It was May by the time she reached Enfield, and there she was welcomed to the mansion occupied by Sir William Lovel, who was her brother’s Lord Treasurer.
She was now very close to London and she believed that in a short time she would see her brother.
It was a glorious morning when she left Enfield and, as she was coming to Tottenham Cross, she saw in the distance a brilliant cavalcade making its way toward her. Her heart leaped with pleasure for she guessed who this was and, as the party approached hers, she recognized him riding at the head of it. He was a larger, more glorious version of that young boy whom she had known. His doublet was of purple velvet; jewels flashed on his hands and garments, and there were rubies and diamonds in his feathered bonnet. He had grown so much that he appeared to be far taller than any of his companions. On his face was the flush of good health and his blue eyes were as sparkling as water in sunshine and as brilliant as flames.
This was her brother. There was no doubt about that.
And as she recognized him, so did he her, for the resemblance between them had not grown less with maturity.
He rode up to her, smiling.
“My King and dearest brother.”
He sprang graciously from his horse which his groom hastily seized. He came to her and, taking her hand, kissed it.
“This is a great joy,” he told her.
“Henry! How happy I am to be here.”
“We have long looked forward to your coming. But where is my Lord Angus?”
Margaret’s expression clouded. “He returned to Scotland.”
“Returned to Scotland! Why so? Did he not receive my letters of invitation?”
“He thought it wiser to make terms with Albany, I fear.”
The pleasure faded from Henry’s plump square face. His eyes narrowed, so that blue chinks shone through the folded flesh. He turned to his sister and gazed at her speculatively, and she knew that he understood full well that Angus had deserted her.
Then he gave a loud laugh. “Done like a Scot!” he cried. “He could do without us, eh? Then, sister, I tell you we shall do very happily without him.”
He remounted and brought his horse beside his sister’s.
“We will rest awhile at Compton’s house on Tottenham Hill,” he said. “Then we will ride into my capital.”
In the afternoon they started out from Tottenham Hill, Henry on his fine horse with its glittering trappings, a dazzling figure; and beside him Margaret rode pillion with Sir Thomas Parr on Katharine’s white palfrey.
The people now crowded the roads. Henry beamed on them, graciously and delightedly acknowledging their cheers.
How he revels in his new state! thought Margaret. He always said that things would be different when he became King, and so they are. And how the people love this merry England he has given them. What a king! How different from our father who was also a good king. And yet it is due to Henry VII that Henry VIII is possessed of the riches which make it possible for him to live in such style.
“To Baynard’s Castle,” cried Henry, “which I have set aside for your private residence, sister. But we shall not stay there. The Queen and our good sister are waiting to see you at Greenwich.”
So the cavalcade paused awhile at Baynard’s Castle on the north bank of the Thames below St. Paul’s; and Margaret, looking at those Norman towers and ramparts, was well pleased with the dwelling Henry had chosen for her.
Here she rested and changed her costume, for Henry had arranged that they should travel the rest of the way to Greenwich by barge.
Margaret looked about her eagerly; now and then her memory stirred. It was so many years since she had passed down this river on the way to Greenwich, and how wonderful it was to see and hear the people on the banks cheering the royal barge, to listen to the sweet music of the minstrels who played as they went along.
Now she saw the Palace with the brick front facing the river; she saw the tower in the park and the convent which adjoined the Palace.
“We have arranged good sport for you here at Greenwich, sister,” Henry told her gleefully; and she was conscious that all the time he was watching her to see how she marveled at the splendor of his realm.
They alighted at the stairs, and at the gates of the Palace the Queen was waiting to greet them.
Margaret was warmly embraced by her sister-in-law and the first questions Katharine asked, when she had ascertained that Margaret was well and had suffered no harm from her journey, were concerning the welfare of the little Margaret.
But there was another who came forward to embrace Margaret; this was a dazzling, beautiful young woman who was so like Henry that Margaret knew at once that this was her young sister, Mary, now grown to womanhood.
Margaret kissed her warmly; then drew away from her and looked into that radiant, laughing face.
“Mary! Why, can it be possible?”
“Would you have me remain a baby forever?” demanded Mary.
“How old were you when I went away? Was it six?”
“Well,” replied Mary, “you were about thirteen. None of us stand still.”
“And you have had adventures.”
Mary grimaced. “You too, sister,” she murmured.
Henry was impatient. He liked to see his family in amicable friendship, but he wanted them to remember that, no matter who came, or who met whom after how long an absence, there was one person who must be the center of every gathering: the dazzling King of England.
If she could have had her son James with her, if little Alexander were still alive, if Angus had been the husband she longed for, those would have been happy days for Margaret.
It was wonderful to be with her family again; Henry was eager to impress her with the superiority of the English over the Scottish Court, and one lavish banquet and ball followed another. This was a pleasure, for Margaret too loved gaiety. Katharine, kindly sympathetic, welcomed her as warmly in her way. As for Mary, she was full of high spirits, and delighted to be back in England at the gay and brilliant Court which her brother had made.
Margaret told herself that she needed rest and relaxation before she concerned herself with state matters. In good time she would impress on Henry the need for his help in regaining what was hers by right; but she understood her brother well. At this time he was bent on entertaining her; and had she tried to turn his mind to more serious matters he would have been greatly displeased.
She herself was not averse to a little lighthearted entertainment. Before she reached London she had sent messengers to Scotland to bring her dresses and jewels to her in England, for she would need them if she were to vie with the elegant ladies of Henry’s Court.
Albany, evidently eager that she should withdraw her accusations about the death of little Alexander, and perhaps sorry for her, had put no obstacles in the way of her clothes being sent to her; and they arrived in London soon after she had.
Her sister, Mary, was with her on the day her clothes came, and they dismissed their attendants and examined the clothes together.
Mary shrieked with delight as she drew one glittering object after another from the trunk. She pranced round the apartment in a pair of sleeves of cloth of gold lined with crimson velvet; she put a cheveron on her head and turned this way and that to her reflection in the burnished mirror, delighting in the flash of the jewels.
“You were fine enough in Scotland, sister,” she said. “I had always believed it to be such a gloomy land.”
Margaret sat on her bed, looking at a gold collar decorated with enameled white roses. She remembered the occasion when James had given it to her.
“My husband was a great king and a fine gentleman.”
“But old,” put in Mary, and her own face darkened. She shivered, and Margaret knew she was thinking of the old King of France to whom she had been married. Poor Mary! At least Margaret had not suffered in that way.
“Not old as Louis was. He was merely older than I… and I was very young, so that he was not really very old. He was in his prime. Do you know, Mary, I believe he was the handsomest man I ever saw.”
“Do not let Henry hear you say that,” laughed Mary.
“You are happy now though, Mary?”
Her young sister clasped her hands and lifted her eyes to the ceiling. “Ecstatically.”
“So it was all worthwhile.”
Mary pouted. “It need not have happened. What good did the French marriage do for England?”
“It made peace between the two countries, and that is always a good thing.”
“An uneasy peace! And for it I had to endure… that.”
“Not for long.”
“Oh, no. I could not have borne it. And then he died… and Charles came to take me home.”
“And he married you.”
“I insisted, Margaret. I was determined. Henry had promised me that if I married old Louis I should marry my own choice when he died. And Charles was my choice… long before I married Louis.”
“So you got your wish.”
“Oh, those were glorious days, Margaret. I’ll never forget them. Married to Charles… and both wondering what we should be called upon to pay for our boldness… and not caring!”
“It was a reckless thing to do. You might have been carrying the heir of France.”
“But I was not. And what fun I had, teasing François and his old mother that I was!”
“It seems to me that you found much to amuse you in this French marriage.”
“But only after my husband was dead, Margaret. What bold and lusty people we are. I wish I could have seen your Angus. He is very handsome?”
Margaret’s face hardened. “Handsome enough.”
“Why did he not come with you?”
“He preferred to stay in Scotland.”
“I know what I should do if I had such a husband.”
“What?”
“Rid myself of him and find another.”
“Easier said than done.”
“What! And you a Tudor. Did you not know that Tudors always find a way? I said I’d marry Charles Brandon — before they sent me off to France — and I have married him. We get what we want… if circumstances do sometimes make us wait for it. We’re three of a kind, Margaret — you, myself and Henry. Don’t you see it?”
“We’re strong, we’re determined; yes, I see that.”
“Sometimes I am a little sorry for the people who marry us. I was a little sorry for poor Louis. I knew he would not live long. He tried to be young, Margaret. That was a mistake. His pursuit of youth led him to the grave. And now this Angus… I am sure you will make him sorry for what he has done to you. And sometimes I look at Henry and Katharine and say: ‘Poor Katharine.’”
“But she is devoted to him.”
“Katharine is such a virtuous woman; she’ll always be devoted to him because he is her husband. Her religion tells her she must be. But there is a little friction between them already. He begins to wonder why she cannot give him a son.”
“But she has had several miscarriages, and now she has Mary.”
“Yes, but where are the boys, where are the boys?” Mary took up a silver pomander on a jeweled girdle and set it about her waist. “Nay,” she said, “I would not be the wife or husband of a Tudor… and displease them. If I were Angus, Katharine, or even Charles, I would be wary.”
Then she began to dance around the room, looking so vital, so lovely, that Margaret could well understand how the King of France in pursuit of youth had been hastened to his tomb by his desire for a Tudor.
There were pleasant hours spent with Katharine, and when they could be alone together they were two mothers fondly discussing their children.
The two little girls were so close in age that when Margaret was at Greenwich they shared a nursery; and it was the joy of the two mothers to visit them and send away their nurses and attendants that they might have the children to themselves.
Margaret, remembering what Mary had said about Henry’s growing uneasiness at Katharine’s inability to give him a son, felt herself drawn toward her sister-in-law, not only by affection and a common interest, but by pity.
And during those sessions in the nurseries, Katharine confided her great desire to bear a son.
“If I could but give Henry the son he so earnestly needs I should be completely happy,” she told her sister-in-law.
“You will,” Margaret assured her. “You have had bad luck, as I did in the beginning. There was my little James and my little Arthur, and they both died. Then the present James. Ah, if you could see my James! I never saw such a lovely boy.”
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