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The Complete Tudors: Nine Historical Novels

Page 251

by Jean Plaidy


  He jousted again, and again was the victor.

  Soon everyone was talking of the man whom they called the Wild Knight, who appeared every day at the jousts, and one by one challenged the French champions, all of whom went down before him.

  The French muttered together that this was no man; it was a god of some kind; it was impossible to beat him at the joust, for he was unconquerable.

  At the end of the last day of the jousting, the King announced that there was to be a grand feast which he was calling a Round Table of King Arthur.

  This was the climax of the brilliant entertainment. Margaret, seated beside the King, was to give the prizes for those who had won honors in the jousts, and the citizens of Edinburgh crowded into the Palace to watch their King and his guests and to marvel at the splendor they saw.

  Margaret was happy, for there was little she enjoyed so much as these displays and there was no question now of her importance. She was the mistress of the revels, the Queen, who would give the prizes and proudly carried the heir to the throne. The heat was overpowering and she could wish that her confinement was behind her and she already the mother of a healthy boy; but she could not complain of the homage all—including the King—bestowed on her. If only he had been a faithful husband! If only he respected her intellect as he did her beauty, how contented she would be! But she must enjoy life while it was good.

  The King whispered to her: “What think you of my Round Table?”

  “A fitting end to all the pageantry,” she answered.

  “Let us call the child Arthur.”

  “Why, yes!” she cried. “And whenever I look at him I shall remember this day.”

  When it was time to present the prizes all declared the first prize should have gone to the stranger, the Wild Knight who was the conqueror of all; and, said the French champions, they felt they should not take their prizes while he, who excelled them all, did not come forward to take his.

  There was a hush in the hall, for it seemed that the event for which all were waiting—the prize-giving—would not take place unless the identity of the Wild Knight were revealed.

  Then James rose and addressed the assembly.

  “My friends,” he said, “since you insist on my revealing my identity, I will do so. I am the Wild Knight, and I trust our guests will not think hardly of me for the injuries I may have inflicted upon them.”

  His words were cut short by a great cheering which shook the hall.

  Margaret turned to him, her eyes shining, as the child moved within her.

  If he were but my faithful husband, how happy I should be, she told herself.

  Margaret was brought to bed in the middle of sultry July. The last weeks had been difficult ones, and she feared that she was a woman who must suffer more than most at the time of childbirth.

  Her ladies were about her bed; but the King did not come near her; he could never bear to look on suffering.

  “But when my son is born,” murmured Margaret, while her women wiped her brow with a kerchief smelling of sweet unguents, “it will all be worthwhile.”

  At last, after much travail, the child was born.

  Margaret heard the whispers in the apartment and her heart sank.

  “A maiden bairn.”

  “Alas, alas, Her Grace so longed for a son.”

  The child lay in her arms and James came to stand by her bedside, to smile at her, to soothe her; and to try to pretend that he was as delighted with the birth of his daughter as he would have been with that of a son.

  There had been only time to christen the baby before she died. Melancholy brooded over Holyrood House. The lutes and harps were silent; the Queen was desolate and James the King went about with an expression of sorrow on his face.

  It was Margaret who tried to comfort him.

  “There will be other children, James. We have been unfortunate, but that cannot continue.” Then she burst out passionately: “I have seen the common people in the streets. Mothers with children at their skirts and at their breasts. Why should this happen to us!”

  James buried his face in his hands. “Sometimes I think I am cursed,” he said. “Never shall I forget that day at Sauchieburn when I fought on one side and my father on the other. What an unnatural son I was! To go into battle against my own father.”

  “James, you were but a boy.”

  But he shook his head. “I was old enough to know what I did. And for this I am cursed…cursed with failure to give my country an heir.”

  Margaret put her arms about his shoulders; it gave her a certain pleasure to see him thus. At least he laid no blame on her for their ill luck, as many a man would have done. And he was very eager for the comfort she could give.

  “Why,” she told him gently, “we shall get ourselves an heir.”

  “But see how these births affect your health. Remember how ill you were last time…and this…”

  “I am young, James, and strong; I shall soon be well.” A cunning look came into her eyes. “Perhaps it is because you squander your manhood on other women that you cannot give your lawful wife a child who will live.”

  “Nay,” was the answer. “My father loved many women, yet he had sons. It is because of my ill deeds at the time of Sauchieburn. There is a curse on me.”

  Margaret put her arms about his neck.

  “We will defeat the curse, James. With our love for each other we will defeat it.”

  He held her tightly as though he were asking for her protection. Margaret felt strong then, with an infinite faith in the future.

  It was April and there was a promise of spring in the air. Margaret sat at a window of her apartments looking out on Arthur’s Seat, and she laid her hands on her body and rejoiced because once more she had conceived.

  This time all would be well. She was certain it was a boy she carried. She wondered why she had been so unfortunate and why it was that her children did not live. She herself was so strong and healthy—or she had been until she had suffered so from her ordeals. James was strong and lusty. Why could they not get healthy children?

  Before the birth of her daughter, who had died so soon, she had spent some months at Lochmaben Castle where Robert the Bruce had been born. James had said: “Go there, stay there for a while; it would be well if you lived during those waiting months where my noble ancestor drew his first breath.”

  She had agreed to go; yet while she was there she had spent as much time wondering with whom James was dallying as she had thinking of the effect the great Bruce might have on her child.

  Perhaps last time they had concerned themselves overmuch; perhaps those women, whom she saw in the streets with their children at their heels, did not fret during their pregnancies. They might even regret them. Could one long for something so fervently that fate perversely denied it?

  Thus she was musing when Lady Guildford came to tell her that messengers from England were below and they brought letters from her father’s Court.

  “Bring them to me without delay,” cried Margaret, and when the letters were brought to her, she read them several times before she could fully grasp their significance.

  Her father…dead…and her brother King!

  When she had last seen Henry he had been not much more than ten years old—a swaggering, boastful boy with the words “When I am King” continually on his lips. Well, now he was King. He was also a man. And her father, who for all his coldness had been a good father, was dead.

  She put her hand over her eyes. This was real sorrow. She felt apprehensive, a little frightened and alone; and she realized that, all through the years which had been lived in Scotland as James’s wife, she had thought of her father on his throne—all-wise, all-powerful, always there in case she should need him.

  Now her brother Henry was in his place. She wondered what effect this was going to have on her and James—on England and Scotland.

  James came to her, for he too was excited by the news.

  “What difference will this m
ake, James?” she asked. “Who knows? Your father was a wise man—not always easy to deal with, but one respected his sound good sense.”

  “And my brother?”

  “He is as yet untried. You knew him. Do you think he will follow his father’s cautious ways?”

  Margaret saw him clearly in her mind’s eye—rosy-faced, flushed, little mouth prim; the arrogance in his strong young body, the love of flattery and finery.

  “I do not think he will be like my father,” she said. “He writes to me in most friendly fashion.”

  “I am glad of that. For I could not be happy if Scotland and England were not good friends.”

  “Ah,” said James lightly, “you should not grieve for such a matter. You are no longer English, remember; you are the Queen of Scots. If there are differences, you should not take them to heart.”

  “I trust you will not allow your friendship for the French to stand between you and friendship with England.”

  James patted her hand gently and made no answer. Instead he said: “Your brother is going to marry Katharine of Aragon, so I hear.”

  “But she was my brother Arthur’s wife!”

  “Henry sees no reason why she should not be his also.”

  “She is older than he is and I remember she was rarely at Court. She lived aloof from us with her Spaniards. I am surprised.”

  “I have heard that your brother’s ministers were not eager for the marriage, but he is a young man who will have his own way.”

  Margaret smiled. That was true. In the old days people had said they were alike—not only in looks but in temperament. Lucky Henry to be able to say, “I will have this” and “I will do that”—and have none who dared gainsay him.

  In October of that year Margaret’s son was born, to wild rejoicing.

  With great pomp he was christened Arthur and declared Prince of Scotland and Lord of the Isles.

  Margaret suffered a difficult labor as usual but because the child was alive she came through this in good spirits and quickly regained her health.

  She delighted in the child who was named in memory of Arthur of Britain but also of Margaret’s favorite brother, who had died so tragically at Ludlow Castle soon after his marriage to that Katharine of Aragon who was now Henry’s wife and Queen of England.

  This reminded her that Arthur had left her certain jewels in his will, for he had been as fond of her as she of him; but she had never received them. It had been exceedingly difficult to persuade her father to part with anything of value and he had always had some excuse for not sending jewels from England into Scotland; but now he was dead and Margaret did not see why she should not ask Henry to let her have what was hers. She received an affectionate letter from Henry, but he said he could not send her jewels to Scotland. He believed that her husband was very friendly with the French, and the French were no friends of the King of England. If he sent the jewels, how could he be sure that the King of Scotland might not sell them and use the money to make war?

  Margaret showed the letter to James whose face darkened with anger.

  “It would seem,” he said, “that we shall not live on such peaceful terms with your brother as we did with your father.”

  “But Henry is eager to be friends with you,” Margaret insisted.

  “My dear, you do not understand these matters. Your brother is a young king in possession of the great wealth your father amassed over long and careful years. ’Tis my belief that he intends to spend lavishly…on pleasure and mayhap war. I hear that he is already planning a campaign against the French. It is easy to see that relations between our two countries will be less cordial than they were during your father’s reign.”

  “Henry is only a boy,” insisted Margaret. “He is new to kingship and anxious that everyone shall know how powerful he is.”

  “Power is dangerous in the hands of boys,” was James’s comment.

  Margaret ceased to think of politics, for after a few months of life little Arthur followed his brother and sister to the grave.

  This was too much to be borne, and the King and Queen were prostrate with sorrow.

  James was certain now that he was accursed, and he blamed himself afresh for the part he had played at the time of his father’s death.

  “Perhaps,” he said, “I should go on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. I begin to fear that we shall never have a son who will grow up to be King after me.”

  But Margaret refused to despair.

  She put her arm about him. “We have been unfortunate, but has not my brother’s wife met with the same misfortune? We will try again, and this time our son will live. I know it.”

  “You are right,” James told her. “It is foolish to fret.”

  Hope came to them when, shortly after the death of little Arthur, Margaret was once more pregnant.

  “Now,” said James, “we must take every precaution. I will go at once to St. Ninian’s shrine and there ask him to take especial care of you.”

  “It might be well if you paid no visits on your way back from the shrine,” said Margaret shrewdly. “Mayhap St. Ninian feels it is disrespectful of you to go from him to your mistress.”

  James was thoughtful; he decided that he would not visit Janet Kennedy on this occasion.

  Now the King and the Queen, together with the whole Court, thought constantly of the importance of the coming birth. Every precaution was taken to placate any supernatural influence which might prove hostile. Relics were brought to the Queen to kiss; some she kept with her at all times. But James and Margaret devoted themselves to prayer and meditation. With only one or two lapses James was the faithful husband. He devoted himself to naval affairs and spent a great deal of time in the company of Sir Andrew Wood watching the building of a new ship which was to be greater in every way than the two—named the James and the Margaret—which had been recently built. Often he would stay the night on board; and during the first months of her pregnancy, Margaret often joined him there.

  If she could only have been sure of producing a healthy child and did not suffer sickness and the disabilities which were always her lot at such times, those would have been the happiest months of Margaret’s life. Never since those early days of her marriage had James been so completely hers.

  One of the happiest days of all was that in October when the great ship was launched and she stood with James listening to triumphant drums and trumpets as the ship rolled into the harbor of Leith.

  It was a day of rejoicing. The Queen pregnant; the greatest ship any of them had ever seen, successfully launched! It must be celebrated with worthy entertainment; and on the arrival of the royal party at Holyrood House a play was performed.

  When it was over and the King and Queen had expressed their pleasure, Margaret called the principal actor to her in order to compliment him. This was a young man named David Lindsay who was known as Lindsay of the Mount; he was a poet and had been for some years in the royal household. The King had made him equerry to his first heir, the little Prince James who had died when he was about a year old.

  David Lindsay was greatly respected throughout the Court, being a man without any ambition except to live a good life; he was devoted to literature rather than to position and wealth; and both Margaret and James had an affection for him.

  “I want to thank you for your performance,” Margaret told him. “It was a pleasure to watch.”

  Delight shone in David’s gentle face. “’Twas a good part, Your Grace,” he said.

  “And your play coat of blue and yellow taffeties became you well,” Margaret added. “Pray, tell me the cost, that you do not pay it from your own pocket.”

  “It was three pounds, four shillings.”

  “A goodly sum, but it was a goodly performance you gave us and well worth the sum.”

  James turned to him and added his praise to the Queen’s. “Why, Davie, you are indeed a credit to our Court.”

  “You were usher and equerry to my firstborn son who died, alas,” s
aid Margaret. “I intend to ask the King to make you the same to this child which is soon to be born.”

  James cried: “’Tis a good choice. None could make a better.”

  “I thank Your Graces,” murmured David. “I assure you I will never betray the trust you have placed in me.”

  “Do this then,” said James. “Pray for a safe delivery for the Queen and a healthy boy for Scotland.”

  “I shall continue to pray thus, Your Grace.”

  When he had left them James said to Margaret: “He is a good man, that Davie, and one whose prayers may well find favor. We cannot have too many prayers.”

  It was April again and Margaret lay at Linlithgow. Her time had come and in the streets the people stood about and asked themselves what would happen this time. If the Queen failed again, they would say that there was indeed a curse on their royal family.

  Some months before, a comet had appeared in the sky—it sent out beams as though it were a sun; and thus it had remained for twenty-one nights.

  A warning? A sign of evil? A bad omen?

  Now the people remembered it and asked themselves these questions.

  There were services in all the churches; there were prayers throughout the country.

  A son! A son for Scotland.

  Margaret lay groaning on her bed.

  “This time a son,” she prayed. “This time he must live and he shall be called James after his father.”

  “A boy!”

  The triumphant words rang through the Palace, through the streets of Linlithgow; they were carried to Edinburgh and all over the country the people rejoiced.

  The King came to his wife’s chamber and demanded to see his son. There he was, lustily crying, a strong little boy with a down of tawny hair on his head and, so said the women of the bedchamber, already a look of his father.

  “Let the bells ring out!” cried the King. “Let Scotsmen rejoice, for this child will live.”

 

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