Bring Up the Bodies (43 page)

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Authors: Hilary Mantel

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Harry Norris says, ‘I assume you will not just lead us out to execution. There will be a process, a trial? Yes? I hope it will be quick. I suppose it will. The cardinal used to say, Cromwell will do in a week what will take another man a year, it is not worth your while to block him or oppose him. If you reach out to grip him he will not be there, he will have ridden twenty miles while you are pulling your boots on.' He looks up. ‘If you intend to kill me in public, and mount a show, be quick. Or I may die of grief alone in this room.'

He shakes his head. ‘You'll live.' He once thought it himself, that he might die of grief: for his wife, his daughters, his sisters, his father and master the cardinal. But the pulse, obdurate, keeps its rhythm. You think you cannot keep breathing, but your ribcage has other ideas, rising and falling, emitting sighs. You must thrive in spite of yourself; and so that you may do it, God takes out your heart of flesh, and gives you a heart of stone.

Norris touches his ribs. ‘The pain is here. I felt it last night. I sat up, breathless. I durst not lie down again.'

‘When he was brought down, the cardinal said the same. The pain was like a whetstone, he said. A whetstone, and the knife was drawn across it. And it ground away, till he was dead.'

He rises, picks up his papers: inclining his head, takes his leave. Henry Norris: left forepaw.

 

William Brereton. Gentleman of Cheshire. Servant in Wales to the young Duke of Richmond, and a bad servant too. A turbulent, arrogant, hard-as-nails man, from a turbulent line.

‘Let's go back,' he says, ‘let's go back to the cardinal's time, because I do remember someone of your household killed a man during a bowls match.'

‘The game can get very heated,' Brereton says. ‘You know yourself. You play, I hear.'

‘And the cardinal thought, it is time for a reckoning; and your family were fined because they impeded the investigation. I ask myself, has anything changed since then? You think you can do anything because you are the Duke of Richmond's servant, and because Norfolk favours you –'

‘The king himself favours me.'

He raises his eyebrows. ‘Does he? Then you should complain to him. Because you are ill-lodged, are you not? Sadly for you, the king is not here, so you must make do with me and my long memory. But let us not cast back for instances. Look, for instance, at the case of the Flintshire gentleman, John ap Eyton. That is so recent you have not forgot it.'

‘So that is why I am here,' Brereton says.

‘Not entirely, but leave aside now your adultery with the queen and concentrate on Eyton. The facts of the case are known to you. There is a quarrel, blows exchanged, one of your household ends up dead, but the man Eyton is tried in due form before a London jury, and is acquitted. Now, having no respect for either law or justice, you swear revenge. You have the Welshman abducted. Your servants hang him out of hand, all this – do not interrupt me, man – all this with your permission and contrivance. I give this as one instance. You think this is only one man and he doesn't matter, but you see he does. You think a year or more has passed and no one remembers, but I remember. You believe the law should be what you would like it to be, and it is on that principle that you conduct yourself in your holdings on the marches of Wales, where the king's justice and the king's name are brought into contempt every day. The place is a stronghold of thieves.'

‘You say I am a thief?'

‘I say you consort with them. But your schemes end here.'

‘You are judge and jury and hangman, is that it?'

‘It is better justice than Eyton had.'

And Brereton says, ‘I concede that.'

What a fall this is. Only days ago, he was petitioning Master Secretary for spoils, when the abbey lands in Cheshire should be given out. Now no doubt the words run through his head, the words he used to Master Secretary when he complained of his high-handed ways: I must tutor you in realities, he had said coldly. We are not creatures of some lawyers' conclave at Gray's Inn. In my own country, my family upholds the law, and the law is what we care to uphold.

Now he, Master Secretary, asks, ‘Do you think Weston has had to do with the queen?'

‘Perhaps,' Brereton looks as if he hardly cares, one way or the other. ‘I barely know him. He is young and foolish and good-looking, isn't he, and women regard these things? And she may be a queen but she is only a woman, who knows what she might be persuaded to?'

‘You think women more foolish than men?'

‘In general, yes. And weaker. In matters of love.'

‘I note your opinion.'

‘What about Wyatt, Cromwell? Where is he in this?'

‘You are in no place,' he says, ‘to put questions to me.' William Brereton; left hindpaw.

 

George Boleyn is well past thirty, but he still has the sheen we admire in the young, the sparkle and the clear gaze. It is hard to associate his pleasant person with the kind of bestial appetite of which his wife accuses him, and for a moment he looks at George and wonders if he can be guilty of any offences, except a certain pride and elation. With the graces of his person and mind, he could have floated and hovered above the court and its sordid machinations, a man of refinement moving in his own sphere: commissioning translations of the ancient poets, and causing them to be published in exquisite editions. He could have ridden pretty white horses that curvet and bow in front of ladies. Unfortunately, he liked to quarrel and brag, intrigue and snub. As we find him now, in his light circular room in the Martin Tower, we find him pacing, hungry for conflict, we ask ourselves, does he know why he is here? Or is that surprise still to come?

‘You are perhaps not much to blame,' he says, as he takes his seat: he, Thomas Cromwell. ‘Join me at this table,' he directs. ‘One hears of prisoners wearing a path through stone, but I do not believe it can really happen. It would take three hundred years perhaps.'

Boleyn says, ‘You are accusing me of some sort of collusion, concealment, concealing misconduct on my sister's part, but this charge will not stand, because there was no misconduct.'

‘No, my lord, that is not the charge.'

‘Then what?'

‘That is not what you are accused of. Sir Francis Bryan, who is a man of great imaginative capacities –'

‘Bryan!' Boleyn looks horrified. ‘But you know he is an enemy of mine.' His words tumble over each other. ‘What has he said, how can you credit anything he says?'

‘Sir Francis has explained it all to me. And I begin to see it. How a man may hardly know his sister, and meet her as a grown woman. She is like himself, yet not. She is familiar, yet piques his interest. One day his brotherly embrace is a little longer than usual. The business progresses from there. Perhaps neither party feels they are doing anything wrong, till some frontier is crossed. But I myself am far too lacking in imagination to imagine what that frontier could be.' He pauses. ‘Did it begin before her marriage, or after?'

Boleyn begins to tremble. It is shock; he can hardly speak. ‘I refuse to answer this.'

‘My lord, I am accustomed to dealing with those who refuse to answer.'

‘Are you threatening me with the rack?'

‘Well, now, I didn't rack Thomas More, did I? I sat in a room with him. A room here at the Tower, such as the one you occupy. I listened to the murmurs within his silence. Construction can be put on silence. It will be.'

George says: ‘Henry killed his father's councillors. He killed the Duke of Buckingham. He destroyed the cardinal and harried him to his death, and struck the head off one of Europe's great scholars. Now he plans to kill his wife and her family and Norris who has been his closest friend. What makes you think it will be different with you, that are not the equal of any of these men?'

He says, ‘It ill becomes anyone of your family to evoke the cardinal's name. Or Thomas More's, for that matter. Your lady sister burned for vengeance. She would say to me, what, Thomas More, is he not dead yet?'

‘Who began this slander against me? It is not Francis Bryan, surely. Is it my wife? Yes. I should have known.'

‘You make the assumption. I do not confirm it. You must have a guilty conscience towards her, if you think she has such cause to hate you.'

‘And will you believe something so monstrous?' George begs. ‘On the word of one woman?'

‘There are other women who have been recipients of your gallantry. I will not bring them before a court if I can help it, I can do that much to protect them. You have always regarded women as disposable, my lord, and you cannot complain if in the end they think the same of you.'

‘So am I to be put on trial for gallantry? Yes, they are jealous of me, you are all jealous, I have had some success with women.'

‘You still call it success? You must think again.'

‘I never heard it was a crime. To spend time with a willing lover.'

‘You had better not say that in your defence. If one of your lovers is your sister…the court will find it, what shall we say…pert and bold. Lacking in gravity. What would save you now – I mean, what might preserve your life – would be a full statement of all you know about your sister's dealings with other men. Some suggest there are liaisons which would put yours in the shade, unnatural though it may be.'

‘You are a Christian man, and you ask me this? To give evidence to kill my sister?'

He opens his hands. ‘I ask nothing. I only point out what some would see as the way forward. I do not know whether the king would incline to mercy. He might let you live abroad, or he might grant you mercy as to the manner of your death. Or not. The traitor's penalty, as you know, is fearful and public; he dies in great pain and humiliation. I see you do know, you have witnessed it.'

Boleyn folds into himself: narrowing himself, arms across his body, as if to protect his guts from the butcher's knife, and he slumps to a stool; he thinks, you should have done that before, I told you to sit, you see how without touching you I have made you sit? He tells him softly, ‘You profess the gospel, my lord, and that you are saved. But your actions do not suggest you are saved.'

‘You may take your thumbprints off my soul,' George says. ‘I discuss these matters with my chaplains.'

‘Yes, so they tell me. I think you have become too assured of forgiveness, believing you have years ahead of you to sin and yet though God sees all he must be patient, like a waiting man: and you will notice him at last, and answer his suit, if only he will wait till you are old. Is that your case?'

‘I will speak to my confessor about that.'

‘I am your confessor now. Did you say, in the hearing of others, that the king was impotent?'

George sneers at him. ‘He can do it when the weather is set fair.'

‘In doing so, you called into question the parentage of the Princess Elizabeth. You will readily see this is treason, as she is the heir to England.'

‘
Faute de mieux
, as far as you're concerned.'

‘The king now believes he could not have a son from this marriage, as it was not lawful. He believes there were hidden impediments and that your sister was not frank about her past. He means to make a new marriage, which will be clean.'

‘I marvel you explain yourself,' George says. ‘You never did so before.'

‘I do so for one reason – so that you can realise your situation and entertain no false hope. These chaplains you speak of, I will send them to you. They are fit company for you now.'

‘God grants sons to every beggar,' George says. ‘He grants them to the illicit union, as well as the blessed, to the whore as well as the queen. I wonder that the king can be so simple.'

‘It is a holy simplicity,' he says. ‘He is an anointed sovereign, and so very close to God.'

Boleyn scrutinises his expression, for levity or scorn: but he knows his face says nothing, he can rely on his face for that. You could look back through Boleyn's career, and say, ‘There he went wrong, and there.' He was too proud, too singular, unwilling to bridle his whims or turn himself to use. He needs to learn to bend with the breeze, like his father; but the time he has to learn anything is running out fast. There is a time to stand on your dignity, but there is a time to abandon it in the interests of your safety. There is a time to smirk behind the hand of cards you have drawn, and there is a time to throw down your purse on the table and say, ‘Thomas Cromwell, you win.'

George Boleyn, right forepaw.

 

By the time he gets to Francis Weston (right hindpaw) he has been approached by the young man's family and offered a great deal of money. Politely, he has refused them; in their circumstances he would do just the same, except that it is hard to imagine Gregory or any member of his household to be such a fool as this young man has been.

The Weston family go further: they approach the king himself. They will make an offering, they will make a benevolence, they will make a large and unconditional donation to the king's treasury. He discusses it with Fitzwilliam: ‘I cannot advise His Majesty. It is possible that lesser charges can be brought. It depends how much His Majesty thinks his honour is touched.'

But the king is not disposed to be lenient. Fitzwilliam says grimly, ‘If I were Weston's people, I would pay the money anyway. To ensure favour. Afterwards.'

That is the very approach he has settled on himself, thinking of the Boleyn family (those who survive) and the Howards. He will shake the ancestral oaks and gold coins will drop each season.

Even before he comes to the room where Weston is held, the young man knows what to expect; he knows who is gaoled with him; he knows or has a good idea of the charges; his gaolers must have babbled, because he, Cromwell, has cut off communication between the four men. A talkative gaoler can be useful; he can nudge a prisoner towards cooperation, towards acceptance, towards despair. Weston must guess his family's initiative has failed. You look at Cromwell and you think, if bribery won't do it, nothing else will. It's useless to protest or disclaim or contradict. Abasement might just do it, it's worth a try. ‘I taunted you, sir,' Francis says. ‘I belittled you. I am sorry I ever did so. You are the king's servant and it was proper for me to respect that.'

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