And yet my foolish heart yearned, such is the nature of a woman spurned.

Not once did he dance with me. No troubadours sang my praises. He did not choose my company when we went out hawking but rode beside Mary or the self-satisfied Duchess of Gloucester.

I had given myself more than one hearty lecture. I had been summoned to give my expertise to the fast expanding nursery. That is why I was at Hertford, and that is what I would do. Had I not desired to remain alone, acknowledging the comfort of keeping my distance from all emotional shackles? What right did I have to complain? Nothing must occur to rouse the old spectre of the Duke and his mistress. I must not on any account tell Countess Joan why my thoughts were tangled in a morass of sensible acceptance and heartfelt dismay.

But: ‘Tell me,’ Countess Joan urged.

‘He gave me nothing,’ I replied against all my good intentions.

‘Ah!’

I stood, to place the baby in his cradle with the little carved birds, ever watchful, on their wooden supports.

‘He gave every guest a New Year gift. But not me.’ I felt my face flush with shame, and knelt beside the cradle to hide it, but it had hurt. I had been surprised how much it had hurt. ‘There now! Was there ever such a show of selfish ingratitude?’ Briefly, I managed to smile at her across the sleeping child. ‘And I think you tricked me into a confession of which I am sorely ashamed.’

‘Then tell me this.’ The Countess’s face was a masterpiece of gravity. ‘What did Henry give you?’

I looked up again in some surprise. ‘A gold ring with a diamond set in it. It is beautiful.’ I was wearing it and lifted my hand for the light to set a flame in its depths.

‘And?’

‘A length of white damask for a robe.’

‘And did you not think that such gifts were unusually generous?’

‘Yes.’ More than generous, certainly, but then Henry has always been very kind.

‘Did it not surprise you?’ Countess Joan continued.

‘I thought it was in recognition of my care for Mary and this little one.’ I put a hand to the cradle to set it rocking.

‘I’m sure it was. He has a great affection for you. But a ring with a diamond? Consider it, Kate.’

I stilled the cradle and stared at her.

‘Young men are not noted for their thoughtfulness, unless they have been kicked on the shin to engage their mind away from tournaments and such like.’ Her eyes gleamed. ‘I’d say that Henry was persuaded. I’d suggest that John is a master of discretion these days. I don’t know what he hopes for—that is between the pair of you—but without doubt he is being very careful.’

My thoughts were instantly engaged. Careful. We had not been careful in the past.

‘Is this a wooing in disguise?’ I asked plainly, disconcerted that I had not recognised it for what it was. ‘If it is, it’s too discreet for my appreciation.’

‘Who am I to judge?’ she replied.

‘And if it is,’ I continued, still to be convinced, ‘I am being very unhelpful.’

‘It is possible.’ She paused. ‘What do you want, Kate? What do you want from him?’

‘I don’t know.’

A question that I had been closing my mind to for so long was now being asked of me. Would I put my trust in him again? Would I be willing to give my happiness into his keeping again?

‘Do you not trust him? Do you love him still?’ Countess Joan urged me to consider.

‘Yes.’

‘Would you be with him if he asked you?’

The difficult question, the impossible question, that I was avoiding.

‘How can that be? We know the public scandal it would cause. John is still wed. We cannot step back into adultery and think we can do it without recrimination.’

‘I don’t suggest you announce it from the battlements. All I ask is: do you love him enough to give thought to it?’

‘Yes.’ I covered my face. ‘I have never stopped loving him. Not even when I thought he was my enemy. I’m just not sure…’

‘Of course you are sure.’ She could be formidably bracing. ‘And you must tell him. Before he crowds out the stables with even more horses for your use.’

I lowered my hands, much taken with the surprising comment.

‘Have you ever thought about it?’ the Countess asked with a crow of laughter. ‘Why is it that you ride a different horse almost every time you ride out? And all of them animals of superior breeding?’

I had not considered it to any degree. ‘I thought it was whatever animal was left after everyone else was mounted.’

‘Go and look in the stables, Kate. And I’ll come with you, just to see your face.’

I went immediately. So did the Countess. The stables were quiet apart from the satisfying chomp of horses in their stalls and the occasional clatter of shod feet, the work here having been done for the day, the animals fed and watered. As we entered, stepping carefully, Hertford’s master of horse approached with a smile.

‘I think my lord has a horse kept here for my use,’ I said, ignoring the Countess’s bark of laughter behind me.

There was a guffaw from the groom lounging on a stool in one of the empty stalls.

‘Come with me, my lady.’ The master led me down one line of stalls, stopping beside a little grey that I had ridden the previous day. ‘There’s this one.’

‘I’ve ridden her.’

With a hand beneath my elbow to help me over the straw-strewn cobbles, he led me on. ‘Then there’s this one. And this one…’

I counted a half-dozen altogether.

‘There’s another six or so, my lady. At Kenilworth. You’ll not be short if you’ve a mind to ride out, anywhere in England.’

The master remained remarkably straight-faced as I turned to look at the Countess and joined her in laughter. It seemed to be the first time I had laughed with such carefree amusement for days, and my heart was light.

‘See what I mean?’ Countess Joan asked.

‘Yes. Yes, I do.’

And I did. He had wooed me after all in his own inimitable way. And, to my shame, I had not realised it.

It coloured the final days of the festivities and the joyous rompings of the younger people over Twelfth Night, yet even though the Duke’s demeanour towards me in public was no different from before, now I saw it as a discreet lovemaking. No, he did not ride out hawking at my side, still choosing to entertain the Duchess of Gloucester with lively wit, but the tercel I was given was new to the mews and very beautiful. My mount was a lively bay gelding I had not seen before. The gauntlets handed to me by the master of horse for my particular use were stitched in gold, entirely inappropriate to my mind for the stress of a hawk’s talons, but a considerate gift that would attract no real attention.

A master of discretion indeed.

But time was running out before my departure. Was Countess Joan misguided? Had she misread the gift-giving after all? All I could do was keep myself busy, all the time failing to force my thoughts from their familiar distressing path.

‘When do you leave?’

My nerves jumped. I dropped the spoon I was using to measure out the tiniest amount of ambergris into a bowl. I was in Hertford’s well-stocked stillroom with Joan who had expressed a wish to be shown how to make a perfume for her own use. Intent as I was on persuading my determined daughter to lean towards the lighter scents of rose and cinnamon, he had crept up on me.

‘Tomorrow, my lord.’

‘What are you doing, Mistress Beaufort?’ he asked Joan, who laughed at being so formally addressed and held up the phial.

‘Making this,’ she announced enigmatically.

‘This looks very interesting,’ the Duke replied with commendable gravity. ‘Would you allow me five minutes of conversation with your mother? I would be very grateful. Grateful enough to exchange those five minutes for this.’

He extracted a silver penny from the purse at his belt, which Joan took without a second thought. It disappeared with alacrity into her own purse.

And we were alone, the door closed on the small space, with the heady scents of ambergris and musk and rose petals with the heat of summer on them. And as if the perfume worked its magic, there was no dissimulation between us, no words that were not direct and lethally potent.

‘That was bribery,’ I accused.

‘It certainly was. Don’t go, Katherine. Stay with me.’

Command or request? The Duke took my hands in his and I did not draw back.

‘Do you know what you are asking?’

‘I know very well. I have paid my debt to England and to Constanza.’

‘But Walsingham would not see it in such a light. If we are seen to be together, he will raise the old storm and condemn you. Are you willing to risk your immortal soul?’

‘My soul is in God’s keeping, not Walsingham’s.’

It was an unexpected flippancy that troubled me.

‘John…’

But he was not flippant at all. He touched his lips to my fingers, first one hand and then the other.

‘Before God, Katherine, I have lived apart from you too long. I have done my duty by my country and by my family. Since I have failed Constanza over Castile she no longer has need of me. We have agreed to live apart except for the occasions when we must stand together for public show. We will separate our households.’

‘I am so sorry,’ I said. And I was.

‘Now I must make my peace with you. Will you forgive me for the wrong I have done you? Will you accept what I can give you now? I am no longer young. I do not have the strength I once had. But the fervour of my love remains the same. Will you, dearest Katherine, be again my very dear companion?’

I never replied in words, but took one step. My lips pressed against his expressed all my love, whilst his returned the unspoken promise with a fervour I had forgotten. Glittering strands of disbelief and delight interwove to dance through my blood.

And then the stillroom did not give us what we needed. Taking my hand in his, he led me from the heady scents and sharp aromas. Led me to his own chamber.

‘How long have we been apart?’ he asked as he closed the door.

‘Altogether?’

‘Altogether.’

‘Eight years, at the last count since Rochford Hall.’

‘A lifetime. I have wooed you for two weeks. Is it enough?’

I did not question the wooing, since now I knew it for what it was. ‘Enough for what?’

He released my hand to allow me to stand alone in that opulent room with its tapestries and polished coffers. With its vast bed, hung with gold and blue.

‘Enough to keep us together for the rest of our lives. We have wasted such a very long time. We’ll waste no more.’

I took a breath, moved by his determination, and equally by his desire to allow me to set the pace, when he looked hungry enough to devour me. His eyes were alight with all their old passion.

‘Will you let me love you again?’ He held out his hand. ‘I have never stopped loving you, but will you allow me the right to show you?’

I did not reply straight away. ‘You asked me what I saw when I looked at you,’ I said instead.

‘So I did. And you did not respond.’ There was latent humour in his eye behind the heat. ‘Perhaps to shield me from the truth.’

But I remained solemn. ‘Now I will tell you, in truth. I see a man of honour. A man of integrity and a wise knowledge of how to use the power that he has. I see a man whose heart and mind speak to mine.’ How strongly I needed to say these words. ‘We have both made mistakes. We have both hurt each other, but my love for you has never changed. It is yours now as it has always been.’

The jewelled chain that lay on the Duke’s chest rose, gleaming, on a deep breath, and his lips firmed as if anticipating rejection. ‘So what do you say?’

What indeed? The days of my youth and foolish dreams of courtly love as hailed by the troubadours were long gone. Since then I had travelled far, both with the Duke and alone, along roads that had been joyous and full of heartache. I feared that the evidence of age that put its mark on the Duke’s still-handsome features was regretfully replicated on my own. Marks of experience and tolerance and acceptance. I was a different woman from the one who read the poetry of the troubadours and thought the world well lost for love. Not a better woman perhaps, but one more seasoned in life’s battles, and more honest in my judgements. I knew full well that love was no easy burden, with all its depths and intricate twists and turns for those who are caught up in its toils. But who, being loved as I had been, was able to turn away from it?

I smiled at the thought.

‘By the Rood!’ He gathered up my hands in his. ‘Are you going to keep me waiting again, Madame de Swynford?’ And I laughed a little. Not much tolerance here. ‘I seem to have been waiting on your decisions all my life.’