Read Crown in Candlelight Online
Authors: Rosemary Hawley Jarman
‘Hadham, I thought,’ she said. ‘We stay there sometimes, as a change from Hertford.’ Her sadness had gone, her dark eyes were full of mischief. ‘I think I shall call him Edmund,’ she said, ‘in memory of poor disappointed Edmund Beaufort!’
Bedford laughed. He kissed her on both cheeks. No wonder Harry, and this Welsh wonder, loved her so.
‘God be with you, Katherine. I must go to oversee the levies. The King will be well looked after with me. Remember I am your friend.’ He got up. He said suddenly: ‘Young Harry clings very close to Richard of York. There’s proud blood there, an ambitious family. Do you approve, Katherine?’ but she shrugged, uninterested, and again he gloried in her womanliness. Never, never, could
she
lead an army …
She took her farewell of the King. God keep you, in France, my son. He vowed he would pray for her. The young priest looked on severely as she kissed him. She would like to have held the child close, but he was on his dignity, and it was a painful moment. Beneath the concealing gown, Owen’s child gave a hefty Welsh kick.
On her way back to Hertford, she felt great relief at Bedford’s attitude. She was glad he knew, although surprised at his liberal attitude. But he had a lot on his mind. And he didn’t know about her two miscarriages, one occurring quite soon after the move to Hertford, the other two years later. She would never forget that second miscarriage. She had been in bed afterwards, still bleeding, out of danger but sorry for herself. Owen had been lying on top of the bed beside her, holding her, bathing her forehead, and she had fallen asleep in his arms. That was when she had had the dream. More like a vision, very strange. She had told him.
‘A woman,
mon amour
… a woman with long red hair and a fox cub in her arms. She was weeping so dreadfully. She was more distressed than we are … it was strange … all mixed up with the herbal potion.’
And he had said, very carefully, his body becoming rigid: ‘What potion was that,
cariad
?’
‘Oh, some stuff that Cobham advised … I took it once or twice.’
He had left the bed. She had never heard anyone swear like it in any language. When he was in control he came back and told her all about Cobham. So notorious a witch that even when he was in France she had been talked about. Yet so clever none could pin down her evils.
‘So it is she who has killed my children,’ he had said. She could not look at his eyes; he frightened her so. She wept; he became calmer, tender again, telling her it was no fault of hers. I will make you another child, he said. When you are strong again. Sweet Cathryn.
She came back to Hertford. The sun was shining. He was waiting for her. Standing in his embrace, she felt a scratching at her gown. A fluffy white dog grinned up at her.
‘I remembered,’ he said. ‘Your little dogs—your Beppo and Jacquot, who died. Page got this one for me. A sailor at Southampton brought it home. White dogs are hard to find. Don’t ask me what breed he is.’
He was a mystic. He could cut down into her most secret past and heal wounds none other had ever seen or cared about. He picked her up and carried her into the hall, and up the stairs. She had been away for a week. She kissed his neck. She knew his mind.
‘Bedford knows,’ she told him. ‘Gloucester knows. But there’s no need to worry. John was so kind …’
While she told him he walked to the solar window and looked out. Huw and Caradoc were in the yard. They were good little hardworking boys, though he thought Huw not overblessed with brains. They had settled well, they were not homesick for Wales. It was good to talk Welsh to them. Cathryn could speak quite a bit of Welsh. He thought like this to blot out a retrospective pain.
Bedford knows. Huw was grooming a horse. Caradoc was tending the roses. Red roses. He could have told Cathryn himself that their bliss was no secret. Two months ago, was it? No, it was near Christmas. He had gone with her to Windsor, as part of her entourage. Careful to keep away, not to speak or touch or look. She wanted a fur cloak that had been left behind. He had gone down to the Wardrobe, and just outside the door, had heard the voices. One of them was Robert Waterton’s. But the first was Thomas Harvey—one-time friend.
‘I see we have his Grace with us today.’
His Grace. That could mean anyone. Several lords and Bishops were at court.
Someone laughed. ‘We’re honoured.’
Another voice: ‘Who?’
‘The Queen’s creature. Katherine’s tame stallion!’
Loud laughter. Then he heard the voice of Waterton, who had loved the King. It was full of grieving rage.
‘Sweet Christ!’ Waterton said. ‘Would that King Harry could return,
for just one day
… he’d have the bowels from that …’ An unspeakable name.
He had felt the blood leaving his face. Of its own volition his hand unsheathed the baselard at his belt. He touched its wafer edge, cutting his thumb, watching his own blood spring. Harvey first, up under the ribs, straight into the heart. Then Waterton. Then the others.
‘Fell on his feet, didn’t he?’ said another voice. ‘The post’s no sinecure, I’ll wager. But he was always a good cocksman, from what I heard …’
‘I’d not complain, to be in his place!’
‘Sweet Jesus, yes. She has the look …’
‘I wonder if she pays him by the hour, or by the deed!’
They all burst out laughing again. Except Waterton.
His father Meredyth had killed a man in anger. For the rest of his days he had lived a fugitive, outside the peace. It was the hardest thing he had ever done in his life, to sheathe that blade, to walk in to the sudden awful silence with his face and lips chalk-white, to go to the chest and take a fur cloak, any cloak, and walk out again under Waterton’s loathing eyes. But he did it. Kill, as he should have killed, defend her as she should have been defended, and he would never see her again. He felt as if they had all had their hands on her. He felt himself defiled. Riding back to Hertford behind her equipage, he shook all over. He felt dirty. Bought and sold. Her tame stallion
As soon as they reached home and were in their chamber, he threw her on the floor and raped her. Not in play or in pretence, but hurting her. It relieved his feelings somewhat. He took a long time over it. As far as he could judge, that was when the child she now carried was conceived. It should be a strong fierce child, got in such anger. She had kissed him, kissed away his shame. He did not tell her. Demons could not have dragged it from him. Now he put the memory away. But he would never accompany her to court again.
Now she was leaving the solar, going towards her bedchamber, looking back at him once over her shoulder. The white dog trotted beside her. The back of her neck shone like a pearly crescent. She swayed like a young tree as she walked. He went after her, managing to shut the dog out of the bedchamber.
He turned her to face him. She had been away for a week. All of her was so lovely he didn’t know where to start. Five years with her! It could have been five weeks. Five days. The passion was brighter, hotter. At times it reached peaks of intensity that awed them both, almost frightened them.
‘Be careful. The child.’
There was no need to remind him. He wanted this child desperately. Nearly as much as he wanted her.
‘I have decided to call him Edmund,’ she murmured.
‘Whatever you please. Oh, my Cathryn …’
‘Do not punish me so, Uncle.’ The King spoke quietly through a bleeding lip. ‘You do ill to strike the Lord’s anointed.’
Despite these brave words, he bowed his head like a beast to the slaughter before Gloucester’s massive menace. It was wrong for his uncle to chastise him; there was nothing in the edicts of the Privy Council to approve such acts—he was almost sure of this. On the other hand he was guilty. Guilty. He should be punished. His guilt had been revealed to him clearly during the last dreadful, dream-like eighteen months in France. Before his eyes men had burned a woman, a woman who had cried on the Holy Name at the last. Jeanne d’Arc was always with him, in dreams and daylight, her sad eyes looking into his. She had come from God. They had burned her, and he had done nothing to assuage her doom. Therefore he was guilty. His guilt blurred any perception that Gloucester tormented him now from any motive save his own foul humour. He sighed. Humphrey of Gloucester thought: I hate the sight of him. That frail, black-clad figure, heir to all the greatness I could have worn so much better. This diademed infant so lost and holy … he irks me, oh how he irks me with his tiny omnipotence …
‘Anointed!’ he sneered. ‘You call that makeshift mummery in Notre Dame, where you were sacred by a mere
Bishop
, a true coronation? Charles of Bourges is crowned King of France. Your father died in vain. Are you not ashamed?’
‘I am ashamed,’ said the King softly. From the tail of his eye he saw the woman, pretending to work on her tapestry. Her long silver needle rose and fell. He felt it penetrating his own nerves, delicate, relentless, sewing him to his own tragic future, tightening his guilt. Eleanor Cobham, Duchess of Gloucester. Watching him. She is of the Devil, he thought. His pliant mind registered the fact unerringly, but he was not comforted, for how could he be right in his judgement and the rest of the world be wrong? For
Jeanne la Pucelle
was of God, and he had watched what they did to her. Seeing her truth in that last terrible moment. Yet Eleanor is of the Devil, with her shifting, changing dark shape and the flashing silver needle that goes straight to the heart, biting, punishing, drawing his spirit’s blood …
Gloucester was speaking of his mother now, saying dreadful things about her. Cardinal Beaufort had agreed that the King should go with her to Wales for a short visit. If he could get through today—he would look forward to it. And to seeing the children—he had never seen her children. Edmund, and the baby, Jasper. It was a secret between them. Gloucester was still saying terrible things about his mother.
‘… make the most of your visit to her. It will be the last for a long time. She is an evil influence.’
Master Simon, his young chaplain, never said that, although there was a certain veiled disapproval in him when he spoke of her. He merely said that the King should pray for her, and for all sinners. Other than that he made no comment. Now the King felt himself moved to defend her. I love her very much, he said, and Humphrey raised his hand again.
‘No,’ said Eleanor. ‘No, my lord.’
She rose and came to him, terrifying him with her gentleness as she wiped the blood from his mouth. She looked at her husband over the King’s head, a keen black look like a viper’s inclination. The Cardinal will notice if you mark him further, the look said. And more: give him to me. I have poisons none can discover, used in ancient Rome by Livia on Augustus, by Agrippinilla on Claudius. Also, I can kill without touching; my powers are strong. You should be King; you are next in line after Bedford, and Bedford cannot live for ever. Give little Harry to me.’ Almost imperceptibly Humphrey shook his head. There was the Cardinal to be reckoned with. There were subtler means of torment. He drew Harry between his knees.
‘Your Grace must tell me again of your experiences in France. Tell me again,’ he said. The King’s white face became tinged with green.
‘Tell me of the burning,’ said Humphrey. ‘How long did she suffer? Did she scream much? And her flesh must have reeked. There’s a stench, isn’t there? A stench, and a crackle, and the blood boils. It bursts the veins. You had a good view, didn’t you? A front seat for princelings. Did her hair catch fire? Or was it shaven like a soldier’s? Then her brains burned, eh? Did they run, and melt, what colour was her brain, little nephew? What did she say to you, tell me, tell me…’
Between his knees he held a cluster of frail bones that shook so that the chair and the man who sat on it shook in unison. The dark eyes cried silently for release, became unfocused. Eleanor drew the fainting child away.
‘Don’t talk so, my lord.’ She was a little pale herself. Even behind the defences of her unearthly kingdom she feared the burning. Gloucester looked at her, knowing her kin to all witches. He was more afraid of her these days. Love had almost gone out of their relationship; she was mainly his counsellor. On countless nights they had lain in bed together, and he had touched her and found her icy cold and motionless, in catalepsy; at first he had thought her dead. Then later he understood; her spirit was out of her body, wandering, wreaking mischief near or far. That understanding terrified him most of all.
It was a new bed. Two years ago he had had the great goosefeather bed chopped up for firewood, after Eleanor had burned the truth out of Katherine’s maid. That bed had been profaned. Humphrey had a vivid, lustful imagination in which rage and envy mingled. A whore, and a Welsh mounteback. Whore. But Bedford was her friend, and out of sheer perversity, Cardinal Beaufort seemed to be turning a blind eye. You should have been King, Eleanor whispered in the new bed. You should be King. Let me have charge of the child. And always he said No, for the Cardinal still held mighty sway with the Council. And yet (the only comfort in his life at present) Beaufort was growing old. The last time they had met Humphrey had noticed it. The very slightest of tremors, the faintest hesitancy in the harsh, direct voice. All of a sudden his foul temper vanished. He said kindly to the King, now reviving queasily against Eleanor’s arm:
‘Make ready now to leave for your stay with your mother. Wales is very pleasant in summer, I believe, especially by the sea. My compliments to the Queen- Dowager.’
Henry left the chamber like a hare before running hounds. Along the devil-haunted corridors he raced, to his own apartments, where he fell into the arms of the young chaplain who had been waiting with prayers so fervent they had become almost unintelligible.
‘Hush, your Grace, be still.’
‘Father. Let us pray.’
‘I never cease,’ said the young man, dragged by Henry’s hand towards the royal Chapel.
‘We must pray,’ said the King, lifting his tearful face. ‘For all sinners, of which I am chief. Now and at the hour of our death, amen, amen.’