Her eyes went to Owen Tudor who was partnering one of the ladies in the dance. He was scarcely graceful. Dancing was not one of Owen’s attributes. Dear Owen! He was often quiet and thoughtful nowadays. She wondered if the same thoughts occupied him as did her.
The dancers were pirouetting which some of them performed very gracefully. She clapped her hands. ‘See who can turn the longest,’ she cried. ‘Come closer that I may see.’
So they approached and she called on one at a time to perform before her. The ladies applauded and some of the men were laying stakes on who should be able to do the most turns on tiptoe.
‘Come, Owen Tudor,’ she called. ‘It is your turn. I wish to see you perform this pirouette.’
‘My lady,’ he said, flushing a little, ‘I am no good at it.’
‘Nevertheless you must try,’ she said.
He lifted his shoulders in a gesture of despair which amused everyone, then he came close to her and began to turn on his toes. In a second or so he had toppled forward. The Queen put out her arms and he fell into them.
It was the first time they had made such close contact and both were aware of a tremendous excitement. It could only have been a few seconds that they remained so, looking at each other, but the true nature of their feelings was revealed to them … and perhaps a hint of them was given to others.
Owen recovered himself first. ‘My lady …’ he stammered. ‘A thousand pardons …’ He scrambled to his feet, his face now scarlet.
The Queen laughed on rather a high note. ‘’Twas no fault of yours, Owen,’ she said. ‘Methinks, alas, you are not going to be the champion.’
Everyone was laughing now. Owen Tudor was happier on a horse than pirouetting in the ballroom, they said.
‘Happier still,’ whispered one of the men, ‘in the company of Queen Katherine … alone.’
When the Queen retired for the night she was very thoughtful. She had known for some time, of course. When she went out riding and he was a member of the party the day brightened. If they could contrive to be alone then it was indeed a happy day.
She faced the truth. She was in love with Owen Tudor.
One of the women who was combing her hair said to her: ‘My lady, have I your permission to speak openly to you?’
This was a faithful friend, one who believed because of the favour Queen Katherine had shown her she was especially privileged.
‘What is it?’ asked Katherine.
‘It is being noticed, my lady, that you show much favour to Owen Tudor.’
‘Owen Tudor. The Welsh squire? He is a very good squire. The King is greatly attached to him.’
‘My lady, people talk.’
‘Of course they talk. They have tongues have they not?’
‘At times mischievous people talk slanderously.’
‘Against me, you mean?’
‘Yes, my lady. Against you and … Owen Tudor.’
‘What say they? Tell me that.’
‘That he would be your lover … and that he is low-born and you are a Queen of England and a daughter of a King of France. Also, he is Welsh.’
‘Welsh? What of that?’
‘They say the Welsh are barbarous savages.’
‘Then they speak nonsense, do they not? Owen Tudor has shown he is as gallant and cultivated a gentleman as any we have at Court.’
Her vehemence frightened the woman who had thought only to offer a gentle word of warning. She did not believe for one moment that the Queen could possibly take a lowborn Welsh squire for a lover.
‘Ah,’ said Katherine, ‘I am not English either. Do they say that I also am a barbarous savage?’
‘You are a French Princess, my lady. The Welsh are not as the French. The Welsh live in the mountain valleys like peasants.’
‘Oh,’ cried Katherine angrily, ‘they are advancing a little as we talk. The savages have become peasants. I did not know that there was the difference in the races on this British island.’
‘Forgive me, my lady. I did but tell you what I had heard because I thought you ought to know.’
Katherine stood up and laid a hand on the lady’s arm.
‘You are my very good friend,’ she said. ‘Do not fret. I shall do nothing to disgrace you.’
Then she leaned forward and kissed the woman’s cheek.
The woman shook her head. The manners of the French were unaccountable, she thought.
Never mind. She had done her duty.
Katherine rode beside Owen Tudor. They had missed the rest of the party on purpose.
‘I have to speak to you,’ she said.
‘I know,’ he answered. ‘They are talking about us. It was at the ball.’
‘You fell into my arms,’ she said.
‘It was not my intention. I was no good at their dancing.’
She burst out laughing. ‘You looked so … funny, Owen, and I liked you for it. I liked it very much and then when you fell I held out my arms to catch you.’
‘It was unpardonable of me to fall upon you.’
‘Then the unpardonable is pardoned,’ she said.
‘You are so good to me,’ he murmured.
‘Owen,’ she answered, ‘is it not time that we faced the truth?’
He did not answer for a moment. Then he said staring ahead of him: ‘You must send me away. I could go to France. Men are constantly being sent to France. The Duke of Bedford is raising a new force to take back with him when he returns.’
‘I forbid it,’ she said firmly. ‘Are you not my squire?’
‘Aye, and one whose mission is to do you good service. It is why I know I must go to France.’
‘No,’ she said. ‘You shall do as I say … that is if you want to. Dismount, Owen.’
‘Dismount, my lady?’
‘That is what I said.’ He obeyed. ‘Now help me to dismount.’ When he came to her she put her arms about his neck. She kissed his lips. He was hesitant but only for a moment.
She slid to the ground and they still stood together, their arms about each other.
‘It has slowly come upon us,’ she said, ‘but now there is no denying it. Do you love your Queen, Owen?’
‘With all my heart,’ he said. ‘I would die in her service.’
‘And live in it?’
‘I will do whatever she commands me now and forever.’
‘That is a true lover’s vow. I will make mine now. I love you, Owen Tudor, and here solemnly in this green sward I take you as my husband, my true husband that needs no mumbling of priests … no grand fine vestments, no signing of contracts … nothing but love.’
Owen said: ‘How I have longed to hold you thus.’
‘And I to be held. Shall we walk awhile and talk? Let us tether the horses.’
‘What if we are discovered?’
She laughed. ‘I am the Queen, Owen. I shall do as I please.’
‘We will have to take care. If this were discovered …’
She was silent suddenly. ‘Yes,’ she said, ‘you are right. You could be in danger. Oh, Owen, that frightens me. I will be careful but, Owen, we are not going to be denied each other. That I insist on … but only if you will take the risk. Will you?’
‘I would risk my life for you.’
‘My fear is for you. For myself I care not. But we cannot be denied, can we? We have faced the truth. Owen, we love each other. We are going to be together for I could not endure my life without you.’
‘Nor I mine.’
‘Then we shall meet … we shall be as husband and wife together. I am so happy. For so long I have been lonely. I was fond of Henry but this, Owen … this is wonderful. This makes everything worth while for me. Does it for you, Owen?’
‘My love,’ he whispered, ‘we shall forget everything but each other.’
‘Shall we plight our troth here … in the greenwood?’
He closed his eyes and held her close to him.
‘Let us find a spot,’ she said, ‘away from the world where no one can find us.’
Gloucester was as enamoured of Eleanor Cobham as he had ever been. Not only was she voluptuous and skilled in erotic arts so that she continued to surprise even his jaded palate, but she was ambitious too. She kept a close grip on affairs. She had been immensely amused by his conflict with the Bishop of Winchester and when he was inclined to be depressed by the dismal nature of his prospects she would point out his successes. It had been a complete victory over his old uncle, hadn’t it? Beaufort had had to give up the Chancellorship and being a Cardinal got him out of the way.
That, said Eleanor, was subtle politics, for which, with her help, he had a decided talent.
He did occasionally have a twinge of conscience about Jacqueline. She had relied on him and had really believed he would get her estates back for them both to share. And it might have worked, of course, if they had been able to hold onto the estates and if Eleanor had not come along.
Now his great desire was to be with Eleanor and to spend their time exercising their considerable talents in bed – and that came first – and then in political intrigue.
It was true in some measure that he had won the battle with his uncle; but it had had the result of bringing brother Bedford to England, and that was not so good. He could very well do without the presence of his brother. John took command and everyone held him in such high respect that whatever John said they were inclined to agree was right.
John criticised Humphrey’s rule generally. To be at the head of government was a task not to be taken lightly, he reiterated. One must dedicate oneself to the needs of one’s country. One must subdue one’s own personal desires, one’s greed. That was the burden of John’s song. Let him live up to it. It was not brother Humphrey’s way. ‘Let my brother govern as he will while he is in the land,’ he said to Eleanor. ‘For after his going over to France, I will govern as seems good to me.’
Eleanor agreed.
‘You can be sure,’ she said, ‘that as soon as John feels he can safely leave, he will be off.’
Appeals were constantly coming from Jacqueline. It was no use, he told himself. She should give up. How could she stand out against Philip of Burgundy? If he could not send troops, she wrote frantically, could he send her money?
He approached certain members of the Council. If they would grant her a little money it would ease his conscience. He was not sure whether it was his conscience which bothered him or the desire to harry Burgundy.
John came to see him. Very soon now he would return to France. ‘For which mercy let us be thankful,’ Humphrey had said to Eleanor.
‘You have asked the Council for money to send to Holland,’ he said. ‘This is madness.’
‘Madness … to consider a request from my wife?’
‘Do you want to anger Burgundy still further?’
‘Burgundy! Burgundy! Burgundy!’ sang out Humphrey. ‘He has become your patron saint, has he not, brother?’
‘I do not have to explain again, do I, the importance of his friendship to us?’
‘If you did it would have been for the ten thousandth time.’
‘The need to hold that friendship is more important now than it was when you first heard it. Now, give me your promise. Your adventures in that direction are at an end. Be thankful that they were not even more disastrous.’
When brother John talked in that way it was wise to put up a semblance of agreement. John was the most powerful man in England as well as France.
Never mind, the field would be clear when he went back with his precious Burgundian wife.
‘I shall not allow my brother to dictate to me,’ he told Eleanor.
John left for France and as soon as he had gone Humphrey approached the Council again and asked for five thousand marks to send to Jacqueline.
It was refused. Humphrey shrugged his shoulders. He had done what he could, Jacqueline’s was a hopeless case. This was confirmed when one day a message came to him from the Pope. His marriage to Jacqueline had been annulled.
‘Burgundy’s work,’ he said to Eleanor.
She was pleased. There was a sly expression in her eyes. Why not? She would enjoy being the Duchess of Gloucester. For once she applauded Burgundy’s action. She would not suggest it just yet. She would wait and shrewdly implant the suggestion into his mind, so that he thought it was his own idea. However, nothing must be done hastily. Divorces were tricky. She did not want to go through a form of marriage with Humphrey and then to have someone prove that it had been no marriage at all. And what if by that time he would have outgrown his desire for her company? One could never be sure. Men who had indulged as freely and consistently as Humphrey could become suddenly satiated. Eleanor was cunning, and one of the lessons she had learned was never to come to too hasty a conclusion to important matters.
"Epitaph for Three Women" отзывы
Отзывы читателей о книге "Epitaph for Three Women". Читайте комментарии и мнения людей о произведении.
Понравилась книга? Поделитесь впечатлениями - оставьте Ваш отзыв и расскажите о книге "Epitaph for Three Women" друзьям в соцсетях.