Read Philippa Gregory 3-Book Tudor Collection 1 Online
Authors: Philippa Gregory
We rode by the river. The tide was coming in and the waves splashed on the shore, white-capped. The seagulls, blown inland, cried and wheeled above our heads, their wings as bright as silver in the spring sunshine. The hedgerows were greening with the fresh colour of spring growth, primroses like pale pats of creamy butter in the sunny spots on the banks. The track alongside the river was hard-packed mud and the horses cantered along at a good easy pace. As we rode, the king sang me a lovesong of his own composing, and when I heard it over the second time I sang it with him and he laughed at my attempt at harmony. I did not have Anne's talent, I knew. But it did not matter. That day nothing mattered, nothing could matter, but that my beloved and I were riding out together in the brightest of sunshine, on a little journey for pleasure, and he was happy, and I was happy in his sight.
We reached the shipyard sooner than I wanted and Henry himself stood beside my horse, lifted me down from the saddle and held me for a swift kiss when my feet were on the ground.
âSweetheart,' he whispered. âI have a little surprise for you.'
He turned me around and stepped to one side so that I could see his beautiful new ship. She was almost ready for the sea now, she had the characteristic high poop deck and prow of a fighting ship, built for speed.
âLook,' Henry said, seeing me taking in her lines but not the detail. He pointed to her name carved and enamelled in gold in bold curly letters at the ornate prow. It said: âMary Boleyn'.
For a moment I stared, reading the letters of my name but not understanding. He did not laugh at my astounded face, he watched me, seeing my surprise turn to puzzlement and then to dawning understanding.
âYou named her for me?' I asked. I could hear my voice quaver. It was an honour too great for me. I felt too young, too small a person altogether to have a ship, and such a ship, named for me. And now everyone in the world would know that I was the king's mistress. There could be no denial.
âI did, sweetheart.' He was smiling. He expected me to be delighted.
He tucked my cold hand under his elbow and urged me to the front of the ship. There was a figurehead, looking out with a proud beautiful profile, looking out over the Thames, out to sea, to France. It was me, with my lips slightly parted, slightly smiling, as if I was a woman to want such an adventure. As if I were not the cat's-paw of the Howard family but a courageous lovely woman in my own right.
âMe?' I asked, my voice a thread above the sound of the water splashing at the side of the dry dock.
Henry's mouth was at my ear, I could feel the warmth of his breath on my cold cheek.
âYou,' he said. âA beauty, like you. Are you happy, Mary?'
I turned to him and his arms came around me and I stood up on tiptoe and buried my face in the warmth of his neck and smelled the sweet scent of his beard and his hair. âOh Henry,' I whispered. I wanted my face hidden from him, I knew that he would see no pleasure but a terror at rising so high, so publicly.
âAre you happy?' he insisted. He turned my face up, with a hand under my chin, so that he could scan me as if I were a manuscript. âIt is a great honour.'
âI know.' My smile trembled on my lips. âI thank you.'
âAnd you shall launch her,' he promised me. âNext week.'
I hesitated. âNot the queen?'
I was fearful of taking her place to launch the newest and greatest ship that he had ever built. But of course it had to be me. How could she launch a ship that bore my name?
He shrugged her away as if they had not been husband and wife for thirteen years. âNo,' he said shortly. âNot the queen. You.'
I found a smile from somewhere and hoped that it was convincing and that it hid my terrified sense that I was going too far, too fast, and that the end of this road was not the sort of carefree joy that we had felt this morning, but something darker and more fearful. For all that we had ridden, singing out of tune together, we were not a lover and his lass. If my name was on this ship, if I launched it next week, then I was a declared rival to the Queen of England. I was an enemy to the Spanish ambassador, to the whole nation of Spain. I was a powerful force in the court, a threat to the Seymour family. The higher I rose in the king's favour the greater the dangers that opened up around me. But I was a young woman of only fifteen years old. I could not yet revel in ambition.
As if she could read my reluctance, Anne was at my side. âYou do my sister a great honour, sire,' she said smoothly. âIt is a most exquisite ship,
as lovely as the woman you named her for. And a strong and powerful ship â like yourself. God bless her and send her against our enemies. Whoever they may be.'
Henry smiled at the compliment. âShe is bound to be a lucky ship,' he said. âWith the face of an angel going before her.'
âD'you think she'll have to fight the French this year?' George asked, taking my hand and giving my fingers a quick hidden pinch to recall me to my work as a courtier.
Henry nodded, looking grim. âWithout doubt,' he said. âAnd if the Spanish emperor will move in concert with me, we will follow my plan of our attack in the north of France, as he attacks in the south, then we cannot fail to curb Francis's arrogance. This summer we will do it, without fail.'
âIf we can trust the Spanish,' Anne said silkily.
Henry's face darkened. âIt is they who have the greatest need of us,' he said. âCharles had better remember that. This is not a matter of family or kinship. If the queen is displeased with me for one reason or another she must remember that she is a queen of England first, and a princess of Spain second. Her first loyalty must be to me.'
Anne nodded. âI should hate to be so divided,' she said. âThank God we Boleyns are English through and through.'
âFor all your French gowns,' Henry said with a sudden gleam of humour.
Anne smiled back at him. âA gown is a gown,' she said. âLike Mary's gown of yellow velvet. But you of all people would know that underneath there is a true subject with an undivided heart.'
He turned to me at that and smiled at me as I looked up at him. âIt is my pleasure to reward such a faithful heart,' he said.
I felt that there were tears in my eyes and I tried to blink them away without him seeing, but one stood on my eyelashes. Henry bent down and kissed it. âSweetest girl,' he said gently. âMy little English rose.'
The whole court turned out to launch the ship, the
Mary Boleyn
, and only the queen pleaded an indisposition and stayed away. The Spanish ambassador was there to watch the vessel slip into the water, and whatever reservations he felt about the name of the ship he kept to himself.
My father was in a silent frenzy of irritation at himself, at me, at the king. The great honour which had been done to me and to my family had turned out to have a price attached. King Henry was a subtle monarch in such matters. When my uncle and father had thanked him for the compliment of using their name he thanked them for the contribution
that he was sure they would want to make to the fitting out of such a ship which would so redound to their credit as it carried the Boleyn name across the seas.
âAnd so the stakes go up again,' George said cheerfully as we watched the boat slide over the rollers into the salty river waters of the Thames.
âHow can they get any higher?' I asked from the corner of my smiling mouth. âI have my life on the table.'
The shipyard workers, already half drunk on free ale, waved their caps and cheered. Anne smiled and waved in reply. George grinned at me. The wind stirred the feather in his cap, ruffled his dark curls. âNow it's costing Father money to keep you in the king's favour. Now it's not just your heart and happiness on the table, my little sister, it's the family fortune. We thought we were playing him for a lovesick fool, but it turns out he's playing us for money lenders. Stakes go up. Father and Uncle will want to see a return for this investment. You see if they don't.'
I turned away from George and found Anne. She was a little distance from the court, Henry Percy beside her as usual. They were both watching the ship as the barges towed her out into the river and then turned her, and, struggling against the current, brought her back alongside the jetty and started to tie her up so that she could be fitted out as she lay in the water. Anne's face was bright with the joy that flirtation always brought her.
She turned and smiled at me. âAh, the Queen of the Day,' she said mockingly.
I made a little grimace. âDon't tease me, Anne. I have had enough from George.'
Henry Percy stepped forward and took my hand and kissed it. As I looked down at the back of his blond head I realised how high my star was rising. This was Henry Percy, son and heir to the Duke of Northumberland. There was no other man in the kingdom who had fairer prospects or a greater fortune. He was the son of the richest man in England, second only to the king, and he was bowing his head to me and kissing my hand.
âShe shall not tease you,' he promised me, coming up smiling. âFor I shall take you in to dine. I'm told that the cooks from Greenwich were out here at dawn to get everything ready. The king is going in, shall we follow?'
I hesitated but the queen, who always created a sense of formality, was left behind at Greenwich, lying in a darkened room with a pain in her belly and fear in her heart. There was no-one at the dockside but the feckless idle men and women of the court. No-one cared about
precedence, except in the sense that winners must come first. âOf course,' I said. âWhy not?'
Lord Henry Percy offered his other arm to Anne. âShall I have two sisters?'
âI think you would find the Bible forbids it,' Anne said provocatively. âThe Bible orders a man to choose between sisters and to stay with his first choice. Anything else is a cardinal sin.'
Lord Henry Percy laughed. âI'm sure I could get an indulgence,' he said. âThe Pope would surely grant me a dispensation. With two sisters like this, what man could be made to choose?'
We did not ride home until it was twilight and the stars were starting to come out in the pale grey sky of spring. I rode beside the king, my hand in his, and we let the horses amble along the riverside tow track. We rode under the archway of the palace and up to the opening front door. Then he pulled up his horse and he lifted me down from the saddle and whispered in my ear: âI wish you were queen for all the days, and not just for one day in a pavilion by the river, my love.'
âHe said what?' my uncle asked.
I stood before him, like a prisoner under question before the court. Behind the table in the Howard rooms were seated Uncle Howard, Duke of Surrey, and my father and George. At the back of the room, behind me, Anne was sitting beside my mother. I, alone before the table, stood like a disgraced child before my elders.
âHe said that he wished I was queen for all the days,' I said in a small voice, hating Anne for betraying my confidence, hating my father and my uncle for their cold-hearted dissection of lovers' whispers.