Read The Scandalous Duchess Online
Authors: Anne O'Brien
âTo find a rose? Well nigh impossible. This was the only oneâ¦' I smiled when he used his free hand to silence me, his fingers gentle on my lips.
âTo make the decision, my dearest girl! My very dear Katherine.'
âYes. It was,' I admitted, but still I smiled against his fingers for my heart was leaping with joy. âDo you remember who it was who helped the Lover in his battle?' I knew that he would.
âOh, yes. All-powerful, all-conquering Venus. The goddess of carnal desire, of all physical delights.' His hand tightening around mine and the suffering rosebud, he drew me
closer. âSo, Madame de Swynford, you will give yourself up to me and all the pleasures I can bring to you?'
âI will.'
âFor ever?'
âFor all time.'
âThen we will be together for all time. And I will extract a promise from you.'
âOnly one?'
âOne will do for now.' He stroked his knuckles over my embroidered bodice, over the swell of my breasts, in a possessive movement that made me hold my breath. âWill you promise me that you will never wear black again?'
âI promise.'
He kissed me on the lips, as light and insubstantial as that first kiss, as a butterfly's wing, although I felt the rigid tension of the muscles in his forearms as he tucked the sad rose into the bodice of my gown. It was like feeling the explosive force of a warhorse, held on a tight rein until released into the heat of battle. I was in no doubt of his desire for me. My fingers trembled as I smoothed them over the knap of his sleeve. I needed him to take the next step, for it was beyond me.
Abandoning the map and the forthcoming expedition, he led me to the door.
âDoes Lady Alice expect you?'
âNo, my lord. I am in your employ.'
âThen I have need of an hour of your time.' For a moment he hesitated, his eyes studying my face, smoothing my lower lip with the pad of his thumb, a more poignant gesture than any other. âOr a month, a year. Even a lifetimeâ¦'
âYou must make do with an hour, my lord,' I remarked
practically, even as my heart throbbed. âLady Alice will ask after me.'
âAn hour it shall be,' he agreed, âfor I too, unfortunately, have demands on my time.'
And in that moment of perception I knew that this would always be so. The Duke's duty was to England. Any woman in his life must accept that she would never be pre-eminent, no matter how strong his desire to be with her. I knew that this driving force in him to be pre-eminent, to wield power, would colour all our days together, however long or short our liaison might be. And in that moment, I witnessed the path of my life stretched out before me, with all its shadows, its moments of brilliance.
You can still step back
, my conscience whispered in my mind.
Are you indeed brave enough? Do you have the fortitude to take what you want, what you have always dreamed of taking? Or will you step back and preserve the moral high ground? If you take this step, there will never be any moral high ground, ever again, for you
.
There is no marriage in this for you
.
If you accept you will be no better than a court harlot, damned as a fallen woman. What will you say to your children? How will you explain to your son when he asks why those at court point and gossip?
There is still time to retreat. To return to your widowhood, your conscience clear as you kneel before the priest with a clean heart
.
There will never be the possibility of marriage for you in this relationship
.
Go back to Kettlethorpe and take up the reins of the estates
.
But I would not. My decision was made, finally and irrevocably, even when my conscience struck a final blow.
The Duke has never said that he loves you
.
I would not listen. Had any woman ever refused him? I could not.
Once outside the library, the Duke broke the contact between us but I walked beside him as he opened the door into his private accommodations and dismissed his body servant who was engaged in laying garments in a clothes press. He did not even glance at me, probably thinkingâif he even considered itâthat I had come to report to the Duke about one of the children. Yet, even soâ¦
âIs this discretion, my lord?' I asked. âComing to your rooms in the broad light of day?'
âI will not lurk and skulk.' A vestige of a frown momentarily settled on his brow. He was unused to his actions being questioned. âIt is not in my nature to hide and dissemble. But nor am I lacking in good sense. You have my word. I will not willingly put you or Constanza into the public eye. Enough! This hour is for us. An hour in which I'll turn your beautifully ordered world upside down.'
Strides quickening, he led me through the sumptuous rooms to his bedchamber, where he flung the door wide.
âWelcome, Katherine.'
I stepped over the threshold, entirely of my own volition. I took in the splendour of the furnishings, the polished wood, the silver sconces, the velvet-padded prie-dieu with its heavy silver crucifix, but my mind was not on prayer. And there was the ducal bed.
The Duke shut and barred the door.
âMy bed is cold. Who will warm it for me?'
I
did not hesitate.
âI will, my lord.'
Desire swept away all discretion when the Duke closed his door against the world. Passion ruled, all the words, all the explanations, the warnings, all the anxieties excoriated in a blaze of heat. If any doubts remained in my heart, they would have been obliterated. But since there were none, I let my senses be seduced. There were no uncertainties to undermine my decision to be with him.
His control was superb. Had he not promised to tie my laces? He was equally proficient at unlacing them, although he growled at the row of buttons that stretched from elbow to little finger on my sleeves. He proved to be just as skilled at removing my intricately latched crispinette and veil and loosing the braids of my hair. I shivered under his hands, under the sway of his marvellous expertise.
âI thought I remembered, but I had forgotten how rich it was,' he murmured as the length of my hair uncoiled to spread over my shoulder, and his, when I leaned against him. âThe sun's burnishâ¦' He buried his face in it as I rested my head against his breast. It was good to rest against a man taller than I.
There was little rest. He needed no help from me to disrobe, even though I offered to be his squire for the occasion. Nor did he need help to remove my shift.
No restraint, now, he turned my limbs to flame, my heart to breathless excitement, my blood to molten gold. He wakened my body to a sensual pleasure where there were no past shades keep us company.
I adored him.
I no longer cared what doubts the heavenly creatures harboured. It did not trouble me that the Duke never spoke of
love. It was enough that he treated me as if, for him, I was the most precious creature in the universe.
An hour was too short to encompass all we wished to say, every emotion that demanded expression.
âIt is a taste of a banquet that will last us a lifetime,' he whispered against my throat.
âI must go, my lord,' I said when the minutes f led, as if winged.
âAnd you must call me John.'
âIt is not easy.'
âBut you will practise. Soon it will come readily to your lips.'
His assurance never failed to move me. How could I even contemplate the future with fear when the Duke of Lancaster held me in his arms and looked ahead with such confidence? He helped me to dress and hide my hair, he retied my laces. He wrapped a plain cloak around me to hide my inexplicable finery until it could be put to rights. How fast we learned the need for ultimate prudence.
âThe rose has fallen into pieces,' I said, seeing it on the coffer with my rosary.
âIt is a transient thing. But my desire for you is not.' He tucked the tell-tale gold of my veil into the neck of the cloak. âDo you have regrets?'
âNone.'
âNor I.
You are of my Life and Death the Queenâ¦'
I sighed as I recognised the beautiful sentiment, the expression of utmost poetic devotion from the Lover to his Lady.
âYour brother-in-law, Master Chaucer, has a masterful way with words.' The Duke kissed me as if he would linger
still, although we both knew that good sense dictated that we could not. âKeep me in your mind, until we can be together again. Promise me that.'
âYes, John. I will keep you in my mind.'
Collecting up the rosary into the palm of my hand, I walked slowly back to my room.
I was John of Lancaster's mistress.
Back in my chamber I removed my finery, recalling with a smile it being removed with much more alacrity and much less care.
I loved him, I adored him. I would never not love him.
Why had I done it? Why had I turned my back on every rule I had lived by? It shocked me that I had done so, laying aside my principles because a man had asked it of me, as I would lay aside an old gown that I no longer had use for. Now I had a new garment. A glittering cloak made of love, a magical cloak that in my naïve mind would protect me from the slights and condemnations of the society in which I lived. I was wrapped about by happiness. Pickled in it, I decided fancifully with a smile, as I would store beans in brine to last me through the winter.
Why had I done it? Because I loved the Duke and he had offered me the moon and the stars and the sun in one magnificent gesture. The firmament was mine in all its glory.
I searched for a comb beneath Philippa's haphazardly strewn belongings and addressed the tangles in my hair, allowing other truths to step into my mind.
The end is inevitable, as night will follow this bright day. As grey will streak the gold of your hair and a web of lines mar your skin. One day you will be parted
.
I was no blind fool. I could see it so clearly. All the insurmountable
obstacles to what for many lovers would be a permanent happiness, whatever words of commitment the Duke and I might choose to exchange. Whatever he might vow to me and I to him. Whatever lasting passion our bodies might promise when they fused with desire.
Did the Duke see those obstacles as clearly as I, an impossible bulwark of walls and ditches, not to mention the stalwart portcullis that would one day bring about our separation and stand between. I did not think he did. When did a Plantagenet prince ever have need to question his own worth? His needs and desires were there to be satisfied.
What would it be that intervened, to destroy this idyllâfor that is surely what it wasâI mused. Family. Political battles. The demands of England's policy abroad. He might desire me but his life was not his own to direct as he chose.
Nor was I his first mistress. Would I be his last? In all honesty I did not think so. He wanted me now, but I might yet be a forgotten name on the list of women who took his appreciative eye. It might be that the Duke would simply fall out of need for me.
This day I had stepped beyond the acceptable. I had crossed a forbidden line, knowing that I would have consequences to face. At some point, on one day in the future, for some reason that I could not quite see, he would have to make a choiceâand then what of me? What would be left for me but memories and a reputation that would destroy my good name for ever?
Momentarily I closed my eyes to hide the contempt that I would assuredly read in the eyes of many who knew me. Then opened them as I briskly coiled my hair into its netted confines.
I would not allow such thoughts to cloud my happiness. The memory of the Duke's arms holding me, the heated demand of his kissesâthey were more than enough. And indeed they would have to be, for the Duke had not said those stark, simple words:
I love you
. Not once. Desire and longing. Passion and need. But not love.
What did it matter? I would not allow it to matter. His need for me in his life was enough, and I was free to love him without restraint. But I would choose my words with care. The Duke did not talk of love, so I would not burden him with mine. Silently I vowed that he must never be compromised by my adoration, which he could not return.
June 1372: Hertford Castle
âS
he'll have a hard time of it, mark my words.' Mistress Elyot, experienced midwife summoned by the Duke to attend his wife, was quick to give her opinion. We were all established at last at Hertford and the important event loomed.
âNarrow hips. And she's not strong. Comes of being Castilian, I expect.'
Tears filled Mistress Elyot's eyes and she sniffed in doleful anticipation.
I did not see that Duchess Constanza being Castilian had any bearing on her ability to grit her teeth, hold onto the hand of one of her Castilian damsels and push hard when instructed to do so, but since Mistress Elyot had the reputation of a wise-woman, and her nature was well-known to me, I did not argue the point. Mistress Elyot had supported Blanche through her pregnancies so her reputation
was well-earned and perhaps she was right. The weather was June-sultry, the rooms at Hertford uncomfortably hot, but Constanza insisted on the windows tight shut to ward off malign forces, since she was Queen of Castile and that is how all royal children were born.
âThis son,' she panted between groans and heart-rending cries, âwill be King of Castile.'
We suffered with her, for her demands were frequent. At least the nausea that had so afflicted her in the early months had vanished, but now her ankles and feet were so swollen that the skin was as tight as a drum. I drew on all the knowledge I had, bathing the afflicted areas in rose oil and vinegar, encouraging her to eat lightly of chicken. Praising the beneficial properties of quince fruits and pomegranate.
Duchess Constanza was a poor patient but for the sake of the child gave in to my ministrations.
Mistress Elyot nodded curtly, faint but noteworthy praise. Constanza insisted on my remaining at her side, day and night. The little cluster of damsels, useless except to carry carefully learned messages and fetch trays of food that went for the most part uneaten, glowered speechlessly at me. My sister Philippa, dislodged from her place at Constanza's right hand, observed with a caustic shrug that there was no accounting for the strange decisions of pregnant queens.
âThis is a great endeavour for me,' Constanza whispered as her strength waned, despite the cups of spiced wine held to her lips. âI must bear a son for my lord.'
Her final words, before a dark-haired, red-faced, squalling scrap of humanity took its first breath and howled. Strong enough, lively enough, but not received with any great rejoicing. Constanza's great endeavour was a girl.
Washed gently and wrapped in linen, the baby had improved to the eye when Constanza, also restored, held out her arms. I placed the infant there.
âShe has the look of my sister Isabella,' Constanza observed, touching the dark hair, before handing her back to me almost immediately. âTake her. Fetch me new linen for my bed.'
âShe is a fine daughter,' I assured her, the light weight of the child in my arms reminding me of my own labours, the joy and relief at the outcome. That the Duchess showed so little concern except for her own discomfort was worrying me. I would not have handed my new daughter to other arms, with barely a glance.
âBetter a son,' the Duchess announced.
âNext time, my lady,' Mistress Elyot cooed.
âI suppose I must.' Her brow was furrowed. âIt is my duty. To my country.'
And I knew that she did not mean England. The frown remained heavy on Constanza's brow.
âYour daughter will be of great value in a marriage alliance when she grows, to the glory of Castile,' I said. An angry woman did not make a good mother. âShe will be very beautiful, and much sought after,' I tried.
âYes.' She was not soothed. âI will call her Katalina. Katherine, I think you say.'
I felt my whole body tense, my arms tightening around the child who whimpered a little, as the unpalatable incongruity of it struck home. The Duke's child called after the Duke's mistress. As dismay stirred uneasily in my belly, I could only imagine the waspish tongues, stinging at my
expense, heaping mockery on all of us, if the truth ever became the talk of the court.
I would not wish that for the Duchess.
âIt is not a royal name in England, my lady,' I suggested lightly, keeping my eyes on the child, keeping my mouth in a smile, selecting the only argument that I thought would hold any weight with her. âMonseigneur might not like it.'
âWhy would he not? It is a beautiful name.' She looked directly at me. âIs it not, Katherine?'
There was a rustle of laughter at this rather laboured attempt at humour. But for me, although I kept the smile intact, dismay turned to horror. Constanza could not know that I had kissed the Duke with more than the respect expected from a damsel of the household. She could not.
âSt Katherine is the saint I admire most,' Constanza continued, impervious to my cold fear.
Of course she did not know. And relief flooded through me. I must learn to control my reactions. I could not allow myself to be so vulnerable, so open to every breath of possible scandal, for the rest of my life. The die was cast and I had the audacity to hold my nerve.
âIt is an admirable name,' I replied easily now, for I too admired St Katherine, a virgin princess of Alexandria, martyred for her faith by a Roman Emperor.
âI approve of her courage in adversity, holding fast to her faith in the face of death,' Constanza announced. âAs I will hold fast to mineâthat my lord will recover Castile for me. And next time I will bear a son. Go to the chapel and give thanks to St Katherine and the Virgin, for my safe delivery,' she directed us. âAnd for the child, of course. I expect my lord daily.'
As I handed the babe to the waiting wet nurse, my compassion was stirred a little, for I saw the disappointment swim in Constanza's eyes with the unshed tears. She would not weep. Queens of Castile, she had informed us, did not weep. But that did not mean that she was untouched by what she saw as a failure.
I would see no successful birth of a child of mine as a failure, son or daughter.
And I too looked for the Duke's arrival. He was in London, in attendance on the King. It was almost three months since we had been together for that shortest of hours, a lifetime of absence and longing.
My sister prayed beside me, then kept step with me as we left the chapel.
âSince when did you care what she calls the child?' she asked
sotto voce
since Lady Alice with her sharp hearing was a mere few steps in front of us. Philippa's glance was equally sharp. âDoes it matter?'
My reply was cool. âI spoke without any real intent.'
âYou never speak without intent, Kate. Your cheeks are flushed.'
âAre we not all flushed in this heat?'
âPerhapsâ¦it's having an effect on your temper too.'
âAnd on my patience!' I responded as my sister's barbs got the better of me.
Lady Alice, falling back to walk with us, clicked her tongue. Philippa stalked off ahead. I sighed.
âI promise to offer up two novenas in penance,' I remarked, but with a wry smile.
Lady Alice laughed. âBut your sister is right. Something is troubling your equanimity.'
âNothing that a good night's sleep and a cup of warm ale would not cure. If the Duchess can allow me out of her sight for an hour or two.'
âPerhaps she will become less demanding when the Duke arrives. It will be good to see him.'
I lay on my bed, the hangings drawn back to allow even a breath of air. I wished with all my heart that the Duke would come.
âI present to you your daughter, my lord.'
The Duke had arrived at Hertford.
But I did not want this. I did not want to be in this formal audience chamber with the newest royal child in my arms, under the combined eyes of a nursemaid, a servant, a liveried page and William de Burgh, the chaplain, but the office had been given to me. Since Constanza remained secluded in her chambers until she was churched, it was decided that I should be the one to present Katalina, now two weeks old, to her father.
I did not want to do this at all.
I had once shivered at that brutal word hypocrisy. Here it stared me in the face, that I, the mistress, should present the child of the legitimate wife to her lover.
My excuses were ignored, rolled over like a charge of cavalry, my suggestions for one of the Castilian damsels to have the honour swatted away. Mistress Elyot declared herself too busy. And at least, she added, with a jaundiced eye to the damsels, I could speak good French when I conversed with my lord, which was more thanâ¦
I pondered the wisdom of handing the child to Philippa, but she would want to know why I was reluctant and I could
not say. Philippa had waved me on, although she was not entirely pleased at what was considered an honour for me.
So there I stood in the audience chamber with the babe in my arms. Uncomfortable with the whole situation, I governed my features and acted out the pretence, taking as my pattern Master Ingoldsby's formidable austerity to me when faced with some conundrum.
The Duke entered, having been informed by Robert Swillington, the Chamberlain, that one of the damsels would present the new child. Even though he had the appearance of a man just emerged from an edgy diplomatic bout, he took in the scene with one sweeping survey, and there was no hesitation as he strode in with perfect sangfroid. Yet I spoke immediately to give him fair warning that I was the damsel.
âYour daughter, my lord. She is two weeks old and thrives. Duchess Constanza is in good health and is eager for your visit.'
How well I had learned my announcement.
How well his features had settled into enigmatic lines. I was merely a servant, no different from young Henry Warde, the page at his heel.
He stopped before me, and I offered the swaddled bundle in case he wished to hold her, watching as his gaze dwelt for a moment on the child, then lifted to me. My hands trembled as if the little body weighed heavily, until the Duke took her in his arms, as I knew he would, his face softening as the baby yawned.
âTell the Duchess that I look for her churching and her return, if you will. Tell her I will send a gift.'
He touched the dark curls that escaped the little linen coif, and bent to press his lips to the infant's forehead.
âThe Duchess wishes her to be called Katherine, my lord,' I stated carefully, adding: âAfter St Katherine, you understand.'
My words brought a wry twist to his mouth. âI will not argue against it, although it would not have been my choice.'
âThe Duchess calls her Katalina.'
âWhich is good. My thanks to you all for the care of my wife.'
The nursery maid curtsied, the chaplain beamed and I continued to stand with my rigidly schooled expression.
Such a multitude of emotions expressed between us, without any evidence on his face or mine, yet his were clear to me. I saw his pleasure, after his initial disappointment, as with any man, that the child was not a male heir for Castile. The tenderness with which he supported the child. His surprise that the babe should be called Katherine. And a thought touched me to awaken all my insecurities and the green glitter of jealousy that sparkled through my blood. I had no history with this man to call on when uncertainty struck. I had no place in this family. The Duke, with only one son to his name, would desire more children with his wife. They would of necessity continue to share a bed and the intimate act of procreation. Which I must accept, however hard it might be.
Unaware of the lurch of dismay that began to build beneath my sleekly buttoned bodice, the Duke said: âTell the Duchess that I send her felicitations on this happy birth of our daughter.' He glanced up. âBut she wishes it was a son, of course.'
âYes, my lord. She hopes for more children, an heir for Castile.'
He gave the child to the nursery maid, not to me, but it was to me that he spoke. âWill you talk to me? About the Duchess? Tell me how she has fared.'
All the time that he was speaking he was unpinning a sapphire from the shoulder cape of his hood, dextrously transferring it to his daughter's wrappings.
âYes, my lord.'
And then the calmly beautiful chamber with its carved hammer-beams and lightly plastered walls was empty, apart from the two of us, and the atmosphere was not calm at all. We simply stood apart, not talking, not touching, the long drawn-out weeks of our separation formidable between us.
It will always be like this
, a voice warned in my mind.
It will never get better. How could it when you will live most of your lives apart, snatching moments that are tainted with guilt and anticipation of loss?
I waited for him to speak first.
âSmile at me.'
I smiled. The muscles of my face felt stiff, unused.
âSpeak to me.'
âYou are right welcome, my lord.'
âNot like that.' His voice was unexpectedly harsh. He did not smile at me. âSpeak to me as a beloved to her lover.'