Young Francis, who had loved his father dearly, was being so courted now by the de Guises, was being so prepared for kingship by his clever little Mary, that he too felt excitement mingling with his sorrow.
It will be the de Guises who will rule France now, not the Queen-Mother!
thought Catherine in the midst of her grief and the realization was brought home to her that she desired power almost as much as she had desired her husband. I do not forget that this I owe to Mary Stuart! She fell to fresh weeping.
Henry, come back to me. Give me a chance. Diane grows old, and I am not so old. I have never known the true love of a man, and if you leave me now I never shall. Word went through the palace: ‘The Queen is prostrate in her grief.’
* * *
The body of the King was embalmed and laid in a leaden coffin. With great solemnity and lamentation, it was borne to Notre Dame, and from there to Saint-Denis, with a great company of all the highest in the land.
The Cardinal of Lorraine officiated; he it was who pronounced the funeral oration as the coffin was lowered into the vault.
Montmorency broke his baton and threw its fragments over the coffin, whereupon the four officials did likewise. It was a touching scene.
And when it was done, the ceremonial cry rang out: ‘Le Roi est mort. Vive le Roi François!’ Then the trumpets sounded. The ceremony was over. King Henry was in his grave, and sickly, pock-marked Francis was the King of France.
* * *
The walls and floors of Catherine’s apartments were covered in black. Her bed and her altar were also in the same sombre covering. Only two wax tapers burned, and she herself was wrapped from head to foot in a black veil which covered her plain black gown.
She was truly prostrate with grief. It had come upon her so suddenly. She had had some premonition of evil, it was true, but she had not believed it could be the death of Henry.
She had loved him completely; and now there was nothing left to her but revenge.
Diane! Lex talionis! An eye for an eye; a tooth for a tooth.
For nearly thirty years, Madame, I have suffered humiliation. I have watched you through a hole in the floor with a man for whom I longed. I have seen the citizens of Lyons kiss your hand before mine. I have heard you called the Queen of France when that title was mine. Madame, that is now changed. Your day is done, and out of misery and sorrow is mine born. She started up from her black-covered bed and went to her bureau; she unlocked the secret drawer.
Let her death be long and lingering. Let there be much pain for there must be long agony to compensate for the years of misery.
‘He was beginning to like me,’ she whispered. ‘I had pleased him at the time of Saint-Quentin. He appeared at my cercle. In time I would have won him from the ageing widow. And now I have lost all― and nothing is left to me but revenge.’
Diane had said that she did not fear her enemies, that any bitterness that might be inflicted on her would be sweet coma pared with her loss. Perhaps the greater punishment would be to let her live, for if she died suddenly and of poison, people would say: ‘The Queen-Mother has done this.’
Ah, had she planned cautiously in those early days of her passion, she might have won her husband long ere this. But her love had weakened her. Now that she had lost her love, she could plan with caution.
She flung herself on to her bed and wept. Her women thought her grief would drive her mad, so they sent in one who they thought could comfort her.
Little Henry stared at her with wondering eyes; she held out her arms and he ran into them. She took his face in her hand and kissed him. Then she smiled slowly, reminding herself that she had someone left to love.
She had this boy― this other Henry― and she had France. She had the hope of gaining power, as once she had had hope of gaining Henry’s love.
Diane had ruled France through Catherine’s husband, should not Catherine rule France through her sons?
Tears began to flow down her pallid cheeks, and the little boy took a perfumed handkerchief from his belt and kneeled on her lap to wipe them away.
* * *
The Vidame de Chartres had an arrogant air; yet he was tender in his manner to the Queen-Mother.
Catherine went about the court in her deep mourning― sad, yet sly, seeming wrapped in melancholy, yet missing nothing.
She had restrained herself over this matter of Diane. She had turned from her poison-closet, realizing that the woman who had been the shining light of the court for so long could be more wretched in exile than in death. Let her return her gifts and jewels; let her make a present of the Château de Chenoneaux to the Queen, in exchange for which the Queen would magnanimously give her the Château de Chaumont, which she had always considered to be unlucky, and then exile her to Anet. The Queen-Mother must not forget that Diane was related to the Guises and that, although through the death of the King she could no longer be of great use to them, they would not wish to see her poisoned.
Moreover, this family which feigned to show great respect for Catherine, who, on account of Francis’ age, was practically Regent, would not hesitate to accuse her if their once-powerful relative died suddenly and mysteriously.
Catherine found solace in her grief by making plans for a glorious future.
She looked about her, wondering how she could use people for her own advancement; she was working now for power, not for love; and thus she could work more calmly.
Her greatest enemies were the Guises, for they were preparing now to rule the country through the young King and Queen.
She smiled on the gallant Vidame; she had thought that, since she had used him in an attempt to provoke Henry’s jealousy, he would no longer be of use to her; but this was not so. The young man was ambitious; he was a Bourbon, and the Bourbons were the natural enemies of the Guises.
Why should not the Queen-Mother secretly make plans with the House of Bourbon to outwit the House of Guise? Once the Guises were removed from power, nothing stood between the young King and Queen and the Queen- Mother. As for Mary Stuart, she was a child; she could be managed to Catherine’s satisfaction if her scheming uncles were removed.
She permitted the Vidame to visit her secretly, and told him something of her plans.
‘I wish you,’ she said, ‘to take letters from me to the Prince of Condé.’
The Vidame’s eyes were full of speculation then, for Condé was the head of the House of Bourbon, and he knew what this meant.
‘I will serve you with my life,’ he declared, kissing Catherine’s hand, ‘and, serving you, shall hope for some reward.’
Catherine answered: ‘Queens are not asked for rewards, Monsieur.’
‘Madame,’ he said, I do not ask you as a Queen, but as a woman.’
She smiled and her smile held some promise. She eagerly awaited his return with the answers to her letters.
But it was not the Vidame who came to her.
A page was brought into her presence to tell her that the Duc de Guise was asking to be admitted immediately; she gave permission that he should be sent to her.
The candles in their sconces flickered as the door opened and shut behind the man. There he stood― arrogant, virile, with a smile on his hideously scarred face.
‘I crave your Majesty’s pardon for the intrusion,’ he said. ‘But― there is treason abroad.’
She studied him calmly, her face blank.
‘The Vidame de Chartres has been arrested.’
‘Is that so? Why is this?’
‘Treasonable documents have been found on his person, Madame.’
‘What documents?’
‘Letters to the Prince of Condé.’
‘A plot?’ said Catherine.
‘It is feared so, Madame. He is to be sent to the Bastille.’
‘I gave no orders that this should be done,’ she answered haughtily.
Le Balafré bowed low. ‘Madame, it was thought to save you trouble. I have the order for his arrest here. It is si
gned by the King.’
She nodded.
She was defeated. She knew that her battle with the Guises would be as long and as arduous as her battle with Diane. Power was no easier to win than love.
* * *
Heavily cloaked, cunningly disguised, Catherine hurried through the streets of Paris to the sombre building of the Bastille.
It was dusk, and she had chosen this hour; for it was imperative that she be not recognized. She shuddered as she looked up at the dark towers and the ramparts with their cannon.
A cloaked figure that had seemed part of the thick wall moved towards her, and she knew she was recognized, by the reverent tone of the man’s voice.
‘Madame, all is ready.’
He led the way through a small door into a dark corridor, up a flight of stairs, along more corridors. Catherine smelt the odour indigenous to prisons― damp, age, slime, sweat, blood, death.
Below her were hideous dungeons where men fought for their lives with the rats that shared their cells; close to her were the oubliettes where men and women lay forgotten, and the calottes where human beings were incarcerated to endure extreme cold in winter and suffocating heat in summer, and where it was not possible to stand upright; somewhere in this terrible place was the Salle de la Question where men and women suffered the water torture or the horrors of the Boot. But the Vidame de Chartres was not housed in oubliette nor calotte; his sojourn in the Bastille had been a comparatively comfortable one, for he had powerful friends; moreover, he had not hesitated to point out that the Queen-Mother herself was a particularly dear friend.
Tomorrow the Vidame was to be released; it was for this reason that Catherine had arranged to visit him.
Her guide had halted before a heavy door; this he unlocked; beyond it was another door which he also unlocked.
‘Enter, Madame,’ he said. ‘I will wait outside. It will be well if you do not stay more than fifteen minutes. There may be a jailer here after that, and your presence would be difficult to explain.’
‘I understand,’ said Catherine.
The Vidame rose as she entered his cell. He came swiftly towards her and, taking her hand, kissed it fervently.
She studied his face in the faint light that came through the barred window.
The window was small and it was growing dark outside so that it was not easy to see him, yet she fancied that three months in prison had left their mark upon him.
‘It was good of you to come― Catherine,’ he said.
She flinched a little at the use of her Christian name, but he did not notice that.
‘You are to be released tomorrow,’ she told him.
‘Tomorrow!’ His voice was hysterical with joy. ‘And you― my Queen― have done this for me.’ He was on his knees; he took her hand again and she felt his tears fall on it.
How arrogant he was! He had had great success with women; he believed himself to be irresistible to all women; he did not know that Catherine de’
Medici was no ordinary woman. He could not guess that she had but used him in the hope of arousing jealousy in her husband, that when he had bungled the simple matter of carrying letters to his powerful relative she had no further use for him; that this release of his was yet another move of the Guises, to set him free that they might watch him and catch him again and perhaps others with him; he did not guess that the last thing the Queen-Mother wanted was his release.
She stood back, pressed against the cold stone wall. He said in a whisper:
‘How did you get in?’
She answered: ‘There are many who serve me.’
‘Yes,’ he whispered slowly. ‘Yes. I see.’
‘You will be watched when you come out,’ she said rapidly. ‘It will be well for you to leave France.’
He came close to her so that she could feel his breath on her cheek. ‘Leave France! Leave― you! Though you asked me to do that, I could not.’
‘It is the wise thing to do,’ she said.
She heard his quick intake of breath. ‘Can it be that you would wish to be rid of me?’ There was in his voice a desperate note; she understood; he was determined not to be banished. He was prepared to run risks. Why not? He was an ambitious man. One thing he was not prepared for, and that was exile.
‘They will be suspicious of you,’ she said. ‘They will have you watched.’
‘You cannot think that I am afraid of danger?’
‘I think you would be wise to get away. Go to Italy.’
‘I feel my life is here― beside you― serving you―’
She drew closer to the wall, but he came closer too.
‘There is much to be done,’ he said. ‘The King is young, and is your son.
The little Queen― she is but a child. You and I― with others to help us, could get the Protestants to rise against these upstart Guises. I have news. I have not been idle in here. I have laid deep plans. The Protestants are straining at the leash. They but await a leader.’
‘And you will be that leader?’ she said, her voice expressionless.
‘You, Catherine, are the Regent of France. It is for you to rule this country.’
‘And you― would work for me― serve me― no matter how dangerous the work?’
‘To serve you is the only course I would follow. You dare not send me from you. The court has seen our deep and tender friendship. Why, Catherine, our names have been linked. I could tell many secrets―’
She laughed. ‘We have been nothing but friends.’
‘Who would believe that? Ah, you see how devoted I am. You must, for the sake of honour, keep me at your side, for I declare, so deep in love am I, that I would let nothing stand in the way of keeping at your side.’
‘Listen to me now,’ she said, ‘for I dare stay no longer. Tomorrow you will be released. We will meet, but secretly. Depend upon it, the spies of the de Guises will be watching you. Come, if you can, at this hour to the house of the brothers Ruggieri. You know it? It is close to the river.’
‘At this hour,’ he repeated. And then: ‘Yes, I know the house.’
‘I will be waiting, and we will talk of the future over a goblet of good Italian wine.’
He would have kissed her lips, but haughtily she held out her hand.
He bowed low, and, turning, she hurried out of the cell.
* * *
Catherine sat in her room. She had asked that she might be quite alone.
Looking in her mirror, she saw a woman, fattening, coarsening, who had never been really beautiful even in her youth; thick, pallid skin, sly mouth, and those flashing dark eyes.
This was an important day in her life. It was three months since she had lost her love, but that tragedy was behind her now. She must look to the future. Last evening, at dusk, she had gone to the house near the river, and there she had met that ambitious young man who wished to become her lover. He had great plans for himself, this Vidame de Chartres.
She had talked to him calmly, kindly, and affectionately over a goblet of wine.
Together they had planned to put down the mighty Guises, they had arranged to meet again, this night.
The sly mouth smiled, for Catherine realized that the ache in her heart was growing less acute. There was so much work to be done. Her eyes went to the cabinet in the corner of the room. None but herself knew the secrets of that cabinet. In it lurked death, to be administered to the enemies of Catherine de’
Medici.
For years she had planned the murder of Diane; but now that she was calm, she could see that it would be pointless to murder Diane. Yet, all those years when she had added secret after secret to her cabinet, she had thought of murder; and now murder was a part of her life, a servant, ready at her command, waiting for that moment when it could work for her.
She was not happy as she could have been with the love of Henry, but she was stimulated. She knew that a bitter battle was before her, but she also knew the strength of her armour.
She was going to
fight the seemingly all-powerful de Guises. Sickly Francis was on the throne. How long could he live? Then it would be the turn of Charles. He was but a boy yet, and his upbringing was in the hands of his mother. She would get an Italian tutor for him. A face leaped to her mind. Yes, she knew the tutor she would get; and Charles should be taught a way of life that some might call unnatural. He was not strong; he was peevish― but pliable. She did not wish Charles to marry― but if he did, he must not have children. While Charles was on the throne, his mother would rule; and after Charles would come beloved Henry, whose pleasure it would be to serve his mother, as it would be hers to serve him.
Power was beckoning her, and she would have to fight for it with all her craft and cunning, in all the devious ways she had learned in a lifetime of humiliation. She would deeply relish such a fight.
Madalenna was knocking at the door.
‘Come in.’
Madalenna’s eyes were wide, her face pale.
‘You have something to tell me, Madalenna?’
‘Terrible news, Madame.’
‘Of whom?’
‘Madame, the Vidame de Chartres was released from the Bastille yesterday―’
‘Is that such terrible news?’
‘Oh, Madame― you have not heard. He died― last night. He had been out in the city― and when he returned, he was ill― violently ill. He died at midnight.’
Madalenna looked fearfully at her mistress, who was holding a kerchief to her eyes.
‘Madame,’ stammered Madalenna, ‘I wish to offer― my― my deep sympathy.’
Catherine answered from the depth of the kerchief: ‘You may go, Madalenna. Leave me― leave me―’
As the door shut on Madalenna, Catherine thrust the kerchief into her mouth to stifle the gusty laughter which was shaking her.
Madalenna’s sympathy! Perhaps others in this palace would be sorry for a woman whom they believed to have lost her lover?
Poor Vidame, she thought. This is the end of your flirtation with a Queen; it is also the end of the brilliant career you planned for yourself. You have been the first to learn that it is unwise to ignore the wishes of Catherine de’ Medici.
Madame Serpent Page 35