Read Philippa Gregory 3-Book Tudor Collection 1 Online
Authors: Philippa Gregory
George poured us all another glass of wine.
âI should go too,' I said. âWilliam will be waiting.'
âYou stay,' Anne said peremptorily.
âYes, Your Majesty,' I said obediently.
She gave me a hard, warning look.
âShall I send the Seymour thing from the court?' she asked George. âI
won't have her simpering around the king all day. It makes me furious.'
âLeave her alone,' George recommended. âWhen he is well again he'll want something a little more fiery. But stop pulling at him. He was angry with you tonight and you ran towards it.'
âI can't stand him so pitiful,' she said. âHe didn't die, did he? Why should he be in such misery for nothing?'
âHe's afraid. And he's not a young man any more.'
âIf she simpers at him once again I'll slap her face,' Anne said. âYou can warn her from me, Mary. If I catch her looking at him with that Mother of God smile on her face I'll slap it off her.'
I slithered from the bed. âI'll say something to her. Perhaps not quite that. Can I go now, Anne? I'm weary.'
âOh all right,' she said irritably. âYou'll stay with me, won't you, George?'
âYour wife will talk,' I warned him. âAlready she says that you're always here.'
I thought that Anne would shrug it off but she and George exchanged a swift look, and George rose to his feet to go.
âDo I have to be always alone?' Anne demanded. âWalk alone, pray alone, bed alone?'
George hesitated at the bleak appeal.
âYes,' I said stoutly. âYou chose to be queen. I warned you it wouldn't bring you joy.'
In the morning Jane Seymour and I found ourselves side by side on the way to Mass. We walked past the king's open door and saw him seated at his table, his injured leg propped before him on a chair, a clerk beside him reading out letters and putting them before him for signature. As Jane went by his door she slowed down and smiled at him, and he paused and watched her, the pen in his hand, the ink drying on the nib.
Jane and I kneeled side by side in the queen's chapel and listened to the Mass celebrated before the altar of the church below us.
âJane,' I said quietly.
She opened her eyes, she had been far away in prayer.
âYes, Mary? Forgive me, I was praying.'
âIf you go on flirting with the king with those sickly little smiles, one of us Boleyns is going to scratch your eyes out.'
Anne adopted the habit of walking beside the river, up to the bowling green, through the yew tree
allée
, past the tennis courts and back to the
palace every day during her pregnancy. I always walked with her and George was always at her side. Most of her ladies came too, and some of the king's gentlemen, since the king was not hunting in the afternoons. George and Sir Francis Weston would walk either side of Anne and make her laugh and take her arm and help her when we went up the steps to the bowling green, and any of our particular circle, Henry Norris, or Sir Thomas Wyatt, or William would walk with me.
One day Anne was weary and cut the walk short. We re-entered the palace with her on George's arm and me a few paces behind her walking with Henry Norris. The guards threw open the doors of her apartments as we came towards them and thus framed a tableau of Jane Seymour leaping from the king's lap and him trying to jump to his feet, brush down his coat, and look nonchalant, but as he was still lame from his fall, he staggered and looked foolish. Anne went in like a whirlwind.
âGet out, slut,' she said sharply to Jane Seymour. Jane dropped a curtsey and scuttled from the room. George tried to sweep Anne through to her inner rooms, but she rounded on the king.
âWhat were you doing with that thing on your lap? Is she some sort of poultice?'
âWe were talking â¦' he said awkwardly.
âDoes she whisper so low she has to have her tongue in your ear?'
âI was ⦠it was â¦'
âI know what it was!' Anne shouted at him. âYour whole court knows what it was. We all had the privilege of seeing what it was. A man who says he is too tired to go out for a walk, sprawled at his ease, with some clever little ninny sneaking into his lap.'
âAnne â' he said. Everyone but Anne heard the warning note in his tone.
âI won't tolerate it. She's to leave court!' she snapped.
âThe Seymours are loyal friends to the crown and our good servants,' he said pompously. âThey stay.'
âShe is no better than a whore in a bath house,' Anne raged at him. âAnd she is no friend to me. I won't have her among my ladies.'
âShe is a gentle pure young woman and â'
âPure? What was she doing in your lap? Saying her prayers?'
âThat's enough!' he said with a rumble of anger. âShe stays among your ladies. Her family stays at court. You overreach yourself, madam.'
âI do not!' Anne swore. âI have the say of who attends me. I am queen and these are my rooms. I won't have a woman here I don't like.'
âYou will have the attendants I choose for you,' he insisted. âI am the king.'
âYou will not order me,' she said breathlessly, her hand to her heart.
âAnne,' I said. âBe calm.' She did not even hear me.
âI order everyone,' he said. âYou will do as I bid you for I am your husband and your king.'
âI'll be damned if I do!' she screamed, and turned on her heel and fled to her privy chamber. She opened the door and shouted at him from the threshold. âYou don't master me, Henry!'
But he could not run after her. That was her fatal mistake. If he had been able to run after her then he could have caught her and they could have tumbled into bed together as they had done so many times before. But his leg hurt him and she was young and taunting and instead of being aroused he was baited. He resented her youth and her beauty, he no longer revelled in it.
âIt is you who are the whore, not her!' he shouted. âDon't think I have forgotten what you will do to get into a king's lap. Jane Seymour will never know half the tricks you used on me, madam! French tricks! Whore's tricks! They no longer enchant me; but I don't forget them.'
There was a shocked gasp from the court and George and I exchanged one look of total horror. Anne's door slammed shut and the king turned to his court and George and I met his fulminating glare with the blankness of absolute terror.
He pulled himself to his feet. He said: âArm.' Sir John Seymour thrust George aside, and the king leaned on him and went slowly to his own rooms, his gentlemen following him. I watched him go and found that I was swallowing painfully with a dry throat.
George's wife Jane Parker was at my side. âWhat tricks did she used to do?'
I had a sudden vivid recollection of coaching her to use her hair, her mouth, her hands on him. George and I had taught her everything that we knew, drawn from George's time in the bath houses of Europe with French whores, Spanish madams, and English sluts, and everything that I knew from wedding and bedding one man and seducing another. We had taken Anne and trained her to do the things that Henry liked, the things all men like, things expressly forbidden by the church. We had taught her to strip naked before him, to raise her shift an inch at a time to show him her privates, we had taught her to lick his cock from the base to the tip with long languorous touches. We had taught her the words he liked and the pictures he wanted in his head. We had given her the skills of a whore and now she was reproached for it. I met George's eyes and I knew he had the same memory.
âOh Lord save us, Jane,' he said wearily. âDon't you know that when
the king is angry he'll say anything? Nothing, is what she did. Nothing more than a kiss and a caress. The sort of thing that any husband and wife do in their balmy days.' He paused, and corrected himself. âWe didn't, of course; not you and me. But then you're not really a very kissable woman, are you?'
She turned away for a moment as if he had pinched her. âBut of course,' she said, as quiet as a snake going through bracken, â
you
don't really like to kiss women at all unless they are your sisters.'
I left Anne alone for half an hour and then I tapped on her door and slipped into the room. I closed the door on the curious faces of the ladies in waiting and looked around for her. The room was in the darkness of an early winter afternoon, she had not lit the candles and only the firelight flickered on the walls and the ceiling. She was lying face down on her bed and for a moment I thought she was asleep. Then she reared up and I saw her pale face and her dark eyes.
âMy God, he was angry.' Her voice was husky from crying.
âYou angered him. You ran towards it, Anne.'
âWhat was I to do? When he insults me before the whole of the court?'
âBe blind,' I counselled her. âLook the other way. Queen Katherine did.'
âQueen Katherine lost. She looked the other way and I took him. What am I to do to hold him?'
We both said nothing. There was only one answer. There was always only one answer and it was always the same answer.
âI was sick with anger,' she remarked. âI felt as if I might vomit up my very guts.'
âYou must be calm.'
âHow can I be calm when Jane Seymour is everywhere I turn?'
I went to the bed and took her hood from her head. âLet's get you ready for dinner,' I said. âGo down to dinner looking beautiful and it will all blow over and be forgotten.'
âNot by me,' she said bitterly. âI won't forget.'
âThen act as if you do,' I advised her. âOr everyone will remember that he abused you. You had better act as if it was never said and never heard.'
âHe called me a whore,' she said resentfully. âNo-one will forget that.'
âWe're all whores compared with Jane,' I said cheerfully. âSo what of it? You're his wife now, aren't you? With a legitimate baby in your belly? He can call you what he likes in temper, you can win him back when he is calm. Win him back tonight, Anne.'
I called for her maid and Anne picked out her gown. She chose a gown
of silver and white, as if she would assert her purity even when the court had heard her accused of whoreish tricks. Her stomacher was embroidered with pearls and diamonds, the hem of the silvery cloth of the skirt was stitched with silver thread. When she put her hood on her black hair she looked every inch a queen, a snow queen, a queen of speckless beauty.
âVery good,' I said.
Anne gave me a weary smile. âI have to do it and go on doing it forever,' she said. âThis dance to keep Henry interested. What will happen when I am old and I can dance no more? The girls in my chambers will still be young and beautiful. What happens then?'
I had no comfort to offer her. âLet's get through this evening. Never mind about years to come. And when you have a son and then more sons you won't mind about getting old.'
She rested her hand on the encrusted stomacher. âMy son,' she said softly.