Read The Scandalous Duchess Online
Authors: Anne O'Brien
How could I possibly be present at their reunion, knowing that she was his choice?
Oh, John! What have you done to me?
For a long moment the Constable waited for my response. Then, receiving no instruction, he leaned over the parapet
and informed those who waited below: âLady de Swynford is in residence here.'
My breath leached out between my clenched teeth. What had he indeed read in my face? I felt Philippa clutch at my arm. Below me it was possible that Constanza stiffened on her mount, for it sidled restlessly as if her hands had clenched on the reins.
âI don't care if the Devil himself 's in residence,' the caustic reply came back from Constanza's captain. âThere's room for any number of households here. What's stopping you opening the gates, man? We need admittance.'
I felt the Constable's glance again before he replied. âIt might be better if you take the Duchess on to Knaresborough.'
âDo you dare to refuse entry to the Duchess?'
The Constable answered without hesitation. Perhaps only I noticed his knuckles, clenched as white as mine against the stone coping.
âI do refuse you. My lord placed Lady de Swynford here for her safety. The castle is in my charge. The Lady Philippa is also here. In the circumstances it is not fitting that the Duchess reside under the same roof. It is better if you go on.'
The refusal swirled in my head. A specious argument, there was no logic to it, only perhaps a desire to protect me from humiliation. From Constanza's biting tongue. The Constable's support was a strange comfort when all around me was black with despair.
Below a laconic conversation occurred between Constanza and her Captain, resulting in: âThe Duchess is afraid to ride on. Notwithstanding the circumstances, she begs that you will give us accommodations for the night.'
Philippa's fingers tightened even more.
âI will not,' our Constable rejoined with astonishing calm. âMake haste to Knaresborough before the light fails totally.'
âLady Swynford.' It was Constanza, her voice thin but perfectly audible. âLady de Swynford. I beg of you.'
So she had known I was there all the time. I stepped back, as if to hide from her would make my refusal more acceptable, even as I knew that nothing could. It was a deplorable act, lacking in Christian charity, yet although guilt might aim a punch at my heart, I could not do it. It was the Constable who settled it for me.
âThe decision has to be mine, my lady. Go on to Knaresborough. You will be safe enough. We have had no disturbances hereabouts.'
Without another word Constanza and her retinue, banners and pennons refurled, turned and rode off towards Knaresborough.
And I?
Could I really allow this? I found that I had taken that step forward again to the parapet. If I raised my hand now, speaking out before one more moment passed, I could halt this debacle. I could call to Constanza, claiming a misunderstanding. I could send a scout riding fast after them to bring them back. If I gave the order the gates would open and she would ride in, the Duchess of Lancaster, in authority in her husband's name. I would curtsy before her and stand aside. My conscience would be clear.
I lifted my hand.
I let it fall. I said nothing, made no attempt to recall them to safety.
âKatherineâ¦!' Philippa's whisper was harsh, her hand on my arm a grip of steel. She had long ago abandoned calling
me formally. At twenty-one she had acquired the maturity of years, and of judgement which at this moment was unsparing. âThis is wrong. You can't let it happen. If harm comes to her the blame will be yours to shoulder.'
I shook her off, already riven as I was with that guilt, walking the length of the battlements to watch the vanishing cavalcade, identification once more hidden. Today I had rejected compassion, good manners, duty. Obedience to those who employed me. Had I not in effect, disobeyed the Duke also? Would he not have expected me to offer shelter and safety to his wife?
I was horrified at what I had done. But I could not admit her. I could not.
âWe should not have done that.' Philippa, relentless, had followed me. It did not help at all that she had acknowledged the joint decision.
âIt is better so, in the circumstances,' I replied flatly. âIt is not far to Knaresborough.'
âBut if any harm comes to herâ'
The echo of my own words. How devastating they were, stitching in bright colours what I had done.
âThen I will take the blame,' I said. âYou had no part in it. I will answer to the Duke.'
And to God
.
Refusing her company I went to the chapel where I prayed to the Virgin, for her intercession, for forgiveness, my thoughts all the time flitting away from my prayers to scenes invisible to me. My self-justification was like the constant and ineffectual pecking of a bird.
Constanza would be safe. She would be reunited with the Duke. The country held her in its heart, in the highest of
esteem. Constanza would not be seized and done to death as a detested foreigner. No one would wish harm to her. I was the evil one. If anyone dared attack her she had only to reveal her name, and she would be revered, whereas I was the one who would be torn to pieces. She would place her hand once more in that of the Duke and, his reputation salvaged, all would be put right. For her. For him, in the eyes of England.
I was the one who would be punished.
What a formidable, vengeful mistress England was.
I tore my thoughts away, back to the chapel with its candles and the reminiscence of incense. Even the kindly face of the Virgin was closed against me, stern and unsmiling, as I undoubtedly deserved. It seemed that her downcast eyes deliberately turned away from me. I pressed my clasped hands against my lips, begging for her compassion. Shame was a heavy cloak.
I felt a movement at my side where Philippa was sinking to her knees.
âI will pray with you,' she said. âThe Virgin will listen.'
âI think she will not,' I replied.
âBut she will. She will not condemn you for a broken heart. For loving too much.'
Oh, Philippa! Tears welled in my eyes but this was no time for tears. âI was wrong.'
âYou had your reasons.'
âNot such that God would forgive. I was vindictive beyond measure.'
Philippa did not reply but bent her head to her task, her fingers moving over the beads of her rosary. I made to follow her example, then realised as I saw the beads of coral
and gold that it was the rosary that the Duke had given me. I closed my fist over the beads. I could not use it. It would make me more of a hypocrite than I already was.
Philippa eventually raised her head, making the sign of the cross.
âIt must be true, then,' she said, addressing the altar. âWhat my father has done.'
âYes, it must.'
I saw a long dark road stretching ahead of me, leading me to I knew not what. For the first time in my life I felt frightened and vulnerable. I felt beyond hope.
From the chapel I refused Philippa's companionship and climbed to the battlements once more, despite the darkness, to look north. How often had I done this? Once I would have sensed him. The direction of his thoughts. Sometimes a brush of his emotions. His love.
Tonight there was nothing.
It was as if I faced a stone revetment or a wall of shields. A fortified bastion, I decided fancifully, although I was in no mood to be fanciful.
The Duke had shut me out.
I lifted my hands in silent plea, in despair, then allowed them to fall as a patter of approaching footsteps grew louder. I knew who they belonged to before he raced up the steps.
âJohn.' I took his hand in mine, letting my hand rest on his head. âYou should be in bed.'
âI escaped from Agnes.'
âI expect you did.'
And then, predictably, Henry. I lifted him into my arms so that he could see over the wall.
âWhere is my father?' asked John.
âI wish I knew.'
âWill he come soon?'
âI don't know.'
âDoes he know we are here?'
âYes he does.' I lowered Henry to his feet. âAnd now we will go down, or you two will face Agnes's wrath.'
They ran in front of me, surprisingly agile on the turn of the stair. I could imagine them both excelling at military skills as they grew older.
Life would have to go on, for my sake and theirs. I did not know how I could.
What should I do now? Frightened and vulnerable, I never expected to experience such draining emotions, but the sturdy confidence that had built within me over the years now drained away, no matter how often I told myself that I was not without resources. I had Kettlethorpe and Coleby in my son Thomas's name, my annuities, my connections in Lincoln. Margaret and Thomas were provided for. My Beaufort children would never lack. I knew the Duke well enough that whatever might stand between the two of us, his sense of honour was far too strong for him to neglect these children of his blood.
Had I no strength of character to withstand this terrible blow?
Go back to Kettlethorpe
.
But I couldn't. I could not yet cut the cord. Caught up in a maelstrom, I remained at Pontefract, wrought with indecision. Until the decision was made for me.
I was in pointed communication with the cook who was overseeing the messy task of dismemberment of a carcass
with an eye to making brawn with the brain and offal. I would have retreated long before this, except that his complaints about the quality of the meat and the lack of it were legion, and so it was there that I received a letter. The courier had been directed to the kitchens.
âI was instructed to deliver this to your hand, my lady.'
I took it, and the opportunity to turn my back on the chitterlings, except that they no longer seemed to matter. The letter took all my attention for the inscription was in the Duke's own even script. I opened the cover to find a single page. It was strikingly brief, as if written under duress with haste a necessity. It lacked even a superscription, such as my name.
Do not leave Pontefract. I command it. You must not leave until I can come to you
.
And, below, a scrawled signature.
The Duke was coming. He was coming to me.
Rereading it took no time at all. Nor did my decision-making on the strength of this imperious command. I had no intention of leaving. There were things that I needed to say.
A movement at my side made me look up to see the cook, cleaver gripped firmly, watching me. So was the courier, if less overtly. It would be far easier to slink away, back to Kettlethorpe, where I might lick my wounds in private without too many prurient eyes watching my every move. Eyes that, as now, were keen to strip the flesh from my bones.
âWill you sit, my lady?'
What emotions had the cook read chasing across my features? I shook my head but I took the cup of ale he proffered and sipped, feeling the blood flow back beneath my skin at cheek and temple. No, I would not run away to Kettlethorpe. I had been Lancaster's lover for nine years, I had borne him four children. I would wait and hear what he had to say. I would not weep at his feet as, the rumours said, Constanza had done when they met on the road. The emotionally vivid account of their passionate reconciliation had reduced me to unutterable fury.
It swept through me again now, and I cast the letter into the fire in a fit of pique, noting with satisfaction that the wax image of John of Lancaster, King of Castile, surrounded by all the accoutrements of his authority, melted away to nothing in the flames.
What could he say to me that would reinstate him in my good graces? Could I ever forgive him for what he had done?
âWas it important, my lady?' The cook, abandoning his cleaver, nudged me to sit. I must appear to be more fragile than I thought.
âNo. Not important at all,' I said with an attempt at a smile. And I did sit, for my legs seemed to have no strength.
But I would wait. I would be here when he arrived. And I might listen.
T
he Duke of Lancaster rode with his retinue into the courtyard at Pontefract.
âYou waited until I came.'
âAs you see.'
It was not an opening that boded well for what was to follow. The courtyard was grey and glistening with the earlier heavy rain that still pattered on my head and shoulders as if in a final lingering defiance. Much like my own frame of mind. I would not take shelter until he had dismounted, even though it was to my discomfort. I would wait as he had instructed. I would be calm, obedient, open to his persuasion. I forced myself to stand and observe with commendable dispassion as he swung down from the saddle and gave his reins to his squire. Throughout all his movements his eyes had not left my face.
It had crossed my mind that I should stay in my chamber. That I should keep him waiting. But that, I decided,
would be a sign of immaturity. I would acknowledge his arrival, as I had so many times before. I would listen to what he had to say.
The Duke signalled for his retinue to dismount and take shelter.
âI note the castle is well garrisoned.'
As well he might. It was bristling with military.
âYes,' I replied. âWe received your orders.'
Apart from my one line of instruction, it had been the only direct communication between the Duke and Pontefract throughout all those difficult weeks. His gaze continued to hold mine as I allowed the silence between us to lengthen. Even in the courtyard with all the noise and bustle of the Duke's dispersing entourage, I felt the power of his regard. It made me shiver. Not from pleasure, as once it might. I kept the contact, every muscle in my body braced against what was to come.
I had expected him to look weary, from travel, from the shock of such vehement hatred flung at him by the rebels. From the loss of his most beloved possession, The Savoy. Even from the acknowledgement that his life had actually been in danger at the hands of Englishmen. In the blackest corner of my damaged heart I hoped that he would look at least careworn. If I felt older than my thirty-two years, why should not he, at a decade older? I resented the little lines that had become ingrained between my brows, the smudge of shadows beneath my eyes from lack of sleep. My mirror was no longer my friend. As I stood there in that inhospitable courtyard, growing wetter by the minute, I studied his face, a very female resentment building as my gown clung in sodden folds.
Why did I not have the sense to go inside?
Because I had anticipated this meeting for so long. I had longed for it as much as I had feared it. I knew that what had been between me and the Duke of Lancaster, the overwhelming emotion that had encompassed us in the face of all tenets of morality and good judgement, would never be the same again. I could not retreat from it.
And so I took in every inch of him as he stood a good arm's length from me, remarking that there was no inordinate sign of strain in his visage, and his movements were as elegantly controlled as I had ever seen them. If the lines between nose and mouth were well marked, I had seen such an effect when he was faced with a problem of moving troops or supplying a garrison. A cup of warm ale would soon smooth away the tension. No, there was no hint here of the man who had begged God's forgiveness on his knees in public, with tears staining his cheeks.
The man who had in so cursory and public a manner rejected his lover of nine years, before informing her of his decision.
I bit down on the little surge of wrath.
âI see you are in health and good spirits, Lady Katherine,' he remarked.
Good spirits!
The flapping of my veil, wetly against my neck, was the final straw. I raised my chin. Without courtesy or any acknowledgement that he had addressed me, I turned on my heel. He would follow if he needed to speak with me. Was I in health? It was the least of my concerns. As for my spiritsâ¦I strode on, up the staircase, aware of his footsteps behind me, relieved that he followed me, and yet anger burned through
any relief. I flung back the door into one of the chambers used by the family for celebrations, empty now except for a chest and a pair of backless stools, an empty dais at one end. The walls, usually hung with magnificent tapestries, as were the rooms of all the Duke's accommodations, were bare and grim. In a corner there was a stash of boxes and trestles, on one resting the folded tapestries.
A bleak place for a bleak reconciliation.
There would be no reconciliation here.
I walked to the centre of the chamber, where I turned.
âWe will speak in here. Where there is no one to eavesdrop and pass comment on my shameâor yours.'
The Duke inclined his head, before closing the door quietly at his back, then casting gloves onto the chest, dislodging a swirl of dust as he did so. Something I must take in hand, I thought inconsequentially. The room had not been used of late, nor would be, for we were in no mood for celebrations. What emotion would it witness now? The Duke made no further move to approach me, but stood, hands clasped lightly around his sword belt, the dim light glinting on the breastplate of his half-armour.
âWell?' When my voice sounded annoyingly shrill to my own ears, I tempered it. âI have remained here as ordered. What would you say to me, my lord?'
The pause was infinitesimal, but I noted it. âYou will have heard by now.'
âYes. I think I have been the recipient of every piece of rumour about the pair of us that has run the length and breadth of the country.'
I would not make this easy for him.
âThey have destroyed The Savoy,' he said.
I raised my brows. Did not all the world know of that? I would not respond.
A muscle in his jaw leaped beneath the fine skin, but so it often did when he might struggle with a document from a difficult petitioner. I folded my hands, one on the other, over the clasp of my girdle. I had had many days to consider all that I knew, almost as many days in which the developments had festered like an ill-tended wound. It would astonish him how much I had gleaned from the gossip of passing travellers. I tilted my chin, as if I might be mildly interested in what he had to say.
I stopped my fingers before they could clench into fists. I would hold fast to composure. I would be reasonable. Understanding. I would, by the Virgin!
âWhy have you come?' I asked.
âI had to know for myself that you were safe.'
âSafe,' I repeated unhelpfully.
âBut I knew you were. God sheltered you from all harm. I asked Him to.'
My brows remained beautifully arched. âI am flattered. Or I suppose I am.'
âAnd I had to come and tell you myself.'
He took a step forward as if testing the water, as if there might be an unseen pit below the surface, into which he would haplessly fall and drown.
My lips thinned and curled minutely. âSo you said.'
His spine was as straight as an ash sapling, his voice raw, but that might be thirst after a long journey. I offered him no refreshment. It was his castle. He could summon his own steward if he so wished.
âIt would be discourteous,' he continued in the same limpid
but impassive tone, âfor you to be the subject of gossip and not know why I didâ¦why I did what I did. I have come to try to explainâ¦So that you would not remain ignorantâ¦'
Not once had he moved, his breathing as level as if he were purchasing a horse.
âExplain?' I would be understanding, would I? My fingers clenched anyway, nails digging deep into my palms. I kept my voice low, yet even though, raised as I was to impeccable good manners, I knew it was unforgivably venomous, I chose every word with precise care.
âExplain? And I should thank you for that? I have, of course, to be thankful that you have considered my situation to any degree. In the circumstance of my beingâwhat was it you said?âan agent of Satan? But then, you have always considered the welfare of all your servants, have you not, my lord? How charitable of you to dismiss them from your service in Scotland, so that they need not suffer with you in your painful exile there, far away from friends and family. If I had been with you in Edinburgh, doubtless you would have done the same for me. Would you have wept over me, as I am told you did over them? For it seems I am no better than a servant to you.'
My tongue hissed on the word servant. I had not realised the true depths of my bitterness.
âThat is not so.' His lips barely moved.
âAhâ¦Were the rumours then false? I did not think so, but I am willing to be persuaded. Answer me one question, my gracious, chivalrous lord. Are you sending me away?'
The silence in the room was as taut as a bowstring before the release of the deadly arrow.
âYes.' He took a breath as if he would have said more. Then repeated: âYes. I am sending you away.'
My anger bubbled dangerously, too dangerously, near the surface.
âI don't think I can ever forgive you,' I said between clenched teeth, âfor the manner in which you did it.'
âWhat have you heard?'
âYou would not believe what I have heard. I did not, at first. Until each repetition came as a slap in the face.'
âAnd now you believe what is said? You hold it to be the truth without hearing me? To know why I took the decisions that I did?' His hands remained clenched at his belt. âDo I not at least deserve a hearing from you, of all people? If you love me, you will hear me out.'
For a moment I closed my eyes against the pain of that thrust. But only for a moment.
âOh, I will give you a hearing, my lord. I will listen,' I said. âBut it is difficult to give you the benefit of the doubt, is it not? When Constanza rode past my door, intent on an emotional and intimate reunion with you.'
He had not expected that from me. His eyes widened a little.
âIs that what happened?' I asked.
âYes.'
A flat affirmation, all I needed, all I dreaded. It was what I had feared more than any other. I turned my back on him because I could not look at him without weeping, and marched to the window, the thick glass grown opaque with rain and gloom, where I smacked my knuckles hard against the stone surround.
âOh, they relished telling me the detail of that little event,'
I announced to the view I could not see. âWhat pleasure to give all the details to the whore, of the triumphant victory of the ill-used wife.' I looked back over my shoulder as I fought to control my voice. âThey told me how you met on the road at Northallerton. How the distraught Duchess fell on her knees in the dust at your feet and begged your forgiveness for her lack of affection towards you. Three times she prostrated herself, so they told me. Three times, with tears and wailing, until you lifted her up and reassured her that all would be well between you. Is that how it went?'
I saw my lips curl again with wry appreciation, a grey reflection in the glass, but there was no humour in it. Poor Constanza. Had she accepted at last that she had had a part in causing the rift between them? Did the attack on her precious Hertford stir enough terror in her heart that she saw the need to humble herself and beg her husband's protection? In my own loss I had no sympathy for her. I turned my face away, so that he would not note the gleam of moisture on my cheeks, to watch him in the reflection.
âDid you? Did you lift her into your arms?'
âYes.'
I nodded as if in agreement. âOf course you did. That is exactly what you would do. And then you escorted her to the safe luxury of the Bishop of Durham's house where you marked the occasion of your joyful reunion. Until daylight, I understand, with great merriment and celebrations. You asked pardon for your misdeeds and she willingly forgave you.' I looked up, stretching my neck, noting the carving of a cat stalking some misbegotten creature in the stonework above my head. I had never spoken to him in this manner before, but I did not care. I did not care if it roused the fire
of his temper. âBefore God, John,
I
was not invited to the safety of the Bishop's lodging, was I! No place for me. No place for the whore.'
âNo.'
Again that cold affirmation of my accusations, that flat acceptance, when my soul longed for his denial.
âNo,' I repeated. âThere could be no place for me, could there?'
In my mind I saw our two disparate reunions with the Duke, Constanza and I placed side by side, one dramatic and emotional, a true reconciliation for the Duchess, with intimate kisses and promises for the future. The other, as we stood here now, the width of the room between us, bitter and redolent of raw grief, a portcullis of iron lowered between us.
And as that vision filled my mind, without warning all control vanished. I swung round, pressing my back against the stone. âYou rejected me. You denounced me. An evil life, you said, that you had led with me. A life of
lechery.'
I all but spat the word. âWas our love lechery? You stated it, for all to hear. I'm amazed that you did not get your herald to announce it with a blast of a trumpet. You will drive me from your household, you said. Banish me. That's what you said, isn't it?'