Read The Sunne in Splendour: A Novel of Richard III Online

Authors: Sharon Kay Penman

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Kings and Rulers, #Historical, #Historical Fiction, #Great Britain, #War & Military, #War Stories, #Biographical, #Biographical Fiction, #Great Britain - History - Wars of the Roses; 1455-1485, #Great Britain - History - Henry VII; 1485-1509, #Richard

The Sunne in Splendour: A Novel of Richard III (67 page)

BOOK: The Sunne in Splendour: A Novel of Richard III
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still surrounded by a sea of mud. Veronique paused in dismay. One of the Earl of Warwick's prized alaunt bitches had whelped and Veronique enjoyed going to watch as the squirming, squealing puppies clambered atop their patient mother, chewed energetically upon each other's tails, and explored the confines of their boxstall world. But however appealing the puppies were, Veronique had no intention of wading through the swamp the stable area had become, and she turned back toward the house.
Horses were hitched in the inner court and her step slowed at sight of them. Her eyes flickered over the lounging men, to the cognizance they wore upon their sleeves, a Whyte Boar. By now Veronique knew something of English heraldry. She ran up the stairs, into the great hall.
There were at least fifty men milling about, most of them retainers of the Duke of Clarence, who maintained a household of three hundred or so. They were awaiting his orders now, were fascinated witnesses to the heated exchange taking place between their lord and his brother.
"I'm telling you, Dickon, that you cannot see her. She's ailing, has been abed all week. I did tell you this the last time you were here. You'll just have to come back another time."
"You know that tomorrow I do leave for the Scots border, George!"
"Well then, you do have a problem. But it's not one of my making. Surely you cannot blame me that
Anne was taken ill."
"No ... if I did, in fact, believe she were ill!"
"I don't much care whether you do believe me or not. You wanted to see Anne; she was sick. She still be sick. What would you have me do, let you share her sickbed? You've heard my physician tell you she can have no visitors. Tell him again, Dr. Randall; mayhap this time it will take!"
"My lord of Clarence speaks true, Your Grace. I've been attending the Lady Anne all week. It not be serious, but she's been feverish, has had a queasy stomach. I truly cannot permit her to see anyone just now, my lord."
"If you be lying in this, George ..."
"What will you do about it, Dickon? Need I remind you that you be a guest under my roof? And, I might add, a rather unwelcome one. . . . Until, that is, you do learn to mend your manners!"
Those watching waited, eagerly expectant for the worst. They were disappointed when Richard turned, signaled to his own men, and abruptly departed the hall.
RICHARD paused on the stairs leading down into the inner court. He was in a quandary and knew it. He didn't believe George, not for a moment, but he wasn't sure how to call George's bluff. He couldn't very well force

his way into Anne's chambers; had he been foolhardy enough to try, George would have been only too delighted to give the command to stop him. God damn his worthless soul to eternal damnation for this!
But it was his fault, too. He should never have accepted it when George first swore Anne was ailing. God knows, he'd not believed it then, either. But he'd promised Ned he'd try to get along with George if at all possible . . . and what a bitter jest that was! So he'd taken George at his word, and now George was still refusing to let him see Anne, and he hadn't the time to get Ned to intercede for him. Not that he wanted to ask Ned's aid in this. For certes, there was little he'd like less. But what else could he do? All he did know for a certainty was that he had no intention of going north without first seeing Anne.
He started down the stairs, still not sure what he meant to do, other than what he'd most like to do, which was to murder George . . . or at the least, to shove that hateful smirk back down his throat. He didn't see the girl, therefore, until she careened into him with a cry of dismay, followed by a flurry of fractured
English and flustered French.
For a startled instant, Richard would have sworn it had been deliberate, but he had no time to mull over that peculiar impression, grabbed for her as she flung her arms around his neck in a futile attempt to keep her balance. With his help, she managed to right herself, and then stepped back, sank down in a hasty curtsy upon the stairs.
"Oh, my lord, pray do forgive me! A thousand pardons!"
"That be all right, demoiselle," he said slowly, watched as she fled up the stairs, into the great hall. His stallion was being brought forward now; he swung up into the saddle, but his mind was elsewhere, was still echoing with the words she'd so hurriedly breathed into his ear. "The Lady Anne not be sick, my lord! Come back within the quarter hour!"
george had retreated to his bedchamber, where his tailor awaited him, ready to resume the fitting interrupted by Richard's arrival. He found it hard to recapture his earlier interest, however; looked without seeing at the garment held out for his inspection, a doublet of purple satin lined with Holland cloth. He paid no greater heed to the next item offered, a long velvet gown trimmed in sable.
Devil take Dickon for his stubbornness! He'd waste no time in complaining to Ned, and he'd be back.
And what he'd do then, George didn't know. He crumpled the soft material he held within his hand, heard the tailor's instinctive unhappy protest, and saw an usher come through the doorway, so uneasy that
George knew at once he would not like what he was about to hear.
"Begging my lord's pardon, but Master Watkins did send me to fetch

you, to tell you, my lord, that the Duke of Gloucester be below in the great hall."
George went down the spiral stairway leading from the upper chambers so fast that he came perilously close to tripping over his fashionably pointed, elongated shoes, was spared a nasty fall only by a servant's vigilance. It was not urgency that was propelling him, however, so much as thwarted fury; he already knew he'd be too late. So it was no surprise to him as he came into the great hall to find his brother handfast with the girl he was coming to consider the source of all his troubles.
They turned to face him, Richard triumphant, Anne nervously defiant. George came to an abrupt halt. His first impulse was to order that Anne be taken back upstairs. But he was never to know if he would have acted upon it, for at that moment he heard his wife's voice, rising in an inflection of agreeable surprise.
"Dickon!" Coming forward, Isabel held out her hands, turned her cheek for Richard's kiss. "I didn't realize you were back from Kent! My congratulations upon dealing so capably with Fauconberg; Ned told me he couldn't be more pleased."
Ned! George drew a disquieted breath, exhaled it slowly. He'd almost made a very stupid mistake.
Should he provoke a brawl over Anne, Ned would blame him, would take Dickon's word over his. He always did. An open confrontation with Dickon would only give Ned an excuse to meddle, to favor
Dickon at his expense.
Isabel was ushering Richard and Anne toward the stairwell. For all the world, George thought, like a mother hen with two cherished chicks, and his anger suddenly spilled over onto his wife. His mouth thinned; damned fool woman, why did she not just escort them into Anne's chamber and tuck them into bed together?
Isabel was at his side now, smiling up at him. "George, why did you not tell me Dickon was here? Shall he be staying to dine with ..." Her smile faded. "George, why do you look at me like that?"
"I'd have a word with you, Bella," he said tightly, and grasping her arm, he jerked her toward the stairs.
She stumbled, unable to keep pace, and he saw her bewilderment changing to apprehension. That placated him a little, but his rage still smoldered. Dragging Isabel along behind him, he reached the stairwell just in time to see Richard and Anne disappear into the solar, close the door firmly behind them.
"I DID come before, Anne, but he claimed you were ailing. For years Ned did try to tell me the truth wasn't in him, but I wouldn't let myself see it . . . God, what a fool I was!" Richard moved closer on the solar window

seat, said, "I do want you to tell me, Anne, if he has abused you in any way, done anything to discomfort you or . . ."
Anne was shaking her head. "No, Richard, truly he hasn't. I've scarcely seen him at all since his return;
which is the way I much prefer it, suspect he does, too!"
Richard was relieved but not reassured. "As glad as I am to hear that, ma belle, I don't trust him, nonetheless. When I come back to London, the first thing I mean to do is to see that he cannot-"
"Come back? Richard, you are leaving again? But you've just gotten back from Kent!"
"I know. But there be trouble on the Scots border again, and Ned does want me to go north to deal with it."
Anne was no longer listening. She stared down into her lap, trying very hard to master her emotions. He was going north. For God knows how long. To put down a rebellion for Ned. For Ned, who stayed in
London and took his ease, while Richard did risk his life in Ned's service. She somehow managed to pull herself together, to keep from saying what she knew he'd not have forgiven.
"... and so Fauconberg will be going with me. To tell you true, Anne, I've my doubts as to how trustworthy he is. But when he surrendered to me at Sandwich, he did pledge his loyalty to Ned, and we decided to risk taking him at his word. If he's sincere, he can be of considerable use to me in the North, and if not, I'll find out soon enough."
He was so matter-of-fact about going off to fight with a proven traitor! "Oh, Richard. . ." But he seemed not to notice her dismay, was taking a folded paper from his doublet.
"I've a letter for you, Anne. . . . From your mother."
When she made no move to take it, just stared at him in surprise, he reached over, put it in her hand.
"She did write to me about . . . Well, she does want me to speak to Ned on her behalf. She did ask that
I pass this on to you."
Anne hesitated, and then broke the seal. She wasn't sure what she was expecting, but surely more than this, a stilted half-page that could as easily have come from an aunt she saw only at Epiphany as from the woman who'd given her life.
She looked up at him, said with a too-bright brittle smile, "She hopes I am well, and hopes, too, that I
will urge you to aid her in recovering her estates."
He'd taken her hand in his, held it flat between his own as he said, "Anne, I think you should know that
Ned does not seem inclined to heed her appeal. I'll do what I can, but . . ."
She nodded. She understood what he was reluctant to say. Ned

meant to hold her mother to sanctuary. Because of George. George, who was determined to have the
Beauchamp lands, at any cost. She supposed she should feel sorry for her mother, but the truth was that she didn't, not really. She was not as bitter as Isabel, who said repeatedly that her mother could rot at
Beaulieu as far as she did care. But she found it hard to muster up much sympathy, either.
What she did feel, above all else, was relief that she was not to share her mother's confinement. She saw that her earlier fears had been firmly rooted in reality. If Ned would agree to strip her mother of her estates to placate George, he'd have agreed, too, to seeing her immured behind convent walls, would have let George do as he wished with her. It was Richard who stood between her and such a fate, Richard and only Richard.
"I would be grateful if you might speak for her, Richard," she said, thus discharging the daughterly duty her mother had imposed upon her. "It is kind of you to bother, in truth, for I know you've never been all that fond of her. ..."
"I don't do it for Cousin Nan. I do it for you, Anne."
"Oh," she breathed, looking down at their hands entwined upon the seat between them, fingers laced as if in a bond beyond breaking. Sweet Mary ever Virgin, don't do this to me, she thought hazily. Don't let me believe he does care if it not be true. I couldn't bear it.
"I've thought of you often these weeks past."
"Have you, Richard?" She found herself having to remember to breathe, knew he must be able to feel how her pulse was racing. His fingers had slid up her wrist. He was caressing her palm with his thumb, stirring distracting sensations that were as unnerving as they were unfamiliar. She wanted to pull her hand away, and at the same time, to feel his arms around her, to be held to his heart and hear him call her
"love" as though he meant it.
Clearly, that was what he had in mind. His arm was around her waist. He gave her now the smile he'd always reserved for those times when he'd wanted to coax her into acting against her better judgment.
"Come sit beside me, Anne."
The smile still worked the same magic. She laughed nervously, edged across the inches that separated them, said, "Goodness, Richard, if I sit any closer, I shall be in your lap!"
She felt his mouth against her temple, felt the warming breath of his laughter as he said softly, "I'd not mind that in the least, my love!"
"Nor would I," she whispered, not sure whether she hoped or feared that he would hear her, knew he had when he tightened his arm around her even more. How queer, she thought, that his body could be

so known and yet so unfamiliar to her. His clothing was scented faintly with orris root and saffron. A
fresh, rather deep nick on his jaw showed her he'd taken the trouble to shave before coming to her. She had a sudden urge to put her lips to the spot; she compromised by touching with a gentle finger the proof of his barber's haste. His hair lay glossy against the collar of his doublet, and she found now it had the flyaway softness her own hair did when newly washed.
"I want to kiss you, Anne."
This hardly came as a surprise, except in that he'd chosen to ask. It occurred to her suddenly that he might be finding her fears as difficult to deal with as she was. She nodded shyly, raised her face for his kiss. He no longer tasted of thyme as he had in the priory garden, but his mouth was warm, just as she'd remembered it to be. She wished her heart would stop pounding so; surely he could hear!
"You're not fearful, Anne? Not of me, beloved?"
"No, Richard," she whispered. "Never of you. . . ."
Their eyes met, held. "I do have something for you," he said, and fumbled in the pouch that hung from his belt, drawing out a small package wrapped in green velvet.
"At first I'd hoped to have it for your birthday, and then for your name-day, but now it seems I must miss that, too."
For some moments, Anne looked down in silence at what she held in her hand, a delicately crafted locket, shaped into a perfect golden oval. It was a beautiful piece of workmanship, but what took her breath were the entwining initials, so closely inscribed that she could not tell where the jeweled A ended and the began. How he'd ever found the time to have it made midst his activities of the past few weeks, she could not begin to imagine, thought dazedly that he must have set a goldsmith working night and day to have it done in so short a span, to be able to give her this, which could be meant only as a love pledge.
She fumbled with the catch until the locket sprang open, held it out toward him.
"Put a lock of your hair in it for me . . . please."
He didn't say anything, merely unsheathed his dagger, handed it to her. She raised up, very carefully wrapped a few strands of dark hair around the blade. As she slipped the knife back into his sheath, he took the locket from her and fastened it around her throat.
"To remember me by," he said and only then did he smile. She wanted to say that her every thought would be for him. She said, instead, "Kiss me goodbye."
As close as they were, he had only to lower his mouth to hers. The kiss was gentle and had in it more of tenderness than passion. When it

BOOK: The Sunne in Splendour: A Novel of Richard III
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