Mary, Queen of France: The Story of the Youngest Sister of Henry VIII

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Mary, Queen of France: The Story of the Youngest Sister of Henry VIII Page 25

by Jean Plaidy


  He took her hands and pulled her up, standing very close to her.

  “I have thought a great deal about our future,” he told her.

  “Ours?”

  “Yours and mine.”

  “Yours is a great destiny.”

  “I should like you to have a share in it. I think that together we should find great … contentment.”

  “I to share your life? And your Queen?”

  “Poor little Claude. She will do her duty in a docile manner, but she will not expect to share my life.”

  “But she shares your throne.”

  “Here in France it is the woman the King loves who is in truth Queen of France—not the one he marries.”

  “You are suggesting that I become your mistress!”

  “Do not look horrified. You have forgotten that I am now the King. Everything you wish will be yours. Savoy shall understand the position so that he will be no encumbrance to you.”

  “I see. Is that how matters are arranged in France?”

  “It is how I intend matters shall be arranged in France.”

  He had his arms about her and she placed her hands on his chest, holding him off. He could see now that she was in truth afraid of him.

  “François,” she said urgently, “you have always been my friend.”

  “And always will be, I hope.”

  “From the moment I saw you, although my coming could well have meant the death of all your hopes, you were good to me. More than anyone you made me feel welcome and comfortable in a new land.”

  “That was my endeavor.”

  “So now I am going to be frank with you. I am going to ask you to help me. I am fond of you, François. You see I speak to you as my friend—not as the King of France. But I shall never willingly be your mistress. Oh, it is not that I hate you, or find you repulsive. That would be foolish. Everyone knows you are the most attractive man in France. But François, before I came to France I loved, and I do not change. I shall love one man forever.”

  “Suffolk?” said François.

  “You know.”

  “You betrayed your feelings at the tournament, when he tilted against the German.”

  She had clasped her hands across her breast and was looking at him appealingly. François turned away. This was too much. After having played her tricks on him and his family she was asking him to help her make a secret marriage with Suffolk, so that the dowry and the jewels should not after all remain in France.

  The impudence of this girl was past belief.

  She was catching at his arm and there were tears in her beautiful eyes. “Oh, François, you who are so gallant, so wise, will understand. I shall tell you everything because you are as a brother to me … the dearest, kindest brother any girl ever had. I thought I should die of a broken heart when they told me I should have to marry Louis. And my brother promised me that if I did, on his death I should marry whom I pleased. That time has come, and I shall look to my brother to keep his promise.”

  François walked away from her and pulled thoughtfully at the hangings.

  He said, without turning to look at her: “I can tell you this. Your brother has no intention of keeping his promise to you. He is negotiating for the Prince of Castile as your second husband.”

  “When I see my brother I can persuade him.”

  “As you hope to persuade me?”

  “I know that you are kind at heart and would always want to help a woman in distress.”

  “You ask too much,” said François. And indeed she did, she who refused his embraces and had the effrontery to ask him to help her to enjoy a rival’s!

  “Not of you … the King … the all powerful King.”

  “The marriage of Princesses cannot be settled at the whim of one King.”

  “Not even when the King proposes to make a princess his mistress after marrying her to a complaisant husband?”

  François muttered: “It is the wish of my ministers that you remain in France.”

  “But you will not allow your ministers to rule France, surely?”

  She came to stand demurely at his elbow and when he looked down into her lovely young face and saw the purpose there, when he remembered how moved she had been at the tournament, he was touched. He admired women who knew what they wanted and determined wholeheartedly to get it. He believed—and he knew he would continue to do so all his life—that the two most wonderful people in the world were his mother and sister. They had always known what they wanted and would always be bold enough to fight for it. Mary Tudor was another such. So he had to admire her while deploring what might have been called her insolence. François was deeply affected by women; having been brought up by such a mother and sister, women had been his chief companions during the formative years of his life. He idealized them, preferred their company to that of his own sex, and could not bear to disappoint those for whom he had some affection. Women aroused all his chivalry, and as he had been ready to sacrifice his desire for Françoise, he was now ready to do so for Mary Tudor.

  He took her hand and kissed it.

  “I envy Suffolk,” he said.

  She threw back her head and laughed, showing her perfect white teeth and plump, rounded throat. What I am losing! thought François regretfully.

  “You!” she cried. “You envy none. You are the King of France which is what you have always longed to be—and you will be beloved by your subjects, particularly the females, so you should envy none.”

  “None but Suffolk,” he answered.

  “François, you are going to help me? You are going to allow me to see Charles when he comes? You are going to put nothing in the way of our marriage?” She leaped up and threw her arms about his neck. “François, how I love my beau-fils.”

  He smiled down his long, humorous nose. “But not as you love Suffolk?” he asked plaintively.

  She shook her head sadly and kissed his cheek. Then she knelt demurely before him and, taking his hand, kissed it.

  “I shall remember you all my life,” she said, “as one of the best friends I ever had.”

  Mary paced up and down her chamber. In that adjoining, the English embassy was dining, and among them was Charles. She had not seen him yet, but she knew he was there.

  The six weeks since the death of Louis were not quite at an end, but the Duke of Suffolk, as emissary of her own brother, would be allowed to visit her.

  Burning with impatience she had plagued young Anne and all her attendants. How weary she was of her white mourning! How she longed to put on something gay. They assured her that nothing could have been more becoming than her white garments, but she was uncertain and so eager to appear at her best before her lover.

  François, who on the 28th of January had been crowned at Rheims, clearly intended to keep his promise to her, for he raised no objection to Suffolk’s enjoying a private interview with Mary; and it was for this that she was now waiting.

  It seemed hours before he came to her; she studied him intently for a few seconds and then threw herself into his embrace.

  “I thought I should never be free,” she told him.

  He kissed her with both tenderness and passion but she sensed his disquiet.

  “Why, Charles,” she said, “are you not happy?”

  “I could be happy only if there was nothing between us two.”

  “But we are both free now. Think of that, Charles! And François is my friend. He will help us. There must be no delay. I shall not allow you to leave me again.”

  He took her face in his hands and shook his head.

  “There is the King,” he said.

  “Henry? But I have his promise.”

  “He is making plans for your marriage, and they do not include me.”

  “Then he must change his plans. You forget that he has given me his word. Why, dearest Charles, you must not be unhappy now. I have been so excited … waiting for this moment. And now it is here, I do not intend to be cheated again.”

  �
�I had a long talk with your brother before I left England.”

  “But Henry knows what will happen. He would not have sent you here to me if he had not approved of our marriage, for he must know that I intend to marry you.”

  “I must tell you something, my dearest. Before I left England, Henry made me take a solemn oath.”

  Mary stared at her lover with tragic eyes.

  “And there was naught I could do but take it.”

  “And what was this oath?”

  “That I would not induce you to plight your troth to me, nor seize the opportunity which my presence here might give me.”

  “Henry made you promise that! And you did?”

  “My beloved, you know your brother. What else could I do? I should not have been allowed to come here if I had not made it.”

  Mary stared ahead with narrowed eyes. Her lips were firmly set. “I’ll not be cheated again,” she declared. “I tell you, I will not.”

  Then she was twining her arms about his neck, giving him kiss after fierce kiss.

  “I’ll not let you go,” she insisted. “I kept my side of the bargain, and Henry shall keep his. Charles, if you love me you will not allow a miserable promise to keep us apart. Do you love me, Charles? Do you love me one tenth as much as I love you?”

  “I love you infinitely.”

  “Then why so sad?”

  “Because, my beloved, I fear our love will destroy us.”

  They could not remain alone for long. That they should have been given this short time together was a great concession. He must return to his embassy, she to her mockery of mourning.

  But before he left she had shown him her determination. She was a Tudor and she would have her way.

  She talked to Anne Boleyn of her suspicions. She was certain that many were jealous of her Charles.

  “Why, look,” she cried, “he is handsome, so clever, so skilled in everything he does. He is my brother’s best friend. So they are jealous of him—men, such as Norfolk, seek to spoil the friendship between him and Henry. They have whispered poison into my brother’s ear so that he forgets his promise to me. But I do not forget.”

  She liked to talk to Anne because the child never attempted to soothe her. She merely sat and listened, and now and then added a shrewd remark of her own.

  “It is for this reason that Henry extracted a promise from Charles before he left England. But my brother also gave me a promise, and I have no intention of forgetting that, I tell you. The King of France will help. So I shall insist on Henry’s keeping his promise to me. For if my brother did not wish me to have Charles, why did he send him over here with the embassy?”

  “It is said that he sent the Duke of Suffolk in order to lure you back to England, Madame.”

  “So they are chitty-chatting about me and Charles, are they?”

  “It is said that the Duke is a very ambitious man, Madame, and that, having failed to win an Archduchess, he will try for a queen.”

  Mary pulled Anne’s long black hair sharply. “Do not speak of the Archduchess to me. Charles never had any fancy for her.”

  “No, Madame.”

  “And understand this, little Boleyn, that my Charles would never lure me back that my brother might marry me to that slack-mouthed idiot of Castile.”

  The Queen’s confessor came to her apartments and asked that he might speak to her alone; and when Mary signed to Anne to go, the young girl went quietly from the room.

  The friar was an Englishman—and that she should have a confessor from her own country was another concession from François.

  “Madame,” he said, “I wish to speak to you on a most urgent matter.”

  “Speak on,” Mary commanded.

  “It concerns one of our countrymen who is here on a mission.”

  Mary studied him through narrowing eyes. “Which man?” she demanded.

  “His Grace of Suffolk.”

  “And what of his Grace of Suffolk?”

  “A most ambitious gentleman, Madame.”

  “Is that so? I see nothing wrong with ambition. I doubt not that you have some of that tucked away behind that holy expression you show me and the world.”

  “Madame, I come to warn you.”

  “Of what and whom?”

  “Of this ambitious man.”

  The color was high in her cheeks but the friar ignored the danger signals.

  He went on blithely: “It is said that Your Highness is inclined to favor this man, and I have been warned that I should make known to you the type of man he is. Beware of Suffolk, Madame. He traffics with the devil.”

  “Who told you this?”

  “It is well known that Sir William Compton has an ulcer on his leg which will not heal. Your brother, the King himself, has made an ointment which has cured other ulcers. Nothing cures Compton’s. And do you know why?”

  “Yes,” Mary replied. “Compton has led too merry a life, and the ulcer is an outward sign of all his gaiety.”

  “Your Highness misjudges him. Suffolk laid a spell on the man out of jealousy of the King’s friendship for him. Suffolk is a friend of Wolsey who, it is well known, is one of the devil’s servants.”

  “They are my friends, also, sir friar. And you are not. You fool, do you not think I shall treat your lies with anything but what they deserve? If there is one grain of sense left in your addled pate, you would remove yourself from my presence without delay, for the sight of you so sickens me that I wish never to look on your silly face again. And I tell you this: If you repeat to anyone the lies you have told me, you will ere long have no tongue with which to tell even the truth, if so be you have a mind to it—which I doubt.”

  “My lady Mary …”

  She went toward him, her hand uplifted to strike him. The friar hurried from her presence.

  When he was gone, she threw herself onto her couch. So many enemies, she thought. Powerful men against us. Where will it all end?

  But not for more than a moment would she allow her confidence to desert her.

  There was another interview with Charles.

  She faced him triumphantly.

  “I have the answer,” she told him. “Henry made you swear not to influence me. Well, you have kept that promise. You did not influence me. My mind has long been made up. He made you promise not to induce me to plight my troth to you. Well, have I? Did I need any inducement? Now, Charles, you have kept your promise. But I insist that you plight your troth to me. I command that you marry me.”

  Charles shook his head sadly. “I fear it will not do.”

  “But it shall do,” she insisted.

  “And afterward?”

  “Oh, let us not think of afterward. I will deal with that if need be. I will make known to Henry that I was determined to marry you and commanded that you should obey me. Oh Charles, why do you hesitate? Do you not want to marry me?”

  “More than anything on earth. But I want to live with you in peace and comfort for the rest of our lives. I want us to be able to watch our children growing up. I do not want a few short nights and then a dungeon for us both.”

  She took his hands and laughed up at him. “I would not think beyond those few short nights,” she answered.

  Then his emotions seemed to catch fire from hers. He seized her hungrily and they remained close.

  Then she said: “If you do not marry me, Charles, I shall go into a convent. I’ll not be thrown to that other Charles. Oh my dearest, have no fear. I will face Henry. He will never harm us. He loves me too dearly and has often said that you are his greatest friend. What do you say, Charles?”

  “When shall it be?” he asked, his lips close to her ear.

  “As soon as it can be arranged. François will help us.”

  “Then,” said Charles, “we will marry. And when it is done, together we will face whatever has to be faced.”

  “I promise you this, my love,” she told him solemnly. “There will be no regrets. As long as I live there shall be none.”


  In the oratory chapel of the Hôtel de Clugny a marriage ceremony took place in great secrecy.

  Only ten people were present, and the priest was a humble one who had no notion, when he had been summoned, of the people whom he was to marry.

  And there Mary stood, blissfully content, for this was the ceremony of which she had dreamed over many years.

  The nuptial ring, the nuptial kiss—how different this occasion from that other in the Hôtel de la Gruthuse—how simple this, how elaborate that!

  She smiled to think of the cloth of gold she had worn, and all the glittering jewels; they served their purpose for they did hide some of the bitter dejection, the melancholy which was then in her heart.

  Now there were no jewels and the ceremony was simple; yet she wore her exultation, her supreme happiness more proudly than she had worn the costly treasures of France and England.

  And as she stood beside her bridegroom, one of the spectators, smiling down his long nose at the bridal pair, cynically told himself that he was a fool to pass over this radiant girl to a rival. Yet it gave him pleasure to contemplate his own chivalry, and he would always remember the grateful glances of the bride.

  The ceremony was over, and Mary Tudor was married to Charles Brandon.

  The King of England might be furious, but at least they had the blessing of the King of France.

  The English SCENE II

  The Return

  THE COUNTRYSIDE was at its most beautiful when Mary and her husband returned to England, for the spring was well advanced. What a joy to be riding once more through the country lanes of her native land with the man of her choice beside her.

  Charles was the perfect lover, the perfect husband, as she had always known he would be, simply because she had long ago decided that he was the only man for her. He was more uneasy than she was, particularly since they had crossed the sea. He was apprehensive, thinking of facing the King.

  As they came near to London, she said: “Charles, whatever happens now, it was worth it.”

  He turned to smile at her. Her recklessness amused and delighted him while it often startled him; and when he thought of the honeymoon and the singleminded passion of his wife, he could say honestly that it was worthwhile and he would do the same again.

 

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