Read The Scandalous Duchess Online
Authors: Anne O'Brien
âThen I have decided. I want you to be my damsel,' she stated with all the imperiousness of the house of Castile.
âAs I will be. The Duke has appointed me.' I explained, slowly: âMy sister, Mistress Chaucer, will also come to care for you.'
âIs she like you?'
âShe is very capable. She knows about children.'
The new wife stretched out her arm for the maid to wash with a soft cloth. Her glance to me was suddenly sharp. âI
fear thisâ¦' She spread her free hand over her belly. âIt makes me feel ill.'
âThere is no need to fear, my lady. You are young and strong.'
âStill I fear.' She shrugged. âWere you with Duchess Blanche? When she was with child?'
âYes, my lady.'
âShe lost some of her babies, did she not?'
âYes, my lady.' I could not lie, but I poured her a cup of warm wine and offered it, hoping to distract her. It would do no good to speak of the three little boys who had not seen the first anniversary of their birth. Or the girl, Isabella, who had barely breathed.
âHow many?' the Duchess insisted.
âFour,' I admitted. âBut she carried three who are now grown.'
She waved aside the wine. âHave you lost any babies?'
âNo, my lady.'
âThen you will stay with me. You will give me your advice.' A demand again, not a request. âIt isâ¦it is
imperativo
that I carry
un heredero
for Castile.'
I caught the gist. âOf course,' I soothed. The Duchess Constanza needed an heir.
âMy lord will get my kingdom back for me. I will not live in England long. My lord will drive my
vicioso
uncle Enrique from Castile. He will kill him for me. And I will take back what is mine.'
It sounded as if she had learned the phrases. So confident. So driven. Her eyes were aflame, her hands fisted on the edge of the bath. Then she looked at me, gaze narrowed again on my face.
âYou are beautiful.'
Which surprised me. âThank you, my lady.'
âI am said to be beautiful too.'
âYes, my lady. The people of London filled the streets to look at you.'
Her frown deepened into a scowl. âWas Blanche beautiful?'
âYes, my lady. But fair. Not dark like you.'
âMy lord likes beautiful things.'
âYes, my lady. You will lack for nothing here at The Savoy.'
My soothing comment elicited a torrent of Castilian.
âA excepción de la tierra de mi nacimientoây la venganza.'
I looked helplessly at the Castilian damsel who had hovered at my side throughout.
âThe Duchess says: “Except for the land of my birth. And vengeance.”'
âVengeance for what, my lady?'
Which was answered by a flash of eye and another stream of invective, carefully translated for me:
âMy fatherâKing Pedroâhis murderers live on, unpunished. He was ambushed by assassins, paid for by my uncle Enrique. He was decapitated and left unburied to his great dishonour. His head was sent to Seville for public exhibition.
Dios mio!
It is my life's ambition to have my father interred in Castilian soil with all honour and his murderers slain. That I will do before I die.'
âOf course, my lady.'
Her flat chest heaving, extreme vexation in every gesture, Constanza surged to her feet, splashing water, the evidence of the forthcoming child clearer as she arched her body.
âMy lord will take Castile from the deplorable Enrique. We will rule it together as King and Queen. This childâthis sonâwill rule in his own time. I will have fulfilled my destinyâand my new husband's too. What more could he desire, than to be King of Castile?'
What more could the Duke desire? There was no path for his ambitions in England, but Castile might just provide them. A kingdom of his own, to rule in his own name, answerable to no one. For the first time I understood the importance of this marriage for him. This marriage, the promise of this kingdom, would give him his heart's desire.
âI am tired,' she announced. âI will go to bed.'
We dried her with soft linen, combed her hair. Wrapped in an embroidered chamber robe, feet in fur-lined slippers, she was soon propped against the pillows on her bed.
âDo you think the Duke cares for me?' she asked.
How could he not love her? She was beautiful and wellborn, an heiress with a kingdom for the taking by a courageous man. Obvious to all, the Duke was chivalrous and caring in his first meeting with her. Of course he loved her.
âThe Duke chose you before all other ladies who wished to wed a Plantagenet prince,' I replied, for was that not the truth? âHow could he not care for you?'
âBien! I hope it is so.' She nodded, seeming to understand.
Do you care for him?
I felt an urge to ask. I had no idea. She gave nothing away. She was shrewd and sharp, and I knew it was my duty to hope that the Duke would be happy with her and she with him.
Jealousy, bitter as aloes, coated my mouth as I left her to sleep, but then the erratic leap of my thoughts forced me into a wry smile.
Beware of the wife
, Mistress Saxby had warned.
It's easy to be carried away by the glamour of stolen kisses, but a wife can make your life a misery. Take my word for it
.
I would indeed beware, if ever such kisses came my way. It seemed, on my first steps as a damsel to Duchess Constanza, an unlikely eventuality.
So this marriage to the Queen of Castile was of vast importance to the Duke. It was brought home to me just how critical a step it was for him when a messenger arrived from the King as the household, without the new Duchess, sat at supper in the sumptuous splendour of the Great Hall. He bowed and handed over a sealed document.
âHis Grace the King asks that you consider the contents,
Monseigneur d'Espaigne
. He would value
Monseigneur's
advice at the earliest possible moment.'
The Duke took the packet, inviting the messenger to sit with us while he read.
Monseigneur d'Espaigne
.
Already he was recognised as King of Castile in his wife's name. I would never see him as thatâto me he would always be the Dukeâeven if courtesy and etiquette determined that I comply, but without doubt it would colour the direction of his future life. Would
Monseigneur d'Espaigne
not forget everything but the road to the throne of Castile, paved with gold and bloodshed, which lay stretching in a glittering seam before him, with the bride at his side? He would take an army and begin a re-conquest of the kingdomâand then he would live there, far from England, far from me, with his wife and new family.
An excellent outcome for all concerned. All my concerns should be allayed.
But they were not.
I offered up a silent prayer for forgiveness as the Duke perused the King's letter, and my spoon congealed in a rich dish of
mammenye ryal
, the minced poultry redolent of almond milk and sweet wine, while I listed my sins in silent petition before the Blessed Virgin. Lust for a man who was bound to another. Avarice, the sin of deadly excess, as evidenced by my uncontrolled emotion. Greed that made me wish for an affection that was not mine to take. Envy against the Duchess, beautiful and regal, in her rightful place at the Duke's side and in his bed. Pride that blinded me to my own unworthiness.
All of those. The tally of them horrified me.
Can you not find evidence of Sloth, Wrath and Gluttony as well?
I asked bitterly.
I was sure I could. I put my spoon down, determined to eat no more that night. I should never have come back. It was an unforgivable mistake. I should not have allowed myself to be drawn into dreams of what could never be. I had allowed myself to live, however briefly, in a magical scene in which my love was no longer unrequited. One day spent at The Savoy, absorbing the high politics of the occasion and the determination of the new Duchess, had shown me the futility of it all. The Duke would assuredly have other fish to fry.
âHas my wife found her chamber to her liking?' the Duke asked Lady Alice as we rose at last at the end of the meal.
âYes, my lord, so I understand. Lady Katherine waited on her.'
Since I was standing within earshot, he could do no other than look to me for clarification.
âI trust she has suffered no ill effects from the journey, Lady Katherine?'
âNone, my lord,' I replied, coolly informative and nothing more. âThe Duchess is weary, of course. She will be strong again by the morning. I am honoured to be appointed as her damsel, my lord,' I added.
âI can think of none better.'
He moved on beside Lady Alice, head bent, absorbed in some household problem.
Well, that had been entirely impersonal, completely centred on the well-being of the Castilian Queen, as it should be. His smile was such that he would bestow on any one of his retinue from his most eminent physician to Nichol, the gardener at The Savoy. That briefest of conversations had made everything crystal clear. All my worrying had been futile.
Now it must be for me to put it right in my mind, to return to the calm existence of my previous service at The Savoy. It would be just like before. It would be like stepping back into my old skin, before all the upheaval. Before the Duke had said what he said, and torn my world apart.
Why did he have to do that, when it was obviously an aberration? Why were men sometimes as insensitive as a wild boar's charge when faced with a huntsman's lance? And there he was, entirely oblivious to the disturbance he had created, presumably concerned for nothing more than the perfect lie of the damask along his shoulders, the dramatic gleam of the gold chain against the red and black and gold of the cloth.
A little bubble of anger in my belly made me wish I had not eaten those final spoonfuls of the highly spiced dish. I regretted it even more when the Duke abandoned Lady Alice and awaited me by the door. My heart leaped, then plummeted as he raised a hand to stop my progress.
âLady Katherine.'
âMy lord?'
âAre you angry?' he asked abruptly.
We were, for that one moment, alone.
âNo, my lord,' I reassured him quickly, smiling lightly, as I smoothed what I thought must be a particularly unyielding expression from my face. How well Queen Philippa had schooled me. âThere is nothing to disturb me except gratitude for your kindness.'
âI will send for you,' he said with a shadow of a frown.
I was not to be allowed to slip into my old skin after all. His appraisal, agate-bright, was direct and uncompromising. I met it the same way, until he gestured for me to precede him from the hall, adding imperiously:
âYou will come to me.'
I opened my mouth, to refuse, or so I thought, until, fleetingly, he touched my arm. My adroitly composed refusal promptly fled, my willpower compromised by the slightest pressure of his fingers against my tight-buttoned sleeve. I think I looked at him in horror.
âYou give me no peace. Why should that be?' he demanded.
I could find no reply at all to that.
I walked on, conscious that the Duke's footsteps did not follow me, until a prickle of awareness snatched at my attention.
I was being observed from the little knot of newcomers just arrived at the outer door.
There, muffled in furs, eyes cool and searching on my face, a cage of singing finches much like my own in her hand, was Philippa. My sister. I smiled, and kept my smile lively, even though I did not enjoy the judgemental quality of her expression. Philippa was not smiling.
In my own chamber, before she could descend on me, I put the rosary away in my coffer. Caught between sister Philippa and the Duke, I must tread carefully.
âWhere is he then, Philippa?'
âI have no idea. Picardy, the last I heard.'
As I seated myself on my bed, my sister began to divest herself of her furs, placing them carefully over a polished settle, sweeping her hand down over the lustrous skins. She was not without means, but she took care of her possessions with a neat exactitude I recognised from our shared childhood. Her voice now, in maturity, was clipped with displeasure. âA military expedition, so I'm led to believe, but why he should feel the need to go whenâ¦' She hissed her irritation. âI am, as usual, kept in the dark. He gave me the finches to keep me company and sweeten my mood.'
âVery poetic,' I observed, not daring to laugh.
âPoetic, but useless,' she remarked, uncharitably I thought. But then, I was not wed to Geoffrey Chaucer. I did not think that it was an experience I would enjoy, despite his erudition and clever way with words.
Philippa had arrived eventually at my chamber, leaving me much relieved that what I had thought to be a censorious stare had proved to be nothing of the sort, when she
had laughed and fallen into my arms. Or perhaps she was keeping the censure for later. I knew my sister well.
âI am so very pleased to be back here,' she announced. After Duchess Blanche's death, when her household was disbanded and I had gone to Kettlethorpe, my sister had taken up residence in the Chaucer family property in Thames Street. âIt was becoming very cramped. I've brought the children too, as you saw.'
As I had. Elizabeth and another Thomas, their ages matching with Margaret and my own son.
Philippa's eyes glinted. âAre you pleased to see me?'
âDelighted. I'll happily hand the Duchess over to you, and all her starchy women, while I lurk in the background. Do you speak Castilian?'
âNo.'
âA pity.'
âIs she like Blanche?'
âShe is nothing like Blanche.'
âSo I presume we're going to Tutbury. Or Hertford.'
âIf Queen Constanza can be persuaded that that is where she wishes to go.'
âSo it's like that, is it? Do you come too?'
âI am appointed as a damsel with you. Just like old times.'