The Thistle and the Rose (3 page)

BOOK: The Thistle and the Rose
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Henry came and stood at her side; even he was subdued. “Is she very ill, do you think?” he asked his sister.

Margaret nodded.

“Skelton told me that Dr. Hallyswurth is now at her bedside.”

Margaret was suddenly afraid. Her mother was grievously ill and her illness was due to the birth of their little sister; and the bearing of children was the direct result of marriage.

First came the jousting, the banquets, the feasts and the dancing; and then the nuptial rites; and if one were fruitful—and one must pray that one might be—this terrible ordeal, which often resulted in death, was the next step. Not once only must it be faced… but again and again.

Her mother was very ill—many believed she was dying—and it was because she too had had a wedding, as Margaret had, and because it was her duty to give her husband children.

It was a sad thought when one was twelve years old and just married.

She felt envious of her brash young brother, who would one day be King in his own right—not because of a marriage he had happened to contract—and who would not have to suffer as their mother had.

“I wish I were a man,” she said vehemently; and she watched the slow satisfied smile spread across her brother's face.

A barge stopping by the stairs caught her attention and she said: “Look! Someone is alighting. He may bring news from the Tower.”

They ran from the room and down to meet the messenger, but when Margaret saw the expression on his face she felt sick and wished that she had stayed in her apartments, because before he spoke she knew.

“My mother is dead,” she said in a whisper.

The messenger did not answer, but bowing, stood humbly before her; and in that moment Margaret was too filled with sorrow for the loss of her kindly mother to harbor fears for her own future.

So the Queen was dead and it seemed that the little Katharine would not long survive her. The King had shut himself away to be alone with his sorrow, but those who knew him believed he would already be making plans for a new marriage. It was not that he did not appreciate his Queen who had been a good and docile wife to him; he would never forget that through their marriage the White Rose of York and the Red Rose of Lancaster had mingled harmoniously. It had been a good marriage, but it was over, while the need to provide England with sons was still present. Young Henry was a fine healthy boy—but now that Arthur was gone he was the only boy; and death could strike quickly and suddenly as he knew well.

There was mourning throughout the Court where there had been gay wedding celebrations; and on the day when Elizabeth of York was laid in her grave the scene was in sad and bitter contrast to that of a few weeks before.

Through the city, from the Tower to Westminster, rode the melancholy cortege, and the newly wed Queen of Scotland knew
that many of her father's courtiers watched her furtively and asked themselves whether this was not an ill augury for her wedding. On the other hand, was that a certain relish—equally furtive—which she detected in the eyes of the Scottish lords? Were they telling each other that only young Henry stood between Margaret and the crown of England now? And since Elizabeth of York could no longer give the King of England sons, that was a matter of some moment for those who had the good of Scotland at heart.

Was there a little extra deference in their demeanor toward her?

If so, Margaret did not notice. During those sad days she forgot that she was a newly created Queen; she was merely a twelve-yearold girl sorrowing for a mother who had never shown her anything but kindness.

One could not mourn forever. That long winter was passing and with the coming of May the King sent for his eldest daughter.

“Your husband grows impatient for his bride,” he told her. “It is time you joined him.”

“Yes, Sire,” answered Margaret.

“Preparations shall begin,” the King told her. “Make yourself ready. In June we will leave Richmond together, for I plan to accompany you on the first stages of your journey.”

Fear showed itself briefly in Margaret's eyes. Now that the time of departure was coming near she did not want to go. It was pleasant being a queen in her father's Court where she had spent her childhood, teasing Henry, flaunting her new importance before little Mary; but to go away to a foreign land was a different matter.

The King did not notice her fear. His mind was on other matters. He wanted a new wife, more children for whom advantageous marriages should be arranged. When he looked at his daughter he did not see a tender young girl so much as a means of keeping the peace with the tiresome warlike people who had made trouble at the Border for as long as any could remember.

The marriage pleased him; therefore Margaret pleased him.

“You may go now,” he told her gently. “Remember what I have told you.”

She curtsied and left him; then she hurried to her bedchamber.

She told her attendants that she had a headache and wished to rest, and when she was alone she began to weep silently.

“I want my mother,” she murmured into her pillows, for now, when she would never see the Queen again, she realized that from her alone could she have received the comfort and understanding of which she was in such need.

So Margaret, remembering that she was a bereaved little girl, forgot that she was also Queen of Scotland; and for a long time she lay sobbing because she had lost her mother.

To the Court, however, she showed a brave face, and on the sixteenth day of June, riding beside her father, acknowledging the cheers of the people who had come to watch her pass, she left Richmond Palace on the first stage of her journey to Scotland.

J
AMES
I
V OF
S
COTLAND
W
AS
N
OT
A
WAITING
H
IS
bride with any great excitement. His counselors had advised him that the marriage was for the good of Scotland and he must needs agree to it.

And so, he thought, I must take this child to wife.

Not so long ago he would have refused to do so, no matter that she was the daughter of the King of England and peace between the two countries was desirable. He had been in love and had made up his mind whom he would marry; and so deep had been his feelings that he would have insisted on having his will.

But passions ran high in Scotland and lives were cheap.

I should have taken greater care of her, he told himself again as he had a hundred times before. Then he would have been the husband of another Margaret.

But the deed had been done and there was no going back. He had now to think of greeting this child whom they were sending him from over the Border, for it was no fault of hers.

They were saying that England and Scotland were united at last; and the Rose and the Thistle could now grow happily side by side. But could that ever be achieved? Was even the union of Tudor and Stuart capable of working such a miracle?

James stroked his auburn curling beard, and his hazel eyes were momentarily melancholy.

He had lost the Margaret he loved, and now must endeavor to make a success of union with her namesake.

And even as he prepared himself for the journey which would end in his meeting with his bride, he was thinking of his first meeting with that other Margaret at Stobhall, her father's mansion on the banks of the Tay.

The banks of the Tay! The wild water cascading over the rocks; the sound of birdsong, and the trees in bud! And beside him, Margaret. Never had he believed such happiness existed in the world.

To be fifteen again… and in love for the first time. For the first and last time, he had told her; for she was the only one he would ever love.

She had listened earnestly, believing him. Then he had been a handsome youth. Not dark like his father; not yellow-haired like his Danish mother. It was said that he had inherited the good points of each, and the result was auburn hair which shone as gold in the sunshine; and hazel eyes that could be serious but more often merry; the sensitive mouth of a poet, sensual as a lover's; and a hint of recklessness in the expression which hinted he would be brave in battle.

Margaret was tall and golden-haired and all the world seemed as beautiful as the banks of the Tay to the lovers.

In the beginning they strolled among the trees while he talked to her of his childhood which had been a strange one. He tried to explain to her how he and his brothers had lived almost like prisoners in the Castle of Stirling.

“Whenever I see Stirling I shall remember. What a prison! There it stands on that precipitous hill, and my brothers and I used to look down from our windows on to the Forth. We were always expecting our father to come. We talked continually of him. I remember so well that whenever a stranger came to the castle and he was tall and handsome we would run to him and ask him if he were our father. ‘Please, please, sir,' I used to say, ‘tell me you are my father.' And always I was assured that he was not.”

“Poor James. How strange it must have been.”

“My mother tried to console us. We were fortunate in her.”

“The King has behaved badly not only to you, James, but to the whole of Scotland.”

Had anyone else made such a statement he would have been shocked, for he and his brothers had always been taught that kings should not be judged by their subjects; but since she was Margaret who could do no wrong, he listened.

“I have heard it said that it is no easy matter to be a king,” he replied with a hint of melancholy.

“You will be the best King Scotland has ever known.”

She gave him such adoring looks that he believed her.

“Queen Margaret,” he said, and kissed her hand.

He saw her eyes shine with the excitement he shared; at fifteen it had been pleasant to play their game of make-believe.

“It may be soon that you are crowned King of Scotland, James.”

“Nay, my father has many years before him.”

“But the nobles have risen against him.” She was well aware of that because her father was one of the rebel leaders, and it was for this reason that they had brought the heir to the throne from Stirling to Stobhall.

“It is not good that there should be civil war in Scotland.”

“It will not be for long.” She was repeating what she had so often heard. “And the King spends too much of the nation's wealth on his favorites, and has mixed brass and lead in silver money and passed it off as pure silver. That is a bad thing to do.”

James shrugged his shoulders and, putting an arm about Margaret, kissed her; there were more pleasant things to do on a sunny afternoon than talk of the misdeeds of his father.

“You must not forget that you will soon wear the crown.”

They sat down on the bank and James thought fleetingly of his father.

“Perhaps he was led away by the company he kept. My mother told me that his greatest friends were a musician, a tailor and a smith at one time, and that he set great store by his astrologers.”

“He believed all they told him,” Margaret affirmed. “That was why he was afraid of you and your brothers as well as his own brothers.”

“I remember my mother telling me that when I was born the position of the stars and planets showed him that harm would come to him through me. As if I would ever harm him!”

“You would never harm anyone. You are too kind and gentle. You will be the greatest King Scotland has ever known.”

They kissed once more and as he laid his hands on her shoulders, he was trembling with excitement, but he did not know what he wanted to do, so he dropped his hands and stared at the river.

“He had a dream,” he said, “and when he asked his astrologers
to interpret it, they replied that the royal lion of Scotland, in course of time, would be torn by its whelps. That was why he lived in fear of me.”

“A father—and a king—in fear of his son!” scorned Margaret. Then she touched his cheek with her finger. “And such a son.”

He caught the hand and kissed it. He was overcome by a gust of passion but, acutely conscious of his inexperience, he hesitated. There was a bitter sweetness in fifteen-year-old love that would never be equaled at another time of his life, he knew. She drew away from him. “They will find a bride for you from some foreign country,” she said sadly. “They will need to make some useful alliance.”

“They have found brides for me before.” He snapped his fingers. “That for their foreign marriages! When I was very young it was decided I should marry the Lady Cecilia, second daughter of King Edward IV of England, but when Edward died his daughter was no longer considered a worthy consort. There was a new king on the throne—Richard III. I know because my mother insisted that I learn what was happening in other countries and particularly in England.”

“It is a necessary part of the education of one who is to be King,” Margaret reminded him.

“And Richard had a niece, the Lady Anne Suffolk, and he was eager for her to marry me. But it was not long before the Tudor Henry VII had ousted Richard from the throne and then Lady Anne, like Lady Cecilia, was no longer a worthy match for me. Foreign marriages! They often come to naught.” He boasted: “When I am King I shall choose my own bride and I know who she will be.”

Margaret sighed and leaned against him. Why not? She was after all a Drummond and an ancestor of hers, Annabella Drummond, had married Robert III of Scotland.

“Oh, James, would you indeed?”

“You may trust me,” he assured her. “I would I were King now…But no…I don't.”

His brows were drawn together. He wanted to see his father, to tell him what nonsense it was to think that
he
, his eldest son, James, who wished to live in peace with everyone, would ever
dream of harming him. James was imagining a pleasant scene when he would be brought face-to-face with his father and would heal the rift between him and his nobles; then he would take Margaret by the hand and say: “Father, this is the lady I have chosen to be my bride.” There would be great rejoicing throughout Scotland, for the discord would be healed by this marriage; Stirling would be the scene of joyous festivities and he would ride through the streets to Edinburgh, and there would be tournaments in the fields about the Castle and Holyrood House.

It was such a pleasant dream that it was a pity to wake from it. But he did not wish to be King since that must mean his father would be dead. He hated the thought of death; it would always remind him of the death of his mother.

Margaret understood; she pressed her lips tightly together because she knew it would hurt him if she said what was in her mind; she must not repeat what she had heard her father and his friends say, which was that it would be a good day for Scotland if James III were dethroned and his son set up in his place.

Everyone at Stobhall talked of it. She had discussed it with her sisters, particularly the younger ones—Anabella, Eupheme and Sibylla. It was for this reason that her father had brought the young heir to the throne to Stobhall, that he might be here in the hands of his father's enemies when the need arose.

“I hate death,” whispered James. “And my father would have to die before I could be King.”

It was only about a year ago that his mother had died, and he was still aware of the void that had made in his life. It had changed the tenor of his days and he could still wake in the night and shed tears for the loss of his kind and tolerant mother.

And when she was no longer there his father's enemies had decided to make him their figurehead. He should have protested, he knew; but Lord Drummond had brought him to Stobhall and here he had found Margaret.

She was impatient of the course the talk was taking, for she did not wish to make him melancholy.

“Let us take off our shoes,” she said, “and dabble our feet in the water.”

She cried out in mock dismay as the cold water splashed about
her ankles; she held her skirts above her knees, as James splashed into the river after her and she pretended to run from him.

He caught her, as she intended he should.

“Why, James IV,” she cried, “how bold you are!”

“Is that your opinion then, Queen Margaret?”

They embraced there, while the water played about their ankles, and were astonished by their sensations. They were fifteen and people of their age who lived in the early sixteenth century in Scotland were invariably sexually awakened. They had both led more sheltered lives than most young people, and they felt in that moment impatient with their innocence. They seemed bound more closely together because they must lead each other, because they must explore together.

He drew her from the water and they lay on the bank together.

“This is the happiest day of my life,” said the future James IV of Scotland.

But even as they lay there on the bank they heard the sound of urgent voices calling the Prince.

“Heed them not,” whispered James. “They will go away.”

But the voices came nearer and Margaret struggled free of his arms and leaping to her feet smoothed her hair, straightened her rumpled gown.

He rose and stood beside her, and thus the messenger from Stobhall found them.

“I implore Your Highness to return to the house without delay,” James was told, and he caught the excitement in the voice of the man who addressed him.

Important events were close; he could not guess how important; but as he walked back with Margaret he sensed that the idyll on the bank of the Tay had been more than temporarily interrupted—perhaps it would be lost forever.

He felt the remorse even now, looking back over the years. What should I have done? he asked himself, as he had so often. Should I have refused?

But Margaret's father was among those who pointed out his duty, and Margaret herself stood by with shining eyes watching him, telling him by her glances that he was no longer a boy.

BOOK: The Thistle and the Rose
10.73Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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