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Authors: Laura Andersen

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BOOK: The Boleyn King
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Though straightforward in many ways, Mary showed an advanced ability to refer to her love for her half siblings without ever acknowledging their mother. Even when Lord Norfolk had come in person to repeat the king’s command to attend him upon his birthday, Mary had listened stonily and then bade him tell the king that, as she loved him, she would do all that he commanded … within her conscience.

At least her conscience allowed her to be driven to Hampton Court today. If nothing else, Minuette was desperate to see her friends once more. Especially Dominic—she’d had word from Elizabeth that he had been recalled from France. She could not wait to have people to speak to freely again. She had not even had Carrie with her for the last two weeks. As soon as her stepfather had left Mary’s house, Minuette had sent Carrie back to court carrying on her person a message to be hand-delivered directly to Elizabeth.

They rode for hours without speaking, and Minuette wondered why Mary had wanted her at all. Only when the lanes began to show the familiarity of the approaching palace did Mary speak.

“Mistress Wyatt,” she said. “Will the king allow the woman to humiliate me?”

“Never. And I assure you that the queen has nothing but care in her heart for you. She would be your friend if you would let her.”

The downward curl of Mary’s lip reminded Minuette of William when he was displeased. “You are too young to know of what you speak,” she said dismissively. “However she may appear to you, that person is the cause of all the misery in my life. She turned my father’s heart away from me. She rejoiced when my mother died, and she would be happy to see me follow.”

Minuette felt a great pity for the resentful and, yes, wronged Mary. But she was also weary of her inability to recognize what would be in her best interest. “And as you loved your mother, my lady, so does the king love his. He does not ask you to betray anything—only to be civil. Surely we can all manage that for the good of England.”

When Mary turned stubbornly to look out the window, Minuette added, “It would have pleased your father greatly.”

“Do not presume to tell me about my father!” Mary snapped, and this time it was Elizabeth she resembled.

Fortunately, Minuette was too used to Elizabeth’s anger to be intimidated by Mary’s. “I seek only to serve His Majesty. He wishes peace at home. You have the power to give it to him.”

Then she turned away herself and shut her eyes, calling up images of Hampton Court to soothe her. She could not wait to arrive and hand over this responsibility to William.

Dominic rode into view of his mother’s house just before sunset on June 26. He had landed in Dover the day before and, though anxious to return to court, he could not in conscience overlook the opportunity to visit. He came alone, having sent Harrington on ahead. There were things waiting here too personal to be shared with anyone.

His mother stood on the steps as Dominic dismounted in the courtyard, her slight figure dwarfed by the double-width oak door behind her. The dark blue gown she wore was unadorned, her hair completely covered by a white headdress. She looked like nothing so much as a mother abbess.

Which, some days, she thought she was.

But today, it seemed, was one of her good days. She greeted Dominic with a smile and even stood on tiptoe to kiss his cheek. In spite of that, Dominic could not relax entirely—he was too busy searching her face and voice for clues as to her state of mind. She knew who he was, she knew he’d been in France, and, most important of all, she spoke with a soft lucidity that indicated her mind was as calm as her face.

After a hot bath and fresh clothing, Dominic escorted his mother to the low-beamed hall where a long table had been set for four. They were joined at dinner by Dominic’s old nurse, Grace, who now cared for his mother through both good and bad. The other guest was a short, powerfully built man in dark robes who was introduced only as Michael, his mother’s clerk. It was a charade one played in Protestant England. Michael was only the latest in a long line of Continental priests who had taken refuge in his mother’s house.

It didn’t take long for the first danger signs to appear. Dominic grew increasingly uneasy as his mother questioned him about his personal life and attachments. Not that the inquiries themselves were unnatural—it was what mothers did, after all, and he usually welcomed any sign that Philippa was normal.

But with each probing question, his mother’s voice grew higher and more rapid and her green eyes began to glitter unevenly. Dominic was spare and neutral in his answers, hoping by his reserve to keep her anchored firmly in the present. But he could not avoid answering a direct question and he was forced to admit that, no, he was not as yet betrothed.

Philippa smiled. “I’ve been corresponding with Margaret Haywood in Devon. Her husband is sheriff of the county. Four sons and one daughter. The girl’s quite lovely … they sent me a miniature—”

“Mother, please. I don’t need you to find me a wife.”

She perched on the edge of her chair, chattering on as if he had not spoken. “She needs the right kind of husband, of course—it is such an uncertain time for those of the true faith. But you are both kin and friend to the king. The girl would be quite safe with you. Her name is Katherine, and her mother assures me she’s as sweet-tempered and biddable a girl as ever there was. Just turned fourteen, but a woman. You would not have to wait for children—”

“Mother.”

She blinked.

Caught between anger and despair, Dominic did not measure his words. “You speak out of turn when you consider me of your faith. I do not follow Rome. And when I choose to marry, it will not be to some child I’ve never laid eyes on. I’ll not bed a girl of fourteen, willing or not.”

In that brief pause that followed his outburst, hope flared in Dominic that maybe it would be all right. Maybe this time she had heard and understood him and would treat him as any other indulgent mother, laughing off his unpardonable manners and retreating to a safer subject.

Her voice, when it came, was brittle and cracked, like ice rotting from beneath. “You prefer a reluctant wife? But of course. You are a Courtenay, after all.”

Dominic could not answer, his throat tight with self-disgust. It was Michael who saved them, by the simple expedient of taking Philippa by the arm and raising her from the chair. Like a docile child, she let him lead her from the room. With a shake of her head, Grace followed.

He never should have come here. It was too late to leave for Hampton Court now, but at first light he would be on his way.

Provided that his mother didn’t burn the house down around them in the night.

When Grace returned to the room an hour later he was still sitting at the table, pondering the unpleasantness of filial duty, while the servants cleared up around him.

With the gentleness of long affection, Grace said, “You make things worse, you know. The tone of your voice, the turn of your countenance—it’s no wonder she sees him in you.”

“Pity I wasn’t born a girl,” Dominic said lightly.

Grace continued to gaze at him, eyes wide and mild. For some reason, the very lack of judgment in her face made Dominic want to defend himself. “I can’t help how I look.”

“It’s not only that. You are your father’s son, Dominic. You have his ideals and his ambitions and his passion. Such intensity frightens your mother, for it made her own life a misery.”

“Then why is she pushing the Haywood daughter on me? I’d expect her sympathies to be entirely on the girl’s side.”

“They are. According to Margaret Haywood’s letters, her daughter is willing and eager to marry. No doubt she’s been fed romantic stories of your looks and your skill at arms, not to mention your friendship with kings. It’s enough to turn any girl’s head.”

Dominic snorted. “So it’s all right to marry me off to a stranger as long as the bride is convinced she herself wishes it?”

“Odd as it may seem, your mother wishes this marriage for your sake. She would not have you marry after your heart as your father did. She did not love him, but there were moments when she could pity him. His life was no less bitter than hers, loving a woman who flinched every time he touched her. Better, she thinks, to leave your heart out of it altogether, for then you cannot be hurt.”

She rose and kissed him on the forehead. When she had gone, Dominic could not bear the closeness of the house another minute. The half-moon gave enough light for him to wander across the lawn to the perimeter of the kitchen garden. He could hear the lowing of cattle from a distant field, and he tried to lose himself in the pastoral serenity.

As he leaned against the trunk of a knobby oak tree, random images tumbled before his eyes: his father showing him how to hold a sword, his large hand swallowing up five-year-old Dominic’s fingers; his mother standing before his father’s tomb with dry eyes and compressed lips; a girl of fourteen somewhere in Devon, her features soft and unformed, waiting in a church for a husband she’d never met.

Dominic kicked at a clump of grass and swore. Why was this so difficult? Men married every day for reasons far from romantic—for land, for family, for connections. When he’d troubled to think about it, he had assumed he would do the same. After all, his heart had never entered into his affairs before, only considerations of pleasure and good company.

He had followed his own strict ethics—no virgins, no wives, and no force—and had thought his detachment a point of honour, a means of avoiding entanglement. Now, as the summer darkness closed around him, with the seductive smell of warm grass and sleeping flowers almost tangible against his skin, Dominic forced himself to dive into the icy center of his heart and admit the truth.

He was afraid of being his father. He feared falling so desperately in love that he would ride roughshod over anyone, even the woman herself, to get what he wanted. By that measure, his mother’s suggestion was sensible—if Dominic was going to marry for reasons of logic and practicality, the Haywood daughter was as good as any other. And it wouldn’t be so terrible for the girl. He would be kind.

But Dominic choked at the thought. He didn’t want to marry Katherine Haywood. He didn’t want a biddable girl or a needy widow or a calculating mistress.

He closed his eyes and allowed thoughts of Minuette to creep through the barriers in his memory. The unexpected feel of her in his arms when she’d jumped to him at Hampton Court. Her pale face, turned to him in appeal the night he’d pulled Giles Howard off her. The lilt of her laughter as she’d flirted with another man.

In the darkness of his mind, he let his control slip. He imagined her before him, trembling a little as he ran his fingers down her cheek to her throat. He imagined her eyes closing and her chin tilting up, bringing her mouth closer to his own, her lips parting as they kissed …

His eyes snapped open. God in heaven, he was in trouble.

William slipped out of bed and shivered once at the night air on his bare skin before he slipped a robe over his shoulders. Moonlight poured across the floor and he padded silently to the window, looking over the shadowy courtyard and the moon-bleached gardens to the silver glint of the river beyond the walls.

Hampton Court slumbered below him, though he knew many were still awake at this hour—laundry maids scrubbing, cooks working through the night to ensure that the court and its many guests were well fed. And surely more than one couple engaged in breathless intimacy.

Hitching himself onto the window ledge, he stared absently back at his empty bed. Eleanor had returned to court this week with her husband and had not missed a chance to remind William of her charms. But her charms came with a price, and he hadn’t felt like listening to her subtle persuasions that he increase her allowance or acknowledge her daughter. He wasn’t married yet—he should be allowed some peace.

Of course, the council would change all that if they had their way. William’s marriage had been a topic of every council meeting for the last six months, with opinions on an appropriate mate ranging across the map of Europe, plus several serious contenders here at home.

Jane Grey was the nearly unanimous choice of the Protestant faction, with more than just religion in her favor. Royal blood, for one: Jane’s grandmother had been his father’s beloved youngest sister, and it was always wise to co-opt any future threats to the crown. Her age, for another: at sixteen, she was ready to take her place as England’s queen without delay. The only Protestants who disliked her were those who had fallen foul of her difficult mother, the Duchess of Suffolk, and didn’t want their king in his cousin’s debt.

The most serious Catholic candidate was the French princess Elisabeth. As King Henri’s oldest daughter, she was quite valuable, and a marriage to her would enhance William’s standing in Europe. The largest drawback, though by no means insurmountable, was her age. Elisabeth de France was only nine years old, and her father likely would not permit her to solemnize a marriage before she was twelve. Though once word got out that French soldiers were loose in Scotland, the girl’s age wouldn’t matter at all. There could be no betrothal without peace.

Throughout the long and contentious debates, only two men had kept their opinions quiet—William himself and his uncle Rochford. Although they had not discussed the matter openly, William was certain that they were thinking the same thing.

Mary Stuart, Queen of Scotland.

She was perfect. Like Jane, the granddaughter of a Tudor princess. Like Elisabeth de France, a Catholic. And as a queen in her own right since she was six days old, Mary had a stature that no other woman could match. That she was Scotland’s queen only enhanced the temptation. To be the English king who united the island was an inducement far greater than Mary’s personal charms, which were many.

BOOK: The Boleyn King
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