Read Philippa Gregory 3-Book Tudor Collection 1 Online
Authors: Philippa Gregory
She gave me a bitter little smile. âGeorge says that you are the only Boleyn with sense,' she said. âHe says that of the three of us you made the wisest choice. You'll never be wealthy, but you have a husband who loves you, and a healthy baby in the cradle. George's wife looks at him as if she would kill him and eat him, her desire is so mixed with hatred; and Henry flits in and out of my room like a butterfly in the springtime. And those two girls flit after him with nets at the ready.'
I laughed aloud at the thought of the increasingly fat Henry as a butterfly in the springtime. âBig net,' was all I said.
Anne gleamed for a moment, and then laughed too: her merry familiar laugh. âDear God, I'd give anything to be rid of them.'
âI'm here now,' I said. âI can keep them off you.'
âYes,' she said. âAnd if it goes wrong for me you can help me, can't you?'
âOf course,' I said. âWhatever else happens, you always have George and you always have me.'
There was a flurry of noise from the outer room: an unmistakable bellow of laughter, the great Tudor roar. Anne heard her husband's joy and she did not smile. âNow I suppose he'll want his dinner.'
I stopped her as she went to the door. âDoes he know that you're with child?' I asked quickly.
She shook her head. âNo-one knows but you and George,' she said. âI dare not tell.'
She opened the door and we saw, just as she opened it, Henry tying a locket around the blushing neck of Madge Shelton. At the sight of his wife he flinched but finished his task. âA little keepsake,' he remarked to Anne. âA small wager won by this clever girl here. Good evening, my wife.'
âHusband,' Anne said through her teeth. âGood evening to you.'
He looked past her and saw me. âWhy, Mary!' he exclaimed, beaming with delight. âThe beautiful Lady Carey, back with us again.'
I dropped my curtsey and looked up into his face. âLady Stafford, if you please, Your Majesty. I have remarried.'
His quick nod showed that he remembered â and remembered the peal his wife had rung over his head as she banished me from court. As I saw his smile stay constant, and his eyes stay warm on my upturned face, I thought what a poisonous witch my sister was. She had sought and obtained my banishment quite alone, it had not been the will of the king at all. He would have forgiven me at once. If Anne had not needed me to help her hide her pregnancy then she would have left me at the little farmhouse forever.
âAnd you have a child?' he asked. He could not help a swift glance over my head to Anne, looking from the fertile Boleyn girl to the barren one.
âA girl, Your Majesty,' I said, thanking God that it had not been a son.
âWilliam is a lucky man.'
I smiled up at him intimately. âI certainly tell him so.'
Henry laughed and reached out a hand to draw me closer. âIs he not here?' he said, looking around his gentlemen.
âHe was not asked â¦' I started.
At once he grasped my meaning. He turned back to his wife. âWhy is Sir William not bidden back to court with his wife?' he asked.
Anne never even wavered. âOf course he was summoned. I invited them both to come back to us as soon as my dear sister was churched.'
I could do nothing but admire her as she delivered this barefaced lie. Nothing for me to do but accept the lie and then play it for all I was worth. âHe will join me tomorrow if it please Your Majesty. And if I may, I will have my daughter with me too.'
âThe court is no place for a baby,' Anne said flatly.
At once Henry rounded on her. âMore the pity. And more the pity I should hear that from my wife. This court is the very place for a baby, as I would have thought you, of all people, would know.'
âI was thinking of the baby's health, my lord,' Anne said coldly. âI was thinking that she should be brought up in the country.'
âHer mother can be the judge of that,' Henry said grandly.
I smiled, honey sweet, and then I snatched at my chance. âIndeed, with your permission, I should like to take my baby into the country, to Hever this summer. She can meet my other children.'
â
My
son Henry,' Anne reminded me.
I turned a beguiling gaze upwards to the king.
âWhy not?' he said. âWhatever you wish, Lady Stafford.'
He offered me his arm and I swept him a curtsey and slipped my hand
in the crook of his elbow. I gazed up at him as if he were still the most handsome prince in Europe, and not the balding fat man he had become. The clear line of his jaw had thickened. The hair on the top of his head was thin and sparse. The rosebud mouth which had been so kissable in a young face was now a self-indulgent little pout, and his dancing eyes were occluded by the fat of his eyelids and the puff of his cheeks. He looked like a man both indulged and yet unhappy. A man like a sulky child.
I smiled radiantly up at him, I tilted my head towards him, laughed at his remarks, and made him laugh with tales of my buttermaking and my cheesemaking, until we were at the high table and he went to his throne as King of England, and I went to my seat at the table for the ladies in waiting.
We sat long over dinner, this court had become gluttons. There were twenty different meat dishes: game and killed meat, birds and fish. There were fifteen different puddings. I watched Henry taste a little of everything, and continually send for more. Anne sat beside him with a face like ice, picking at her plate, her eyes forever flicking to one side and then the other as if she would see where danger waited.
When the plates were finally taken away there was a masque and then the court set to dancing in earnest. I kept a close watch on the side door to the left of the fireplace, even when I was taking my place in a circle of dancers, even when I was flirting with my old friends of the court. After midnight, my watch was rewarded: the door opened and my husband William slipped in, and looked around for me.
The candles were guttering down and there were so many people dancing and moving around that he was not seen. I excused myself from the dance and went over to him and he drew me at once into an alcove, behind a curtain.
âMy love,' he said and took me in his arms. âIt feels like a lifetime.'
âFor me too. Is the baby all right? Settled in?'
âI left her and the nurse sound asleep. And I have good lodgings for them and for us too as soon as you can get away from court.'
âI've done better than that,' I said delightedly. âThe king was pleased to see me and he asked for you. You are to come to court tomorrow. We can be here together. He said that we could take Baby Anne to Hever for the summer.'
âDid Anne ask it for you?'
I shook my head. âIt's Anne I have to thank for my exile,' I said. âShe
wouldn't even have let me see my children if I had not asked it of the king.'
He gave a low whistle. âYou must have thanked her kindly for that.'
I shook my head. âNo point complaining of her very nature.'
âAnd how is she?'
âSour,' I whispered very low. âSick. And sad.'
That night George and I sat in Anne's room as she prepared for bed. The king had said he would lie with her that night and she had bathed and asked me to brush her hair.
âYou do make sure he is careful, don't you?' I asked her anxiously. âIt's a sin that he should lie with you at all.'
George gave a short laugh from where he was stretched out on her bed, his boots on her fine covers.
She turned her head under the hairbrush. âI'm in little danger of rough wooing.'
âWhat d'you mean?'
âSome nights he cannot do it. Some nights he cannot get hard at all. It's disgusting. I have to lie underneath him while he heaves around and sweats and grunts. And then he gets angry, and he is angry with me! As if I had anything to do with it.'
âIs it drink?' I asked.
She shrugged. âYou know the king. He's always half-drunk by night.'
âIf you tell him you're with child â¦' I said.
âI'll have to tell him in June, won't I?' she remarked. âAs soon as it quickens, I'll tell him then. He'll cancel the court's progress and we can all stay at Hampton Court. George will have to ride out and hunt with him and keep that moon-faced Jane off his neck.'
âArchangel Gabriel couldn't keep the women off him,' George said negligently. âYou've set a pattern, Anne, you'll live to regret it. They all of them hold him at arm's length and promise him the earth. It was easier when they were all like pretty Mary here â took a little romp and were paid a couple of manors for it.'
âI think you got the manors,' I said sharply. âAnd Father. And William Carey. As I recall, I got a pair of embroidered gloves and a pearl necklace.'
âAnd a ship named for you, and a horse,' Anne said with her accurate envious memory. âAnd gowns without number, and a new bed.'
George laughed. âYou have an inventory as if you were a groom of the household, Anne.' He stretched out a hand for her and pulled her to the bed to lie back on the pillow beside him. I looked at the two of them, as intimate as twins, side by side in the big bed of England.
âI'll leave you,' I said shortly.
âRun off to Sir Nobody,' Anne threw over her shoulder, and twitched the richly embroidered curtains of the bed so they were both shielded from my sight.
William was waiting for me, in the garden, looking out over the river, his face dark.
âWhat's the matter?'
âHe's arrested Fisher,' he said. âI never thought he'd dare.'
âBishop Fisher?'
âI thought he had a charmed life. Henry always loved him, and he seemed to be allowed to defend Queen Katherine and emerge unscathed. He's been her man without swerving. She'll grieve for him.'
âBut he'll just be in the Tower for a week or so, won't he? And then apologise, or whatever?'
âIt depends what they demand of him. He won't take the oath of succession, I'm sure of that. He can't say that Elizabeth is to succeed in the place of Mary, he's written a dozen books and preached a million sermons in defence of the marriage, he can't disinherit her daughter.'
âThen he'll just stay there,' I said.
âI suppose so,' William repeated.
I drew a little closer and put my hand on his arm. âWhy are you so worried?' I asked. âHe'll have his books and his things, his friends will visit him. He'll be released at the end of the summer.'
William turned from the river and took my hands in his. âI was there when Henry ordered him sent to the Tower,' he said. âHe was at Mass while he was doing his business. Think of that, Mary. He was at Mass when he ordered a bishop to the Tower.'
âHe's always done his business while hearing Mass,' I said. I was unwilling to recognise my husband's earnestness. âIt doesn't mean anything.'
âThese are Henry's laws,' my husband said, holding my hands and not releasing me. âThe Oath of Succession and then the Supremacy Act, and then the Treason Act. These aren't the laws of the land. These are Henry's
laws that set a trap to catch his enemies, and Fisher and More have fallen into it.'
âHe's hardly going to behead them â¦' I said reasonably. âOh William, really! One is the most revered churchman in the land, and the other was Lord Chancellor. He'd hardly dare behead them.'
âIf he dares to try them for treason then none of us is safe.'
I found I had lowered my voice to match him. âBecause?'
âBecause he will have found that the Pope does not protect his servants. That English men and women do not rise up against tyranny. That no-one is so well thought of, or so well connected, that they cannot be arrested under a new law of his devising. How long d'you think Queen Katherine will be free once her advisor is imprisoned?'
I pulled my hands away. âI won't listen to this,' I said. âIt's to fear shadows. My Grandfather Howard was in the Tower for treason and came out smiling. Henry wouldn't execute Thomas More, he loves him. They may be at loggerheads now but More was his greatest friend and joy.'