Philippa Gregory 3-Book Tudor Collection 1 (82 page)

BOOK: Philippa Gregory 3-Book Tudor Collection 1
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But every other night, also without fail, George would come to the room I shared with Anne and tap on the door and say: ‘He wants you,' and I would go to my love, to my king, at the run.

I never stayed for the whole night. There were foreign ambassadors from all over Europe bidden to Greenwich for Christmas and Henry would not show such a snub to the queen before them. The Spanish ambassador in particular was a stickler for etiquette and he was a close friend to the queen. Knowing the part I played at court, he did not like
me; and I would not have enjoyed bumping into him coming out of the king's private rooms all flushed and dishevelled. Better by far that I should slip from the king's warm bed and hurry back to my chamber with George yawning at my side, hours before the ambassador arrived to hear Mass.

Anne was always up and waiting for me, with ale ready mulled and the fire banked in to warm our chamber. I would jump into bed and she would throw a woollen wrap around my shoulders and sit beside me and comb out the tangles from my hair while George put another log on the fire and sipped at his own cup.

‘It's weary work, this,' he said. ‘I fall asleep most afternoons. I cannot keep my eyes open.'

‘Anne puts me to bed after my dinner as if I were a child,' I said resentfully.

‘What d'you want?' Anne asked. ‘To be as haggard as the queen?'

‘She's not looking too bonny,' George agreed. ‘Is she ill?'

‘Just old age, I think,' Anne said uncaringly. ‘And the effort of appearing happy all the time. She must be exhausted. Henry takes a lot of pleasing, doesn't he?'

‘No,' I said smugly, and the three of us laughed.

‘Has he said if he is giving you a special gift for Christmas?' Anne asked. ‘Or George? Or any of us?'

I shook my head. ‘He hasn't said.'

‘Uncle Howard sent a gold chalice wrought with our arms for you to give to him,' Anne said. ‘It's safe in the cupboard. It's worth a fortune. I only hope we see some return on it.'

I nodded drowsily. ‘He has promised me a surprise.' At once the two of them were alert. ‘He wants to take me to the shipyard tomorrow.'

Anne made a grimace of disdain. ‘I thought you meant a gift. Are we all to go? The whole court?'

‘Just a small party.' I closed my eyes and started to drift off into sleep. I heard Anne get up from the bed and move about the room, unpacking my clothes from the chest and laying them out for the morning.

‘You must wear your red,' she said. ‘And you can borrow my red cape trimmed with swansdown. It'll be cold on the river.'

‘Thank you, Anne.'

‘Oh, don't think I'm doing it for you. I am doing this for the advancement of the family. None of this is for you, as yourself.'

I hunched my shoulders against the coldness of her tone but I was too tired to retort. Dimly, I heard George put down his cup and rise from his chair. I heard his soft kiss on Anne's forehead.

‘Weary work but everything to play for,' he said quietly. ‘Goodnight, Annamaria – I leave you to your duties and go to mine.'

I heard her seductive chuckle. ‘The whores of Greenwich are a noble calling, my brother. I shall see you tomorrow.'

Anne's cape looked wonderful over my red riding habit and she lent me her smart little French riding hat as well. Henry, Anne, I, George, my husband William, and half a dozen others rode alongside the river to the shipyard where they were building the king's new ship. It was a bright wintry day, the sun sparkled on the water, the fields either side of the river were noisy with the sound of water birds, the geese from Russia overwintering at our milder watermeadows. Against their continual gabble, the quacking of ducks and the call of snipe and curlew were very loud. We cantered beside the river in a little group, my horse shouldering against the king's big hunter, Anne and George on either side of us. Henry pulled up to a trot and then a walk as we came near to the dock.

The foreman came out as he saw our party approaching and pulled off his hat and bowed low to the king.

‘I thought to ride out and see how you do,' the king said, smiling down on him.

‘We are honoured, Your Majesty.'

‘And how goes the work?' The king swung himself down from the saddle and tossed the reins of his horse to a waiting groom. He turned and lifted me down and tucked my hand into the crook of his elbow and led me to the dry dock.

‘So what d'you think of her?' Henry asked me, squinting up at the smooth oak side of the half-built ship as she rested on the great wooden rollers. ‘Don't you think she is going to be most lovely?'

‘Lovely and dangerous,' I said, looking at the gun doors. ‘Surely the French have nothing as good as this.'

‘Nothing,' Henry said proudly. ‘If I'd had three beauties like this one at sea last year I would have destroyed the French navy as they skulked in port, and I should have been King of England and France in deed as well as word today.'

I hesitated. ‘The French army is said to be very strong,' I ventured. ‘And Francis very resolute.'

‘He's a peacock,' Henry said crossly. ‘All show. And Charles of Spain will take him in the south as I come at him from Calais. The two of us will divide France between us.' Henry turned to the shipwright. ‘When will she be ready?'

‘In spring,' the man answered.

‘Is the draughtsman here today?'

The man bowed. ‘He is.'

‘I have a fancy to have a sketch made of you, Mistress Carey. Will you sit for a moment and let the man take your likeness?'

I flushed with pleasure. ‘Of course, if you wish it.'

Henry nodded to the shipwright who shouted from the platform to the quay below us and a man came running. Henry helped me down the ladder and I sat on a pile of newly sawn planks while a young man in rough homespun cloth sketched a quick likeness of my face.

‘What will you do with the picture?' I asked curiously, trying to keep still and hold a smile on my lips.

‘Wait and see.'

The artist put his paper to one side. ‘I have enough.'

Henry put out his hand to me and raised me to my feet. ‘Then, sweeting, let's ride home to our dinner. I'll take you home around the watermeadows, there's a good gallop to the castle.'

The grooms were walking the horses around so that they did not catch cold. Henry threw me up into my saddle and then mounted his own horse. He glanced over his shoulder to see that everyone was ready. Lord Percy was tightening Anne's girth. She looked down and gave him her slow provocative smile. Then we all turned and rode back to Greenwich as the sun set primrose and cream in the cold winter sky.

Christmas dinner lasted for nearly all the day and I was sure that Henry would send for me that night. Instead he announced that he would visit the queen and I had to be among the ladies who sat with her, waiting for him to finish drinking with his friends and come to bed in the queen's apartments.

Anne pushed a half-sewn shirt into my hands and sat beside me, firmly planting herself on the skirts of my outspread gown so I could not rise without her letting me up. ‘Oh leave me alone,' I said under my breath.

‘Take that miserable look off your face,' she hissed. ‘Do your sewing and smile as if you were enjoying it. No man is going to desire you when you look as sulky as a baited bear.'

‘But to spend Christmas night with her …'

Anne nodded. ‘D'you want to know why?'

‘Yes.'

‘Some beggarly soothsayer told him that he would get a son tonight. He's
hoping the queen might give him an autumn child. Lord, what fools men are.'

‘A soothsayer?'

‘Yes. Foretold a son, if he forsook all other women. No need to ask who paid her.'

‘What d'you mean?'

‘My guess is that we'd find Seymour gold in her pocket if we turned her upside down and shook her very hard. But it's too late for that now. The damage is done. He'll be in the queen's bed tonight and every night till twelfth night. So you had better make sure that when he walks past you to do his duty he remembers what he's missing.'

I bent my head lower over my sewing. Anne, watching me, saw a tear fall on the hem of the shirt and saw me blot it with my finger.

‘Little fool,' she said roughly. ‘You'll get him back.'

‘I hate the thought of him lying with her,' I whispered. ‘I wonder if he calls her sweeting, too?'

‘Probably,' Anne said bluntly. ‘Not many men have the wit to vary the tune. But he'll do his duty by her and then look around again, and if you catch his eye and smile then it will be you again.'

‘How can I smile when my heart is breaking?'

Anne gave a little giggle. ‘Oh what a tragedy queen! You can smile when your heart is breaking because you are a woman, and a courtier, and a Howard. That's three reasons for being the most deceitful creature on God's earth. Now sshh – here he comes.'

George came in first with a quick smile for me and went to kneel at the queen's feet. She gave him her hand with a pretty blush, she was glowing with pleasure that the king was coming to her. Henry came in next with my husband, William, and with his hand on Lord Percy's shoulder. He walked past me with nothing more than a nod of his head though Anne and I stood as he entered the room and dipped low into a curtsey. He went straight to the queen, kissed her on the lips and then led the way into her privy chamber. Her maids went in with them and shortly came out and closed the door. The rest of us were left outside in silence.

William looked around and smiled at me. ‘Well met, good wife,' he said pleasantly. ‘Shall you be keeping your present quarters for much longer, d'you think? Or will you want me as a bedfellow again?'

‘That must depend on the command of the queen and of our uncle,' George said evenly. His hand slid along his belt to where his sword would hang. ‘Marianne cannot choose for herself, as you know.'

William did not rise to the challenge. He gave me a rueful smile. ‘Peace,
George,' he said. ‘I don't need you to explain it all to me. I should know by now.'

I looked away. Lord Percy had drawn Anne into an alcove and I heard her seductive giggle at something that he said. She saw me watching and said more loudly: ‘Lord Percy is writing sonnets to me, Mary. Do tell him that his lines don't scan.'

‘It's not even finished,' Percy protested. ‘I was just telling you the first line and already you are too critical.'

‘“Fair lady – thou dost treat me with disdain –”'

‘I think that's a very good start,' I said helpfully. ‘How would you go on, Lord Percy?'

‘It's clearly not a good start,' George said. ‘To start a courtship with disdain is the very worst start you could make. A kind start would be more promising.'

‘A kind start would be certainly startling, from a Boleyn girl,' William said with a barb in his tone. ‘Depending on the suitor, of course. But now I think of it – a Percy of Northumberland might get a kind start.'

Anne flashed him a look which was something less than sisterly but Henry Percy was so absorbed in his poem that he hardly heard him. ‘It goes on with the next line, which I don't have yet, and then it goes something something something something, my pain.'

‘Oh! To rhyme with disdain!' George declared provokingly. ‘I think I'm beginning to get this.'

‘But you must have an image that you pursue throughout the poem,' Anne said to Henry Percy. ‘If you are going to write a poem to your mistress you must compare her to something and then twist the comparison round to some witty conclusion.'

‘How can I?' Percy asked her. ‘I cannot compare you to anything. You are yourself. What should I compare you to?'

‘Oh very pretty!' George said approvingly. ‘I say, Percy, your conversation is better than your poetry, I should stay on one knee and whisper in her ear, if I was you. You'll triumph if you stick to prose.'

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