Philippa Gregory's Tudor Court 6-Book Boxed Set (147 page)

Read Philippa Gregory's Tudor Court 6-Book Boxed Set Online

Authors: Philippa Gregory

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Retail

BOOK: Philippa Gregory's Tudor Court 6-Book Boxed Set
3.92Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Contents

Jane Boleyn, Blickling Hall, Norfolk, July 1539

Anne, Duchess of Cleves, Duren, Cleves, July 1539

Katherine, Norfolk House, Lambeth, July 1539

Jane Boleyn, Blickling Hall, Norfolk, November 1539

Anne, Cleves Town, November 1539

Katherine, Norfolk House, Lambeth, November 1539

Jane Boleyn, Greenwich Palace, December 1539

Katherine, Norfolk House, Lambeth, December 1539

Anne, Calais, December 1539

Jane Boleyn, Calais, December 1539

Katherine, Norfolk House, Lambeth, December 1539

Anne, Calais, December 1539

Jane Boleyn, Rochester, December 1539

Katherine, Rochester, New Year’s Eve 1539

Jane Boleyn, Rochester, New Year’s Eve 1539

Katherine, Rochester, New Year’s Eve 1539

Jane Boleyn, Rochester, New Year’s Eve 1539

Anne, on the road to Dartford, New Year’s Day 1540

Katherine, Dartford, January 2, 1540

Anne, Blackheath, January 3, 1540

Katherine, Greenwich Palace, January 3, 1540

Jane Boleyn, Greenwich Palace, January 3, 1540

Anne, Greenwich Palace, January 3, 1540

Katherine, Greenwich Palace, January 6, 1540

Anne, Greenwich Palace, January 6, 1540

Jane Boleyn, Greenwich Palace, January 6, 1540

Anne, Greenwich Palace, January 6, 1540

Katherine, Greenwich Palace, January 7, 1540

Jane Boleyn, Whitehall Palace, January 1540

Anne, Whitehall Palace, January 1540

Katherine, Whitehall Palace, January 1540

Anne, Whitehall Palace, January 11, 1540

Jane Boleyn, Whitehall Palace, February 1540

Katherine, Whitehall Palace, February 1540

Anne, Hampton Court, March 1540

Jane Boleyn, Hampton Court, March 1540

Katherine, Hampton Court, March 1540

Anne, Hampton Court, March 1540

Jane Boleyn, Hampton Court, March 1540

Katherine, Hampton Court, March 1540

Anne, Hampton Court, March 1540

Katherine, Hampton Court, March 1540

Jane Boleyn, Hampton Court, March 1540

Katherine, Westminster Palace, April 1540

Anne, Westminster Palace, April 1540

Jane Boleyn, Westminster Palace, May 1540

Anne, Westminster Palace, June 1540

Jane Boleyn, Westminster Palace, June 1540

Katherine, Norfolk House, Lambeth, June 1540

Anne, Westminster Palace, June 10, 1540

Jane Boleyn, Westminster Palace, June 24, 1540

Anne, Richmond Palace, July 1540

Jane Boleyn, Westminster Palace, July 7, 1540

Anne, Richmond Palace, July 8, 1540

Jane Boleyn, Richmond Palace, July 8, 1540

Katherine, Norfolk House, Lambeth, July 9, 1540

Anne, Richmond Palace, July 12, 1540

Katherine, Norfolk House, Lambeth, July 12, 1540

Anne, Richmond Palace, July 13, 1540

Queen Katherine, Oatlands Palace, July 28, 1540

Jane Boleyn, Oatlands Palace, July 30, 1540

Anne, Richmond Palace, August 6, 1540

Katherine, Hampton Court, August 1540

Jane Boleyn, Windsor Palace, October 1540

Katherine, Hampton Court, October 1540

Anne, Richmond Palace, October 1540

Jane Boleyn, Hampton Court, October 1540

Katherine, Hampton Court, October 1540

Jane Boleyn, Hampton Court, October 1540

Anne, Richmond Palace, November 1540

Jane Boleyn, Hampton Court, Christmas 1540

Katherine, Hampton Court, Christmas 1540

Jane Boleyn, Hampton Court, Christmas 1540

Anne, Hampton Court, Christmas 1540

Jane Boleyn, Hampton Court, New Year’s Eve 1540

Anne, Richmond Palace, February 1541

Katherine, Hampton Court, March 1541

Jane Boleyn, Hampton Court, March 1541

Katherine, Hampton Court, March 1541

Anne, Richmond Palace, March 1541

Jane Boleyn, Hampton Court, April 1541

Katherine, Hampton Court, April 1541

Jane Boleyn, Hampton Court, April 1541

Anne, Richmond Palace, April 1541

Jane Boleyn, Hampton Court, April 1541

Katherine, Hampton Court, April 1541

Anne, Richmond Palace, May 1541

Jane Boleyn, Hampton Court, June 1541

Anne, Richmond Palace, June 1541

Jane Boleyn, Hampton Court, July 1541

Katherine, Lincoln Castle, August 1541

Jane Boleyn, Pontefract Castle, August 1541

Anne, Richmond Palace, September 1541

Katherine, King’s Manor, York, September 1541

Jane Boleyn, Ampthill, October 1541

Anne, Richmond Palace, November 1541

Katherine, Hampton Court, November 1541

Jane Boleyn, Hampton Court, November 1541

Anne, Richmond Palace, November 1541

Katherine, Syon Abbey, November 1541

Jane Boleyn, the Tower of London, November 1541

Anne, Richmond Palace, December 1541

Katherine, Syon Abbey, Christmas 1541

Jane Boleyn, the Tower of London, January 1542

Anne, Richmond Palace, February 1542

Jane Boleyn, the Tower of London, February 1542

Katherine, Syon Abbey, February 1542

Jane Boleyn, the Tower of London, February 13, 1542

Five years later: Anne, Hever Castle, January 1547

Author’s Note

Reading Group Guide

For Anthony

Jane Boleyn, Blickling Hall, Norfolk, July 1539

It is hot today, the wind blows over the flat fields and marshes with the stink of the plague. In weather like this, if my husband were still with me, we would not be trapped in one place, watching a leaden dawn and a sunset of dull red; we would be traveling with the king’s court, on progress through the weald and downland of Hampshire and Sussex, the richest and most beautiful countryside in all of England, riding high on the hilly roads and looking out for the first sight of the sea. We would be out hunting every morning, dining under the thick canopy of the trees at midday and dancing in the great hall of some country house at night in the yellow light of flickering torches. We were friends with the greatest families in the land, we were the favorites of the king, kin to the queen. We were beloved; we were the Boleyns, the most beautiful, sophisticated family at the court. Nobody knew George without desiring him, nobody could resist Anne, everyone courted me as a passport to their attention. George was dazzling—dark-haired, dark-eyed, and handsome—always mounted on the finest horses, always at the side of the queen. Anne was at the peak of her beauty and her wits, as alluring as dark honey. And I went everywhere with them.

The two of them used to ride together, racing, neck and neck like lovers, and I could hear their laughter over the thudding of the hooves as they went flying by. Sometimes, when I saw them
together, so rich, so young, so beautiful, I couldn’t tell which of them I loved more.

All the court was besotted with the two of them, those dark Boleyn flirtatious looks, their high living: such gamblers, such lovers of risk; both so fervent for their reform of the church, so quick and clever in argument, so daring in their reading and thoughts. From the king to the kitchen maid there was not one person who was not dazzled by the pair of them. Even now, three years on, I cannot believe that we will never see them again. Surely, a couple so young, so radiant with life, cannot simply die? In my mind, in my heart, they are still riding out together, still young, still beautiful. And why would I not passionately long for this to be true? It has been only three years since I last saw them; three years, two months, and nine days since his careless fingers brushed against mine, and he smiled and said, “Good day, wife, I must go, I have everything to do today,” and it was a May Day morning and we were preparing for the tournament. I knew he and his sister were in trouble, but I did not know how much.

Every day in this new life of mine I walk to the crossroads in the village, where there is a dirty milestone to the London road. Picked out in mud and lichen, the carving says “London, 120 miles.” It is such a long way, such a long way away. Every day I bend down and touch it, like a talisman, and then I turn back again to my father’s house, which is now so small to me, who has lived in the king’s greatest palaces. I live on my brother’s charity, on the goodwill of his wife who cares nothing for me, on a pension from Thomas Cromwell, the upstart moneylender, who is the king’s new great friend. I am a poor neighbor living in the shadow of the great house that was once my own, a Boleyn house, one of our many houses. I live quietly, cheaply, like a widow with no house of my own whom no man wants.

And this is because I am a widow with no house of my own whom no man wants. A woman of nearly thirty years old, with a
face scored by disappointment, mother to an absent son, a widow without prospect of remarriage, the sole survivor of an unlucky family, heiress to scandal.

My dream is that one day this luck will change. I will see a messenger in Howard livery riding down this very road, bringing a letter for me, a letter from the Duke of Norfolk, to summon me back to court, to tell me that there is work for me to do again: a queen to serve, secrets to whisper, plots to hatch, the unending doubledealing life of a courtier, at which he is so expert, and I am his greatest pupil. My dream is that the world will change again, swing topsy-turvy until we are uppermost once more, and I am restored. I saved the duke once, when we were in the worst danger, and in return he saved me. Our great sorrow was that we could not save the two of them, the two who now ride and laugh and dance only in my dreams. I touch the milestone once more, and imagine that tomorrow the messenger will come. He will hold out a paper, sealed with the Howard crest deep and shiny in the red wax. “A message for Jane Boleyn, the Viscountess Rochford?” he will ask, looking at my plain kirtle and the dust on the hem of my gown, my hand stained with dirt from the London milestone.

“I will take it,” I shall say. “I am her. I have been waiting forever.” And I shall take it in my dirty hand: my inheritance.

Anne, Duchess of Cleves, Duren, Cleves, July 1539

I hardly dare to breathe. I am as still as a block, a smile stuck on my face, my eyes wide open, looking boldly at the artist, appearing, I hope, trustworthy, my frank stare indicating honesty but not immodesty. My borrowed jewels are the best that my mother could lay her hands on, designed to show to a critical viewer that we are not quite paupers, even though my brother will offer no dowry to pay a husband. The king will have to choose me for my pleasant appearance and political connections. I have nothing else to offer. But he must choose me. I am absolutely determined that he will choose me. It is everything to me to get away from here.

Other books

Mitosis: A Reckoners Story by Sanderson, brandon
The Next Right Thing by Dan Barden
Startide Rising by David Brin
Son of a Dark Wizard by Sean Patrick Hannifin
Sons of Amber by Bianca D'Arc
Best I Ever Had by Wendi Zwaduk
Jay Walking by Tracy Krimmer
Wild Embrace by Nalini Singh
Lost Property by Sean O'Kane