Philippa Gregory 3-Book Tudor Collection 1 (186 page)

BOOK: Philippa Gregory 3-Book Tudor Collection 1
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Katherine, Whitehall Palace, February 1540

I am brushing the queen's long fair hair as she sits before her silvered mirror. She is looking at her reflection but her eyes are quite blank, she is not seeing herself at all. Fancy that! Having such a wonderful looking-glass that it will give a perfect reflection, and not looking at yourself! I seem to have spent my life trying to get a view of myself in silver trays and bits of glass, even leaning over the well at Horsham, and here she is before a perfectly made looking-glass and she is not entranced. Really, she is most peculiar. Behind her, I admire the movement of the sleeve of my gown as my hands move up and down, I bend down a little to see my own face and tip my head to one side to see the light catch my cheek then I tip it the other way. I try a small smile, then I raise my eyebrows as if I am surprised.

I glance down and find she is watching me, so I giggle and she smiles.

‘You are a pretty girl, Katherine Howard,' she says.

I flutter my eyelashes at our reflected images. ‘Thank you.'

‘I am not,' she says.

One of the awkward things about her not knowing how to speak properly is that she says these dreadfully flat statements and you can't quite tell how you should reply. Of course she is not as pretty as me, but on the other hand she has lovely hair, thick and shiny, and she has a pleasant face and good, clear skin and really quite
beautiful eyes. And she should remember that almost no-one at court is as pretty as me, so she need not reproach herself for that.

She has no charm at all but that is partly because she is so stiff. She can't dance, she can't sing, she can't chatter. We are teaching her to play cards and everything else, like dancing and music and singing, of which she has absolutely not a clue; but in the meantime she is fearfully dull. And this is not a court where dull goodness counts for much. Not at all, really.

‘Nice hair,' I say helpfully.

She points to her hood on the table before her, that is so very large and heavy. ‘Not good,' she says.

‘No,' I agree with her. ‘Very bad. You like try mine?' One of the really funny things about trying to talk to her is that you start speaking like she does. I do it for the maids when we are supposed to be sleeping at night. ‘You sleep now,' I say into the darkness and we all scream with laughter.

She is pleased at this offer. ‘Your hood? Yes.'

I take the pins out and I lift it off my head. I take a little glance at myself in the mirror as my hood comes off and my hair tumbles down. It reminds me of dear Francis Dereham, who used to love to take off my hood and rub his face in my loose hair. Seeing myself do this in a good mirror with a true likeness for the first time in my life I understand how desirable I was to him. Really, I can't blame the king for looking at me as he does, I can't blame John Beresby or the new page who is with Lord Seymour. Thomas Culpepper could not take his eyes off me at dinner last night. Truly, I am in extraordinarily good looks since I have come to court, and every day I seem to be prettier.

Gently I hold out the hood for her and when she takes it I stand behind her to gather back her hair as she sets the hood on her head.

It makes a tremendous improvement; even she can see it. Without the heavy square frame of her German hood sitting like a roof slap on her forehead, her face becomes at once rounder and prettier.

But then she pulls my pretty hood forwards so it is practically on her eyebrows, just like she wore her new French hood at the joust. She looks quite ridiculous. I give a little tut of irritation, and push it so that it is far back on her head, and then I pull some waves of hair forwards to show the fair shiny thickness of it.

Regretfully, she shakes her head and pulls the hood forwards again, tucking her lovely hair out of sight. ‘It is better so,' she says.

‘Not as pretty, not as pretty! You have to wear it set back. Set back!' I exclaim.

She smiles at my raised voice. ‘Too French,' is all she says.

She silences me. I suppose she is right. The last thing any Queen of England can dare to look is too French. The French are the absolute last word in immodesty and immorality and a previous English queen educated in France, quintessentially French, was my cousin Anne Boleyn who brought the French hood to England and took it off only to put her head on the block. Queen Jane wore the English hood in a triumph of modesty. It is like the German hood, quite ghastly, only a little lighter and slightly curved, and that's what most ladies wear now. Not me: I wear a French hood and I wear it as far back as I dare and it suits me, and it would suit the queen too.

‘You wore it at the joust and nobody dropped dead,' I urge her. ‘You are queen. Do what you like.'

She nods. ‘Maybe,' she says. ‘The king likes this?'

Well, yes, he likes this hood but only because I am under it. He is such a doting old man that I think he would like me if I wore a jester's cap on my head and danced about in motley, shaking a pig's bladder with bells.

‘He likes it well enough,' I say carelessly.

‘He likes Queen Jane?' she asks.

‘Yes. He did. And she wore an awful hood, like yours.'

‘He comes to her bed?'

Saints, I don't know where this is going but I wish that Lady Rochford were here. ‘I don't know, I wasn't at court then,' I say.
‘Honestly, I lived with my grandmother. I was just a girl. You could ask Lady Rochford, or any of the old ladies. Ask Lady Rochford.'

‘He kiss me goodnight,' she says suddenly.

‘That's nice,' I say faintly.

‘He kiss me good morning.'

‘Oh.'

‘That all.'

I look around the empty dressing chamber. Normally there should be half a dozen maids in here, I don't know where they can all be. They just wander off sometimes, there is nothing so idle as girls, really. I can see why I irritate everybody so much. But now I really need some help with this embarrassing confession and there is no-one here at all.

‘Oh,' I say feebly.

‘Just that: kiss, goodnight, and then kiss, good morning.'

I nod. Where are the idle sluts?

‘No more,' she says, as if I am so stupid that I don't understand the really disastrous thing she is telling me.

I nod again. I wish to God someone would come in. Anyone. I should even be glad to see Anne Bassett right now.

‘He cannot do more,' she says bluntly.

I see a dark colour rising up her face, the poor thing is blushing with embarrassment. At once I stop feeling awkward and I feel such pity for her; really, this is as bad for her to tell me as it is for me to hear. Actually, it must be worse for her to say than for me to hear, since she is having to tell me that her husband feels no desire for her, and she doesn't know what to do about it. And she is a very shy, very modest woman; and God knows, I am not.

Her eyes are filling with tears as her cheeks are growing red. The poor thing, I think. The poor, poor thing. Fancy having an ugly old man for a husband and him not being able to do it. How disgusting would that be? Thank God I am free to choose my own lovers and Francis was as young and sleek-skinned as a snake, and kept me
awake all night with his unstoppable lust. But she is stuck with a sick old man and she will have to find a way to help him.

‘Do you kiss him?' I ask.

‘No,' she says shortly.

‘Or …' I mime a stroking motion with my right hand lightly clenched at hip level; she knows well enough what I mean.

‘No!' she exclaims, quite shocked. ‘Good God, no.'

‘Well, you have to do that,' I tell her frankly. ‘And let him see you, leave the candles burning. Get out of bed and undress.' I make a little gesture to indicate how she should let her shift slide off her shoulders, slither down over her breasts. I turn away from her and look over my shoulder with a little smile, slowly I bend over, still smiling over my shoulder. No man can resist that, I know.

‘Stop,' she says. ‘Not good.'

‘Very good,' I say firmly. ‘Must be done. Must have baby.'

She turns her face one way and the other, like a poor trapped animal. ‘Must have baby,' she repeats.

I mime for her the opening of a shift, I stroke my hand down from my breasts to my fanny. I close my eyes and sigh as if in the grip of tremendous pleasure. ‘Like this. Do this. Let him watch.'

She looks at me with her serious face very grave. ‘I cannot,' she says quietly. ‘Katherine, I cannot do anything like that.'

‘Why not? If it would help? If it would help the king?'

‘Too French,' she says sadly. ‘Too French.'

Anne, Hampton Court, March 1540

This great court is on the move, from the palace at Whitehall to another of the king's houses, called Hampton Court. No-one has described it to me but I am expecting to see a good-sized farmhouse in the country. In truth, I am hoping for a smaller house where we can live more simply. The palace of Whitehall is like a little town inside the city of London and twice a day, at least, if I were not guided by my ladies I should get lost. The noise is constant, of people coming and going, striking deals, having arguments, musicians practising, tradesmen offering their goods, even pedlars come to sell things to the housemaids. It is like a village filled with people who have no real work to do but gossip and spread rumours and cause trouble.

All the great tapestries, carpets, musical instruments, treasures, plate, glasses and beds are packed on a train of wagons, on the day of our departure, as if a city were on the move. All the horses are saddled, and the falcons settled in their special wagons, standing on their posts with wickerwork screens around them, their hooded heads turning eagerly, this way and that, the pretty feathers at the top of the hood bobbing like a knight's jousting crest. I watch them and think that I am as blind and as powerless as them. We have both been born to be free, to go where we want, and here we both are, captives of the king's pleasure, waiting for his command.

The dogs are whipped in by their huntsmen, they spill around the courtyards, yelping and tumbling over in their excitement. All the great families pack their own goods, order their own servants, prepare their own horses and luggage train and we fall into procession, early in the morning like a small army, to ride out through the gates of Whitehall and along the river, to Hampton Court.

For once, God be praised, the king is merry, in high spirits. He says he will ride with me and my ladies and he can tell me about the countryside as we go by. I do not have to go in a litter as I did when I first came to England; I am now allowed to ride and I have a new gown for riding in with a long skirt that drapes down either side of the saddle. I am not a skilled rider, for I was never properly taught. My brother only let Amelia and me ride the safest fat horses in his small stable, but the king has been kind to me and given me a horse of my own, a gentle mare with steady paces. When I touch her with my heel she will go forwards into a canter but when fear makes me jerk on the reins she goes back into a courteous walk. I love her for this obedience, as she helps me hide my fear in this fearless court.

It is a court that loves riding and hunting and galloping out. I should look like a fool if it were not for little Katherine Howard who can ride only a little better than me, and so with her to keep me company the king goes along slowly between the two of us, and tells us both to tighten our reins and sit up straighter, and praises our courage and progress.

He is so kind and pleasant that I stop fearing that he will think me a coward and I start to ride with more confidence, and to look about me, and to enjoy myself.

We leave the city by winding roads, so narrow that we can only go two abreast, and all the people of the city are leaning out of the overhanging windows to see us go by, the children shouting and running alongside our train. On the broad highways we take up both sides of the road and the market vendors in the central section shout blessings and pull off their caps as we ride by. The place is
rich with life, a cacophony of noise from people shouting their wares and the thunderous rumble of cart wheels on cobblestones. The city stinks with its own special smell of manure from the thousands of animals kept in the alleys, the offal of butchers' shops and fishmongers, the reek of the leather tanning, and the constant drift of smoke. Every now and then there is a great house, set amongst the squalor, indifferent to the beggars at its doors. High walls shield it from the street and I can just see the tops of great trees in the enclosed gardens. The noblemen of London build their great houses next to hovels and rent their doorways to pedlars. It is so loud and so confusing that it makes me dizzy and I am glad to rattle through the great gates and find myself outside the city wall.

The king shows me the old moats that have been dug in the past to defend London from invaders.

‘No men come now?' I ask him.

‘There is no trusting any man,' he says grimly. ‘The men would come from the North and the East if they had not felt the hammer of my anger already; and the Scots would come if they thought they could. But my nephew King James fears me, as well he should, and the Yorkshire rabble have been taught a lesson they will not forget. Half of them are in mourning for the other half who are dead.'

I say no more for fear of spoiling his happy mood, and Katherine's horse stumbles and she gives a little gasp and clutches the horse's mane, and the king laughs at her and calls her a coward. Their talk leaves me free to look about me.

Beyond the city walls are bigger houses set back from the road with little gardens before them or close-planted little fields. Everyone has a pig in their field, and some people have cows or goats as well as hens in their gardens. It is a rich country, I can see it in the faces of the people who have the shining round cheeks and the smiles of the well fed. Another mile from the city and we come into countryside of open fields and little hedgerows and neat farms and sometimes little villages and hamlets. At every crossroads there is a shrine
that has been destroyed, sometimes a statue of the mother of Christ stands with her head casually knocked off and still a little fresh posy of flowers at her feet; not all the English are convinced by the changes in the law. In every other village a small monastery or abbey is being remodelled or broken down. It is extraordinary to see the change that this king has made to the face of his country in a matter of years. It is as if oak trees had been suddenly banned and every great sheltering and beautiful tree had been savagely felled overnight. The king has plucked the heart out of his country and it is too soon to see how it will live and breathe without the holy houses and the holy life that have guided it forever.

The king breaks off from his conversation with Katherine Howard and says to me: ‘I have a great country.'

I am not such a fool to comment that he has destroyed or stolen one of its greatest treasures.

‘Good farms,' I say, ‘and …' I stop for I do not know the English word for the beasts. I point to them.

‘Sheep,' he says. ‘This is the wealth of this country. We supply the wool to the world. There is not a coat made in Christendom that is not woven with English wool.'

This is not quite true, for in Cleves we shear our own sheep and weave our own wool, but I know that the English wool trade is very great, and besides, I don't want to correct him.

‘Grandmama has our flock on the South Downs,' Katherine pipes up. ‘And the meat is so good, sire. I will ask her to send you some.'

‘Will you, pretty girl?' he asks her. ‘And shall you cook it for me?'

She laughs. ‘I could try, sir.'

‘Now confess, you cannot dress a joint or make a sauce. I doubt you have ever been so much as inside a kitchen.'

‘If Your Grace wants me to cook for you, then I will learn,' she says. ‘But I admit you might eat better with your own cooks.'

‘I am quite sure of it,' he says. ‘And a pretty girl like you does not need to cook. I am sure you have other ways to enchant your husband.'

Their speech is too quick for me to quite follow but I am glad that my husband is merry and that Katherine has the way of managing him. She chatters to him like a little girl and he finds her amusing, as an old man might pet a favoured granddaughter.

I let them talk together, and go on looking around me. Our road now runs beside the wide, fast-flowing river which is busy with boatmen, barges of the noble families, wherry boats, barges of trade travelling laden into London, and fishermen with rods out for the good river fish. The watermeadows, still wet with the winter floods, are lush and shiny with pools of standing water. A great heron lifts up slowly from a mere as we go past and flaps his great wings and flies west before us, tucking his long legs up.

‘Is Hampton Court a little house?' I ask.

The king spurs his horse forwards to talk to me. ‘A great house,' he says. ‘The most beautiful house in the world.'

I doubt very much that the French king who built Fontainebleau or the Moors who built the Alhambra would agree, but since I have not seen either palace I won't correct him. ‘Did you build it, Your Grace?' I ask.

As soon as I speak I discover that it is once again the wrong thing to say. I thought it would encourage him to tell me about the planning and building of it; but his expression, which was so smiling and handsome, suddenly darkens. Little Katherine quickly answers.

‘It was built for the king,' she says. ‘By an advisor who proved to be a false counsellor. The only good thing he did was make a palace fit for His Majesty. Or at least, that's what my grandmother told me.'

His face lightens, he laughs aloud. ‘You speak truly, Mistress Howard, indeed, though you must have been a child when Wolsey betrayed me. He was a false counsellor and the house that he built and gave to me is a fine one.' He turns to me. ‘It is mine now,' he says less warmly. ‘That is all you need to know. And it is the finest house in the world.'

I nod and ride forwards. How many men have offended this king,
in the long years of his rule? He drops back for a moment and speaks to his Master of Horse who is riding beside the young man Thomas Culpepper, talking and laughing together.

The riders ahead of us turn from the road and I see the great gateway before us. I am stunned at the sight of it. It really is a tremendous palace, of beautiful scarlet brick, the most expensive of all building materials, with arches and quoins of shining white stone. I had no idea that it was so great and fine. We ride through the huge stone gate and down the sweeping road towards it, under the entry gate and our horses' hooves sound like thunder on the cobbles of the great inner yard. Inside is a great court, and the servants coming out of the house fling open the huge double doors so that I can see the hall beyond. They line up, like a guard of honour, in the liveries of the royal Tudor house, according to their rank, row on row of men and women dedicated to our service. This is a house for hundreds of people, a massive place built for the pleasure of the court. Again, I am overwhelmed, the wealth of this country too much for me.

‘What happened to the man who built the house?' I ask Katherine as we dismount in the great courtyard, amid the noise of the court, the seagulls calling on the river beyond the house, the rooks cawing on the turrets. ‘What happened to the counsellor who offended the king?'

‘That was Cardinal Wolsey,' she says quietly. ‘He was found guilty of acting against the king and he died.'

‘He died too?' I ask. I find I dare not ask what blow felled the builder of this kingly house.

‘Yes, died and disgraced,' she says shortly. ‘The king turned on him. Sometimes he does, you know.'

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