Read The Scandalous Duchess Online
Authors: Anne O'Brien
Except that it was not, and never would be, no matter what the outcome of the promised conversation with the Duke.
Philippa must have seen some shadow of my torment. âWhat's wrong?' she demanded.
âNothing.'
âMissing Hugh?'
âYes.'
âI saw the Duke being very solicitous.'
âThe Duke is always solicitous,' I replied, more quickly than was perhaps wise.
âTo have a
tête-à -tête
in the Great Hall, with his wife's damsel?'
So I had been right about the censure. Philippa had been saving her well-sharpened arrows. Perhaps, divorced from court, dissatisfied with the restrictions on her life because of her perennially absent husband, she had been storing them up for such an occasion as this. It behoved me to keep my wits about me. I might be an innocent party in this situation, but guilt had a habit of encroaching on the edges. I grimaced at the image that sprang to mind, like fat around a bowl of mutton pottage.
âThe Duke is solicitous of everyone, as you well know,' I responded. âHe has my eternal gratitude. Without this position, Kettlethorpe would sink beneath the floods.'
âYou look well in the role of Lady of Kettlethorpe.' The sharp assessment was still there in her eyes. âI envy you.'
âAs a widow? With a ruinous estate?'
âNo one would know. You look very sleek and smart.'
I laughed, smoothing the rich fur edging. âI was asked to put aside my widow's weeds.'
âBy the Duke?'
âYes. It would not have been appropriate.'
âI see!'
The twinkle in her eye drove me to employ diversionary tactics. âBeing a widow has its problems.'
âI see none!'
âIt has still to be decided who will administer the estates. Since Thomas is a minor, and Hugh a vassal of the crown,
they have reverted to the King. The wardship of Thomas could be sold to anyone. Our finances are worse than you can ever imagine. You're lucky to have a husband with a steady income.'
Philippa found my plight of no great importance compared with her own miseries. âI may as well be a widow, the amount of time I spend without him.'
âBut you are financially secure. I had to come begging.'
âKettlethorpe as bad as ever?'
I recalled Philippa's single brief visit there, her pointed comments and her rapid departure, and replied sharply, âWorse. Is Geoffrey as bad as ever?'
âWorse.'
We laughed, not unkindly. It was an old exchange and so we settled into gossip, now that we had established our old relationship: Philippa sharp and brittle, critical of the world, I more tolerant. I was the elder by little more than a year, yet it was not always obvious. Philippa sometimes proved to be the more worldly wise.
I sat and watched her as she told me about the doings of her two children. We were close, neither of us having any memory of our mother, and barely of our father, Sir Gilles de Roet, a knight from Hainault, who had died there when I was three years old, having given us into the tender care of Queen Philippa to whom he owed his service. We had a brother, Walter, taken to soldiering like my father, dying in the retinue of Edward of Woodstock at the battle of Poitiers, and an elder sister, Elizabeth, who, a nun in a monastic house at Mons, had gone from birth to death without my knowing her.
So, to all intents and purposes alone in the world, Philippa
and I owed everything to the kindly and maternal Queen: our raising, our education and our position in the household of Duchess Blanche when we were very young, as nothing more than cradle-rockers to the two tiny daughters. Without parents we had clung to each other, and although our lives had taken different directions, the closeness remained. But that did not mean that I was not careful around my sister's caustic tongue.
âAre you happy?' I asked, interrupting a long list of complaints about Agnes, Geoffrey's ageing mother, who still occupied the Thames Street house.
âAs much as I ever am. I don't think it is in my nature to be satisfied. Perhaps if I had wed a handsome knight like you.' A twist of bitterness curved her lips.
âYour husband is a man of great worth.'
âYes. I know.'
âHis writing brings him great fame.'
âTrue.'
âYou have your children.'
âAnd they are a blessing. But I'll have no more.'
I paused, considering whether to ask why she was so adamant, and decided against it. âGeoffrey cares for you,' I observed instead.
âGeoffrey is entirely indifferent to me. He has never written a poem to my beauty or my fine eyes. All he does is condemn what he calls the entrapment of marriage.'
I laughed.
âDon't laugh! Do you know? He owns over sixty books. He'd rather spend time with them than with me.' She chuckled as I continued to laugh at her complaint but there was a sadness there that touched my heart. âI am just dissatisfied.
It will be better at Hertford.' She rose and walked to the window to look out over the Thames. âWhat about you, Kate? Do you have an eye to another husband?'
âI have only been a widow for a matter of months.'
âA lover then.'
âPhilippa!'
âYou're too pious for your own good. You had not seen Hugh forâhow long before his death?'
âSixteen months. And I am not pious.'
âI know you better than you know yourself. You would have to say a full decade of paternosters before leaping into a lover's bed.'
âI would not!'
But I would, as I knew only too well, as I was thrown into a puddle of doubt. My conscience was a strong force within me, and sin was not something to be lightly cast aside, as I was finding to my cost when all my strictly held tenets of living seemed to be hanging by a thread in the face of the Duke's campaign. If I took this step to please him, if I went to him when he summoned me, the thread would be cut as cleanly as if I were finishing the edge of a girdle. I could not hold to any pretence that it would not matter. It would. If I stepped, I must accept the guilt and the condemnation.
âKatherine.' Philippa nudged me. âWhere were you?'
âNowhere.' I knew my cheeks were flushed. âYou were saying?'
âThat I could take a loverâ¦' Philippa mused.
âGeoffrey might mind.'
âGeoffrey might not even notice. So, have you set your eye on anyone?'
Another diversionary tactic was needed. âSpeaking of Geoffrey, does he talk to you about court matters?'
âSometimes. Why?'
âI'm interested in the Duke's ambitions. He's now addressed as
Monseigneur d'Espaigne
. Does he truly seek the crown of Castile?'
Does he love the Queen?
That is what I wanted to know.
Has he wed for love, as he wed Blanche, for the passion that was between them? Or was Constanza a pawn in a foreign alliance, a means to a political end because he saw the crown of Castile as a jewel on his horizon?
âGeoffrey thinks so,' Philippa replied carelessly. âThe Duke has ambitions. It has always been so for him, to seek power. It was once mooted that he become King of Scotland. Now it's Castile. A chance for a kingdom of his own.' She shrugged, displaying her own lack of interest. âHe's an ambitious man. It's no surprise. Why are you so interested?'
âI am not.'
âWell, he would not remain unwed for long, would he? He only has one son to step into his shoes. Perhaps he fell in love. Love at first sight.'
âPerhaps he did.'
It confirmed only what I had thought.
âGeoffrey says he gave her a magnificent wedding gift. A gold cup fashioned as a rose with a white dove on the lid. Sounds like a lover's gift to me.'
So it did to me. Which made everything so much worse. His invitation to me was the prelude to a mere dalliance, and I would not comply.
You will not comply anyway!
My conscience lectured.
âAnd she is strikingly beautiful, I hear. Enough to entrap the heart of any man.'
âYes, she is.'
Philippa had convinced me.
âEnough of Constanza.' Philippa stood, looking round appreciatively at the spacious accommodation reserved for me. âDo I share this room with you, or do I have a Castilian damsel to entertain? Let us go and discover, and find my children. By the by, I have been granted an annuity of ten pounds by the Duke in token of my service.' The slide of her eye was piercing. âIt's good to be appreciated. What are you paid? Are you worth more than I?'
I shook my head, quick to lie. How easily half-truths and deceptions leaped to my lips these days. âHow could I be?'
Another confession that I must make. I was relieved I had packed away the rosary. I would not have liked to explain that gift to her.
âR
obert!' I called out as I turned a corner in the early dusk. âRobert Rabbas! Where are you, in God's name!'
It was cold enough to turn the Thames to ice.
Shivering, infuriated, fingers so frozen I could barely bend them, I held my hood close beneath my chin. Why was there neither sight nor sound of a squire or a page or even a household servant when one was most needed to carry out a burdensome task? And why had we been blighted by a basket of green wood which did nothing but smoulder and smoke and give out no heat, when the weather was at its bleakest, driven in by March winds from the north?
Our plans to transfer the whole household to Hertford had gone awry, when Henry, the Lancaster heir, was struck down with a fever. Cross and fractious, sometimes weeping with pains in his joints, his little body alternated between burning heat and intense cold. With concerns for the health of her unborn childâfor might it not be the plague?â
Duchess Constanza was not to be persuaded that this was a childish ailment and expressed the desire to leave London immediately for the Duke's castle at Hertford. Within a day she was packed into a palanquin with her ladies and Philippa in attendance and they departed, the Duke accompanying her before returning to London to re-engage with the King and Prince Edward in planning for the campaign against the French for the New Year. It was expected that the Duke would lead the forces.
He had not sent for me. In the circumstances he might well leave England with nothing resolved between us.
Meanwhile we remained at The Savoy, the young people and their household, expecting the fever to run like wildfire through the rest of the children before it wore itself out. It was agreed that we would follow to Hertford when the danger was passed.
I was not sorry, as I sat and bathed Henry's forehead and heated limbs with common henbane boiled in wine. The large furry leaves might look uninviting but they were of sound reputation in cooling inflammations, I consoled myself. I could hear Constanza's voice raised in Castilian complaint even as the ducal party rode out of the gate, and silently wished my sister well as I decided that it would be a relief to be free of the Duke's presence.
Yet living in such a milieu as The Savoy, in the world of the Duke's own creation of art and wealth, it was hard not to sense his presence, even when he was miles away. At the turn of a stair, there he might be. Kneeling in the chapel, riding his bay stallion into the courtyard, sitting at supper in the Great Hall. Even though he did none of those things,
it seemed that I might catch that glimpse of him if I looked carefully enough.
I would not give in to temptation. I would not look.
Better that he is not here!
I reprimanded myself.
So now with hoar frost forming on the insides of the glazing and the fire making little impact, we had wrapped the children as warmly as we could in furs and bedcovers and sent for fuel two hours ago, until spurred by righteous anger I had volunteered to chase it up. Thomas Haselden, Controller of the Duke's Household, was nowhere to be found. Sir Thomas Hungerford, our steward, had travelled with the Duke and Constanza to Hertford. Somehow the smooth running of the household had got out of kilter, and approaching the hour for supper as it was, the servants would be busy in the kitchens, but that was no good reason for us to freeze to death. Elizabeth had developed a cough, exacerbated by the acrid smoke, and I suspected Blanche would follow suit. Even Alyne, usually stalwart, had taken to her bed, feeling her age in her bones, she said. Lady Alice was considering the tenor of her complaint to the Duke when she next set eyes on him.
The shadows here in the inner courtyard were thick and deep in the corners, but as I strode on, there was a movement. Emerging from the side door in the far corner came a dark-clad figure with a bundle under his arm. He would do very well for my errand. I raised my hand to draw his attention. I also raised my voice again.
âRobert, is it?' The figure was tall enough to be the lanky page who had brought us the basket of unseasoned logs. âWe have need of fuel in the schoolroom. Would you arrange it?'
He paused. Hesitated. Bowed.
âI have already requested more wood. Four hours ago.' A little exaggeration would not come amiss.
The figure remained motionless. I raised my voice a little more so that it echoed back at me off the dank stones.
âFetch some if you please. And don't just pass the message to someone else and forget about it. It is too cold for the children. And not unseasoned wood either!' I added, as he disappeared within.
I returned to the schoolroom.
âAny success?' Lady Alice shivered in the draught with the opening of the door.
âIt has yet to be seen,' I replied, thinking that the temperature was little different inside than out. The children looked pinched, and yes, Blanche was coughing, her eyes red-rimmed. Only Henry, newly recovering and already beginning to resent the curb on his freedom, looked full of energy. As I stooped to tuck a fur bedspread more firmly around Philippa, the door behind me was shouldered open.
âFuel, mistress,'
âAnd about time too!'
âI came as fast as I could, mistress.'
I swung round. There, placing a basket of logs beside the sulky fire, with an impressive flexing of arm and shoulder muscle, was the Duke. Swinging his short cloak back over one shoulder, he applied himself to brushing twigs and dust from his hands, beating the residue from his tunic.
âMy lord!' We curtsied hurriedly. The children began to emerge from their wrappings like moths from a cocoon, lured by this timely distraction. I busied myself with some entirely unnecessary task, hiding my flushed cheeks, but not before I had registered the gleam in the ducal eye.
âMore's on its way.' He looked round, taking in our beleaguered state, frowning as he pulled his hat from his head and ruffled his hair. âBefore God, it's as cold as Hades in here.'
âWhat are you doing, John?' Alice asked, walking across to remove more pieces of debris from his sleeve. âDo we employ no servants?'
âI expect we do.' His eyes were wide and guileless when they slid in my direction. âBut I was instructed to fetch this personally, and not pass the message onto another and then forget about it.'
I felt a flush of heat creep even deeper from chin to hairline.
Alice laughed. âWhen did you return?'
âJust this moment, and not before time, it seems. I'm pleased to be of use.'
âForgive me, my lord,' I said. I could not meet that apparently innocent stare. âI would not presumeâ¦'
He brushed it aside with a little gesture, much as he had brushed the twigs from the richly figured cloth. âI'm rarely mistaken for a servant, much less Robert. Some would say it was good for my soul and I should thank God that I am reminded of the humility of Christ.' But there was laughter in his voice as he looked round, taking stock, graciously accepting a psalter from Henry, ruffling his son's hair much as he had ruffled his own. âIt's too cold in here. They'll all come down with the ague.' With a grin he pulled his soft felt hat low onto his son's head so that the fur brim covered the child's eyes, making Henry chortle with delight. âTake them to my rooms, Alice, and make them comfortable. Lady Katherine and I will arrange to bring books and whatever else she considers we needâ¦'
âAn excellent thoughtâ¦' Without fuss, Alice rounded up and ushered the little party of children and nursemaids out. Leaving me to face my nemesis. There he stood, between me and the door, hands loosely at his sides, his eyes watchful, expression unreadable. There was no escape and he would require an answer from me.
He must have seen me glance at the open door.
âNoâ¦' Within a breath, he had taken one stride and possessed himself of my hand, his frown deepening. âYou are frozen.'
And without more ado he seized my other hand, pulled me down to the settle just vacated by his daughters, wrapped my hands in the fur-lined folds of his mantle and held them firmly against the breast of his tunic, tightening his grip when I struggled to release them. Since to continue would be fruitless, and undignified, I gave up the lost cause and simply sat. Beneath my palms I absorbed the beat of his heart, hard and steady, far steadier than mine. All my thoughts were dominated by the one: he was too close, too overpowering, and I did not know what to say to him.
âI did not know that you were returned,' I said, inwardly flinching at the banal comment.
âI had to. I had to see you,' he replied evenly.
His eyes were dark, their usual brilliance muted, the flat planes of his face still.
âThis is wrong,' I remonstrated. âI must not be here with you like this.'
âDo you deny me the right to comfort you?'
âYou have no right.' Panic rose in me, because his touch made my blood beat in my ears.
âI am Plantagenet.'
Delivered with a swagger that took my breath with its arrogance.
âSo I am yours to command?'
âYes.'
âI don't know what you want from me, sir.'
âYou. I want you.'
And I struggled even more to find a reply. âYour loyalty is to your wife, my lord.'
Beneath my palms I felt him inhale, and tensed for a blast of Plantagenet irritation. Though his response was lightly made, it was unnerving in that he picked up our conversation as if there had not been a strained hiatus of six weeks.
âYou know what I want, Katherine. In God's name, I made myself plain enough. Too plain. I think if I recall correctly I showed a lamentable lack of finesseâbut I had hoped you would reconsider. It's been too long. How long is it since you came to me and I offered you my service and bed?'
The simplicity of that statement made my own heart bound. âSix weeks, my lord.' I knew exactly.
He laughed, making me feel foolish. âSo you have been counting too.'
And suddenly I cast off any thoughts of the difference in our status. We were no longer royal duke and loyal dependent, simply a man and a woman encountering a choice that was no choice, and never could be.
âMy answer is no different now,' I said.
âNor is my desire to have you with me. Are we at stale-mate? I wanted you then. I want you now.' His words were low and urgent, forcing me to listen and consider rather than wilfully reject. âI cannot accept that you are indifferent
to me. I can feel the blood raging through my body as I hold you, just as I can feel the beat of yours throbbing in your wrists.'
How horribly true. How could I deny what he could sense through the simple fact of our proximity? My throat was dry, my heart furiously beating against my ribs, as his heart did too with increased vehemence against my palms. I would be a fool to claim indifference when my cheeks were flushed with sudden warmth and my whole body trembled.
âIf I kissed you now, this very moment,' the Duke surmised, eyes as keen as one of his goshawks in the mews, âI wager your lips would be warm and welcoming.'
So did I. I knew they would. Close enough that I could see my own reflection in his eyes, it was impossible to hide the turbulence of my thoughts. Helplessly, I turned my face away.
âIf I kissed you, how could you deny the attraction that draws us together?' Lifting our joined hands, he turned my face to his. âDo you fear me? I don't think you doâand I'll not kiss you without your permission.' And with a smile that hacked at the base of all my convictions: âWill you be my love, Katherine?'
But I was not so lost to good sense. âI can't!' Why could he not
see?
âIt was wrong then and it is wrong now.'
âThat's what you said last time.'
âAnd I say it again. You should not ask it of me.'
Formality had fallen away from both of us. His eyes moved over my face, as if absorbing every feature. At first their hard brightness had returned, full of what I could only interpret as displeasure that I refused him. But then they softened, perhaps with regret. âIt is not my intention
to distress you.' It had the sound of a benediction as his grip loosened a little. And then, when I had thought he might actually accept my denial of him and leave me, his gaze sharpened as it flicked over my person.
âWhy are you not wearing my rosary?' So he had noticed the simple length of wooden beads at my waist, replacing the coral.
âBecause it is an unsuitable gift from you to your wife's damsel.'
âUnsuitable? What is unsuitable for the Duke of Lancaster to do?' Arrested, he lifted his chin. âI thought it most suitable. I thought you would like it, and would find more use for it than a hanap.'
âI do. Of course I do. It is magnificent.' I felt an urge to shake him, as a woman might shake any obtuse man who could not follow her line of reasoning. âTo give me such a giftâa gift of such portentâand then ask me to become your mistress, when I am part of your new wife's establishmentâ¦it is too much.'