Philippa Gregory 3-Book Tudor Collection 1: The Constant Princess, The Other Boleyn Girl, The Boleyn Inheritance. Philippa Gregory
he was offering me Harry and I was about to say ‘yes’ when he said that I must think him very old, as old as my father. And of course he is, indeed, he looks far older than my father, that is why I never think of him like a father, a grandfather perhaps, or an old priest. My father is handsome; a terrible womaniser; a brave soldier; a hero on the battlefield. This king has fought one half-hearted battle and put down a dozen unheroic uprisings of poor men too sickened with his rule to endure it any more. So he is not like my father and I spoke only the truth when I said that I never see him like that.
But then he looked at me as if I had said something of great interest, and then he asked me what I wanted. I could not say to his face that I wanted him to overlook my marriage to his oldest son, and marry me anew to his youngest. So I said that I wanted to obey him. There can be nothing wrong with that. But somehow it was not what he wanted. And it did not get me to where I wanted.
I have no idea what he wants. Nor how to turn it to my own advantage.
Henry went back to Whitehall Palace, his face burning and his heart pounding, hammered between frustration and calculation. If he could persuade Catalina’s parents to allow the wedding, he could claim the rest of her substantial dowry, be free of their claims for her jointure, reinforce the alliance with Spain at the very moment that he was looking to secure new alliances with Scotland and France, and perhaps, with such a young wife, get another son and heir on her. One daughter on the throne of Scotland, one daughter on the throne of France should lock both nations into peace for a lifetime. The Princess of Spain on the throne of England should keep the most Christian kings of Spain in alliance. He would have bolted the great powers of Christendom into peaceful alliance with England not just for a generation, but for generations to come. They would have heirs in common; they would be safe. England would be safe. Better yet, England’s sons might inherit the kingdoms of France, of Scotland, of Spain. England might conceive its way into peace and greatness.
It made absolute sense to secure Catalina; he tried to focus on the political advantage and not think of the line of her neck nor the curve of her waist. He tried to steady his mind by thinking of the small fortune that would be saved by not having to provide her with a jointure nor with her keep, by not having to send a ship, several ships probably, to escort her home. But all he could think was that she had touched her soft mouth with her finger and told him that she did not like the lingering taste of ale. At the thought of the tip of her tongue against her lips he groaned aloud and the groom holding the horse for him to dismount looked up and said: ‘Sire?’
‘Bile,’ the king said sourly.
It did feel like too rich a fare that was sickening him, he decided as he strode to his private apartments, courtiers eddying out of his way with sycophantic smiles. He felt that he must remember that she was little more than a child, she was his own daughter-in-law. If he listened to the good sense that had carried him so far, he should simply promise to pay her jointure, send her back to her parents, and then delay the payment till they had her married to some other kingly fool elsewhere, and he could get away with paying nothing.
But at the mere thought of her married to another man he had to stop and put his hand out to the oak panelling for support.
‘Your Grace?’ someone asked him. ‘Are you ill?’
‘Bile,’ the king repeated. ‘Something I have eaten.’
His chief groom of the body came to him. ‘Shall I send for your physician, Your Grace?’
‘No,’ the king said. ‘But send a couple of barrels of the best wine to the Dowager Princess. She has nothing in her cellar, and when I have to visit her I should like to drink wine and not ale.’
‘Yes, Your Grace,’ the man said, bowed, and went away. Henry straightened up and went to his rooms. They were crowded with people as usual: petitioners, courtiers, favour-seekers, fortune-hunters, some friends, some gentry, some noblemen attending on him for love or calculation. Henry regarded them all sourly. When he had been Henry Tudor on the run in Brittany he had not been blessed with so many friends.
‘Where is my mother?’ he asked one of them.
‘In her rooms, Your Grace,’ the man replied.
‘I shall visit her,’ he said. ‘Let her know.’
He gave her a few moments to ready herself, and then he went to her chambers. On her daughter-in-law’s death she had moved into the apartment traditionally given to the queen. She had ordered new tapestries and new furniture and now the place was more grandly furnished than any queen had ever had before.
‘I’ll announce myself,’ the king said to the guard at her door, and stepped in without ceremony.
Lady Margaret was seated at a table in the window, the household accounts spread before her, inspecting the costs of the royal court as if it were a well-run farm. There was very little waste and no extravagance allowed in the court run by Lady Margaret, and royal servants who had thought that some of the payments which passed through their hands might leave a little gold on the side were soon disappointed.
Henry nodded his approval at the sight of his mother’s supervision of the royal business. He had never rid himself of his own anxiety that the ostentatious wealth of the throne of England might prove to be hollow show. He had financed a campaign for the throne on debt and favours; he never wanted to be cap in hand again.
She looked up as he came in. ‘My son.’
He kneeled for her blessing as he always did when he first greeted her every day, and felt her fingers gently touch the top of his head.
‘You look troubled,’ she remarked.
‘I am,’ he said. ‘I went to see the Dowager Princess.’
‘Yes?’ A faint expression of disdain crossed her face. ‘What are they asking for now?’
‘We –’ He broke off and then started again. ‘We have to decide what is to become of her. She spoke of going home to Spain.’
‘When they pay us what they owe,’ she said at once. ‘They know they have to pay the rest of her dowry before she can leave.’
‘Yes, she knows that.’
There was a brief silence.
‘She asked if there could not be another agreement,’ he said. ‘Some resolution.’
‘Ah, I’ve been waiting for this,’ Lady Margaret said exultantly. ‘I knew they would be after this. I am only surprised they have waited so long. I suppose they thought they should wait until she was out of mourning.’
‘After what?’
‘They will want her to stay,’ she said.
Henry could feel himself beginning to smile and deliberately he set his face still. ‘You think so?’
‘I have been waiting for them to show their hand. I knew that they were waiting for us to make the first move. Ha! That we have made them declare first!’
He raised his eyebrows, longing for her to spell out his desire. ‘For what?’
‘A proposal from us, of course,’ she said. ‘They knew that we would never let such a chance go. She was the right match then, and she is the right match now. We had a good bargain with her then, and it is still good. Especially if they pay in full. And now she is more profitable than ever.’
His colour flushed as he beamed at her. ‘You think so?’
‘Of course. She is here, half her dowry already paid, the rest we have only to collect, we have already rid ourselves of her escort, the alliance is already working to our benefit – we would never have the respect of the French if they did not fear her parents, the Scots fear us too – she is still the best match in Christendom for us.’