Firebrand: A Novel
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About this ebook
Widowed for the second time at age thirty-one, Katherine Parr falls deeply for the dashing courtier Thomas Seymour and hopes at last to marry for love. Instead, she attracts the amorous attentions of the ailing, egotistical, and dangerously powerful Henry VIII. No one is able to refuse a royal proposal. Haunted by the fates of his previous wives—two executions, two annulments, one death in childbirth—Katherine must wed Henry and rely on her wits and the help of her loyal servant Dot to survive the treacherous pitfalls of life as Henry’s queen. Yet as she treads the razor’s edge of court intrigue, she never quite gives up on love.
Elizabeth Fremantle
Elizabeth Fremantle is the author of four Tudor novels: Queen’s Gambit (now a major motion picture, Firebrand, starring Alicia Vikander and Jude Law), Sisters of Treason, Watch the Lady, and The Girl in the Glass Tower. As EC Fremantle she has written two gripping historical thrillers: The Poison Bed and The Honey and the Sting. Her contemporary short story, ‘That Kind of Girl,’ was shortlisted for the Bridport Prize in 2021. She has worked for Elle and Vogue in Paris and London and contributed to many publications including Vanity Fair, The Sunday Times (London), the Financial Times, and The Wall Street Journal. She lives in London.
Read more from Elizabeth Fremantle
Sisters of Treason: A Novel Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Watch the Lady: A Novel Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Disobedient Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Poison Bed Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Firebrand - Elizabeth Fremantle
Prologue
Charterhouse, London, February 1543
The notary smells of dust and ink. How is it, Latymer wonders, that when one sense blunts another sharpens.
He can pick up the scent of everything, the reek of ale on the man’s breath, the yeasty whiff of bread baking in the kitchens below, the wet-dog stink of the spaniel curled up by the hearth. But he can see precious little. The room swims and the man is a vague dark shape leaning over the bed with a grimace of a smile.
Make your mark here, my lord.
He enunciates as if talking to a child or an idiot.
A waft of violets sweeps over him. It is Katherine—his dear, dear Kit.
Let me help you up, John.
Katherine shifts his body forward and slips a pillow behind him.
She lifts him so easily. He must have wasted quite away these last months. It is no wonder with the lump in his gut, hard and round as a Spanish grapefruit. The movement starts something off—an excruciating wave that rises through his body, forcing an inhuman groan from him.
My love.
Katherine strokes his forehead.
Her touch is cool. The pain twists deeper.
He can hear the clink of her preparing a tincture. The spoon flashes as it catches the light. The chill of metal touches his lips, and a trickle of liquid pools in his mouth. Its loamy scent brings back a distant memory of riding through woods and with it a sadness, for his riding days are over.
His gullet feels too thick to swallow and he fears setting off the pain again. It has receded but hovers, as does the notary who shifts from one foot to the other in an embarrassed shuffle. Latymer wonders why the man is not more used to this kind of thing, given that wills are his living.
Katherine strokes his throat and the tincture slides down.
Soon it will take effect. His wife has a gift with remedies. He has thought about what kind of potion she could concoct to set him free from this useless carcass of his. She’d know exactly what it would take. After all, any one of the plants she uses to deaden his pain could kill a man if the dose were right—a little more of this or that and it would be done.
But how can he ask such a thing of her?
A quill is placed between his fingers and his hand is guided to the papers so he can make his mark. His scrawl will make Katherine a woman of considerable means. He hopes it will not bring the curse of fortune-hunters to her door.
She is still young enough, just past thirty, and her charisma that made him—already an elderly widower—fall so deeply still hangs over her like a halo.
She never had the ordinary beauty of other men’s wives. No, her attraction is complicated and has blossomed with age.
But Katherine is too sharp to be taken in by some silver-tongued seducer with his eye on a widow’s fortune. He owes her too much. When he thinks of how she has suffered in his name, it makes him want to weep, but his body is incapable of even that.
He has not left her Snape Castle, his Yorkshire seat. She wouldn’t want it. She would be happy, she has said often, were she never to set foot in Snape again. Snape will go to Young John.
Latymer’s son did not turn out quite the man he’d hoped and he has often wondered what kind of child he might have had with Katherine. But that thought is always shadowed with the memory of the dead baby, the damned infant that was made when the Catholic rebels ransacked Snape. He cannot bear to imagine how that baby came about, fathered by, of all people, Murgatroyd, whom he used to take out hunting hares as a boy. He was a sweet lad, showed no sign of the brute he would become.
Latymer curses the day he left his young wife alone with his children to go to court and seek pardon from the King, curses the weakness that got him involved with the rebels in the first place. Six years have passed since, but the events of that time are carved into his family like an epitaph on a tomb.
Katherine is straightening the bedcovers, humming a tune he doesn’t recognize, or can’t remember. A surge of love rises in him. His marriage to her was a love match—for him, anyway. But he hadn’t done what husbands are supposed to do. He hadn’t protected her.
Katherine had never spoken of it. He’d wanted her to scream and rage at him—to hate him, blame him. But she remained poised and contained, as if nothing had changed. And her belly grew large, taunting him. Only when that baby came, and died within the hour, did he see the smudge of tears on her face. Yet still, nothing was ever said.
This tumor, swelling in his own belly in gruesome mimicry, is his punishment. All he can do to atone is make her rich. How can he ask one more thing of her? If she could inhabit his wracked body even for an instant she would do his bidding without question. It would be an act of mercy, and there is no sin in that, surely.
She is by the door, seeing the notary out, before floating back to his side. She pulls her hood off, discarding it at the foot of the bed, rubbing her temples with the tips of her fingers and shaking out her russet hair. Its dried-flower scent drifts over, making him yearn to bury his face in it as he used to do.
Taking a book, she begins to read quietly, the Latin tripping easily off her tongue. It is Erasmus. His own Latin is too rusty to get the sense of it. He should remember this book but he doesn’t. She was always better learned than him, though pretended otherwise.
A timid knock interrupts them. It is his Meg holding the hand of that gawky maid, whose name escapes him. Poor little Meg, who, since Murgatroyd and his men came, has been jumpy as a colt. It made him wonder what might have been done to her too. The little spaniel comes to life with a frenzied wagging and wriggling about the girls’ feet.
Father,
Meg whispers, placing a spring-meadow kiss on his forehead. How do you?
He lifts his hand, a great dead lump of driftwood, placing it over hers and attempts a smile.
She turns to Katherine. Mother, Huicke is here.
Dot,
Katherine says to the maid, will you see the doctor in.
Yes, my lady.
With a swish of skirts the girl makes for the door.
And Dot…
adds Katherine.
The maid stops in the doorway.
… ask one of the lads to bring more wood for the fire. We are down to the last log.
The girl bobs, with a nod.
It is Meg’s birthday today, John,
says Katherine. She is seventeen.
He feels clogged up, wants to see his girl properly, read the expression in her nut-brown eyes, but the detail of her is blurred. My little Margaret Neville, a woman… seventeen.
His voice is a croak. Someone will want to marry you. A fine young man.
It strikes him like a slap in the face—he will never know his daughter’s husband.
Meg’s hand wipes at her eye.
Huicke slips into the chamber. He has come each day this week. Latymer wonders why it is that the King sends one of his own physicians to care for an almost disgraced northern lord such as he. Katherine says it is a sign that he is truly pardoned. But it doesn’t make sense and he knows the King enough to suspect that there is an ulterior purpose to this gesture—although what it is, he’s not sure.
The doctor is a thin black shadow approaching the bed.
Meg takes her leave with another kiss.
Huicke draws back the covers. A rancid stench escapes. He begins to palpate the lump with butterfly fingers. Latymer hates those kid-clad hands. He has never known Huicke to remove his gloves, which are fine and buff like human skin. He wears a ring set with a garnet the size of an eye over them. Latymer loathes the man disproportionately for those gloves, the deceit of them pretending to be hands, and the way they make him feel unclean.
Sharp bursts of pain peck at him, making his breath come fast and shallow. Huicke sniffs at a vial of something, holding it up to the light while talking quietly with Katherine. She glows in the proximity of this young doctor.
He is too fey and girlish to be a threat at least, but Latymer hates him anew for his youth and his promise, not just for his gloved hands. He must be quite brilliant to be in the King’s service and still so young. Huicke’s future is laid out before him like a feast, while his own is all used up. Latymer drifts off, the hushed voices washing over him.
I have given him something new for the pain,
she is saying. White-willow bark and motherwort.
You have a physician’s touch,
Huicke replies. I would not have thought to put those together.
I am interested in herbals. I have a little physic garden of my own…
She pauses. I like to see things grow. And I have Bankes’s book.
"Bankes’s Herbal, that is the best of them. Well, I think so, but it is rather scorned by the academics."
I suppose they think it a woman’s book.
They do.
He smiles with a lift of the eyebrows. And that is precisely what recommends it to me. In my opinion women know more about healing than all the scholars in Oxford and Cambridge together, though I generally keep that to myself.
A new bolt of pain shoots through Latymer, sharper this time, folding him in half. He hears a scream, barely recognizing it as his own. He is dying of guilt. The spasm wanes slowly, as if something is being unscrewed from his gut, leaving just a dull ache.
Huicke has gone. He must have been asleep. He is struck with a sudden, overwhelming sense of urgency. He must ask her before speech deserts him, but how to phrase it?
He grabs his wife’s wrist, surprised by his own strength. Give me more tincture.
I cannot, John. I have already given you the limit. More would…
Her words hang.
He grips her more tightly. It is what I want, Kit.
She looks at him, straight on, saying nothing.
He thinks he can see her thoughts like the workings of a clock, wondering where in the Bible she might find justification for this; how to reconcile her soul with such an act; that it could send her to the gallows; that if he were a pheasant got at by the dog, she would think nothing of a merciful twist of his neck.
What you ask of me will damn us both.
Her whisper is filled with resignation.
I know,
he replies.
PART ONE
Better to be his mistress than his wife.
Katherine Parr
1
Whitehall Palace, March 1543
There has been a late snowfall and the dusted turrets of Whitehall Palace are indistinct against the pallid sky.
The courtyard is deep in slush. In spite of the sawdust that has been strewn in a makeshift path across the cobbles, Katherine can feel the wet chill soaking through her shoes and the damp edges of her skirts flick bitterly at her ankles. She shivers, hugging her thick cloak tightly about her as the groom helps Meg dismount.
Here we are,
she says brightly, though bright is the last thing she feels, holding out her hand for Meg to take.
Her stepdaughter’s cheeks are flushed. She has the sweet, slightly startled look of a woodland animal but Katherine can see the effort she is making to hold off more tears. Her father’s death has hit her hard.
Come,
says Katherine, let’s get inside.
Two grooms have unsaddled the horses and are brushing them down briskly with handfuls of straw. Katherine’s gray gelding Pewter throws his head about with a jingle of tack and snorts, billowing trails of steam like a dragon.
Easy, boy,
says Katherine, taking his bridle and stroking his velvet nose, allowing him to snuffle at her neck. He needs a drink,
she says to the groom, handing him the reins. It’s Rafe, isn’t it?
Yes, m’lady.
A hot blush rushes over his cheeks. I remember Pewter, I gave him a poultice once.
Yes, he was lame. You did a fine job with him.
The boy’s face breaks into a grin. Thank you, m’lady.
"It is I who should thank you." As Rafe leads Pewter towards the stable block, she clasps her stepdaughter’s elbow and makes for the great doors.
She has been numb with grief for weeks and would rather not have to come to court so soon after her husband’s death. But she has been summoned—Meg, too—and a summons from the King’s daughter is not something one is able to refuse.
Besides, Katherine likes Lady Mary. They knew one another as girls, even shared a tutor for a while when Katherine’s mother was serving Mary’s mother—Queen Catherine of Aragon—before the King cast her off. None of that is ever to be spoken of, at court or elsewhere.
Things were simpler in the days before the whole world was turned on its head, the country rent in two. But she won’t be commanded to stay at court just yet. Mary will respect her period of mourning.
When she thinks of Latymer, how she helped his passing, shame rises through her like milk on the boil. She has to remember the horror of it all in order to reconcile herself to her actions: his anguished screams, the way his own body had turned on him, his desperate request. She has searched the Bible since for a precedent, but there is no story of merciful killing there, nothing to give hope for her blighted soul. There’s no denying it—she killed her husband.
Katherine and Meg enter the Great Hall. It smells of wet wool and woodsmoke and is teeming with people, busy as a market square. They mill in the alcoves and strut in the galleries, showing off their best clothes. Groups gather in corners to play cards or dice, throwing down bets. Occasionally a whoop goes up when someone has won or lost.
Katherine watches Meg, wide-eyed at it all. She has never been to court. She’s barely been anywhere, and after the deathly quiet of Charterhouse, all cloaked in black, this must be a rude awakening.
They make a somber pair in their mourning garb among the flocks of bright-clad ladies floating by, bubbling with chatter. Their dresses swing as they move, as if they are dancing and eyes are cast about to see who has noticed how fine they look. There is a fashion for little dogs, bundled in their arms like muffs or trotting obediently at heel. Even Meg manages a laugh to see one that has hitched a ride on its mistress’s train.
Pages run back and forth and pairs of servants move through, burdened with baskets of logs, one between two, destined to stoke the fires in the public rooms. Long tables are being laid for dinner in the Great Hall by an army of kitchen boys clanking by, balancing precarious stacks of dishes.
A group of musicians tunes up, the dissonant chords eventually transforming into something like a melody. To hear music at last, thinks Katherine, imagining herself caught up in the sound, whirling and spinning until she can hardly breathe with joy. She stops that thought. She will not be dancing just yet—not while she is mourning her husband.
They step aside to allow a band of guards to march past and she wonders if they might be on their way to arrest someone, reminding her of how little she wants to be in this place. But a summons is a summons. She gasps as a pair of hands comes from nowhere, clapping themselves over her eyes, catapulting her heart into her throat.
Will Parr,
she laughs.
How could you tell?
Will drops his hands.
I would know your smell anywhere, brother.
She pinches her nose in mock disgust, turning to face him where he stands with a group of men. He beams like a small boy, his brassy hair sticking up where he has removed his cap, his mismatched eyes—one gray, one hazel—flashing.
Lady Latymer. I can hardly remember the last time I clapped eyes on you.
A man steps forward. Everything about him is long: long nose, long face, long legs and bloodhound eyes. But somehow nature has conspired to make him quite becoming in spite of his oddness. Perhaps it has something to do with the unassailable confidence that comes with being the eldest of the Howard boys, and next Duke of Norfolk.
Surrey!
A smile invades her face. Perhaps it will not be so bad at court with these familiar faces about. You still scribbling verse?
Indeed I am. You will be pleased to know my style has improved greatly.
He had once penned her a sonnet when they were little more than children. They had often laughed about it since—virtue
rhymed with hurt too.
The memory causes a laugh to bubble up in her. One of his juvenile embarrassments,
as he had described it.
I am sorry to see you in mourning,
he continues, serious now. But I heard how your husband suffered. Perhaps it is a mercy that he has finally passed.
She nods, her smile dropping away, unable to find words to reply, wondering if he suspects her, scrutinizing his face for signs of condemnation.
Have the circumstances of Latymer’s death been discovered?
Is it spreading through the corridors of the palace?
Perhaps the embalmers had spotted something irregular—her sin written into her dead husband’s guts.
She dismisses the thought. What she gave him leaves no trace and there is no accusation in Surrey’s tone, she is sure of it. If it shows on her face, they will think her distraught with grief, but nevertheless her heart is hammering.
Let me present my stepdaughter, Margaret Neville,
she says, gathering herself.
Meg shrinks back wearing a barely disguised look of horror. Since those cursed events at Snape Katherine has kept her away from the company of men as much as possible, but now there is no choice. Besides, the girl will have to marry eventually. Katherine will be expected to arrange it, but God knows, Meg is far from ready.
Margaret.
Surrey takes Meg’s hand. I knew your father. He was a remarkable man.
He was.
Her voice is small.
"Are you not going to present me to your sister?" A man has stepped up, tall, almost as tall as Surrey. Slapping her brother on the back with one hand, he waves a velvet cap with the other. It is adorned with an ostrich feather the size of a hearth brush, bobbing and dancing as he gives it an unnecessary flourish.
Katherine stifles a laugh. He is got up spectacularly, in a doublet of black velvet with crimson satin spilling out of its slashes and finished with a sable collar. He seems to see her notice the sable, bringing a hand up to stroke it.
Trying to place him, she tries to remember the sumptuary laws and who is entitled to wear sable. His hands are weighed down with rings—too many for good taste—but his fingers are fine and tapered and they wander from the sable to his mouth. He draws his middle finger over his bottom lip slowly and deliberately, not smiling. But his eyes, a startling blue, and his disarmingly direct gaze are making her feel hot. She meets his gaze only momentarily, catching the briefest flutter, before dropping her look to the floor.
Did he wink at her? The insolence. He winked at her. No, it must have been her imagination. But then why in heaven’s name is she imagining this overdressed ninny winking at her?
Thomas Seymour, this is my sister Lady Latymer.
Will seems amused by whatever it is that has just passed between them.
She should have known. Thomas Seymour is bearer of the dubious accolade of comliest man at court
—the object of incessant gossip, youthful crushes, broken hearts, marital discord. She concedes inwardly to his looks. He is a beauty, that is indisputable, but she is not foolish enough to be drawn under his spell.
It is an honor, my lady,
he says in a voice as smooth as churned butter, to finally meet you at last.
Surrey rolls his eyes.
So there’s no love lost there, she thinks. "Finally and at last! It trips off her tongue before she can stop it. She can’t help herself wanting to put this man in his place.
Goodness!" She places a hand to her breast affecting exaggerated surprise.
Indeed, my lady, I have heard of your charms,
he continues, unprovoked, and to be confronted with them makes me tongue-tied.
By charms she wonders if he means her recently acquired wealth. News of her inheritance must be out. Will for one can’t keep his mouth shut. She feels a little surge of anger for her brother and his blabbering.
Tongue-tied?
She searches for a witty retort and keeps her look firmly directed at his mouth, not daring to meet his eyes again, but his wet pink tongue catches the light disturbingly. Surrey, what think you? Seymour here has got his tongue in a knot.
Surrey and Will don’t hide their amusement as she racks her brain for something more. And it might be his undoing.
The three men burst into laughter simultaneously. Katherine feels triumphant. Her wit has not deserted her, even in the face of this unsettling creature.
Meg stares at her stepmother aghast. She has not had much opportunity to see this Katherine, the sharp-witted courtly one. Katherine throws her a reassuring smile while Will introduces her to Seymour, who looks at her as if she is made of sugar.
Katherine takes her hand, saying, Come, Meg, we will be late for Lady Mary.
So brief but yet so sweet,
simpers Seymour.
Katherine ignores him, placing a kiss on Surrey’s cheek. As she walks away, she half turns back to vaguely dip her head in the general direction of Seymour for the sake of politeness.
I shall walk with you.
Will puts himself between the two of them.
When they are up the stairs and out of earshot, Katherine quietly admonishes her brother. I would prefer it if you would refrain from discussing my inheritance with your friends.
You’re too quick to accuse, sister. I’ve said nothing. It’s got out. It was bound to, but—
What was all that about my so-called charms then?
Irritation makes her tone shrill.
Have you considered he might really have been referring to your charms?
She emits a peeved snort.
Do you always have to be the disgruntled elder sister?
"I’m sorry, Will. You’re right, it’s not your fault that people talk."
"No, it is I who should apologize. Things have been hard for you. He pinches the black silk of her skirts between his fingers.
You’re in mourning. I should be more sensitive."
As they walk down the long gallery towards Lady Mary’s rooms, Will mutters under his breath, I wish it were I in mourning.
You don’t mean that.
He scowls in response.
Will and his wife loathed each other from the moment they met. Anne Bourchier, the sole heir of the elderly Earl of Essex, was the prize their mother had almost beggared herself to catch for her only son. With Anne Bourchier came great expectations, not least the Essex title to hitch the Parrs back up a notch or two. But the marriage had brought poor Will nothing, no children, no title, no happiness—nothing but disgrace, for the King gave Cromwell the earldom while Anne eloped with some country cleric.
Will couldn’t shake off the scandal, was ever beset by jibes of clerical errors
and priests’ holes
and parsons’ noses.
He didn’t see the funny side and, try as he might, he hadn’t managed to persuade the King to sanction a divorce.
When I think of the hopes Mother had for my marriage, all she did to arrange it.
She never lived to see its failure. Perhaps that is as well.
It was her greatest wish to see we Parrs on the rise again.
Our blood is good enough without her.
Katherine is firm. Father served the old King and his father served Edward IV, Mother served Queen Catherine.
She counts them off on her fingers. Do you want me to go on?
That’s ancient history.
Will sounds like a petulant child. "I don’t even remember Father."
Nor me, really.
She does remember clearly the day their father was laid to rest. How indignant she’d felt at being deemed too young, at six years old, to attend the funeral. Besides, Anne has served all five Queens and now serves the King’s daughter—and it is likely I shall, too, once more.
She’s irritated by her brother’s grasping ambition, wants to tell him that if he cares so greatly to raise the Parrs, then he should start currying favor with the right people instead of that Seymour fellow. Seymour may be Prince Edward’s uncle but it is his elder brother Hertford who has the King’s ear.
Will begins his grumbling again but seems to think better of it and they fall to silence once more, weaving through the crowd outside the King’s chambers.
Then he squeezes her arm. What think you of Seymour?
Seymour?
Yes, Seymour…
Not much.
Her voice is clipped.
Do you not find him splendid?
Not particularly.
I thought we might try to make a match for him with Meg.
With Meg?
she blurts. Have you lost your senses?
The color has fallen from Meg’s face.
Seymour would eat the poor girl alive. Meg will not be marrying anyone just yet. Not while her father is barely cold.
It was only—
A ridiculous idea.
She is sharp.
He is not what you think, Kit.
He lowers his voice. Seymour’s one of us.
By that she supposes he means he’s for the new religion. She doesn’t like to be packaged up with the court reformers, prefers to keep her thoughts on the matter close to her chest. She has learned over the years that it’s safer to cultivate an opaqueness at court.
Surrey doesn’t like him,
she says.
Oh, that’s nothing but a family thing, not even about religion. The Howards think the Seymours upstarts. It has no bearing on Thomas.
Katherine huffs.
Will leaves them to admire the new painting of the King that hangs in the gallery. It is so fresh she can smell the paint and its colors are vivid, with all the detail picked out in gold.
Is that the last Queen?
Meg points to the somber woman in a gable hood beside the King.
No, Meg.
She presses a finger to her lips, whispering, Best not mention Catherine Howard here. It is Queen Jane, the sister of Thomas Seymour whom you just met.
But if it is a new painting, why is it of Queen Jane, when there have been two Queens since?
Queen Jane is the one who gave him the heir.
She omits adding that Jane Seymour was the one who died before the King could tire of her.
So that is Prince Edward.
Meg points to the boy, a pocket version of his father, mirroring his stance.
It is, and they,
she indicates the two girls hovering about at the edges of the picture like a pair of butterflies with nowhere to alight, are Ladies Mary and Elizabeth.
I see you are admiring my portrait,
comes a man’s voice from behind.
The women turn, startled.
Will Sommers!
Katherine says. "Your portrait?"
Do you not see me?
He points to the back of the image.
There you are. I hadn’t noticed.
She turns to her stepdaughter. Meg, this is Will Sommers, the King’s fool, the most honest man at court.
Sommers stretches out a hand and pulls a copper coin from behind Meg’s ear, provoking a rare delighted laugh from her.
How did you do that?
Meg stares at the coin in wonder.
Magic.
I don’t believe in magic,
says Katherine. But I know a good trick when I see it.
2
Susan Clarencieux, in egg-yolk yellow, looms over the door to Lady Mary’s inner rooms, shushing them like an adder as they arrive.
She has one of her headaches.
Susan smiles tightly. So keep the noise down.
Looking Katherine up and down, as if totting up the cost of her dress and finding it wanting, she adds, So very dull and dark. Lady Mary will not approve.
Then her hand swoops to cover her mouth. Forgive me, I forgot you were in mourning.
It is forgotten,
replies Katherine.
You will find your sister in the privy chamber. Excuse me, I must deal with…
She doesn’t finish and slips back into the bedchamber, closing the door silently behind her.
The privy chamber is scattered with ladies quietly concentrating on their needlework. Katherine nods at them in greeting before spotting her sister, Anne, in a window alcove.
Kit!
Anne stands, drawing her older sister into an embrace. What a pleasure to see you at last. And Meg.
She kisses Meg warmly on both cheeks.
The girl has relaxed visibly now they are in the women’s rooms.
Anne suggests Meg go and look at the tapestries on the far wall. I believe your father is depicted in one. See if you can find him.
Anne leads her sister away from the other women, to a bench in the window.
So, what’s the occasion? Why do you think I have been summoned?
Katherine can hardly tear her gaze away from Anne, her easy smile, the translucent glow of her skin, the pale tendrils of hair escaping from her coif, the perfect oval of her face.
Lady Mary is to stand godmother. Quite a few have been asked to attend.
Not just me then… I am glad of that. So who is to be baptized?
It is a Wriothesley baby. A daughter called…
Mary,
they say simultaneously, smirking.
Oh Anne, how good it is to see you. My house is a gloomy place indeed.
I shall visit you at Charterhouse when Prin—
She cups both her hands over her mouth with an intake of breath, eyes searching the room for eavesdroppers. When Lady Mary gives me leave.
She leans right into Katherine’s ear and whispers, Lady Hussey was sent to the Tower for addressing her as Princess.
I remember that,
says Katherine. But that was years ago and she was making a stand. It was different. A slip of the tongue wouldn’t be punished like that, surely.
You’ve been long away from this place.
Anne looks suddenly serious. Have you forgotten what it is like?
Nest of snakes,
Katherine murmurs.
I hear the King sent Huicke to attend your husband.
He did. I don’t know why.
Latymer was certainly pardoned then.
I suppose so.
Katherine had never fully understood Latymer’s part in the uprising. The Pilgrimage of Grace, they’d called it, when the whole of the North—forty thousand Catholic men it was said—rose up against Cromwell’s reformation. Some of the leaders had arrived at Snape armed to the hilt. There had been heated discussions in the hall and a good deal of shouting but Katherine couldn’t get the gist of what was being said. The next thing she knew Latymer was preparing to leave, reluctantly, he told her: they needed men like him to lead them.
She wondered what kind of threats they’d made, for Latymer was not the sort to be easily coerced even though he thought their cause justified. The monasteries had been razed, the monks strung from the trees and a way of life destroyed with them—not forgetting the beloved Queen cast aside and the Boleyn girl turning their great King about her finger like a toy. That was how Latymer described it. But to take arms up against his King—that was not the husband she knew.
You have never talked of it.
Anne picks at a loose thread on her dress. The uprising, I mean. What happened at Snape.
It is something I’d rather forget.
Katherine snaps shut the conversation.
A version of events had spread around the court at the time. It was common knowledge that when the King’s army had the rebels on the back foot, Latymer had left for Westminster to seek the King’s pardon. The rebels thought he’d turned coat, sending Murgatroyd and his men to hold Katherine and Meg hostage, ransacking Snape—it made a good story for the gossips.
But that was not the half of it. Even her sister knew nothing of the dead baby, Murgatroyd’s bastard son. Nor that she’d given herself to the brute in desperation, to save Meg and Dot from his clutches—the darkest secret of them all. She did save the girls but doesn’t know what God thinks of that, for adultery is adultery, whatever the motive.
Katherine has often wondered why it was that all the other leaders had swung, and Murgatroyd too—two and a half hundred put to death in the name of the King when the uprising failed—but not Latymer. Perhaps he had betrayed them. Murgatroyd had certainly assumed so. She prefers to believe that Latymer was loyal, as he’d maintained, otherwise what was it all for? But she will never know the truth.
Did you ever hear anything,
she asks Anne, about Latymer and why he was pardoned? Were there any rumors at court?
Nothing reached my ears.
Anne rests her hand on Katherine’s sleeve. Don’t dwell on it. The past is past.
Katherine nods but she can’t help thinking of the way the past erodes the present like a canker in an apple.
She looks across the chamber at Meg intently searching the tapestry for her father’s likeness. At least his image has not been stitched over like some.
She returns her attention to Anne—sweet, loyal, uncomplicated Anne. There is something about her, a freshness, as if she has more life in her than she can possibly contain. It strikes Katherine suddenly why this is.
Her heart gutters and, leaning forward, she puts a hand to Anne’s stomacher. Is there something you’re keeping from me?
She wonders if her smile hides the surge of jealousy that comes in the face of her sister’s fertility. It is written all over her, the flush and bloom of pregnancy that Katherine has wanted so very much for herself.
Anne reddens. How is it you know everything, Kit?
That is wonderful news.
The words stick in her throat. Her widowhood is a hard unassailable fact. The possibility of a child is nothing but a distant fantasy now at her age, with not a single living infant to her name, only the dead baby that is never spoken of.
Her thoughts must have seeped through her surface, for Anne squeezes her hand with the words, There is still a chance for you, sister. You will surely marry again.
I think two husbands are enough,
Katherine replies, firmly. "I’m so very happy for you. Unlike the Wriothesley baby, I know this one won’t be a little Catholic with Lady Mary as its godmother."
Anne brings a finger to her lips with a shhh
and the sisters share a secret smile. She stretches out a hand to the pendant that hangs from Katherine’s neck. Mother’s diamond cross,
she says, holding it up so it catches the light. I remember it bigger than this.
It is you who was smaller.
It is a long time since Mother left us.
All Katherine can think of is the length of her mother’s widowhood.
And these pearls,
Anne is still fingering the cross, they are almost pink. I’d forgotten. Oh dear, one of the links is loose.
She leans in closer. Let me see if I can mend it.
Her brow knits in concentration as she presses the open ends of the link between her thumb and forefinger.
Katherine can smell her scent. It is sweet and comforting, like ripe apples. She turns a little towards the paneling so Anne may better get to her throat. On the wood she can clearly see where the initials CH have been scraped away. Poor little Catherine Howard, the most recent Queen, these must have been her rooms briefly. Of course they were, they are the best in the palace, save for those of the King.
There.
Anne releases the cross. You wouldn’t want to lose one of Mother’s pearls.
How was it, Anne, with the last Queen? You have been quite silent about it.
Katherine’s voice has dropped to a whisper and her fingers absently stroke the scraped place on the paneling.
Catherine Howard?
she mouths.
Katherine nods in reply.
She was so young, younger than Meg even.
They both look towards Meg, seeming barely out of girlhood herself.
She hadn’t been raised to hold high position. Norfolk dredged her out of the further reaches of the Howard tribe to serve his own needs. Her manners!
She frowns. You can’t imagine how crude she was or how shallow. But she was a pretty little thing and the King was utterly unmanned in the face of her…
She pauses, searching for the right word.… her attractions. It was her appetite that was her undoing.
For men?
Katherine further drops her whisper.
The sisters’ heads are close together now and their faces are half turned towards the window so as not to be overheard.
A compulsion almost.
Did you like her?
"No… I suppose not. She was insufferably vain. But I wouldn’t have wished that fate on anyone. To go to the block like that and so young. It was dreadful. There is a wobble in Anne’s voice.
Her ladies—we were all questioned one by one. I had no idea what was happening. Some must have known what she’d been up to, carrying on like that with Culpepper, under the King’s nose."
She was just a girl. She should never have been put in the bed of such an old man, King or not.
They sit in silence for a while. Through the window Katherine watches a skein of geese fly high above the river. Who questioned you?
she asks eventually.
Bishop Gardiner.
Were you afraid?
Petrified.
Her face crumples. He’s a monster. Not a man to cross. I once saw him dislocate a choirboy’s finger for missing a note. I knew nothing, so there was little he could do with me. But we all had the Boleyn business in our minds.
Of course, Anne Boleyn.
Katherine’s hand moves instinctively to her neck. It turned out the same for little Catherine Howard.
Just the same. The King withdrew, refused to see her, just as he had with Anne. The poor girl was mad with fear. Ran howling down the long gallery in just her kirtle. Her screams stay with me still. The gallery was teeming with people but no one so much as looked at her, not even her uncle Norfolk. Can you imagine?
She tugs the loose thread in her dress right away. Thank heavens I wasn’t chosen to serve her in the Tower. I couldn’t have borne it, Kit. Standing by to watch her step up to the scaffold. Untie her hood for her. Bare her neck.
She shudders.
Poor child.
And rumor has it he seeks a sixth wife.
Who do they talk of?
The rumors fly as usual. Every unmarried woman has had her name bandied, even you.
Katherine snorts. Better to be his mistress than his wife.
"Everyone’s putting their money on Anne Bassett. She’s younger even than the last one. I can’t imagine him taking another young maid like that. Catherine Howard shook him to the core. But little Anne’s family are pushing her forward