The Queen's Sorrow (20 page)

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Authors: Suzannah Dunn

Tags: #Royalty, #Fiction - Historical, #16th Century, #Tudors, #England/Great Britain

BOOK: The Queen's Sorrow
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And that man himself was someone’s son. Perhaps thirty years ago, he’d been someone’s baby and that someone had got up at night, into the raw cold, night after night, month after month, to feed him. And then, later on, on other nights, that someone had sometimes swallowed down hunger so that the child could eat. That someone might have walked in stocking feet, boots sold, so that the apothecary could be paid. And prayed to God to be taken in the child’s place. In better times, that someone would have daydreamed of the life awaiting the boy. Would have told him stories of his ancestry and his past, of London and England and of other places both far away and imaginary.

And that child had grown into a man who, only the other day, might have kissed his wife in passing for just a little too long, the kiss widening into a smile. A man who, just last week, might have looked at his child’s shoulder turned away in sleep and marvelled again at the loveliness of it, small enough and smooth enough to roll in the palm of his hand. A man who, a mere couple of months ago, might’ve filched a sole blackberry, guiltily and gleefully, from the household’s bowlful.

And all for this.

Where were the man’s children, now? Why had the woman taken them there? But she’d had to, he realised. If she hadn’t, they’d not have said goodbye.

Rafael remembered a night when he and Leonor were woken by Francisco crying. The little lad had wet the bed, which he only rarely did. Leonor was quicker out of bed and got to Francisco’s bedside first, but he was deeply distressed and she struggled to change him. He was crying, ‘No, no, no,’
and wrenching himself away from her, obstructing her efforts. Despite her best intentions, her temper, Rafael saw, was fraying. Then Francisco was crying, ‘I need to –’ then something undecipherable. ‘I need to – I need to –’

And Leonor was asking him, ‘Need to what? Need to what, Francisco?’ and continuing, ‘Come on, now, please, darling: let me do this and then we can all go back to sleep, yes? Come on, now, let’s get you dry. Let Mummy do this.’

Rafael was chipping in: ‘Yes, come on, Francisco, let Mummy do this.’

Suddenly Francisco’s last word was clear:
Mummy
.

Leonor said, ‘Yes: Mummy.’

And then he managed it, got clear – even through the sobs – what he’d been trying to tell them: ‘
I need to find my mummy
.’

Leonor reeled, looked up at Rafael and back to her son. ‘I am your mummy, Francisco.’ And to Rafael: ‘He doesn’t know it’s me!’

‘He’s asleep,’ said Rafael, realising. ‘He’s not properly awake.’

Leonor said, ‘Oh Jesus, Rafael, he doesn’t know it’s me,’ and, frantic, ‘I’m here, Francisco, it’s me, I’m here.’

Just as stunned, Rafael could only say again: ‘He’s asleep, he’s not quite awake.’

Leonor was incredulous: ‘But –’

Yes: the candle was burning and they’d been talking to him for some minutes and he’d seemed to have been talking to them – well, crying at them – in reply … How could he not be awake?

Leonor was continuing, ‘It’s me, darling, I’m here,’ but Francisco suddenly got it and accepted it, stopped his sobbing; he was back in a peaceful sleep.

There’d been something horrifying about it: Francisco sitting there square on the bed, with busyness all around him, yet utterly bereft. He’d been so lost, and, for those few minutes, whatever his parents said or did for him, he was beyond being found. Rafael had never forgotten it, but he didn’t understand at first why the memory had come to him on the day of the burning. And then he realised: it would be those children, some nights, crying desperately like that, in grief and terror, needing to find their daddy, except they’d be wide awake and there’d be no comfort for them. He’d be gone. No grave, even, to visit.

The atmosphere at the Kitsons’, that evening, was radically altered, distinctly subdued, and Rafael guessed it was due to news of the burning. Cecily kept herself blank, looking through him if she ever looked his way so that although he was desperate to go to her, he didn’t dare. Her son fared little better, her glances at him perfunctory as she performed various maternal duties such as cutting up his food.

Antonio had – as ever – been talkative on the way into supper: ‘You heard? – they burned a priest today.’

‘Priest?’ A second burning?

‘Near St Paul’s. Burned him. Heretic. Married, with children.’

That was the man he’d seen, then. And Antonio would believe – and repeat – anything. ‘If the man was married,’ Rafael was scathing, ‘then he was no priest, was he.’

‘Married priest,’ insisted Antonio. ‘They could get married, here. Can’t now. Have to renounce them, now, their wife and
kids. Deny them, or something, and never see them again. Do a penance. I don’t know, do I.’ They were taking their places at the table, so he rushed to add, ‘But whatever it was he was supposed to do, he didn’t, so they burned him.’ They were sitting, now, so it was too late for Rafael to respond, for which he was glad. Whatever he’d have said would have done no justice to the enormity of it.

That night, in his room, he pondered it: a married priest. A priest with responsibilities to a wife and children before his flock. In Spain, plenty of priests did have children, and everyone knew it. They were known as ‘nephews’ and ‘nieces’. Priests were supposed to be above the distractions of family life, free from the complications, the mess. But the queen herself had told him that her love for God had grown because of her love for her husband.

Two days later, a bishop was burned. He was married, he had children. The burning took almost an hour, Antonio informed Rafael.

Rafael was aghast: ‘You were
there
?’

Antonio rolled his eyes. ‘You’re joking, aren’t you? I’d have been hauled up there by that crowd and thrown on there, too. This is all down to us – didn’t you know? That’s what they think. The prince can get his chaplain to preach against it, but it’s still our fault. It’s what we do, isn’t it, burning heretics, and now their queen’s married a Spaniard. So, she’s one of us. That’s what they think. There wasn’t any burning before she married.’ He paused. ‘No wonder they never burned people, what with this weather. The wood’s damp and the wind sends the flames one way then –’ Antonio waved an arm,
away
. ‘Half-burned, he was, that bishop – legs gone – but then the flames were off –’


Antonio
.’ He didn’t want to hear it.

Antonio shrugged. ‘But he took it all,’ he finished, admiringly, ‘preaching forgiveness and giving his view of it all for close to an hour – God, do the English ever shut up? – until his throat was burnt out.’

The burning had been at Smithfield, just the other side of the city wall. Rafael feared that he could have unknowingly breathed in the smoke.

The bishop had been silenced, but London hadn’t. Later that evening, there was a riot, and it even reached St Bartholomew’s Lane. Rafael heard it before he saw it: heard a buzzing and, intrigued, opened his window. Crowd-noise, it was, trouble, all at once louder and nearer. He drew back as it splintered into the lane: two men running; then three, the two running and stopping, turning while the other one scooped something from the ground – a stone? – and chucked it. They were shouting at the closed doors, blaring their indignation. More people came as if thrown into the lane but landing – just – on their feet. Perhaps seven of them, nine or ten. Women, Rafael saw. Behind them came horses, instantly among and ahead of them, wheeling back around to scatter them, their riders thrashing at them. Someone was screaming. Rafael pressed his back against the wall. Somewhere close, glass smashed. The Kitsons’ house? Were they now one window down? Were they under attack?

The trouble moved off as suddenly as it had come. When he was confident it wouldn’t be returning, Rafael went down to the kitchen. A Kitson window had indeed been smashed: word was, one of the children’s bedrooms. Various men had gone to board it up, he gathered. Even so, the kitchen was
packed: everyone there, reeling and commiserating. Everyone except Cecily.

‘Stupid fucking bitch,’ Rafael heard a man remark, his companion adding, ‘Wicked stupid fucking bitch.’ When the first man said, ‘With any luck, she’ll die having the kid,’ Rafael realised they were talking about their queen. How sickening to talk like that of any woman, let alone that they should be blaming their queen when she’d have had nothing to do with the bishop’s burning. It was easy for the English people to blame her – they didn’t really like her. Oh, they’d liked the idea of her – the rightful heir, the underdog; they made much of that – but they didn’t like her, intensely Catholic and dowdy. The bishop’s burning would have been the doing of the ecclesiastical courts: the Church’s doing. The queen wouldn’t burn people, Rafael knew, and certainly not the fathers of children.

The officials had called his bluff: the two weeks were up and they hadn’t arranged transport for him, although they were talking of a ship due to leave in ten days’ time. Reluctant though he’d been to do it, Rafael had written home to Pedro to explain the situation – an impossible task in itself – and to ask about the possibility of a loan. If he didn’t hear back beforehand, he’d send two copies of the letter during the following three or four weeks, just in case, just to make sure.

Cecily continued to keep herself to herself. Once, when they passed each other in the kitchen, she said an expressionless, ‘Hello, Rafael,’ even-toned and low-pitched, but he was convinced he caught a trace of something in it: challenge or
dismissal, or even contempt. She didn’t pause, which put him in his place. Nicholas scampered after her and, albeit uninvited, took his place at her side. Which, after all, however bad his mother’s mood, was still his place.

Rafael missed her. He missed those evenings, back at the beginning, when they’d sat in companionable silence. Watching her with a needle and thread, hands raised into the light, cuffs slipped a little down her wrists. He yearned for those evenings and sometimes he felt he was wishing for the whole world, and sometimes nothing much at all.

The Kitsons were still in London because the winter was so hard, the journey daunting. They’d stay, now, until the royal baby was born in May, and – all being well – then partake of London’s celebrations. Rafael had still heard nothing from home. There’d been time enough, now, to hear back from her. Why the silence? He had no news of his own to tell. He didn’t mention the burnings.

For a couple of weeks there were no more burnings and it was then, during that lull, that Cecily knocked on his door one evening and said, ‘Come for a walk, Rafael.’ He was so taken aback that he found himself unable to muster even the simplest response. His heart beat at him; his blood took flight; he placed a hand on the doorframe to steady himself. She, by contrast, was the very picture of calm. She’d spoken warmly enough, but it’d been no mere suggestion or request. It was so unlikely that he wondered briefly if it had been code. Was he in trouble? She mistook his lack of response for reticence in the face of the curfew – or that was how she decided to take it – because she added, ‘It’s quiet out there; there’ll be no problem.’ Then, ‘And Nicholas is asleep. Alys is there, if he wakes.’

Rafael didn’t know who Alys was, and didn’t ask. Spinning his cloak on to his shoulders, he glimpsed Cecily eyeing the lining. She saw him, and smiled –
the lining I made for you
– and he smiled, too.

Not until they were outside and off down the lane at quite a pace did he ask her where they were going, hoping her reply would reveal the reason for the escapade.

‘Nowhere,’ was all she said.

In the absence of anything more enlightening, he liked the sound of that. Nowhere sounded good to him. Suddenly this lane, which he’d been going up and down for almost eight long months, was nowhere he knew. He might never have been here before and might never come again. There would be just this one time, with Cecily. Letting her lead the way, he took no note at all of where they were. Their breath scythed through the tangle of woodsmoke and river-air. Side by side, in step, their footfalls could have been one person’s. She’d tell him in her own time what they were doing; he was in no rush, now, to know. He liked not having to know.

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