Read Traitor's Kiss Online

Authors: Pauline Francis

Traitor's Kiss (10 page)

The day came when I was strong enough to walk in the garden with Kat. I kept well away from the river. From the rose walk, I could see there was only ice on the water, like the ice in the wind on my face – and in my heart.

Roger Ascham rode in from Cambridge. I watched him dismount, bright-skinned, hair and beard curly. I had begged my stepmother to secure him as my new tutor because he is said to have one of the cleverest minds in England. Now I wished him back in Cambridge because I was not in the mood for study.

“Master Ascham says your books will make you better,” Kat said.

“What does
he
know?”

“More than you,” she said with great patience. “Get up, Bess. You begged him to be your tutor. You must welcome him and dazzle him with your mind.”

“I have no mind. It's rotting like my teeth,” I said.

She gave one of her little warning coughs. “He's already saying that Jane has one of the finest minds in England.”

“Why isn't she studying with Doctor Aylmer?”

“She will, when he returns from Leicestershire. Master Ascham's already started translating Virgil with her –
double
translation.”

I scowled. Kat knew I would. Roger Ascham had promised to try out a new method of learning Greek: I was to translate from Greek into English. Then from my own English back into Greek, to make sure that it matched. It would be exacting. It would be exciting. Ascham had already written a book about archery and he was going to write about education –
my
education.

“Ascham is
mine
, not hers,” I grumbled. “Yes, bring my clothes, Kat. I'll go to lessons today. I won't be outshone by my little cousin.”

But Roger Ascham was disappointed with me. He had given up the great minds of Cambridge to instruct a mind that had grown dull and dreary, a mind that if it sought the truth, must seek it in Bedlam.

Time after time, I stumbled over my words. I had once translated three pages of Virgil in an hour. My mind used to work with the speed of the sword. Now it hacked and chopped at the words.

Ascham winced. “I was told that you shone like a star,” he said.

“The clouds came,” I said, ungracious. “But I
am
thinking about something, although not about Virgil. How do we ever know the truth about anything or anybody?”

“Jesus said that He is the truth,” Jane interrupted, “and the priests speak His truth.”

I glared at her. “How can they?” I asked. “Priests said that there was Purgatory. Now they say there isn't. Priests said that the bread and wine changed into Christ's flesh and blood. Now they say it doesn't. Not even Archbishop Cranmer seems to know the truth, or want to tell it.”

“Are you still unwell?” she asked.

“Yes, sick of your eyes bulging with piety.”

I was sick of them both. I pleaded a headache and asked to leave.

“The Ancient Greeks used to apply electric eels to the head to cure melancholia,” Ascham said, “until one madwoman snatched the eels from her head and ate them raw and writhing.”

My stomach heaved.

I sat at my window. Dark clouds shadowed the sky beyond the river. A flash of lightning caught the lanterns of a barge. And a thought flashed into my mind with it, so simple and so wonderful that I laughed out loud. Unaccustomed to the sound these past weeks, Kat looked at me strangely and threatened to fetch me a calming cordial.

I am accustomed to the men around me having the power: Thomas Seymour, Edward Seymour, King Edward, my father, Robert Dudley, John Dudley… So accustomed to it that I had almost given away my power. In my childish innocence, I had waited for Francis to take me to his mother.

Why had I not thought it before? I did not need Francis.

I
knew where Alys was.
I
would go to Bedlam.

If I went alone, I would be safe. If Alys refused to speak to me, I would have done my best. And if she did speak, I would lay my mother's ghost to rest.

I would go in springtime, when every leaf would hide me on the way to hell for I would have no Charon to row me.

I could wait.

Had my mother not waited six years for my father to marry her? Had I not already waited long enough to hear the truth?

The next morning, bright sunshine and birdsong told me that the storm had passed. Into the darkness of February shone a few small suns: aconites, primroses and curling catkins.

The ice on the Thames cracked and water bubbled to the surface as sulphurous as hell. The river came back to life.

The sap was rising.

I ate like a horse. My stepmother pecked like her parrots. Her face was drained of colour. Her grey eyes were exhausted. I touched her burning forehead. “Are you unwell?” I asked, anxious.

“Yes. No.” She laughed. “I am with child, Bess,” she said. Her eyes brightened with happy tears. “It will be an autumn child like you and Edward and Jane, with red-gold hair and Tom's flashing green eyes…”

“It will be a boy?”

“Oh, yes, and Tom will be content at last.”

We fell silent. Between us lay the ghosts of so many dead sons: Catherine of Aragon's and my mother's. Jane Seymour had borne a living son, but she had died from childbed fever. My belly twisted. I could not bear to be without Lady Catherine.

Impulsively, I took her hand and kissed it and in return, she kissed me on the cheek.

Kat's face darkened. When we were alone, she whispered, “When she's gone, you'll want me.”

“But where's she going?” I asked, startled.

“A first child at thirty-six is foolish,” she said. “But childbed or not, good people don't last long on earth. God always calls them to Him. I don't understand why. If he sent for the bad ones, we'd all sleep more safely in our beds.”

When Kat went back to sleep in her own bedchamber, I knew that Thomas Seymour would be tempted by mine. I got up early, long before first light, and sat at the window seat. As my stepfather tiptoed in, I greeted him.

He pretended not to be startled. “This light isn't good enough to read by,” he said. “That's why you're so short of sight.”

“I can see plain enough, sir.”

He came to the window seat but I did not make room for him. “So what are you reading?” he asked.

“A poem,” I said. “Thomas Wyatt wrote it for my mother.”

“Poetry!” He sneered. “What a pity that Wyatt didn't lose his head along with the others. We wouldn't have to endure his lovesick lines now.”

“Wyatt loved her long before my father but he didn't pursue her once my father fell in love with her. Listen. You'll like this:
There is written, her fair neck round about, Don't touch me –
Noli me tangere
– for Caesar's I am
.” I stared straight into his eyes. “
Noli me tangere
, sir.”

He backed away. He never came to my bedchamber again.

Chapter Ten

“Edward and Anne Seymour have invited us to their new house on the Strand,” Lady Catherine complained. “For Shrovetide,” she added. She was pulling a face, but not in jest.

Shrovetide is one of our greatest feasts. It marks the beginning of the forty days of Lent, when we remember Christ's suffering before his crucifixion. Our earls and dukes and lords seek to outdo each other in their celebratory feasts.

“I shall plead sickness and leave early,” she said. “But you young ones must make merry after this long winter. There will be music again and dancing and all the other things we have missed.”

“Will you come, Bess?” Jane asked.

“YES!” I cried. I thought of my mother, dancing like a butterfly blown by the breeze. “And I'll show the world that I'm better, that I've only been cocooned in my chrysalis this winter. And now the butterfly will emerge.” I twirled around, as if she were still holding me. “I'll spread my wings this spring.”

“Take care,” Jane murmured. “Do not forget that butterfly wings are fragile.”

The new house – Somerset House – was still unfinished. Wooden poles stretched from the roofs to the ground, as did last autumn's ivy, now grey with mould. But it would be splendid one day.

We were to dine and dance outside. Gardens, which would be glorious too, led down to the Thames. High tide and high wind together had allowed the river to seep into the lower garden, where it had frozen into a silver circle, like the moon beneath our feet.

Musicians strolled. Pigs roasted. Wine flowed faster than the water. Bundled in our furs against the bitter wind, we prowled like hungry wolves.

“Eat, drink and be merry, Bess,” Thomas Seymour cried, “from tomorrow, forty days of fasting. No meat. No wine. No…” He winked at Robert Dudley and stopped himself. “It is as bad as the forty days' quarantine of the plague, though not as deadly. So,
carpe diem,
I say.”

“And you say it badly, sir,” Robert teased. “What will you give up for Lent, sweet Bess?”

“I've already given up what I love most,” I said. “Sugar roses.”

My stepfather roared with pleasure at my wit. He bore me no grudge. But I had not forgiven him. He must have already tainted me with tittle-tattle, if only in the kitchen.

Lute players struck the first chords of the galliard. My foot tapped. Nobody had danced in public since my father's death. Thomas Seymour bowed and led me onto the ice. I was heavy in my sable fur, yet my feet were light. I did not feel the icy cold through my velvet shoes. My stepfather lifted me with ease, bringing me eye to eye with one of the lute players, a pretty boy who smiled at me.

The pleasure of the dance faded. Mark Smeaton had been a fine lute player at my mother's court. He had smiled at my mother and she had smiled back. He had been stretched on the rack until his young body broke, until he confessed that he had lain with her, and the next day watched his entrails taken from his twitching body. Some said that I was his child.

When my stepfather put me down, I froze. Seymour was impatient. He wanted to dance with the most beautiful girl in the garden – me. He wanted me to leap to the music. He wanted me to turn every head, both male and female…as my mother had done.

Puzzled, he asked, “Have you forgotten how to dance, Bess? You're as highly strung tonight as that lute.”

“They think that I'm Smeaton's bastard,” I whispered.

“Who?”

I was almost crying. “
Everybody
.”

“The word belittles you, Bess.” He released a curl from my headdress. “This is Tudor hair, down to the last strand. Smeaton's hair was as black as a moonless midnight. Nobody could doubt it. Do you think I'd care for you if it were otherwise?” He lifted me higher than before and people clapped at his daring. Then he handed me to Robert Dudley, who staggered with mock horror as he lifted me.

“I expected to find you thin and wasted,” he said, “but you have…”

“…grown plump on sugar,” I finished. “But I'm giving it up for Lent.”

“And your mother, too, I hope.” Robert tickled my back as he rushed me through the air. I shivered with excitement. Then he touched the nape of my neck briefly as he set me on the ground and I liked it as much as I had hated my stepfather's touch.

Robert and I stole into the Great Hall, although we had not yet been summoned inside. It too would be glorious by summer, when the walls had been panelled with wood and warmed with tapestries. For Shrovetide, the dais under the musician's gallery had been prepared for the evening's entertainment.

This dais was overhung with deep blue silk, painted with silver stars and a full moon. A veil of gossamer silk hung in front of a large table, which was draped with a golden cloth. Silver curtains hung at the sides of the dais. Along the bare walls of the hall, fire torches gave off a great heat and the perfume of lavender and thyme.

It was a sumptuous sight.

Outside, a trumpet fanfare summoned the other guests. Like ours, their winter-pale faces glowed at the sight. I made for the back of the hall, to stand closer to the door, but it was too late. The crowd of guests forced us to stay where we were. Thomas Seymour pushed his way to the side of the dais, pulling Jane behind him.

As soon as we were all assembled, an insistent drumbeat sounded from the gallery. Rising above it came the wail of a plucked viola string. A man's voice spoke from behind one of the silver curtains. “In a far-off desert lived King Herod, who had married his dead wife's sister, Herodias,” he announced. “One of Jesus' disciples, John the Baptist, condemned Herod for what he had done…”

I gasped at the daring of it, for my father had married his dead brother's wife, Catherine of Aragon, and later blamed this marriage for his lack of a son. “Herod's wife had a beautiful daughter, Salomé, who danced better than any girl in the land…”

As his voice died away, fire torches were lit on the walls behind the veil, and a young woman began to dance barefoot on the table. Wrapped in silken cloths, she shimmered like the stars above us as she coiled and uncoiled to the rhythm of the drum, casting shadows across the veil that separated us.

Other books

Going Gray by Spangler, Brian
Tomorrow Is Today by Julie Cross
The Doorbell Rang by Stout, Rex
WarriorsWoman by Evanne Lorraine
The Falcon Prince by Karen Kelley
Lion Heart by A. C. Gaughen
Ultima Thule by Henry Handel Richardson
Dear Cassie by Burstein, Lisa
Premonitions by Jamie Schultz