The King's Grey Mare (42 page)

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Authors: Rosemary Hawley Jarman

BOOK: The King's Grey Mare
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(‘Sweet sister, think of me when you come into your glory!’

‘Anthony, we shall be supreme!
More powerful than the King himself!’)

I have Margaret Beaufort, with her man’s mind and her unerring judgment.
And now she has a new husband, Lord Stanley, well to heel.
His was the loudest voice upholding me at the Council meeting, when Edward’s last decree was superseded.
Edward’s last decree!
Gloucester shall not have charge of my son, that precious chalice of royal blood, that vessel of power.
Gloucester, whom I had almost forgotten, shall die.
No doubt he is already dead, if Anthony keeps faith, which he will.
Anthony shall be rewarded with a quarter of my treasure from the Tower.

Her busy mind went meticulously on, reliving scenes and conversations like a series of tableaux.
The interment of Edward in St.
George’s Chapel, so near through the trees.
The lying-in-state; Edward’s great chest and belly exposed above the loincloth, his gross flesh ethereal in the tapers’ light, so that he drew on a reminder of his slender sunlit youth.
So, he was with his Eleanor now!
She thought: I once dreaded his death as the end of my power.
But now I know my power begins.

The servants, and the Princess Elizabeth who sat near by, looked at the restless twisting hands, the face that smiled and frowned in turn as assets were reckoned, hazards appraised.
She calculated ceaselessly her prizes both monetary and prestigious; she saw the realm like cloth of Arras, starred goldly with her possessions.
Her fee-farms by the thousand, acre on acre of sweeping land rich with barley or patrolled by a million wool-bearing sheep.
Her scores of royal chases thronged with venison and birds to grace a paladin’s table.
The gold, the silver and jewels, the horses, hawks and weapons, the fabulous furnishings and tapestries in fifty or more palaces.
And beside all these the ocean of wealth amassed for Thomas and Richard Grey, for Anthony.
She nodded, a gesture weird to the watchers, as she thought: I acted well over Exeter’s daughter.
Even when she died after a year’s marriage to Tom I prevailed on Edward for those vast estates to remain my son’s.
Clarence’s bounty, too.
All mine, ours.
Earldoms and duchies and marquisates.
My brother Edward in charge of a mighty fleet, lying off the French coast.
Even Calais mine one day …

I asked for as much of the land around the fountain that could be covered by a stag’s hide.
Then I cut the hide into strips so that my land extended far beyond the forest
.

The pattern goes on.
Even in my widowhood there is naught to fear.
Only Hastings, with whom Tom has promised to deal speedily.
And Richard Gloucester … What possessed Edward?
To pronounce as Protector of the Realm, a brother whom he scarcely ever saw, one content to rusticate in the soulless North.
But Anthony would put him down.
The Council should issue all writs
in aurunculus regis uterinus
and
frater regis uterinus
.
In the name of the Queen’s brother and son.

As for Edward Prince of Wales, he was the greatest asset of all.
A pocket King of England, more biddable than the weakest of grown monarchs.
Edward should stay at his lessons until he was twenty-one!

Queen’s College, Cambridge.
Mine.
Endowed and refounded to my honour.
What Marguerite began I finished, far more gloriously.

Elizabeth, Princess of York.
Young Bess.
Out of the tail of her eye she could see her, sitting on spread cloth-of-gold; tall and blonde, wistful in her black.
A royal prince for her!
More glory for the house of Woodville.
All the crowned heads of Europe would be present, the jewelled banners would lift, and foreign chroniclers would gape at the marriage of Bess, daughter of the most powerful Queen in Christendom.
She who had breasted the tide of humiliation, who herself had snared a king, and had seen her enemies fall like flowers.
Twenty bishops would witness a second generation’s rise to royal heights.

The bishops.
Again, her face sobered.
The courtiers did her will, but that covey of wily, guilt-ridden old men were yet to be sounded.
Russell, Bishop of Lincoln and Keeper of the Privy Seal; Story, Bishop of Chichester and King’s Executor; Bourchier, Archbishop of Canterbury.
Thomas Rotherham, Archbishop of York.
Bishop Morton of Ely was already hers, through the gracious intercession of Margaret Beaufort.
Her own brother Lionel had the see of Salisbury in his grip.
One thing was clear; the bishops needed the patronage and favour of the Crown.
They were only too conscious of the ritual squabbling in their ranks, the obloquy in which the Church was held by the laity, to the extent of physical assault on clergy.
Yes, the Church would soon come begging for the Queen-Regent’s assent.
And they should have it.
She liked the new bidding-prayer already written: ‘for our prince, the lady Queen Elizabeth his mother, all the royal offspring, the princes of the King, his nobles and people’.
This augured well; she was not to be overpassed as the mothers of previous infant kings had been; Joan of Kent, mother of Richard II, or Katherine, who bore crazy Henry.
Then Councils had reigned and lesser Queens embraced obscurity.

She flicked back over her thoughts as one turning the pages of a book.
Katherine of France took a lover, Owen Tudor.
Bore Edmund Tudor, Margaret Beaufort’s first husband.
They in turn begat young Henry.
Strange young Henry, of the deep curtsey and cadaverous smile.
She looked idly across at the little lake; irrelevantly Henry’s smile seemed to wink from it.
Such manifestation meant that the person concerned was thinking of you.
But according to Margaret Beaufort, and Lord Stanley, Henry’s new stepfather, this was unlikely.
Henry was again in Brittany, thanks to Edward’s hectoring of him some years previously; the King had mumbled vaguely about the aspirations of bastard Welshmen.
She had paid little heed, but remembered that Henry had been chased to St.
Malo by some Yorkist fleet with little else to do.
Yet she remembered his smile; that look from the wise, heavy eyes.
He could only have been admiring her.

He had looked long at the Princess Elizabeth too.
Almost as if he lusted for her.
It was impossible to associate such gross emotions with the son of the nunly Countess.
Last year Margaret had come to beg the royal licence to her third marriage.
Elizabeth had said politely: ‘God send you many children.’

The bright black eyes were primly amused.
‘Madame, I have told you I am done with childbearing.
My marriage to Stanley will be one of the mind.’
To this, Stanley showed no objection.
He and Margaret were alike, cool and quiet and unfleshly.
Margaret made all the decisions, still signing herself Countess of Richmond, a pretension to which she had no vestige of right.
This had annoyed Edward, but Elizabeth had been amused.
Let Margaret deck herself with small honours like bracelets; the title of noble blood had escaped her.
Like all the Beauforts, she was merely the offshoot of old Gaunt’s sinful liaison with Katherine Swynford.
She
had no enchanted heritage … Elizabeth’s thoughts rustled on, like the bird-haunted trees.

A commotion reached her.
Across the parkland came shouting and the baying of dogs.
Around the Queen, the circle of grooms, falconers, guards, rose to attention.
Hunting was forbidden during the period of royal mourning, yet there appeared to be a chase in progress, not a quarter-league distant.
Then, bursting from a covert of briars, appeared what seemed to be a bundle of rags.
It leaped nimbly towards the Queen’s little camp of pleasaunce.
It was an old woman, running like a hare.
Tatters and thorns encompassed her; her face was streaked with blood and filth.
Bounding close behind her were a half-dozen sleek, snarling wolfhounds, followed more clumsily by a group of yeomen from Windsor.
The woman ran on, mouth gasping in terror, hands clawing the air.
She ran straight into the royal circle, throwing herself with one last lunge past the servants who tried to grasp her.
She fell face down at the Queen’s feet.

Like creatures of Hell, the hounds were close, eyes bloodshot, jaws gaping.
Princess Elizabeth screamed.
The Queen’s women clutched at one another in terror, while several brave pages threw themselves forward to grapple with the rearing beasts.
The yeomen raced up and, with difficulty, put the dogs on leash.
Baulked, they whined and slavered over the prone woman.
Elizabeth, who had not moved, said coldly: ‘What is the meaning of this entertainment?’

To the woman she said: ‘Get up.’
As soon as the eyes in the caked disfigured face met hers, she knew recognition and this worried her.
Soon, she thought, I shall be seeing acquaintances in the bole of a tree or the shape of a flower.
First, Henry Tudor’s smile in the lake, and now this wretched vagrant.
One of the men trying to calm the hounds spoke hastily.

‘Highness, forgive us.
We tried to stop her.
She was too fleet.
She wished to see your highness.
Whitefriar here–’ he soothed a hound – ‘nearly had her.
One more moment and she would not have troubled you’.

Bloody teethmarks stained the woman’s brown bare heel.
Rough and indistinct, she spoke.
She addressed Elizabeth directly; too old, too poor to acknowledge fear.

‘Oh, lady,’ she said.
‘Do you remember Eltham?’

An instant engulfing wave, memory rose.
No trick then, no false recollection.
Eltham; the day of the joust, of John.
The rolling train of festive knights and ladies.
The Countess of Somerset, dozing in the litter.
The Tudors, Jasper and Edmund, sweeping on to the tiltyard.
The coming of York, and the Fiend, to discomfit King Henry.
And the old woman (old even then!) whose skull Barnaby craved to break … Here was certainty that memory was unimpaired, save for deeds born to be forgotten.

A royal prince, fair lady, shalt thou wed,

But trouble dire shall fall upon thine head …

Then, she had thought the rhyme glib, and suspect.
But how true it had become!

Bone of thy bone shall by a future fate

With blood of these three houses surely mate …

But which three houses?
Her mind groped.
She had been saying the rhyme out loud, while the gypsy followed her with little nods and smiles.

‘Lady,’ she said softly, ‘the first two are York and Lancaster … 

‘And the third?’

The woman laughed.
‘Lady,’ she said with finality, ‘that is for you to decide.’
Her deep, lined eye swivelled to rest upon the Princess Elizabeth, still trembling from her recent fright.


She
, lady.’

‘My daughter?
What of her?’

In the eyes there were traces of tears that might have been seen in the gold-framed eyes of ancient Egypt; the tears of dead kings doomed by their enemies to be unremembered.

‘She will be Queen of England.
God have mercy.’

It is favourable, Elizabeth thought joyfully, disregarding the last strange phrase.
My destiny comes to the full.
Bess will be a Queen and twenty bishops shall bow to the crowning of a Woodville.
And yet – Queen of England?
What of Ned, who even now rides to London in Anthony’s care?
To be crowned king, to be ruled by our Council for years until the name of Woodville is as rooted as Plantagenet … How can Bess supersede her brother, or his brother, Richard of York?
She felt the skin stretch tight over her face.

‘Then this means, dame–’ she addressed the gypsy courteously but each word slid like ice – ‘that my sons will never rule England?’

The woman inclined her head.

‘They will … die young?’

‘They will.’

She felt her own senses rejecting the answer almost before it was out.
She saw also that the dogs had done more mischief than was earlier evident; blood ran down the woman’s legs.
The sight of it stole away some magic; this, then, was no seer.
Only a wretch who lived on her wits.
London, England, abounded with false prophets.
Yet she leaned forward again, and said: ‘Tell me …’

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