CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN
Denys bowed her head over the records, made a fist and pounded the
book in anguish. Her twin brother was Henry Tudor, who was at this
moment was trying to seize Richard's crown, fighting her beloved
Valentine, putting at risk everything she had, her entire world.
Her long-lost family, whom she'd longed for and cried out for, all
her life were the enemy. The dreaded Lancastrians. But it was her
mother in that prison cell, and she had to get to her.
Without stopping to even think of how to get there, she fled the
chapel and headed for the Tower of London, where her mother
languished in a cold, damp cell, awaiting death.
The guard at the White Tower regarded her with awe and confusion.
He knew she was no commoner, but with her hair disheveled and her
gown spattered with mud, she hardly looked noble.
"In which tower is Lady Margaret Beaufort?"
"The Beauchamp tower, milady. But why—"
"I am her daughter!" Saying it for the first time to this stranger
seemed to ruin the magic of the revelation. Somehow she'd pictured
it differently. She'd wanted to tell Valentine, or write it in her
journal, not blurt it to a stranger guarding the prison cell.
"Lead me there, please." For a fleeting second, she became aware
that she could turn, go back home, and alter the course of
history. To acknowledge Lancastrians as her family spelled
possible disaster for herself and her husband, but as she climbed
the winding stone steps and strode down the drafty corridor, she
knew there was no turning back.
The woman behind this prison door was her destiny and her
history—the blood running through her veins, through her unborn
children's veins. Beaufort and Tudor blood.
The guard unlatched the lock with a skeleton key and swung the
door open.
Denys took a gulp of air, already fearing the worst in the cell.
He stepped back. She stepped in.
The room was silent, airy and light. It didn't resemble a dungeon.
No mire clung to the walls. There were no rats or piles of filth
about. It was a simple, small room.
The woman's back was to her. Then she turned.
Denys no longer had the dreaded sensation of feeling lost, or
thinking about the past. She was there now, about to come face to
face with her mother. A scene flashed before her eyes. A young
mother, barely out of childhood herself, was handing her baby to
another woman, asking her to raise her, for she was royal, and a
daughter of the enemy.
"You must raise her as your niece," she told the woman, "and never
let her know who she really is."
She shook with nervousness. Her stomach tumbled.
When their eyes met at last there was instant recognition. She
didn't look like a prisoner, starving or near death. It was that
same face on the miniature, but aged. It was her own face, her own
eyes looking back at her, the lips curling up in her smile, her
oval face, her strong chin. She never saw the resemblance until
now.
She wrapped her arms around her daughter. "I prayed you would come
to me," she said softly. "After all these years, I can finally
hold you. Oh, how many years we've lost!"
"
Ma mere
,"
Denys whispered. "I'm here now, so let's not look back. Let's just
start with this moment." She didn't smell death, didn't feel
death. That tragic shroud of doom didn't hang over the room or
over her mother.
But their tears mingled, tears of a thousand emotions that words
couldn't even begin to convey, in French or in English or in any
language. They simply let their tears and their hugs say
everything that needed to be said.
Her fears vanished. There were no warring factions, no bloody
massacres, her brother and her husband and King were not fighting
to the death for England's crown. In the face of this miracle,
that couldn't be happening somewhere on a field in Leicester.
Her mother surprised her with her next words. "You're with child."
She took a tiny step back and held Denys' chin up in a strong but
bony hand.
"How do you know?"
"I just know. I see it in your face. You glow."
"Aye. I am. I'm having your grandchild."
"Oh, I prayed all your life for this moment. But at the same time,
I feared that you'd always hate me for giving you away."
"I knew you didn't give me up because you didn't want me. It had
to go deeper than that. I knew that as much as I knew I wasn't a
Woodville. Now that I know who you are, I know why you gave me up.
You were afraid, weren't you?"
"Oh, Denys." She squeezed her eyes shut and they spilled over with
tears. "I was so fiercely protective of you, you'll never know. I
had to do what was best for you."
"Start at the beginning."
"I was twelve when King Henry gave me as a ward to his
half-brother Edmund Tudor to marry. He was King Henry's heir to
the throne—along with my claim to the throne through my ancestors,
we would have reigned jointly as king and queen. Then he was
captured by Yorkists in the Battle of Saint Albans and died of
plague two months later. He left me pregnant with you and your
brother, and I birthed you at Pembroke Castle.
"The King soon married me to Henry Stafford, and we went to live
way up in Lincolnshire, on the edge of the Fens. I sent you both
away, separating you so you would be even safer. I knew Henry
would be safe with his Uncle Jasper in Wales, because of the
endless wars being fought here.
"But I had big dreams for Henry. I wanted him to aspire to the
throne, so I made sure his uncle trained him well militarily. I
felt, with his royal heritage, he deserved a chance at the throne,
if not through bloodlines, by battle. So I helped him finance his
armies.
"But you were my daughter, my princess. I needed to make a much
greater sacrifice for you. So I told King Henry you had died, and
delivered you unto my trusted friend, Elizabeth Woodville. As I
feared for your life even more than Henry's, I told Elizabeth to
change your identity."
"Why give me to her, of all people?"
"I had good reason to give you to her, and she had just as good
reason to take you. Elizabeth had a mad fancy for Edward
Plantagenet, and she also knew he was destined for greatness. I
knew Edward quite well. Our families are related, and we spent a
lot of time together at Maxey Castle in Northamptonshire whilst
growing up. Elizabeth told me she would protect you if I made a
match between her and Edward, but even then, that wasn't enough
for the greedy Elizabeth. In case Edward didn't fall under her
spell, she wanted something else in the bargain, so I also had to
give her a manor house and its lands that I inherited, Foxley
Manor.
"As for Edward, I told him he needed to court Elizabeth because I
always teased him about his notorious wenching and how he needed a
wife and proper household. So I told Edward of this beautiful
older widow who had a burning desire to meet him. I arranged for
him to court her under an oak tree in Grafton. It has become
legend, and the superstitious folk branded it witchcraft, but it
really was as simple as love at first sight. He fell for Elizabeth
at once. Belief held that she'd cooked up a spell, but it was
naught more than simple human nature. She was a beautiful woman
determined to get what she wanted, and she did.
"Then Edward seized the throne, overthrowing King Henry, and you
would have been in even more danger if your identity had become
known as a Lancastrian claimant to the throne. It almost killed
me. All the while I was dying inside, knowing I had this beautiful
daughter whom I couldn't acknowledge as my own."
"So that is why Elizabeth never told me who I was even once Uncle
Ned became King," Denys guessed. "To make sure I'd never get near
the throne."
"Of course. We all know the self-serving Elizabeth. When she
realized she was about to become queen, she had more reason than
ever to keep it quiet. The fewer claimants to her husband's
throne, the better. If word had got out about your real identity,
the risk of the Lancastrians trying to put you on the throne and
kick her husband Edward off would have been great. And by the time
she began birthing Edward's heirs, she knew anyone with a claim to
the throne was a threat to her princes."
"Did Uncle Ned know who I was?"
"Nay—he believed you were Elizabeth's niece."
"He would have told me the truth had he known."
"He possibly would have, my dear, without regard for his crown or
even his life. He was so selfless and noble. That is why I thought
it too dangerous to tell even him. ‘Tis one thing to have a son in
the thick of a battle for the crown, but I didn't want a battle
fought with my daughter in the crossfire."
Denys' gaze intensified and she began tapping a rhythmic beat with
her ring on the edge of the table that matched the rapid hammering
of her heart.
"As for my life," Margaret sighed and wiped her mouth with the
handkerchief, "after Henry Stafford died, I married Thomas
Stanley. He had always wavered between Yorkist and Lancastrian
sides. Finally I persuaded him to support my son, which he agreed
to do in this battle."
Denys nodded slowly as she digested all these hard facts. She
closed her eyes and reopened them, as if waking from a dream.
Margaret Beaufort tilted her head and opened her mouth to speak.
They stood for a long silent moment before she finally said, "I
know you do not want to hear this, being a loyal Yorkist as you
are, but Henry has a rightful claim to the throne, my dear—and
now, so do you."
"Oh, Jesu, no, I'd never want it! Elizabeth's sons were declared
illegitimate, so the crown belongs to Richard."
"That depends on how hard he's willing to fight for it." She
sighed and wiped her mouth with the handkerchief.
"May the best man win."
"You're aware that my husband is fighting that battle at Richard's
side," she stated evenly.
"I know, my dear. But he shan't perish. Mayhap he and Henry will
become friends."
"Valentine is not like your husband. His loyalties are
unwavering." Denys no longer wanted to discuss politics or
financing of Henry's battles or claims to the throne. This moment
was too fragile, too rare, it wouldn't happen again—until she met
her brother, Henry Tudor.
Her mother changed the subject for her. "So, I want to hear how my
little grandchild is doing. My granddaughter."
"But
ma mere
—how
do you know ‘twill be a girl?"
"You want a girl?"
"Aye, I've always wanted a little girl!"
"Then you shall have a girl."
After a night of hugs and promises, Denys finally left her mother
and returned the next day to Rockingham, their home in Leicester.
She gazed into the looking glass and saw someone else. Denys
Beaufort Tudor. With a claim to the throne of England.
She considered her brother, on the battlefield fighting her
husband and her King. She was not afraid of Henry Tudor and his
dubious supporters. She had faith in King Richard and his first
general, no matter who betrayed them.
But he was still her brother, and every battle had only one
winner.
And one loser.
"Oh, God!" she implored, shaking her head, still stunned with
disbelief. "Please let them be safe."
But her prayers gave her no relief, for now she knew she was right
in the middle of it all, at the crossroads of history, with
nowhere to turn for safety.