Ambition's Queen: A Novel of Tudor England
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Bridget smiled, her heart still thumping wildly. “I want that too, Will, but I really do not care about rising at court. I have only a small amount of money in any case, and I am used to living simply from my time at the abbey. Besides, the queen would do something for us—she has been such a kind mistress to me so far, and I am certain she would want to see us secure.”
Even in the darkness, Bridget saw Will’s face alter. “Please be careful,” he said. “The queen may have been good to you, and I know you are loyal to her, but she is not as powerful as she once was. You must not rely too heavily on her or her influence. I cannot say much more, but in my position, I do hear certain things . . . things that would probably scare your mistress if she knew. Make sure that you stay away from all plots and schemes as much as you can.”
“Will, what does that mean?” Bridget asked, her voice urgent. “Is the queen in danger? Do you know something? If you do, you must—”
“No, no, no,” Will interrupted, “of course not, I merely hear rumours, as we all do. Now, I must go, my master has a meeting this evening and I must get back.” Will was suddenly eager to leave her. He gave a bewildered Bridget a final kiss and departed. Bridget felt chilly, both inside and out. Her mind was racing with what she had heard and almost done. She had a new understanding of how Joanna had managed to forget herself with Sir Francis Weston. Once Will had kissed her, really kissed her, she could think of nothing else but giving herself to him. Her skin was still tingling from his touch.
But what had his warning about keeping away from “plots and schemes” meant, let alone his comments about the queen? He had made her situation sound very chancy, yet the king had sent for her, he had wanted her with him, and Bridget herself had seen the desire in his eyes when he had looked at his queen tonight. She had also seen how fragile the relationship was when they had had some kind of disagreement and the king had moved away from Anne, his discomfort obvious to all. Perhaps there was real trouble afoot and not just a temporary difficulty?
Bridget was walking back to the palace, pondering all these questions, and not taking any notice of where she was going. As a consequence, she rounded a corner and walked headlong into a man. And not just any man, but Thomas Cromwell.
“Oh, excuse me, sir” Bridget exclaimed, “I did not see you there.”
“Evidently,” Cromwell drawled. “I had no idea I was so transparent that young ladies no longer see me.” Bridget laughed nervously and moved aside to let Cromwell pass, hoping he would do so quickly. He did not. He stayed right where he was, his head tilted to one side, studying her.
“We seem to run into each other quite often, Mistress Manning. Not that I am complaining, you understand. At my time of life, any opportunity to encounter a pretty maid of honour is most welcome. Tell me,” he enquired, tapping his chin with his forefinger, “why are you outside instead of in the hall waiting on the queen? I do hope young Redcliff has nothing to do with your dereliction of duty.”
“Oh no,” Bridget answered quickly, shaking her head, “nothing at all, sir. It was just very warm in the hall and I became a trifle . . . overheated. I desired some fresh air. That is all.”
Cromwell nodded sagely, his expression full of understanding. “You are quite right; it is somewhat close in there. I am relieved that Redcliff was not the cause of your departure. I should have to teach him his place if he was. Mind you, that is a hard lesson to learn, is it not? Knowing one’s place? I confess that I have never quite mastered it. Just ask the Duke of Norfolk. He will be thrilled to hold forth on my failings to you or indeed any willing audience.”
Cromwell continued on before Bridget could summon a response. “I am also glad to see that you were not on another errand for the queen, particularly the kind that involves throwing away entirely innocent pieces of jewellery. Especially pretty little rings that have been paid for out of the royal treasury. It seems a shame to consign such an item to the frozen embrace of the Thames.”
The Master Secretary came close to her, and Bridget went quite still. He brushed away a tendril of her hair, exposing her small, delicate ear. “There is barely anything that happens at this court that I do not know about, little sparrow,” he whispered. “I know about the men who come to the queen’s chambers, I know who they are and how long they stay. I know all about the gifts the king sends to the Seymour girl and the queen’s unrestrained reaction to them. I even know that it was Will who saved you from having to throw the ring into the river. I am a man who knows things, Mistress Manning. I find it to be most useful to my existence.”
Cromwell delicately swept her hair back into place and stepped back. He regarded Bridget for a long moment and, despite herself, Bridget could feel a little burst of awareness arc between them. She turned her head to one side to avoid looking at him. “Do not look so nervous,” he said. “You are a bright, young woman and a loyal servant to your mistress. I admire that. You have risen from obscurity and secured a place for yourself at court. I admire that also. Just remember that there are many things in this world, a frivolous, little scrap of gold being the least of them that may be cast out upon the ice. I bid you a good evening, mistress.”
He bowed his head and walked off into the shadows. Bridget put a hand on the nearest stone wall and took a minute to steady her breathing. She could hardly believe all that had happened to her this evening—she had nearly lost her virtue to Will Redcliff, and then she had been alternately threatened and advised by Thomas Cromwell, for whom she had so strangely felt a dark flash of attraction. It seemed to her as if she was moving through a maze of dangerous men with nothing but her instincts to guide her. The abbess had once told her that she had good instincts. She hoped, with all her heart, that she was right.
Chapter Nine
March 1536
The court had returned to Greenwich. The weather was pleasant and, on the surface, so were relations between the king and queen. This was despite the disagreement on St Matthias’s Day, which had turned out to have been about the future of the Priory of Catesby. Henry had refused to save it, even though Anne had offered two thousand marks towards its continuance. Cromwell had advised him that the priory was a lost cause that could not support itself and the king had accepted that advice. Anne had been dismayed that he had taken Cromwell’s side of the argument and had been very quiet and withdrawn for a few days in response.
Until the king had visited her chamber. The ladies had been all a twitter when the king, with only a few attendants, had arrived at their mistress’s apartments, clad only in his night attire, his intentions clear. Bridget had been positive that Lady Rochford and Lady Worcester had been listening at the door, agog to know how events proceeded within. Both had been restrained in their behaviour the next day, Lady Rochford especially so. The queen had also been subdued. Bridget wondered what, if anything, had happened. Perhaps there had been another argument and the king had departed as quickly as he had arrived? She did not dare ask and the queen volunteered no information.
Anne had spent a few days closeted with her father and brother, the trio always emerging grim-faced from their elongated meetings. Sometimes, the queen even met with her brother alone, and the ladies had heard the sounds of weeping and Rochford’s low voice attempting to soothe his sister. “I cannot rouse him,” Anne had said. “Nothing seems to work, not even the old tricks he used to enjoy. You know there have been some difficulties in the past, but nothing like this. What should I do, George?”
Bridget could hear Rochford respond but could not make out his words. Whatever they were, they caused the queen to laugh, and she came away a bit happier from her conversation with her brother. Lady Rochford watched her husband from beneath lowered eyelashes, her expression inscrutable. For his part, he merely ignored her as though she did not exist.
Meanwhile, Anne had kept Bridget busy with household duties and, as a result, she had had little opportunity to see Will. She was currently engaged on making a nightdress for the Princess Elizabeth, one of many th
at the little girl had. Anne doted on her and took a close interest in every aspect of her upbringing.
“I have heard something,” Joanna said, who had not been entrusted with sewing a nightdress but merely a shift for the queen. “Cromwell has given up his quarters for Sir Edward Seymour and his wife. The king wishes to use them to meet with Jane. They are connected to his own by a secret gallery.”
“So secret that everybody knows about it,” Catherine Carey commented, just loud enough for Bridget and Joanna to hear.
“How did you find this out, Joanna?” Bridget asked.
A sly look flickered across Joanna’s face. “I overheard Lady Rochford talking to my lady of Worcester. One can learn a lot from listening to them.”
Bridget glanced over to where the two ladies were standing. They appeared to be chatting happily together, perhaps discussing Lady Worcester’s pregnancy, as she placed her hand over her small belly. Lady Rochford looked up and caught Bridget’s eye. She smiled a strange half-smile and looked away. “Damn!” Bridget cursed. Her sewing needle had slipped and caught the side of her nail bed. A fat bead of crimson blood bubbled up through the cut.
The queen was pacing up and down in her chamber, her footfalls echoing in the large room. “Bridget!” she exclaimed snappishly. “I need you here!” Bridget stood up, holding a handkerchief to her bloody finger, and crossed the floor into Anne’s presence.
Lord Rochford was with her, as well as Sir Francis Weston and Sir Henry Norris. She also noticed Smeaton, the musician, skulking on the edges of the group, as if searching for a way in. “Ah, Mistress Manning,” the Queen greeted her warmly. “I need you to help me with my hair. Lady Rochford arranged it this morning and she is not as skilful as you.”
“That is no surprise, sister,” Lord Rochford said, and Smeaton immediately laughed at the snide remark.
Anne shot him a disapproving look. “Lady Rochford does her best,” she said, silencing further comments. “I simply prefer the way Bridget does it. It always looks so much more elegant. If I did not know better, I would think she had spent time at the French court and not a nunnery!”
This time laughter was permitted. The queen’s hair was indeed a bit of a mess and Bridget set about fixing it. Sir Francis took the opportunity to slip away into the next chamber where the sound of female merriment could soon be heard. “That boy is entirely too charming,” the queen observed. “He should spend more time with his wife. Should he not, Sir Henry?”
Norris had been watching, mesmerised, as Bridget combed out Anne’s glossy, dark-brown tresses, and set about piling them back on top of her head. He seemed startled that Anne had spoken to him and could only reply, “Yes, Your Majesty.”
“Yes, Your Majesty!” the queen mimicked with unerring accuracy. “You are a man of few words around me, sir. All you do is stare and stammer and act as if the cat has got your tongue. Am I so frightening I wonder? Bridget, what do you think?”
Bridget looked at Norris, whose face had flushed all the way up to his sandy eyebrows. She felt sorry for him; he seemed a nice man who clearly could not hide the fact that he had romantic feelings for the queen. Anne was well aware of this and liked to tease him, a pattern of behaviour that Bridget was not convinced was a good idea for someone in her position. But it was not her place to instruct the Queen of England in courtly manners. “No, Majesty,” she replied quietly. “You are not at all frightening.”
“You see, Sir Henry,” Anne said triumphantly, “my young maid here is not afraid of me, so an accomplished gentleman like yourself need have no fear either. But perhaps I am mistaken? Perhaps it is not fear that stays your tongue but something warmer? Sometimes I think you come to my rooms more for me than for Madge.”
Sir Henry looked at a loss, and Lord Rochford came to his rescue. “Sister, do not tease Norris so. You have made him resemble a startled rabbit.” Anne laughed and waved her hand at her brother. “Do not worry, George; Sir Henry knows that I am merely joking with him and no more. I mean nothing by it.”
Sir Henry smiled weakly in response and bowed to the queen. “Naturally, madam,” he said. “It is mere mockery. Tell me, is Mistress Shelton in the next chamber? I would speak with her.” Anne nodded and Norris escaped into the next room.
As soon as he left, the door to the presence chamber opened and Thomas Cromwell was admitted. Bridget immediately noticed that Will was behind him, waiting just outside. Their eyes locked and a spark jumped across the room before the door was closed.
Cromwell bowed low and greeted the queen and her brother in turn. His acute gaze drifted to Bridget and his dark eyes warmed just a shade. Bridget felt her stomach tighten. “Good afternoon, Master Secretary,” Anne said, in a formal tone, all traces of mischief gone from her voice. “How nice to see you. You may leave us,” she continued, indicating to Rochford and Smeaton, who had been standing, previously unnoticed, by the door.
Cromwell watched them both depart and muttered to himself, “He is uncommonly well dressed for a musician.”
Bridget made to leave as well, but Anne stopped her. “Do not go. I like to keep one of my maids with me. I hope you do not mind.”
“Of course not, Majesty,” Cromwell answered in a smooth tone, his manner all charm and ease. Anne seated herself, and Bridget retreated into a corner as far from the two protagonists as she could get. Cromwell remained standing.
“Thomas,” Anne began familiarly, “you have been a good friend to me and to my family for many years, and you have profited from that friendship, as have I. I have always thought of you as ‘my man’ and have even described you thus to others. Why, even Bridget here has heard me do that.” Bridget nodded quickly and avoided looking at Cromwell.
“So you can imagine,” Anne went on, “how much recent events have both grieved and puzzled me. You and I seem to have parted company. For instance, the issue of what to do about the religious houses. I want them to be converted for a better purpose, specifically educational uses, and some need not be closed down at all. You look at them and see only their monetary value. Quite apart from that, I now hear tell that you have surrendered your living quarters to that strumpet Seymour’s brother and his wife! These are not the actions of someone who is ‘my’ man!”
The queen got up from her seat and walked across to the window. She was agitated and clearly angry. Cromwell looked largely unmoved, except for a tic that had developed in his right eyelid. It was the only sign that he was feeling some stress.
“Majesty,” Cromwell said, “the decision regarding my quarters was not mine; it was the king’s. I am at his command.”
Anne turned to him abruptly. “You did not even raise an objection, Cromwell! Not one word! You merely acquiesced quietly and gave up your rooms to my enemies! That leads me to wonder,” she said, moving towards him, “just whose side you are on?”
She was barely three feet from Cromwell and his unease was now quite obvious. “Truly, Your Majesty, it was not my—”
“I do not want excuses, they are meaningless.” Anne regarded him for a while, a look of deep concentration upon her face.
“You think I am weak, don’t you?” she said at last, her voice just above a whisper. Cromwell met her gaze and shook his head once. Anne took no notice. “Yes, you do. You and your new friend Chapuys, and the accursed Seymours, and Carew and his cronies—you all think the same thing. That I am finished. That my influence is at an end and, with that in mind, you all seek to find new places upon the chessboard. You think I am to follow in Catherine’s footsteps, cast aside and forgotten in some ghastly hole in the Fens. Well, you are all very much mistaken. I am still queen, and I did not get to hold that position through being weak. I have strength and I have perseverance. In fact, I once played the part of Perseverance in a masque. Did you know that, Bridget?”
“No, Majesty,” Bridget answered from her place in the corner, her throat dry. Anne barely heard her. Her focus was still very much on the now thoroughly discomfited Master Secretary. “It wou
ld be wise for you, sir, to cease treating with those who wish me ill and to realise where your best interests still lie. I am the king’s true wedded wife and the mother of his heir and I still have his heart. I intend to keep it. If you intend to keep your head, you will remember that.”
Bridget’s mouth fell open in astonishment, and Cromwell paled at the ominous words. A fine sheen of sweat had broken out on his dark forehead. Bridget had never seen him this unnerved before, this rattled. The queen had just threatened to have him executed unless he changed his ways. That prospect was enough to alarm anyone, even the normally unflappable Thomas Cromwell.
It took him a few moments to gather himself and arrange his face into a smile, albeit one that did not reach his eyes. He bowed low and said, “As always, Majesty, I am at your service. I desire only your happiness and that of the king.”
Anne nodded and held out her hand for him to kiss, which he duly did. “You may go,” she said, turning away in dismissal. As soon as her back was turned, Cromwell’s smile vanished and his expression changed from studied deference to stormy anger. He swept from the room as fast as he could, for once paying no attention to Bridget. As soon as he was gone, Anne broke into laughter.