The Heretic’s Wife (28 page)

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Authors: Brenda Rickman Vantrease

Tags: #16th Century, #Tudors, #England/Great Britain, #Writing, #Fiction - Historical, #Faith & Religion, #Catholicism

BOOK: The Heretic’s Wife
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“Your Majesty,” she said, then, “you have been to see the queen?” And before he could answer, because Cromwell had already told her he was going to see the queen, she asked, “How fares Queen Katherine?”

“Very sad, Lady Anne. She is very sad. She was likewise at her altar, probably praying you would be stricken with the pox.” His voice was low because the double doors leading to her chamber, the same chamber Queen Katherine would have used had she come to Hampton Court, were open.

“No, Your Majesty. The queen was always kind to me when I was in her service. I remember when—” She checked herself and would not say
when Wolsey sent sweet Percy away.
“Once when I was very ill, she treated me almost like a mother. It distresses me to think what part I must play in her sadness.”

Gray light—for it had been a dismal autumn day, a herald of the coming winter—filtered through the mullioned window set above the altar and lent a cold glow to the room. A drop of wax from a lone candle flickering beneath the cross dripped, like a drop of blood, upon the white linen altar cloth. He scraped at the wax with a carefully manicured fingernail. His ruby signet cast a prism of red and purple and yellow.

“Your altar is as plain as any Lutheran altar, Lady Anne.”

“It is for my private devotion, sire.”

“And
privately
you scorn the liturgy and trappings of the mass?”

“I make no secret of it. Would you care to sit, Your Majesty? I will call for refreshment.” He looked unusually tired. He still wore his riding boots.

“No. Come walk with me in the maze.”

“The air is chilled. The king might catch an ague.”

“The king wishes to be alone with you to talk privately.”

He was not smiling. He had been to see the queen and now he wanted to
talk privately.

“Fetch my cloak,” she called to the maid, who hovered with the king’s footman just outside the open door, but the maid had already removed the cloak from its peg and was advancing toward her.

He did not touch her as they walked among the tall hedges, did not even reach for her hand, though they were surely alone in the maze. There would be no idlers on such a day as this. Was this a bad sign? Had he decided after all to reconcile with Katherine? Was he giving up on the divorce? Well, she would not be his mistress. She would never be his mistress. She would be queen or nothing. She kept her hands in her pockets to keep them warm.

“I read the book you gave me,” he said.

“What book was that, Your Grace?”

“The Tyndale book.
The Obedience of a Christian Man.

“What did you think of it?”

“I thought it a book for me and all kings to read.”

“Exactly so, Your Highness. William Tyndale is a brilliant man. You would be well served to have him at court.”

They walked on, the only sound the occasional brushing of the boxwood leaves against their arms until he broke the silence. “I’ll cede brilliance, but there is much in his writing that is troubling.”

“Troubling, Your Highness, how so?” She knew what he would say before he opened his mouth. It was what they all said who stood against reform.

“Sir Thomas says he is as heretical as Luther: his emphasis on salvation by grace, denial of Purgatory, and his insistence that the individual is accountable to God and not Holy Church. Odd that More and Tyndale should be enemies, when you think on it. They seem to have much in common in all other respects: both are brilliant thinkers, both admire Erasmus, both are devoted to the new learning in many ways. Two branches of the same tree, it would seem. In the past I have known Sir Thomas to speak of the need for reform, even. I cannot understand why he can think only of Tyndale as fit for kindling.”

“It is the Bible,” Anne said, feeling her nose run from the cold. She sniffed gently, so as not to give offense, and wished she’d brought a handkerchief. Was this what he had brought her out to talk about? She bit her tongue to keep from asking about his visit with Katherine as she said, “Sir Thomas denies the primacy of Holy Scripture over Holy Church. He would burn the Holy Scripture and its translator in a bonfire that would reach all the way to hell just so some plowman may not read the truth therein.”

“The plowman has no need to read Scripture for himself. He is too ignorant. He would misinterpret it. We would be plagued with a thousand false doctrines. Each man his own priest. But I quite agree with Tyndale’s statement that the king gives account to God alone. That would mean, of course, that even the pope has no jurisdiction over the king. It has put me to thinking about a new tactic regarding Katherine.”

A new tactic? Surely he did not mean that he was going to break with the pope and embrace Lutheranism. That would be a reversal indeed for “the defender of the faith.” But whatever the tactic, she thought with relief, it meant that he was not abandoning his pursuit of divorce in face of the Church’s opposition.

“You are not giving up then?”

“I am not. My marriage to Katherine is a sin. And I have told her again of my resolve to see it ended. If Tyndale is right, and the king gives account to God alone, then it is even more my responsibility to see the marriage dissolved and to secure the blessing of God and an heir for England. I intend to make you my rightful queen. You will be the mother of my son.”

As her heart beat faster, she reminded herself that this was not the first time he’d made such a promise, usually followed immediately by physical advances and demands, demands increasingly hard for her to resist. She was but a woman after all. And he could be exceedingly charming—the most magnificent peacock on the lawn.

“About Master Tyndale,” she said, trying to divert him from this usual pattern. “Do you think it would be possible to bring him back to England? It would be advantageous to have such a brilliant man on your council. And there is another. A young scholar named John Frith. Wolsey had him imprisoned unjustly, and I think he has fled England to join Tyndale. Some of your brightest minds are languishing in exile, Your Majesty. Bring them back. England needs them. You need them.” And then, knowing how he loved a challenge, “If you can find them, of course.”

“Be assured I can find them.”

The cold way he said it made her heart squeeze a little.

“Not Sir Thomas, my lord. Do not seek his help in this.”

For the first time he laughed, that quick, mercurial burst of staccato laughter that always set her on edge.

“No. This is hardly a job for Sir Thomas. I expect if he could find William Tyndale, he’d already be in chains and facing down a charge of heresy. I have an agent on the Continent. A man named Stephen Vaughan. He’s a good man. He’ll seek out Master Tyndale and—”

“Frith,” she said. “John Frith.”

“Don’t trouble yourself about Sir Thomas,” he said. “I have another plan to bring him around.”

“Another plan?”

“I intend to make him chancellor in Wolsey’s place. That way I can woo him gently to our cause.”

Her heart sank. In all of England there was no greater enemy to her cause and to her person than Sir Thomas More. He was Queen Katherine’s greatest supporter, and a man more devoted to the old faith than any cleric. She did not think Sir Thomas More would be so easily wooed.

Henry paused in his striding through the frosty hedges and pulled her toward him. “Now, my lady, give your king a kiss, a chaste kiss upon the lips, for we must be patient, if we are to provide a legal heir for England.”

Anne didn’t know whether to be relieved or disappointed at this change in him, she thought as she lifted her face and touched her lips to her king’s.

SIXTEEN

[T]he clergy maketh them not heretics nor burneth them neither . . . the clergy doth denounce them. And as they be well worthy the temporaltie [secular authorities] doth burn them. And after the fire of Smithfield, Hell doth receive them where the wretches burn for ever.

—S
IR
T
HOMAS
M
ORE ON THE
PROCESS OF BURNING HERETICS

A
t first Kate didn’t recognize the woman serving them at table in the captain’s quarters—hardly more than a closet beneath the quarterdeck and cluttered with various charts and instruments, none of which Kate recognized except the sextant. She’d once seen a picture of one in a book her brother printed. Though the serving woman appeared to be watching them from beneath lowered lids, she kept her head down, never saying a word as she removed the empty soup bowl and replaced it with a plate of roasted capon and a crusty loaf.

“The leek soup was delicious, and it was hot! However did you manage that?” Kate asked.

The woman signaled her acknowledgment with a nod but did not answer, only turning her back to them as she tidied the rest of the little chamber, leaving Kate to wonder if perhaps the woman was a foreigner.

“She has a firebox in the bow that makes a passable oven. Kind of like a
small brazier that you would warm your room with—except larger. She uses it to make miracles, which my crew and I delight in.” He gave a little half laugh, half grunt. “The crew almost mutinied when I first brought her on board. But after a few days of her cooking, they decided a woman on board brought better luck than hardtack.”

“I can see why,” John said, as he sliced a bit of the fowl with his knife and put it on Kate’s plate. “It’s awfully generous of you, Captain, to give up your quarters like this.”

Captain Lasser appeared to take little interest in the food. Kate wished he would take his leave of them. The long ride in the cramped little dinghy—with her perched precariously on the trunk that Lady Walsh had bullied the recalcitrant captain into bringing—wondering where they were going, wondering if they were indeed being taken to the ship or if perhaps he had betrayed them, had left her frazzled. But John seemed to take everything in stride.

John speared another morsel and placed it on his plate. “I guess I had not thought . . . I mean I just assumed there would be a private cabin for passengers.”

“This is a merchant ship, Master Frith,” the captain said curtly. “As to my ‘generosity,’ well really, what choice have we? You and your beautiful wife can hardly bunk with the crew.”

He pushed back his chair, abruptly. “Endor will see that you have what you need,” he said, gesturing at the woman making up the cot—it was hardly more than a bench. “She is a mute, but she is not deaf. She will understand what you tell her.” And then with a little half-smile curving his mouth, he added, “Sorry about the size of the bed. It’s not built for two . . . but I’m sure you’ll manage.”

Kate’s face burned with embarrassment.

“At least it’s not a berth swinging from the rafters,” John said cheerfully as if he read no double entendre in the captain’s remark, or, if he did, did not think it at all inappropriate. “We’ll manage quite nicely, Captain.”

The woman, slightly built, thin, with the saddest look in her eyes Kate had ever seen, returned to the table and, gesturing to the captain, raised her hands palms up as she shrugged her shoulders.

“She’s asking if there will be anything else,” he said.

“No . . . that’s quite—” Kate began.

“If she would just light the ship’s lantern hanging on the wall . . .” John
interrupted. “I’m afraid my wife will awaken in the dark in a strange place and be frightened.”

Really, John, he’ll think me some helpless little girl,
and then she reminded herself that she should be grateful her husband was so thoughtful, and what did it really matter what Tom Lasser thought of her?

The woman’s hand removed the lamp and poured a little oil into its base then returned it to its wall clamp with thin, almost claw-like fingers. Kate’s memory flashed back to the day she stood outside Fleet Prison—the beggar woman scrambling in the dirty straw for the coin Kate had dropped into her cell had hands like that. Surely not . . .

“Is that—”

He raised an eyebrow. “I’m surprised you remembered. I’m afraid, being a mute woman, she did not fare as well as I did—that and the fact that she was being held on a charge of fortune-telling.”

John sounded as close to indignation as Kate had ever heard him. “She’s a fortune-teller? But that’s—”

“Against the law . . . ?” He flashed a wide smile, the same smile she’d first seen when he mocked her from inside Fleet Prison even as he was begging for his bread. “It’s more harmless than it sounds—not witchcraft, not something she does deliberately. She doesn’t conjure the devil or anything like that, Master Frith,” he said, his amusement growing with John’s discomfort. “It’s more a gift. I’ll show you.”

John’s usual easy smile was pursed into a small pout. “Really, that isn’t necessary, Captain, indeed, I would prefer—”

“She just sees visions in still water.” He nodded to the woman, who looked uncomfortable being at the center of their conversation. “Endor, come here. Bring that bowl of water and place it on the table.”

Kate was suddenly curious, and anxious that John’s attitude not give offense, less to Tom Lasser, she told herself, than to the woman who had served them so carefully. “What can it hurt, John? Aren’t you even a little bit curious?”

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