Just Flesh and Blood

Home > Other > Just Flesh and Blood > Page 1
Just Flesh and Blood Page 1

by Caro, Jane;




  Jane Caro is an author, columnist, broadcaster, advertising writer, documentary maker and social commentator. She has published ten books, including a memoir, Plain-Speaking Jane, as well as Just a Girl and Just a Queen, the first two novels in the Elizabeth Tudor trilogy. Just Flesh & Blood is the third and final book in the series.

  Jane appears frequently on Q&A, The Drum, Sunrise and Weekend Sunrise. She has created and presented three documentary series for the ABC’s Compass, with another in production. A frequent ad hoc columnist, she writes regular columns for Sunday Life and Leadership Matters.

  Jane divides her time between Sydney and a cattle property in the Upper Hunter. She is married, with two daughters, a grandson and a granddaughter.

  @JaneCaro

  Also by Jane Caro

  Just a Girl

  Just a Queen

  Unbreakable: Women Share Stories of Resilience and Hope (Ed.)

  Destroying the Joint: Why Women Have to Change the World (Ed.)

  I dedicate this book about the past to my grandchildren, Alfred and Esther Howard. They represent the future.

  Anne, May 1536

  Her hair was cut short for the first time in her life and the chill on the back of her neck was unfamiliar. It would be a warm spring day, but the hour was still early and the sun had not yet had a chance to do its work. She could feel the cool air moving around her, not strong enough yet to be a breeze; more like a breath.

  She had not many breaths left.

  She stifled the impulse to put her hand up to her neck and stilled the accompanying bubbles of panic that had risen in her stomach. She must not think about her neck if she was to maintain her composure.

  To distract herself she turned towards the people gathered below the scaffold to watch her die. There was a multitude. They were silent and their faces solemn. Then she heard a woman call out from the back of the throng. She spoke with the harsh accent of the common people of London and her shrill voice carried across Tower Green.

  ‘Tis a pity good Queen Katharine did not live long enough to see your head upon the block!’

  Queen Anne remained motionless, but the woman’s words hit home. She had thought the death of her great rival, Katharine of Aragon, just a few weeks before, only a good thing, cementing her own legitimacy as queen. Even in her extremity, she had to repress a wry smile at the thought of her own foolishness and at the irony of one queen’s death following so hastily upon the other.

  A ripple of murmurs ran through the crowd in response to the woman’s insult, whether in approval or disapproval she did not know, although she could guess. Nevertheless she looked down from the scaffold at the people closest to her. She recognised some of the upturned faces: men and women she had once known well and had thought of as friends, but she did not see any kindness in their eyes. She did not see kindness in any of the thousand pairs of eyes that watched her so intently and for that she was grateful. Their hatred helped. It made her feel defiant. She could not have borne any sign of pity.

  She had rehearsed this moment ever since they told her the timing of her execution. She had gone over and over it in her mind, imagining what she would see, forcing herself to feel what she would feel so that it might not undo her when she was compelled to face the reality. Composing her final words had helped steady her. She knew what she must do in her last act on earth. She must do everything she could to safeguard the fate of her little daughter.

  Elizabeth would be standing up in her cot at just this moment, Anne thought, arms outstretched to her nursemaid. The vivid image brought tears to her eyes. She had to swallow hard to hold them at bay.

  ‘Time to get up! Time to get up!’

  Anne remembered the child’s imperious demands and impatience. How eager the little girl was to get up and get out into the world. How the child’s tone had made them all – queen, ladies and attendants – laugh with pride and delight at her forwardness. Elizabeth did not speak like a baby, although she was not yet three. Her words were clearly articulated and her piping voice already carried a note of command. She spoke in complete sentences with all the words in the right order. Anne’s heart swelled with pride at the thought of her child. Henry did not realise the jewel he had in this daughter of theirs. Anne must do all that she could to send her safely into the future.

  She knew her words must speak no insurrection, no excuses, no defiance. She must not be seen to criticise the justice of her sentence. She would not admit guilt, nor would she claim innocence. Her words must be calm, conciliatory, humble and loving. They would be written down, they would be reported and they would be remembered. She must die quietly and unprotesting so that her infant daughter might live and prosper and all Anne’s hopes and ambitions not be in vain.

  ‘Elizabeth.’ She spoke her daughter’s name so quietly that none could have heard it but God. The people watching saw her lips move and assumed she was praying. They were right.

  ‘My Lord Constable, may I speak to the people assembled here?’ She was relieved that her voice sounded so steady. It raised her spirits a little. She turned back to the crowd below her. They had surged forward in anticipation, the better to hear what she had to say.

  ‘Good Christian people, I am come hither to die, for according to law …’

  It was good that all through the long and sleepless night she had rehearsed the words she would say. She knew them so well they flowed unbidden from her lips, leaving her mind free to take in everything about her. The air she breathed was sweet, the scent of the flowers blooming in the Tower gardens causing her a pang of regret. The crowd was so silent as they strained to hear her words that she could hear the distant roar of the lions and tigers from the Tower menagerie as they anticipated their next feed.

  ‘… for a gentler nor a more merciful prince was there never and to me he was ever a good, a gentle and sovereign lord …’

  She could feel rather than see the crowd relax as she spoke. It was clear that she would say nothing that would shock or accuse. She would go to her death mildly, causing far less trouble in her demise than she ever did in her life.

  ‘If any person will meddle of my cause, I require them to judge the best. And thus I take my leave of the world and of you all, and I heartily desire you all to pray for me. Oh Lord, have mercy on me! To God I commend my soul.’

  She turned and scanned the stony faces of the people standing with her on the scaffold. ‘Who among you is my executioner?’

  ‘He will be here presently, my lady.’

  But the words of the Lord Constable did not deceive her. She knew he was one of the men standing behind her.

  Lady Kingston stepped forward and removed Anne’s mantle. Then the condemned queen was given a linen cap which she tied over her shorn hair. This time she could not resist placing her hand protectively over her neck. The skin was cool to the touch and she could feel little goosebumps pimpling her flesh. Whether from the unaccustomed exposure or from fear, she could not tell.

  Now a French-accented voice in her ear. ‘Will you forgive me, Your Grace?’

  ‘Willingly, good master executioner.’

  But she did not turn around. To see him would undo her.

  ‘Kneel and pray, my lady.’

  ‘Will you give me a little more time, good sir, so I may make my peace with my God?’

  ‘I will.’

  As she prayed, they put a blindfold across her eyes and the bubbles of panic in her belly fizzed and burst, forcing open her eyes against the dark, so that her eyelashes brushed the linen that shut out all sight of the world. Her ears strained to hear the approach of the executioner, but what she heard was the thump of he
r own heart and the pant of her now frantic breath.

  The executioner had removed his shoes so he would make no sound as he approached. But she heard the collective intake of breath by the assembled multitude as he raised the blade and she knew.

  Elizabeth, March 1603

  ‘You must go to your bed, Your Majesty. The doctors insist upon it.’

  Robert Cecil looms over me in the dark. He startles me. I have been thinking about my mother’s death. Imagining myself in her skin, in her brain and her heart. I have tried to feel what she must have felt, see what she must have seen. I know, better perhaps than anyone who was actually there, every action she took, every gesture she made, every word she spoke, minute by minute. When I was young, I insisted that those who were present tell me every detail, sparing me nothing, until my mother’s last moments were imprinted on my brain. Yet still I was unsatisfied. Try as I might, I could not live her death – only she could do that. Anyway, it is my own last moments that press close upon me now.

  I stir myself on my cushions and rub at my eyes, trying to bring them back into focus. I clear my painful throat and peer up at the man who stands over me. I remain silent until I am once again in possession of myself. Only then do I speak.

  ‘Little man, little man, the word “must” is not to be used to princes. If your father had lived you durst not have said as much.’

  I have been reclining on a pile of cushions all this afternoon and into the night. I have been unwell for days with aches and pains and an agonisingly sore throat. I have struggled on with my duties regardless, doing everything while standing, sitting only occasionally in a chair. I could not shake the fear that the minute I gave in to my illness I was giving in to death. The longer I could stand, the longer I held the spectre at bay.

  ‘Your Grace! Your Grace!’

  But I could not stave off the inevitable forever. As my mind drifted, my knees went from under me and I began to swoon and looked to fall. Hands clasped at me quickly, preventing me from tumbling to the floor.

  ‘Fetch cushions, bring as many as you can find!’

  My head was spinning, but I could see my ladies scurrying about, bringing mounds of cushions from chairs and divans and piling them up about me. Once they were in place, my ladies lowered me gently to the floor.

  ‘Will you not retire to your bed, Your Majesty? You will be so much more comfortable there.’

  Philadelphia Carey, granddaughter of my mother’s sister, knelt beside me, her face filled with concern. I knew she meant only to do me a kindness, but a terrible dread took hold in my belly. The only bed left to me was my deathbed and I was not ready for that – not yet. There was still work for me to do. Not perhaps as a queen, but as a woman. I would not die if I could help it while that work remained undone. I flinched away from the girl and nestled deeper into the cushions.

  ‘No, no. I will stay here a little while and catch my breath. I will be back on my feet ere long.’

  Facing death, I am more my father’s daughter than my mother’s, it seems. I turned my face away from my attendants and closed my eyes. I would rest a little and perhaps then I would be my old self again. And then I remembered that my father’s last words were of just such a false hope. When asked if there was any ‘learned man’ (by which they meant a man of God) he would speak with, he said, ‘If I had any, it would be Dr Cranmer, but I will first take a little sleep and then as I feel myself, I will advise upon the matter.’

  The thought made me snap my eyes open. I am dying, but – like my father – I am not quite ready to be dead yet.

  I am the last, the very last. There will be no Tudors after me. The dynasty my grandfather risked his life to establish, and my father his immortal soul, has not survived more than three generations.

  All my friends are gone. All my peers. All those whom I loved and who grew to adulthood beside me have died. Elizabeth who was the first of her Christian name will also be the last of her surname.

  But all is not lost. The Stuarts will follow me and Tudor blood runs in their veins. England and Scotland will be united without any blood being shed, royal or otherwise. Whether this new nation will be for good or ill, I do not know. That challenge is for future monarchs to struggle with. My race is run. I will have done what I can for it just by dying.

  ‘May I fetch a doctor, Your Grace? Perhaps they can relieve your pain.’

  Robert Cecil is hovering nearby. It is a symptom of my decline that fear of me has faded. I am no longer Elizabeth the queen, mighty and dreadful. I am Elizabeth a dying woman, soon to have no more relevance than a memory.

  It hurts so to swallow – yet swallow I must, before I can speak. ‘A pox on your doctors, Master Secretary! They will only torture me with their blood-letting, their cups and their leeches.’

  Ah, but my voice is so hoarse! I can no longer bellow in the way that made my attendants jump and tremble in their shoes. Nevertheless, the force of my emotion makes my secretary bow and scrape and back away into the shadows. I have kept the doctors at bay for a little while longer at least.

  As I fail, I lose their respect. The mantle of monarchy begins to fall from my shoulders, revealing the wrinkled and haggard flesh of an old woman, long past her prime.

  I have lived too long. It may have been my great gift to my people, but it has come at a great cost to myself. There are few alive today who remember an England that was not Elizabeth’s. My long reign has given my people the stability they needed and that stability has brought with it prosperity. At least I can die knowing that I have left my kingdom in much better shape than I found it.

  The child turned his neck towards me. The scrofula that infected him bloomed like hideous, twisted flowers around his ear, down his neck and onto his shoulders. It took all of my will to stop myself recoiling at the sight.

  ‘Bless you, my child,’ I said as I leant forward and laid my fingers upon the horny protuberances. ‘May God in his grace cure you of this evil.’

  Swallowing hard, I ran my fingers gently over each of the wens as I had been shown. I smiled at the boy, who looked at me with eyes that shone with hope. I felt humbled by his belief in my ability to cure what the common people called the King’s Evil. I had only been queen for a few months and it still felt strange. Unlike the boy, I could not believe that I really held the power to cure him in my touch.

  The next sufferer was an old woman, her chest hideously swollen with the disease. After her, an old man, then a girl and, most shocking of all, a baby.

  Dutifully, I stroked each disgusting sore, made the sign of the cross above each sufferer’s head and said the words I had been taught. Earnestly, I hoped that they would be cured. Secretly, I did not believe they would. But it was not just the disfiguring disease that shocked me about the people who queued up to receive my blessing. It was the rags they wore, the bareness and filth of their feet, and how thin their bodies were. I might not be able to cure their sores, but I swore then and there that I would do what I could to return my kingdom to prosperity so that even the least of my subjects were a little better off under my reign than they had been under my sister’s.

  I could hear the wet coughing from consumptive chests of many of those who waited for my supposedly healing touch. I could see others who rested on crutches and hobbled forward on misshapen legs, all of them humble, patient and respectful. I felt ashamed of my rich garments and full belly.

  Eventually, over the years, I grew used to the Maundy Thursday ceremony and familiarity made touching the scrofula less distasteful to me. I almost began to look forward to it, especially when my physicians assured me that most of those I touched did indeed find themselves cured.

  Whether God worked through me to cure the scrofula, I do not know, but I do know that I have been a thrifty housewife. I have restored my realm to good order. I have repaired and rebuilt my little island when it was battered by storms and inclement weather. I have
not allowed dust and dirt to accumulate in dark corners. My hearth is clean. The windows sparkle. Vegetables and fruits grow in abundance in my gardens and the chickens are all good layers.

  Not that it was such a great task to pass on a kingdom in better shape than I found it. England was in disarray when I inherited it and not just for the poor. It was a country rent by religious strife and the instability that followed five monarchs in a little over a decade. Merely by remaining alive I was an improvement on my predecessors.

  But how will history judge me when I am dead and gone? Will it be as kind to me as I am being to myself? I once said to my parliament that I would be content with an epitaph that read: ‘Here lies Elizabeth who ruled from 1558 to such and such a time (1603, it would seem) and who lived and died a virgin.’ Yet, now that the event I once thought was so far in the future is fast upon me, I find such a judgment is not enough. I wish to be thought well of. I hope my labours have not been in vain. Is this pride? If it be so, then it is just another sin that can be added to my long list.

  They say my father sent for a Frenchman called Jean Rombaud to come to London with a fabled sword honed from the steel of Toledo. The Frenchman’s task was to separate my mother’s head from her body. To send for a skilled swordsman instead of using the brute force of the axeman was a gesture of mercy – a sharp sword being more likely to deliver an instantaneous death than a blunt axe. I hope it was my father who sent for Rombaud. Sometimes I worry that it may not have been the king who felt an impulse towards mercy, but his secretary, Thomas Cromwell. They tell me Cromwell was friends with my mother until she fell from grace.

  Certainly someone couldn’t bear the thought of such a barbaric instrument mutilating my mother’s slender neck. It must have been my father’s decision, surely. He had loved the woman to distraction for almost two decades, he had rent asunder God’s Christian church just to gain access to my mother’s person. He must have kissed that same neck with passion and delight many times before his love turned sour. Surely it was my father who could not bear to see my mother’s soft white skin hacked at by a clumsy axe. Unless Thomas Cromwell also carried a torch for her. If my father’s suspicions were correct, he would simply have been one among many. Or was it just simple kindness? Is it possible for a man to feel pity for a woman without any accompanying desire? That is for men to answer, I suppose. I do not know that I have ever seen it.

 

‹ Prev