Read Philippa Gregory 3-Book Tudor Collection 1 Online
Authors: Philippa Gregory
Anne wore a gown of red velvet trimmed with the white fluffy fur of ermine. Her hair, dark and glossy as a racehorse's mane, was spread over her shoulders like a girl on her wedding day. Lady Mary, the duke's daughter, held the robe of state, and the rest of Anne's ladies, Jane Parker, me, the other dozen or so, all dressed in our best, followed in her train and stood behind in sycophantic silence while the king tied the robe of state about her shoulders, and put a gold coronet on her head.
At the banquet George and I sat side by side and looked up to our sister, seated beside the king.
He did not ask if I was envious. It was an answer too obvious to be worth inquiry. âI don't know another woman who could have done it,' he said. âShe has a unique determination to be on the throne.'
âI never had that,' I said. âThe only thing I've ever wanted from childhood was not to be overlooked.'
âWell you can forget that,' George said with brotherly frankness. âYou'll be overlooked now for the rest of your life. We'll both be as nothing. Anything I achieve will be seen as her gift. And you'll never match her. She's the only Boleyn anyone will ever know of or remember. You'll be a nobody forever.'
It was the word ânobody'. At the very word the bitterness drained out
of me, and I smiled. âYou know, there might be some joy in being a nobody.'
We danced till late and then Anne sent all the ladies to their beds but me.
âI'm going to him,' she said.
She did not need to explain what she meant. âAre you sure?' I asked. âYou're still not married.'
âCranmer will be installed any day,' she said. âI'm going to France as his consort and Henry has insisted that they treat me as queen. He's given me the title of Marquess and the lands, and I cannot keep saying no.'
âGood God, you want to!' I suddenly understood her impatience. âDo you love him at last?'
âOh no!' she exclaimed impatiently, as if it were irrelevant. âBut I have kept him at arm's length so long that he has been driven nearly mad, and me too. Sometimes I have been so aroused by his desire and his pulling and teasing of me that I could have done it with a stable lad. And I have his promise, I can see my way to the throne. I want to do it now. I want to do it tonight.'
I poured water for her into the ewer and warmed a drying sheet for her while she washed. âWhat will you wear?'
âThe gown I was wearing to dance,' she said. âAnd the coronet. I'll go to him like a queen.'
âGeorge had better take you.'
âHe's coming, I already told him.'
She finished washing and took the sheet from me to pat herself dry. Her body in firelight and candlelight was as beautiful as a wild animal. There was a tap on the door. âLet him in,' she said.
I hesitated. She was tying her skirt around her waist but apart from that she was naked. âGo on,' she said wilfully.
I shrugged and opened the door. George recoiled at the sight of his sister, her dark hair tumbled over her naked breasts.
âYou can come in,' she said carelessly. âI'm nearly ready.'
He threw one shocked interrogative look at me and came into the room and dropped into the chair at the fireside.
Anne, holding the stomacher across her naked breasts and belly, turned her bare back to George to lace her up. He rose to his feet and threaded the laces through the holes in the criss-cross pattern. At every insertion of the thread his hand brushed her skin and I saw her close her eyes in
pleasure at the continual caress. George's face was dark, he was scowling as he did her bidding. âAnything else?' he asked. âTie your shoes for you? Polish your boots?'
âDon't you want to touch me?' she taunted him. âI'm good enough for the king.'
âYou're good enough for the bagnio,' he said brutally. âGet your cape, if you're coming.'
âBut I
am
desirable,' she said, confronting him.
George hesitated. âWhy on earth ask me? Half the court was weak at the knees this evening. What more do you want?'
âI want everyone,' she said, unsmiling. âI want you to say that I am the best, George. I want
you
to say it here, in front of Mary.'
He gave his low chuckle. âOh the old rivalry,' he said slowly. âAnne, Marquess of Pembroke, you are the most desired and the richest girl in the family. You have eclipsed us both in success. You will shortly eclipse your revered father and uncle in terms of pride and position. What more do you want?'
She had been glowing with his praise but at that question she looked suddenly afraid, as if she remembered the curses of the fishwives and the shouts of âWhore!' from the market traders. âI want everyone to know it,' she said.
âShall I take you to the king?' George asked pragmatically.
Anne put her hand on his arm and I saw him tense at the turn of her head and her sidelong smile. âWouldn't you rather take me to your chamber?'
âIf I wanted to be beheaded for incest â yes.'
She gave her sexy little laugh. âVery well then. To the king. But remember, George, you are my courtier, like all the others.'
He bowed and led her from the room. I listened to them cross the presence chamber and then go down the stairs, and I waited till I heard the door at the bottom of the stairs bang shut. I thought that Anne's desire to be first with everyone must be powerful indeed if she would pause to torment her own brother on the very night of her bedding the king.
She came back at daybreak, huddled into her clothes, just as I used to do. George brought her back and together we stripped her and pushed her into bed. She was too weary to speak.
âSo it's done,' I said as her eyes closed.
âSeveral times, I should think,' he said. âI waited outside the chamber
and slept in the chair and a couple of times in the night they woke me with their crying out and panting. Please God we get an heir from it.'
âAnd no doubt that he'll marry her? He won't tire of her now he has her?'
âNot inside six months. And now she's getting some pleasure for herself and not having to fight him off all the time she might be sweeter to him, and â please God â sweeter to us.'
âIf she's much sweeter to you she'll be in your bed as well as the king's.'
George stretched and yawned and smiled lazily down at me from his extended height. âShe was hot,' he said. âAnd she could take it out on no-one else. She was hot and once that wears off then please God she has a baby in her belly and a ring on her finger and a crown on her head.
Vivat Anna
! And grudge who grudges it â it's done.'
I left Anne sleeping and thought that I might see William Stafford if I went to my uncle's rooms at this hour in the morning. The castle was stirring, the lanes approaching the kitchen were crowded with the wagons bringing cords of firewood and charcoal from the woods, fruit and vegetables from the market, and meat, milk and cheese from the farms. In my uncle's rooms there was the bustle of a great household setting about the day. The maids had finished sweeping and cleaning in the presence chamber and the scullions were loading the fireplaces with logs and blowing on the embers to make them flame up.
My uncle's gentlemen were housed in half a dozen small rooms off the great hall, his men at arms slept in the guard room. William could be anywhere. I walked through the presence chamber and nodded at a couple of the gentlemen I knew and tried to look as if I were waiting to see my uncle or my mother.
The door to my uncle's privy chamber opened and George came out in a rush.
âOh good,' he said on seeing me. âIs Anne still asleep?'
âShe was when I left her.'
âGo to her and wake her up. Tell her that the clergy has submitted to the king, or at least enough of them to mean that we have won, but Thomas More has announced that he has resigned his post. The king will learn it during Mass today when he receives More's letter, but she should be forewarned. The king is bound to take it hard.'
âThomas More?' I repeated. âBut I thought he was on our side?'
My brother tutted at my ignorance. âHe promised the king never to comment publicly on the dissolution of the marriage. But it's obvious
what he thinks, isn't it? He's a lawyer, a logical man, he's hardly likely to be convinced by the twisting of the truth that's been going on in a thousand universities in Europe.'
âBut I thought he wanted the church reformed?' I asked. Not for the first time I was adrift in the sea of politics which was my family's natural element.
âReformed; not taken to pieces and headed by the king,' my brother said quickly. âWho knows better than Thomas More that the king is not fit to play Pope? He's known him from childhood. He'd never accept Henry as the heir to St Peter.' My brother laughed shortly. âIt's a ridiculous notion.'
âRidiculous? I thought we supported it.'
âOf course we do,' he said. âIt means that Henry can rule on his own marriage, he can marry Anne. But no-one but a fool would think that there was the least justification for it in law, in morality, or in common sense. Look, Mary, don't worry. Anne understands all this. Just go and wake her and tell her that More is resigning and the king will learn of it this morning and she is to be calm. That's what my uncle said. Anne must be calm.'
I turned to do as he bid me, and just at that very moment, William Stafford came into the hall, shrugging on his doublet. He paused when he saw me and made me a low bow. âLady Carey,' he said. He bowed to my brother. âLord Rochford.'
âGo,' my brother said to me and gave me a little push. He ignored William. âGo and tell her.'
There was nothing I could do but hurry from the room without even being able to touch William's hand and say âgood morning' to him.
Anne and the king were closeted alone for most of the morning, considering what the resignation of Thomas More might mean to them. My father and uncle were with them, and Cranmer and Secretary Cromwell, all the men attached to Anne's cause, all determined that the king should take the power and the profit of the church in England. Anne and the king came out to dinner in very good harmony and she sat at his right hand as if she were already queen.