Read Philippa Gregory 3-Book Tudor Collection 1 Online
Authors: Philippa Gregory
Her eyelashes flickered down over the heat in her gaze. âHe is nothing to me,' she replied.
âHe's a married man now,' I said firmly. âYou will have to forget him if you ever want to get back to court.'
She pointed at my belly. âThat is the problem for me,' she said baldly. âAll anyone can think of in this family is that you might be carrying the king's son. I have written to Father half a dozen times and he has had
his clerk reply to me once. He doesn't think about me. He doesn't care about me. All anyone cares about is you and your fat belly.'
âWe'll know soon enough,' I said. I was trying to sound serene but I was afraid. If Henry had got a girl on me and she was strong and lovely then he should be happy enough to show the world that he was potent. But this was no ordinary man. He wanted to show the world that he could make a healthy baby. He wanted to show the world that he could make a boy.
She was a girl. Despite all those months of hoping and whispered prayers and even special Masses said in Hever and Rochford church, she was a girl.
But she was
my
little girl. She was an exquisite little bundle with hands so tiny that they were like the palms of a little frog, with eyes so dark a blue that they were like the sky above Hever at midnight. She had a dusting of black hair on the crown of her head, as unlike Henry's ruddy gold as anything one could imagine. But she had his kissable rosebud mouth. When she yawned she looked like a very king, bored with insufficient praise. When she cried, she squeezed real tears onto her outraged pink cheeks, like a monarch denied his rights. When I fed her, holding her in my arms and marvelling at the insistent powerful sucking on my breast, she swelled like a lamb and slept as if she were a drunkard lolling beside a tankard of mead.
I held her in my arms constantly. There was a wet nurse to attend her, but I argued that my breasts hurt so much that I must let her suckle, and I cunningly kept her to myself. I fell in love with her. I fell completely and utterly in love with her and I could not for a moment imagine that anything would have been any better if she had been a boy.
Even Henry melted at the sight of her when he visited me in the shadowy peace of the birthing room. He picked her up from her cradle and marvelled at the tiny perfection of her face, her hands, her little feet under the heavy embroidered gown. âWe'll call her Elizabeth,' he said, rocking her gently.
âMay I choose her name?' I asked, greatly daring.
âYou don't like Elizabeth?'
âI had another name in mind.'
He shrugged. It was a girl's name. It did not matter much. âAs you wish. Call her what you like. She's a pretty little thing, isn't she?'
He brought me a purse of gold and a necklace with diamonds. And he brought me some books, a critique of his own work of theology, some heavy works that Cardinal Wolsey had recommended. I thanked him for them and put them to one side, and thought that I would send them to
Anne and ask her to write me a synopsis so that I might bluff my way through a conversation.
We started his visit formally enough, seated on chairs either side of the fireplace, but he took me to the bed and lay beside me and kissed me gently and sweetly. After a little while he wanted to have me and I had to remind him that I was not yet churched. I was not clean. Timidly I touched at his waistcoat and with a sigh he took my hand and pressed it against his hardness. I wished that someone would tell me what he wanted of me. But then he himself guided my touch, and whispered in my ear what he wanted to do, and then after a little while of his movement and my blundering caresses he gave a sigh and lay still.
âIs it enough for you?' I asked timidly.
He turned and gave me his sweet smile. âMy love, it is a great pleasure for me to have you, even like this, after this long time. When you go to be churched don't confess it â the sin is all mine. But you would tempt a saint.'
âAnd you do love her?' I pressed him.
He gave an indulgent, lazy chuckle. âWhy yes. She's as lovely as her mother.'
He rose up after a few moments and straightened his clothes. He gave me his delicious roguish grin that still delighted me, though half my mind was on the baby in her cradle, and the other half on the ache in my milk-heavy breasts.
âYou shall have rooms nearer to mine when you are churched,' he promised me. âI want you by me all the time.'
I smiled. It was a delicious moment. The King of England wanted me with him, constantly at his side.
âI want a boy off you,' he said bluntly.
My father was angry with me that the baby was a girl â or so my mother said â reporting from an outside world which seemed very remote. My uncle was disappointed but determined not to show it. I nodded as if I cared but I felt only a total delight that she had opened her eyes this morning and looked at me with a sort of bright intensity that made me certain that she had seen me and known me for her mother. Neither my father nor my uncle could be admitted into the birthing room, and the king did not repeat his single visit. There was a sense of this place being a refuge for us, a secret room where men and their plans and their treacheries would not come.
George came, breaking the conventions with his usual comfortable grace. âNothing too awful going on in here, is there?' he asked, putting his handsome head around the door.
âNothing,' I said, welcoming him with a smile and my cheek to kiss. He bent over me and kissed me deeply on the mouth. âOh how delicious, my sister, a young mother, a dozen forbidden pleasures all at once. Kiss me again â kiss me like you kiss Henry.'
âGo away,' I said, pushing him off. âLook at the baby.'
He peered at her as she lay sleeping in my arms. âNice hair,' he said. âWhat shall you call her?'
I glanced at the shut door. I knew I could trust George. âI want to call her Catherine.'
âRather odd.'
âI don't see why. I am her lady in waiting.'
âBut it's her husband's baby.'
I giggled, it was impossible for me not to revel in my sense of joy. âOh George, I know. But I have admired her from the moment I entered her service. And I want to show her that I respect her â whatever else has happened.'
Still he looked doubtful. âD'you think she'll understand? Won't she think it's some kind of mockery?'
I was so shocked that I gripped Catherine a little. âShe cannot imagine that I would triumph over her.'
âHere, why are you crying?' George asked. âThere's no reason to cry, Mary. Don't cry, you'll curdle the milk or something.'
âI'm not crying,' I said, ignoring the tears on my cheeks. âI'm not meaning to cry.'
âWell, stop,' he urged me. âStop it, Mary. Mother will come in and everyone will blame me for upsetting you. And they'll say that I shouldn't be here in the first place. Why don't you wait till you come out and then you can see the queen and ask her yourself if she would like the compliment? That's all I'd suggest.'
âYes,' I said, feeling immediately more cheerful. âI could do that, and then I might explain.'
âBut don't cry,' he reminded me. âShe's a queen, she won't like tears. I bet you've never seen her cry, for all you've been with her day and night for four years.'
I thought for a moment. âNo,' I said slowly. âD'you know, in these four years, I have never ever seen her cry.'
âYou never will,' he said with satisfaction. âShe's not a woman who crumbles into distress. She's a woman of most powerful will.'
My only other visitor was my husband, William Carey. He arrived, gracefully enough, bearing a bowl of early strawberries which he had ordered to be brought up from Hever.
âA taste of home,' he said kindly.
âThank you.'
He glanced into the cradle. âThey tell me it's a girl and she is well and strong?'
âShe is,' I said, a little chilled by the indifference of his tone.
âAnd what name are you calling her? Other than mine? I assume she is to carry my name, she isn't to be Fitzroy or some other acknowledgement that she is a royal bastard?'
I bit my tongue and bowed my head. âI am sorry if you are offended, husband,' I said meekly.
He nodded. âSo what name?'
âShe is to be Carey. I thought Catherine Carey.'
âAs you wish, madam. I have been granted five good stewardships of land, and a knighthood. I am Sir William now, and you are Lady Carey. I have more than doubled my income. Did he tell you?'
âNo,' I said.
âI am in the highest of favour. If you had obliged us with a boy I might have looked for an estate in Ireland or France. I might have been Lord Carey. Who knows how high a boy bastard might have taken us?'
I did not reply. William's tone was mild; but the words had a cutting ring to them. I did not think he was truly asking me to celebrate his good fortune in being England's most famous cuckold.
âYou know, I had thought to be a great man at the king's court,' he said bitterly. âWhen I knew he liked my company, when my star was rising. I hoped to be something like your father, a statesman who might see the whole picture of the scene, who might play his part in arguing at the great courts of Europe, dealing one with the other and always taking his own country's interest as his byword. But no, here I am, rewarded ten times over for doing nothing but looking the other way while the king takes my wife to his bed.'
I kept my silence, and my eyes down. When I looked up he was smiling at me, his ironical half-sad crooked smile. âAh, little wife,' he said gently. âWe did not have much time together, did we? We did not bed very well nor very often. We did not learn tenderness or even desire. We only had a little time.'
âI am sorry for that too,' I said softly.
âSorry that we did not bed?'
âMy lord?' I said, genuinely confused by the sudden sharpness in his tone.
âIt has been suggested, very politely by your kinsmen, that perhaps I had dreamed it all and we did not bed at all. Is that your wish? That I deny ever having had you?'
I was startled. âNo! You know it is not my wishes that are consulted in these matters.'
âAnd they have not told you to tell the king that I was impotent on our wedding night and every night thereafter?'
I shook my head. âWhy would I say such a thing?'
He smiled. âTo get our marriage set aside,' he suggested. âSo that you are an unmarried woman. And the next baby is Fitzroy and perhaps Henry can be prevailed on to make him legitimate, the son and heir to the throne. Then you are the mother of the next King of England.'
There was a silence. I found I was staring blankly at him. âThey never want me to do that?' I whispered.
âOh you Boleyns,' he said gently. âWhat happens to you, Mary, if they have our marriage set aside and push you forward? It overthrows the state of marriage and it names you, without contradiction, as a whore, a pretty little whore.'