Authors: Barbara Kyle
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #C429, #Kat, #Extratorrents
Honor was surprised. “You think her steadfastness admirable, then.”
“I think she may well get her wish of residence in the Tower,” he answered gruffly. “Now, enough talk of her.” He rose and came to her. As he approached, he withdrew a folded paper from his gown. He snapped it open and held it inches from her face. “Seen this?”
It was a printed white page, a pamphlet. Honor glanced at the title:
A Dialogue Concerning the Evil Abuses of the Church
. A chill contracted her backbone but she returned his gaze. “Yes,” she said steadily.
“Is it yours?”
“The author’s name is printed below.” She pointed to it. “‘Ephos.’ ”
“So I have noted. Odd name. My question stands. Is it yours?” He was watching her intently.
Honor hesitated. The pamphlet was wildly heretical, and therefore seditious, and Cromwell was the King’s most trusted councilor. But she reminded herself once again that had he wanted to harm her he had far more damning evidence of her work than this. “It is,” she answered, head high. She felt a grim satisfaction at the sight of the pseudonym, part of the Greek name Sir Thomas had given her, spelled backwards.
Watching her, Cromwell folded the pamphlet and stuffed it back inside his gown. He beamed. “Fine work, Mistress Larke. I did not know you were such an eloquent word smith. Your style is spare yet passionate. Utterly compelling.”
Honor relaxed. “I had the best of writing teachers,” she said with quiet bitterness. “Sir Thomas More.”
“Ha! Exactly so.” He strolled away, clearly amused by the irony.
She did not share his mirth. “Is that why you wanted to see me?”
“As a matter of fact, it is.” He walked around the table, picking up an apple on the way. As he settled back in his chair he tossed the apple from hand to hand. “I could use more of this sort of writing. Powerful, clear broadsides to bring the message home to the literate among our countrymen. What do you say? Can you do more of this kind of thing?”
Honor heard some inner voice whisper caution. “I could,” she said.
“Printed in quantity?”
“Yes.”
“Here, or abroad?”
“Abroad is safer.”
“But possible here? Hopkin’s press, perhaps?”
“Too small. But I know others. It’s possible.”
“Delivered at my instructions to a safe depot?”
“Certainly.”
“Good. Then it’s settled.” He picked up a silver knife and began to peel the apple.
She watched him, searching for clues to his thoughts, but his face, enigmatic as always, was devoid of any emotion. Though their words of heresy and treason hung in the air his eyes were calmly fixed in concentration on peeling the apple skin in one long, unbroken strip.
“No, sir,” she said firmly. “It is not settled.”
He glanced up, surprised.
“I wrote that pamphlet in anger,” she said. “I am not at all convinced it is a course I should pursue.”
“Why ever not?”
“I have no time for such indulgences. The missions take up every available hour, and . . . well, to be blunt . . .” She hesitated.
“Oh, do be blunt, Mistress Larke.”
“It’s just that your other schemes make no sense to me. I see no sign of progress.”
“Nonsense. All is proceeding exactly as we want.”
“We?” she flared. “Master Cromwell, four men have just been burned! Thomas Bilney, Richard Bayfield, John Tewkesbury, Thomas Benet—all dead at the hands of the Chancellor before I could get to them. And poor James Bainham likely to be the next. It is not what
they
wanted, sir. And I assure you it is not what I want!”
She saw by his frown that her outburst had finally disturbed him. Good.
“It is all a question of stages, mistress,” he said calmly.
“And what stage are we in now, pray? A retrogressive stage? All part of the plan, is it, Master Cromwell?”
“Perhaps I was wrong not to have explained my strategy to you. May I do so now?”
She shrugged, weary with wrangling. “Is there a purpose? I really should be going.”
“There is a purpose, yes. I’d like those pamphlets done, you see. So far, the printed word has not been used to influence the popular will. An oversight, I believe. In the coming battle, I intend to use humble ordnance like your broadsheet to great advantage. May I explain?”
She sighed, but she came and sat again, ready to listen.
“After the Blackfriars fiasco,” he began, “the King said something that put everything squarely into place for me. He said, in his anger, that he was sovereign in his own empire. Now, if the King is an
emperor
, I reasoned, he cannot be subservient to Rome. He can act independently from Rome. He could, for example, stop the flow of Englishmen’s gold to Rome. It seemed to me that just such a—I won’t say threat—but such a sober piece of persuasion might be used to prod the Pope into signing the divorce.”
“But it hasn’t.”
“I also knew,” he said, overriding her objection, “that caution must be taken. A stand bold enough to frighten Rome could also frighten our pious countrymen. To most of them the Pope’s place at the head of the Universal Church seems as constant as the rising sun. Fear can cause unrest, and unrest undermines a king’s security. We have the unfortunate example of Henry II and Archbishop Becket to instruct us, to say nothing of the papal interdict under King John when all Church administration was halted and English commerce stymied. No. It would not do to have the people mumbling against
this
king. He must not appear a tyrant. The cry against Rome’s domination must come from the people themselves.”
Honor was becoming impatient with the lecture. “But you just said the people are pious and fear change.”
“I speak, in the second instance, of the people as a political entity. Parliament. If Parliament passed a bill to withhold Church monies, I reasoned, the threat to Rome would be just as flagrant, but the King could not be called a tyrant, for Parliament is, by definition, the people.”
“Yes, it’s been a clever plan,” Honor agreed irritably. Over her plate she was idly crumbling a crust of bread into fragments. “The King, I’m sure, is delighted. You’ve engineered Parliament to do the dirty deed, and the King and his burgesses are pocketing much of the Pope’s gold. But this threat, this sober persuasion, as you call it, of drastically reducing Rome’s English income has accomplished exactly nothing. All the legislation you’ve pushed through your precious Parliament—the reform of mortuaries and plural benefices, checks on the Church’s commercial operations—all of these are excellent, but what is the result? No scream of pain has yet been heard from the Pope. The Bishops’ courts remain intact. And Sir Thomas continues to send men to the stake.”
“That is why the time has come to move into the second stage.”
“Second stage?”
He smiled. “Politicians, like battle commanders, are only as good as their tactics.” He munched a slice of apple. “True, our course so far has made little discernible progress with the Pope. But look at what we have gained at home. A field newly drawn up, and all to our advantage. The King behind me. The men of Parliament savoring their first real taste of power—and seeing what gold rolls back to them for exercising it. And the Church here trembling, on the defensive. Now is the time to attack.”
“Attack?”
“To really threaten Rome.”
“With what?”
“The Imperial autonomy of England. Immune to papal judgments. And once again it is essential that the impetus is seen to come from Parliament. The challenge now is to get their support.”
“Support for what? What in heaven’s name would you have Parliament do?”
“Declare the King to be the supreme head of the Church in England.”
She stared, dumbfounded. The King? Supreme head of the Church? The idea was shocking in its brazen originality. Stunning in its simplicity. If the King was supreme he could write his own divorce, sweep clean his own Church. It was masterful.
Her thoughts suddenly snagged. “But doesn’t this current impasse in Parliament defeat you? I know you’ve maneuvered your latest batch of anti-clerical bills through the Commons, but the bills are mired in the Lords, aren’t they? If the old guard there of Bishops and Abbots is balking at reform legislation, how can you possibly expect them to go even further?”
“Exactly so. The Lords’ bombastic reaction is ideal. Better, in fact, than I had hoped.” He picked a piece of apple pulp from between his teeth.
Honor was baffled. “You
hoped
for the Lords’ opposition?”
He nodded. “All perfectly predictable. Just as is the Commons’ wrath against the Lords for impeding progress.”
Honor whispered, “Good heavens.” Understanding crept over her, bringing with it a huge smile. “Master Cromwell, I owe you an apology. I have underestimated you.” She laughed at the brilliance of the scheme. “Let me see if I have it. The more obstinately the clergy cling to their old ways, with no attempt at reform, the more spiteful is the people’s wrath. Pious they are, to be sure, but God is one thing, and greedy priests quite another. Now, you will use the fury of the Commons as a battering ram to beat down the walls of the Lords. And all without you lifting a finger in the attack. It’s wonderful! But can it really work? Are the people angry enough?”
“They will be,” he said. “If Sir Thomas More’s policies of ferocious protection of Church privilege continue to enrage them.”
“But of course,” she cried, understanding it all now. “Oh, that this plan might snare the monster!”
“And,” Cromwell added pointedly, “if there are hundreds of your pamphlets out there to inflame them.”
She smiled. “I see.”
“I thought you might. Then you agree to write them?”
“Willingly.”
“Excellent.” He stood. “We can discuss the details later.”
Dismissal. “Of course,” she said, rising to leave.
“By the way,” Cromwell said, “I’ve heard something rather distressing. I’m afraid Sir Thomas may have gotten wind of Master Hopkin’s little press.”
Honor stiffened. “How?”
“I don’t know. But it might be best to warn him.”
“I shall. Thank you.”
Cromwell was leading her to the door. “If you’d like, I could send the message to Hopkin myself. You’re so busy just now.”
“Would you?”
“Certainly. Still at his old lodging, is he?”
“No. He’s moved to Milk Street. Beside Montgomery’s. Oh, Master Cromwell,” she said, touching his arm, “do urge him to contact me. Tell him I’m ready to help if he needs me.”
He patted her hand. “Indeed.”
They were at the door. Honor drew aside the brown velvet curtain that hung over it.
“Mistress Larke,” Cromwell said, “there is one thing more. Your worries about having to rush back to the Dowager Princess are finally at an end. The King has decided to terminate your employment with her.”
Honor whirled around, mouth open. “What? But why?”
“His Grace is highly displeased with the Dowager Princess’s insistence on styling herself as Queen. He has declared her staff must be cut back even further. He singled you out especially.”
“Me?” She was shocked. Why had Cromwell waited to tell her this? “But Her Grace relies on me.”
“Exactly so. I’m afraid the King can be vindictive when crossed.”
“Good Lord,” Honor muttered. “What shall I do?”
“I thought you’d be pleased. A fortuitous development, I’d say. Now, without raising suspicions by quitting her, you are free to do as you like.”
“Free to see my work founder,” she cried.
“Nonsense. You can accomplish everything from Chelsea. Sir Thomas is always at Westminster.”
“I will never go back to his house.”
“Well, go to another man’s house, then. Marry.”
“Marry?” she parroted.
“Thousands do, you know,” he said dryly. “And you can’t live alone.” Honor knew he was right. Municipal ordinances forbade single women living alone, clear evidence, city fathers feared, of a bawdy house. If Honor flouted the regulation she would only draw suspicion.
“Why not accept one of the suitors Sir Thomas is urging,” Cromwell suggested. “Or perhaps that old Baron from Yorkshire. Duncombe. Been panting after you for months. Even asked
me
about you.”
“And lose control of my property to him? Jeopardize all my work?”
“Oh come, come. The Baron’s in his dotage. You could carry on right under his dripping nose. He’d never notice.”
Knuckles rapped the other side of the door. A gangly young clerk opened it.
Cromwell fixed Honor with sober eyes. “Marry, mistress. Marry a quiet man, away from all of this. One day, you may be glad of a safe haven.” He nodded at the clerk. “Come in, Andrew. Mistress Larke is just leaving.”
*
Alone with his clerk Cromwell dictated a note: a name, an accusation.
“Is that all, sir?” Andrew asked.
“Yes. No, wait. There may be another Hopkin in Foster’s Lane. Better add a notation that it’s the one on Milk Street. Next to Montgomery’s.”
“Yes, sir,” Andrew said, writing. “To the Lord Chancellor again, sir?”
Cromwell nodded. “And anonymous again.”
The clerk pocketed the note and hurried out.
Alone, Cromwell moved to the window and looked down at the young people tossing the ball under the leafy branches. Would Mistress Larke call one in five a fair ratio? he wondered. One of her unfortunates dropped in Sir Thomas’s path now and then? After all, the more the dragon devoured, the sooner the people would rush out to slay him.