with little Staffords. Don't you?'

We set off back to Westminster the next day. I had already sent a note upriver to George, imploring him to tell Anne and my uncle that I had been taken ill. I said that I had been so afraid that it was the sweat that I left court without seeing them, and had gone to Hever until I recovered.
It was a lie too late, and too unlikely to convince anyone who thought about it, but I was gambling on the fact that with Anne married to the king and pregnant with his child, no-one would be thinking or caring very much what I did at all.

We went back to London by barge, with the two horses loaded with us. I was reluctant to go. I had meant to leave court and live with William in the country, not to disrupt his plans and take him away from his farm. But William was determined. ‘You'll never settle without your children,' he predicted. ‘And I don't want your unhappiness on my conscience.'

‘So it's not an act of generosity at all,' I said with spirit.

‘Last thing I want is a miserable wife,' he said cheerfully. ‘I've tried to ride with you from Hever to London, remember. I know what a sad little drab you can be.'

We caught an incoming tide and an onshore wind and we made good time upriver. We landed at Westminster stairs and I walked up while William went round to the jetty to unload the horses. I promised to meet him on the stairs to the great hall within the hour; by that time I should have discovered how the land lay.

I went straight to George's rooms. Oddly, his door was locked and so I tapped on it, the Boleyn knock, and waited for his response. I heard a scuffling and then the door swung open. ‘Oh it's you,' George said.

Sir Francis Weston was with him, straightening his doublet as I came into the room.

‘Oh,' I said, stepping back.

‘Francis took a fall from his horse,' George said. ‘Can you walk all right now, Francis?'

‘Yes, but I'll go and rest,' he said. He bowed low over my hand and did not comment on the state of my gown and cape which bore all the signs of hard wear and home washing.

As soon as the door was shut behind him I turned to George. ‘George, I'm so sorry, but I had to go. Did you manage to lie for me?'

‘William Stafford?' he asked.

I nodded.

‘I thought as much,' he said. ‘God, what fools we both are.'

‘Both of us?' I asked, warily.

‘In our different ways,' he said. ‘Went to him and had him, did you?'

‘Yes,' I said shortly. I did not dare trust even George with the explosive news that we were married. ‘And he's come back to court with me. Will you get him a place with the king? He can't serve Uncle again.'

‘I can get him something,' George said doubtfully. ‘Howard stock is very high at the moment. But what d'you want with him at court? You're bound to be found out.'

‘George, please,' I said. ‘I've asked for nothing. Everyone has had places or land or money from Anne's rise, but I have asked for nothing except my children, and she has taken my son. This is the first thing I've ever asked for.'

‘You'll get caught,' George warned. ‘And then disgraced.'

‘We all have secrets,' I said. ‘Even Anne herself. I've protected Anne's secrets, I'd protect you, I want you to do the same for me.'

‘Oh very well,' he said unwillingly. ‘But you must be discreet. No more riding out together alone. For God's sake don't get yourself in pup. And if Uncle finds a husband for you, you'll have to marry. Love or no.'

‘I'll deal with that when it happens,' I said. ‘And you'll get him a place?'

‘He can be a gentleman usher to the king. But make very sure that he knows it is my favour that has bought it for him, and that he keeps his ears and eyes open in my interest. He's my man now.'

‘No he's not,' I said with a sly smile. ‘He's very much mine.'

‘Good God, what a whore,' my brother laughed, and pulled me into his arms.

‘And am I safe? Did they all believe I went to Hever?'

‘Yes,' he said. ‘Nobody noticed you gone at all for a day. They asked me if I had taken you to Hever without permission and it seemed the safest thing to say yes, until I knew what the devil you were doing. I said you feared that the children were ill. When I got your note the lie was already told, and so I've stuck to it. Everyone thinks that you dashed off to Hever and I took you. It's not a bad lie and it should hold.'

‘Thank you,' I said. ‘I'd better go and change my gown before anyone sees me like this.'

‘You'd better throw it away. You're a mad romp, you know, Marianne. I never thought you had it in you. It was always Anne who insisted on going her own way. I thought you would do as you are told.'

‘Not this time,' I said, blew him a kiss, and left him.

I met William as I had promised; but it was odd and uncomfortable to have to stand at arm's distance and speak like strangers when I wanted his arms around me and his kisses in my hair.

‘George lied for me already, so I am safe. And he says he can get you the post of gentleman usher to the king.'

‘How I rise in the world!' William said sardonically. ‘I knew that marriage
to you would benefit me. Farmer to gentleman usher in one day.'

‘The block the next day if you don't mind your tongue,' I warned him.

He laughed and took my hand and kissed it. ‘I'll go and find some lodgings just outside the walls and we can spend every night together even if we have to spend our days apart like this.'

‘Yes,' I said. ‘I want that.'

He smiled at me. ‘You're my wife,' he said gently. ‘I'm not going to let you go now.'

I found Anne in the queen's chambers, starting work with her ladies on an enormous altar cloth. The sight was so reminiscent of Queen Katherine that for a moment I blinked, and then I saw the crucial differences. Anne's ladies were all Howard family members or our chosen favourites. Prettiest of the girls was undoubtedly our cousin Madge Shelton, the new Howard girl at court, wealthiest and most influential was Jane Parker, George's wife. The very air of the room was different: Queen Katherine often had one of us reading to her, from the Bible or from some book of sermons. Anne had music, there were four musicians playing as I came in, and one of the ladies lifted her head and sang as she worked.

And there were gentlemen in the room. Queen Katherine, brought up in the strict seclusion of the Spanish royal court, was always formal – even after years in England. The gentlemen visited with the king, they were always made welcome and always royally entertained – but in general the courtiers did not linger in the queen's rooms. What flirtations there were took place in the unsupervised freedom of the gardens or out hunting.

The state kept by Anne was far more merry. There were half a dozen men in the room; Sir William Brereton was there, helping Madge to sort the embroidery silks into colours, Sir Thomas Wyatt was in the windowseat listening to the music, Sir Francis Weston was looking over Anne's shoulder and praising her sewing, and in a corner of the room Jane Parker was in whispered talk with James Wyville.

Anne barely glanced up when I came in, in a clean green gown. ‘Oh you're back,' she said indifferently. ‘Are the children well again?'

‘Yes,' I said. ‘It was only a rheum.'

‘It must be lovely at Hever,' Sir Thomas Wyatt remarked from the windowseat. ‘Are the daffodils out by the river?'

‘Yes,' I lied quickly. ‘In bud,' I corrected myself.

‘But the fairest flower of Hever is here,' Sir Thomas said, looking over at Anne.

She glanced up from her sewing. ‘And also in bud,' she said provocatively, and the ladies laughed with her.

I looked from Sir Thomas to Anne. I had not thought that she would have even hinted at her pregnancy, especially before gentlemen.

‘Would that I were the little bee that played in the petals,' Sir Thomas said, continuing the bawdy jest.

‘You would find the flower closed quite tight against you,' Anne said.

Jane Parker's bright eyes turned from one player to the other as if she were watching tennis. The whole game suddenly seemed to me a waste of the time that I could have been spending with William, yet another masque in the unending make-believe of the court. I was hungry for real love now.

‘When do we move?' I asked, breaking into the flirtation. ‘When do we go on progress?'

‘Next week,' Anne said indifferently, snipping a thread. ‘We go to Greenwich, I believe. Why?'

‘I'm tired of the City.'

‘How restless you are,' Anne complained. ‘Only just back from Hever and you want to be off again. You need a man to tie you down, sister. You've been a widow for too long.'

At once I subsided into the windowseat beside Sir Thomas. ‘No indeed,' I said. ‘See, I am as quiet as any sleeping cat.'

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