3

In a generous and expansive mood, King Henry sent gift after gift to the travelers stranded in Dorset at Wolverton Manor—clothing suitable to their station first of all, then horses and litters. Closer to home, he also spent with a liberal hand, determined to impress his royal visitors. Carts full of tapestry, plate, and furniture were sent ahead to Windsor to decorate the castle in the grandest style possible. More was purchased new, to add to the display of England’s wealth and prosperity. Then the king proclaimed that everyone at court should have new clothes at his expense.

The richness of the fabrics varied according to one’s position in the household, but even the lesser servants were given plain cloth livery in green and white, the king’s colors. Catherine of Aragon, the princess dowager, received enough velvet to make new kirtles and gowns for herself and all five of her ladies.

The rains and stormy weather of mid-January were followed by a cold snap, leaving the waterways impassable and the roads icy and even more treacherous than usual. It was foul going for a journey of any length, but the Lady Mary, the princess dowager, and their attendants all arrived safely at Windsor Castle. We rode in litters, protected from the elements but jounced about unmercifully every inch of the way.

On the day King Philip was to arrive, a few of us went out onto the battlements of the Round Tower, the oldest part of the castle, to watch for him. The view was spectacular, encompassing the countryside for miles around as well as both the upper and lower wards of Windsor Castle itself.

“They will be here soon.” The Lady Mary pointed toward the southwest. “See—they are coming this way.”

The king had ridden out to meet his royal guest, who had been escorted for the last part of his journey by the Prince of Wales. From my tower perch, I had a clear view of King Henry in miniature, mounted on his favorite bay mare, surrounded by the greater part of the nobility of the realm. Colorful as peacocks, they made a bright splash on the landscape. At a distance of a half mile, the figures of the two kings and the Prince of Wales were tiny, but I could see them move through the formalities of greeting.

Queen Juana had been left behind at Wolverton Manor. She was to join her husband at Windsor, but not for a week or more. It was cruel to make her wait, I thought. Juana of Castile was Catherine of Aragon’s sister, and they had not seen each other for many years.

I was distracted by a harsh wind that whipped our cloaks hard against our ankles and threatened to carry away our headdresses. It seemed to gust around me with malevolent intent. I burrowed deeper into my fur-lined cloak, pulling the collar up to cover my nose, and tried not to think about the frost forming on my toes.

Francesca de Carceres, one of Catherine of Aragon’s Spanish ladies, sidled up to me. Curious, I slanted a glance in her direction. We both wore new headdresses, but while the black velvet of mine was decorated with pearls, hers was unrelieved by any light touches. The ebony hue of headdress and cloak combined made her olive complexion look sallow. There would be no improvement in her looks when she removed the outer garment either. Beneath it was more black, and despite a contraption of hoops called a verdugado that all the Spanish ladies wore to make their skirts fall from waist to toes in the shape of a bell, she was extremely thin. I’d often heard the expression “all skin and bones,” but until I met Francesca I’d never met anyone who personified that description.

“They are riding this way,” she said.

After their brief exchange in the open air, the two kings had remounted. They approached the castle with King Henry in the middle, between his son and heir and King Philip of Castile, who was also archduke of Flanders. They led a huge contingent more than five hundred strong. Trumpets and sackbuts sounded as the cavalcade reached the gatehouse.

The yeomen of the guard were lined up just outside the castle. They had been the first to receive new livery. Ordinarily they wore their own shirts with sleeveless white-and-green-striped tunics made of plain cloth. For the occasion of King Philip’s visit, however, King Henry had given them shirts, hose, and bonnets, all in a particular shade of rose vermillion. He’d supplied new sword belts, scabbards, and shoes of black leather. Their new tunics were of damask, with stripes that counterchanged at the waistline. Embroidered on both front and back were round garlands of vine branches, decorated with silver and gilt spangles. In the middle of the design was a red rose beaten in goldsmith’s work. When each man was armed with halberd, bow and arrows, and sword, they looked very fine indeed.

I strained to see King Philip. I had heard him called “Philip the Handsome,” and sometimes “Philip the Fair,” and in French, “Philippe le Beau.” At first glance, he did not impress me as particularly imposing. He was only of medium height and heavily built. He was also shrouded in black—hood, gown, even harness, were all of that color, as were the garments of the dozen or so noblemen he’d brought with him.

“So that is the king.” I let my disappointment show.

“He is a very important man,” Francesca protested. “He is heir to the Holy Roman Empire and ruler in his own right of many Austrian possessions along the Danube and of the lands he inherited from his mother in the Netherlands. He is not just king of Castile, but Archduke of Austria, Duke of Burgundy, and Count of Flanders.”

Then he should dress in a more regal fashion, I thought. In contrast to King Philip’s unrelenting black, King Henry wore a purple velvet gown and hood. His heavy gold chain had a diamond pendant that reflected the pale winter light.

“I wonder what courtiers he has brought with him,” Francesca murmured, leaning out at a precarious angle in an attempt to see them better.

“What does it matter who they are? They will not stay long.” King Henry had many entertainments planned, but even if King Philip attended every event, the festivities were unlikely to go on for more than a few weeks. If nothing else stopped them, they would cease at the beginning of Lent. This year, Ash Wednesday fell on the twenty-fifth day of February.

Francesca lowered her voice. “Have you ever suffered misfortune, Mistress Popyncourt?”

I frowned. “Have you?”

Her nod was so vigorous that it almost dislodged her headdress. “Like you, I was chosen to serve royalty and my family was glad of it, thinking that a rich marriage would be sure to follow.”

I did not disabuse her of the notion that we shared this particular background.

“The death of Prince Arthur was a great blow to my mistress.”

“As it was to us all.”

Francesca directed a wary glance at Catherine of Aragon, who stood next to the Lady Mary to watch the spectacle below. Catherine and Mary looked more like sisters by birth than sisters by marriage. Catherine, too, had red-gold hair and was no taller than ten-year-old Mary. Black velvet flattered her rosy complexion and gray eyes.

Reassured that the princess dowager was paying no attention to us, Francesca leaned so close to me that I could smell the lavender scent she’d used to perfume her body. “Her Grace cannot provide for her ladies as she should. Her father, King Ferdinand, refuses to release the remainder of her dowry to King Henry, and your king has been so miserly with our upkeep that we have been forced to live in poverty. We wear rags on our backs and have no hope of escape back to Spain.”

“You are scarcely in rags now.” I gave Francesca’s headdress and cloak a significant look. Although the gown beneath might be plainly cut, it was made of expensive velvet.

But I could not help but feel sorry for her. Under my cloak—pale gray with rabbit-fur trim—my velvet gown was a flattering peach color with close-fitting undersleeves, cut and slashed at the wrist, and long, wide oversleeves decorated with bands of embroidery. The skirt was long and loose, with a comfortable kirtle and chemise beneath, and it flattered my waist and hips as one of those stiff verdugados could never hope to. It was the most beautiful garment I had ever owned, and I knew I looked very fine in it.

“Our good fortune will not last,” Francesca predicted with gloomy certainty. “I know what will happen to Princess Catherine when King Philip goes away again. She will be forgotten. She and her ladies will be worse off than before.”

“Why do you confide in me?” I asked, afraid she was about to criticize King Henry again. It was dangerous to speak so frankly and almost as unwise to listen to such sentiments.

“You have the king’s ear,” Francesca said. “You can persuade him to treat us better.”

“I have no influence over King Henry. I am like a poor relation, tolerated in a gentleman’s home out of charity.” Unsettled, I pretended great interest in the scene below, hoping she would say no more of this.

“Ah,” Francesca murmured. “Not unlike the princess dowager.” To my great relief, she walked away.

In the lower ward, minstrels played as gloriously attired courtiers rode into the castle. They’d spared no expense to make a grand display. There were splendid jewels and bright colors—gold and crimson and blue predominated. The members of the king’s household added to the sparkle. Livery badges with golden letters hung suspended from their long green-and-white-striped sleeves and reflected the sun almost as brilliantly as did the jewels.

My eyes narrowed when I recognized a familiar face among them. Charles Brandon had traded his old livery for the king’s colors. I had not seen him, not even at a distance, since the night the messenger from King Philip arrived at Greenwich. But his distinctive garments told me he’d joined the king’s spears, that group of gentlemen who were charged with protecting King Henry’s person on an even more intimate level than the yeomen of the guard.

I saw Charles Brandon next, again at a distance, at the first of the festivities King Henry had arranged to entertain his guest. Pretending to ignore him, I stared at King Philip instead.

The king had the blond hair so common among the Flemish. My own father had had the same coloring. I wondered if Philip dressed entirely in black to emphasize this feature. His face was handsome, but there was a hard, calculating look in his eyes when his gaze swept over the assembled English courtiers. Those same eyes acquired a lascivious gleam when he looked at the ladies, all except his sister-in-law, Catherine of Aragon.

The princess dowager was seated near her brother-in-law, but Philip for the most part ignored her presence. So did King Henry. Only the Prince of Wales paid attention to her. In fact, he stared, a look of adoration on his face.

The king of Castile’s minstrels performed, followed by the antics of John, King Philip’s French fool, and the Prince of Wales’s fool, Goose. Then the princess dowager performed a Spanish dance with one of her ladies. It was not Francesca, for she was too tall to look well dancing with a woman as petite as the princess dowager.

When they had finished, King Henry called upon the Lady Mary to dance. I was her partner, so it fell to me to take the gentleman’s part. As a man would, I removed my glove and offered her my hand. After all the years of lessons at Eltham, we fell easily into the familiar slow and stately steps of “The King’s Pavane.”

“Well done, Mary,” King Henry said as the last strains of music faded away. “Well done, Jane. Sit, my dears. Both of you. There, Jane.” He gestured toward a stool just outside the area covered by the cloth of estate. “Rest yourself.”

This unexpected consideration was most welcome. Now that the performance was over, my limbs had begun to tremble in reaction. I was no novice at the pavane but never before had I danced in front of two kings and the entire court. For the next few minutes I simply sat, letting my heart rate slow and trying to catch my breath.

It was the sense of being stared at, long after everyone should have lost interest in me, that made me suddenly self-conscious. I surveyed the gathered company and caught sight of Charles Brandon just turning away. Had it been his gaze I’d felt?

Then I realized that someone else was watching me. Goose, Prince Henry’s fool, waggled his fingers in greeting and I smiled back at him. The man standing next to him glanced my way, too. At first I thought him a stranger. Dark skinned and wearing court dress, I supposed he was one of the Spaniards in King Philip’s retinue. Only after he sent a second, almost furtive look in my direction did I suddenly recognize him.

Seeing my start of surprise, the man ducked his head and walked swiftly out of the hall. I left my stool and circled the chamber until I reached Goose’s side.

Goose doffed his hat and bowed. “I fear you arrive too late, Mistress Popyncourt. Your secret admirer has fled.” For once, his odd, high-pitched voice did not make me want to laugh.

“Was that one of the king’s savages?”

“Bless me! It has eyes to see!” I took his answer to mean yes.

“How astonishing. Are the other two here, as well?”

“One died,” Goose reminded me. “Oh, woe is me.”

I remembered then that the keeper King Henry had assigned to care for the savages from the New World had dressed the remaining two in gentlemen’s attire and attempted to teach them English. Instead of learning the language, they had stopped speaking entirely. Everyone assumed their silence was because they were little better than dumb animals, incapable of being educated. But unless I was much mistaken, I had just seen the gleam of intelligence, as well as a hint of amusement, in the eyes that had been watching me.

“After so many years at court, both men must understand English tolerably well,” I mused aloud. “No doubt they can speak it, too…if they want to.”

“Hard to learn a foreign tongue,” Goose said.

“Not so very difficult.” A laugh caught in my throat. Like the dwarf and the giantess and the rest of the king’s curiosities, those savages had been taken from their homeland, brought to a foreign country where they did not understand the language, and kept at court to serve at the whim and pleasure of the royal family. For the first time I realized that the same could be said of me.

Pondering this revelation, I slowly made my way back to my stool and resumed my seat. The king had just announced that his daughter would perform on the lute. I welcomed the distraction.

The tune she played was familiar to everyone at the English court. It had been written to celebrate Henry Tudor’s marriage to Elizabeth of York and the end of civil war. The lyrics asked what flower was most fragrant and colorful and followed that question with a host of possibilities, each with their attributes—marjoram, lavender, columbine, primrose, violet, daisy, gillyflower, rosemary, chamomile, borage, and savory. It the end, the rose was declared to be above all other herbs and flowers, the “fair fresh flower full of beauty,” whatever its color. The song concluded with the words “I love the rose, both red and white.”

As the courtiers applauded both the sentiment and the princess’s performance, Princess Mary handed her lute to me and signaled for a manservant to bring in a rectangular box with a keyboard and thirty-two strings.

“Do you know why that instrument is called a virginal?” King Henry asked his guest. “It is because, like a virgin, it soothes with a sweet and gentle voice.”

King Philip smiled appreciatively. Prince Henry looked bored. He grew restless whenever he was not the center of attention and fidgeted throughout his sister’s rendition of “The Maiden’s Song.” As soon as she lifted her hands from the keyboard, he leapt from the dais and called for the musicians to play a canary—a pavane designed to demonstrate a dancer’s skill. Then he turned to me.

“Come, Jane. Let us show them how it is done.”

He did not give me time to think, but caught my hand and pulled me to my feet. As the music began, he danced me to the far end of the hall, then withdrew to the point he’d started from, so that we were left facing each other from opposite ends of the room.

Panic swamped me. I swallowed hard. What should I do next? I’d memorized dozens of complicated floor patterns, from pavanes to passamezzos to salte vellos, but in that moment I could not remember any of them.

In the canary, first the gentleman and then the lady perform solo variations on the steps, dancing toward each other and then retreating. I had a choice between using steps I’d been taught by our dancing master or inventing new ones. Most people favored the latter course, priding themselves on the ingeniousness of what they created. Watching Prince Henry caper, clearly showing off, I realized that relying on learned steps was better. The simpler I kept my dance, the more my partner’s skill would shine.

The Prince of Wales was as enthusiastic a dancer as he was an archer, a wrestler, and a tennis player. He excelled at all sports. In dancing, he had been known to throw off his gown and perform in doublet and hose, the better to execute high leaps. He did not go that far on this occasion, but his energetic capering was both skilled and athletic.

Everyone applauded when the performance drew to a close. Afterward, I was in great demand as a partner and the prince asked his sister-in-law to dance. He had been showing off for Catherine, I thought. It was an open secret among those of us who had been raised with the royal children that he was enamored of his late brother’s widow.

They made an attractive couple. Catherine was some six years older than Henry, but she was so tiny that she looked younger. His attitude toward her was both loving and protective.

Later, after the two kings withdrew, taking the prince with them, the dancing continued. By the time another hour passed, I was on the brink of exhaustion. I retreated to a secluded corner to rest, and it was there that Charles Brandon found me.

“Mistress Popyncourt,” he said.

“Master Brandon.” I expected him to ask me to dance. Instead he suggested that we go out for a breath of fresh air and to talk awhile.

When a servant had fetched my cloak, Charles wrapped it closely around me, tying the laces with his own hands. Then he took my arm and guided me along one passage and through another with the sureness of one who knew Windsor Castle well. We emerged in one of the smaller courtyards.

I shivered. It was much colder out of doors than it had been inside. Charles chuckled and slipped an arm around my waist to guide me over an icy patch.

“Prince Arthur once remarked that it was a great pity there were no galleries or gardens to walk in at Windsor,” he said. “I fear there has been little improvement in that regard since his death.”

Each step we took on the frozen cobblestones produced a crunching sound as a thin layer of ice cracked under our weight. A pale sun still lit the sky, but its beams held no warmth. I was powerfully tempted to burrow against Charles’s side to absorb his heat.

“Did you go into Wales with Prince Arthur after his marriage to Princess Catherine?”

He shook his head. “My uncle, Sir Thomas Brandon, believed I would do better to stay at court. He is the king’s master of horse, you know. He trained me to participate in tournaments. My very first performance in the lists brought me to the attention of the Earl of Essex and secured me a post in his household.”

That joust had also brought him to the attention of every lady at court. “I remember,” I admitted.

“You noticed me?”

“How could I not?” I teased him. “It was my uncle, Sir Rowland Velville, that you unhorsed so spectacularly.”

“Is that how you came to be in Princess Mary’s household?” he asked. “Did your uncle sponsor you at court?”

I nodded.

“Sir Rowland came to England with King Henry, I believe, although he was only a boy at the time.”

“You are surely too young to remember that!” He was no more than twenty-one. That was one reason his performance in the tournament had been so startling. Boys did not even begin their training in the lists until they reached their sixteenth year.

“Both my father and uncle were in exile with the king,” he said. “My father died in the Battle of Bosworth, where King Henry won his throne.”

“I am sorry.”

“I do not remember him. I was a babe in arms when he died.”

“I lost my father when I was young, too, and my mother, as well.”

We had circled halfway around the small courtyard and come to another door. Charles led me inside and along a corridor, and when we came to the end, he ushered me into a chamber tucked in beneath a stair.

“Whose lodgings are these?” I asked as he lit a candle. My nose twitched at the musty odor that clung to the bedding. There was no window to let in fresh air.

“The room is assigned to a friend of mine, but he is not at court at present. He will not mind if we borrow his accommodations.” He helped me out of my cloak, and before I could think better of it, caught me by the waist and lifted me onto the bed. A moment later he was sitting beside me and leaning in for a kiss.

I put a hand out to stop him. His chest felt like iron beneath my palm. “You invited me to walk and talk, Master Brandon.”

“So I did. But is that what you really want, Jane? Just to talk?” He ran one hand along the curve of my cheek. His touch made me shiver.

“It would be prudent to do no more than that.” Greatly daring, I added, “Charles.” I placed my hand over his and moved it from my face to the coverlet between us.

This seemed to amuse him. “Well, then, Jane, what shall we talk about?”

“You could tell me your intentions, for if you mean to court me, Charles, you should know I have no dowry.”

“But you are much beloved by the king. I know that to be true.”

I frowned. First Francesca and now Charles seemed to have the mistaken notion that I could somehow influence the king. “I serve his daughter.”

He slid an arm around my shoulders. The embroidery on his sleeve scratched the underside of my chin. “Mayhap you have more value than you know.”

Uncertain how to respond to this statement, my lips parted slightly in preparation for speech. Before I could form words, he took advantage of my hesitation to steal a kiss. This one was not as sloppy as the ones in the passageway at Greenwich. I liked it better. I would have kissed him back had someone not chosen that moment to rattle the latch on the door.

We sprang apart. Charles cursed.

“Jane?” Harry Guildford called, his voice muffled by the thickness of the oak door. “I saw you go in there. My mother is looking for you. If you have any sense you will take yourself back to your own lodgings before she finds you.”


CANDLEMAS, THE SECOND day of February and the traditional beginning of spring, dawned to fresh snow on the ground and an icy wind whipping up the newly fallen flakes. After freezing them into stinging pellets, it flung them into the face of anyone foolish enough to venture outside.

The interior of Windsor Castle was little better. Cold drafts crept right through the walls to chill every chamber. The maidservant I shared with two more of the Lady Mary’s gentlewomen went out early to fetch glowing coals for the brazier and a bowl of washing water free of ice. A quick splash was sufficient for my ablutions.

With King Philip and all his retinue in residence, the castle was crowded. The most favored courtiers, together with their servants, occupied double lodgings—two rooms, each with a fireplace and a stool chamber. Those less important resided in single lodgings—one room with a fireplace—and were obliged to use the public latrines. Others shared cramped quarters and were fortunate if they had a brazier and a bed instead of pallets on the floor.

I wondered if the little, windowless room Charles Brandon had taken me to had been his own poor lodging. That would explain how Harry had known to look for me there. I did not believe for a moment that he’d just happened to see us as we entered the chamber.

My two bedfellows and I had a slit for a window but scarcely space enough to house the bed and the truckle for the maid to sleep on and our traveling chests. I lost no time dressing in my warmest clothing. As I adjusted my headdress, I wished I had some excuse not to go to the Candlemas ceremony, followed by Mass in St. George’s Chapel. The hall and chapel would be even colder than this bedchamber and I had seen the ritual designed to drive out evil spirits many times before. The only difference this year was that two kings instead of one would carry lit tapers, hallowed by the archbishop of Canterbury, in procession around the great hall.

Just as we were leaving, one of my garters came loose. “I will follow directly,” I promised, and stopped to retie the ribbon holding up my stocking.

Left alone, I found myself gazing with real longing at the bed. A lump marked the location of the spaniel one of my bedfellows kept as a pet. Braveheart, she called him. I usually ignored the annoying little creature, but I envied him the warmth of those blankets and fur coverlets.

The Lady Mary would not miss me, I thought. She had a bevy of young women surrounding her. Unfortunately, the same could not be said of Mother Guildford. Nothing escaped her notice, and of late she had paid particular attention to my comings and goings. Resigned, I left the chamber and slowly made my way along the deserted passageway.

I had not gone far when I saw a gloved hand emerge from behind a tapestry. When I stopped and stared, it beckoned to me. The thought crossed my mind that the hand might belong to Charles Brandon. Was he waiting there, in an alcove just large enough to hide two people from passersby?

I had not forgotten Mother Guildford’s warnings about lecherous courtiers. I was curious to know who might be lurking behind the arras, even if it was not Charles Brandon, but this could be some unknown man waiting for any court damsel who might happen along.

“Come out where I can see you,” I called, careful to stay more than an arm’s length distant.

“Are we alone?” The words were muffled but I recognized the voice.

“Harry Guildford, what are you playing at?” A trace of disappointment colored my question.

“Are we alone?” he repeated.

“Yes!” I stepped closer, reached around the side of the arras, grasped him by the arm, and pulled him out of hiding.

It had been a great game, when we were younger, to conceal ourselves behind a convenient hanging or piece of furniture, then jump out and startle one another into shrieking aloud. Prince Henry in particular used to do this. Now, however, we were much too old for such foolishness. I saw at once, by the earnest expression on Harry’s face, that he knew it, too. He had not been in hiding simply for the fun of frightening me.

“I must talk with you, Jane.”

“Now?”

“We will not be missed.” The desperation in his voice suggested that whatever troubled him was no small matter.

“Come to my chamber, then,” I said. “No one will bother us there.”

We were in luck. There were still coals in the brazier that sat in the small square of open floor between the bed and the chests full of clothing.

Harry hesitated. “Your maid—”

“She has gone to break her fast, and then will attend the Candlemas ceremony along with everyone else.” Except, it seemed, for Harry and me.

A few minutes later we had tugged pillows off the bed and were ensconced on the floor next to the firebox. Its heat dispelled some of the chill, but not enough that we were willing to remove our cloaks or gloves. I allowed Braveheart to climb onto my lap, happy to absorb the warmth from his small, wriggling body.

“What troubles you, Harry? Has the prince thrown you out? I cannot keep you here, you know.” I indicated the spaniel burrowing deep into my skirts. “I am allowed either a lapdog or a singing bird, but you are neither.”

My teasing failed to cheer him. He sat tailor fashion, hunched over the brazier, elbows on knees and shoulders slumped. I had never seen him look so wretched.

“Why is it so important that we speak in private?” Now that he had my full attention, he seemed loath to confide in me.

“I did not want anyone to overhear what I have to say to you.”

“Well?”

“This is not easy for me, Jane.” He stared at the glowing coals.

I narrowed my eyes. “You are not about to ask me to marry you, are you?”

“By the saints, I swear I am not!” The shock of my suggestion jerked him upright. His eyes all but popped out of his head. “How came you by such a mad notion?”

“From Lady Guildford.”

“My mother thinks I want to wed you?”

“Your mother thinks I might try to trap you into marriage.” I waved a dismissive hand. “What she believes is of little importance so long as you and I know better. But if that is not why you wished to talk to me, then what is it that troubles you, Harry?”

“Not my mother, but my father.” Heaving a great sigh, he reached inside both cloak and gown to fumble at his doublet. At length he produced a piece of paper folded in thirds and handed it over. “Read this. Then you will understand.”

“It is from Sir Richard to you.” I hesitated to peruse the private words written by a father to his son, in part because Harry and I had never spoken openly of his father’s disgrace.

Sir Richard Guildford’s letter stated that he wished to make a pilgrimage to the Holy Land. He wrote that he had a great sin on his conscience he hoped to have absolved through this penance. This notion troubled me not at all until I realized that Sir Richard wanted Harry to go with him. Suddenly, I felt a giant fist clench around my heart at the thought of losing yet another person I cared for. I could barely find breath to speak. Wordlessly, I returned the missive.

Harry tucked it away inside his doublet. “I do not know what to do, Jane. It would be a great adventure to travel to foreign lands.”

“If you desire to visit shrines, there are plenty right here in England. Surely you do not want to go on a pilgrimage?”

He gave a rueful laugh. “Can you not see me in a pilgrim’s cloak?”

“I cannot imagine that you would want to give up the pleasures of the prince’s household. All your life, you have been trained as a courtier.”

“My father was once accustomed to those same luxuries.”

“Perhaps your father has reason to seek forgiveness!”

“You think his mismanagement of crown funds is the ‘great sin’ he refers to in his letter?” Harry did not seem convinced.

“What else could it be? But whatever sin it is that he carries upon his conscience, you have nothing to atone for. If he wants his own flesh and blood with him on this journey, let him take Edward.” Harry’s brother was the son of Sir Richard’s first wife and fifteen years Harry’s senior. “You cannot go to the Holy Land.”

“Because you say so?” Harry gave a short, humorless bark of laughter. “Careful, Jane, or I will think you do have designs on me after all.”

I stuck my tongue out at him as I shifted position on my cushion. Roused from a nap, the little dog yawned, stretched, and abandoned me for a spot on the truckle bed.

Harry sighed again and seemed to fall into melancholy.

Clasping my knees to my chest, I buried my face in my arms, pulling the cloak more tightly closed around me on the pretext of being cold. In truth, confusion enveloped me, relentless as an incoming tide. Our childhood was over, but the old bonds were strong. I yearned to keep Harry at court but knew not how.

The silence between us stretched until it was pulled taut as a bowstring. At last Harry stirred and spoke. “I am bound to serve the prince, but my father is…my father.”

“The first loyalty is stronger than the second,” I said slowly, thinking the matter through as I spoke, “for your father, in his turn, serves the Crown.” As I obeyed the Lady Mary, Harry was Prince Henry’s to command. I added, carefully, “The Prince of Wales depends upon you, Harry. He listens to you.”

“He has others to—”

My head shot up. “He needs you, Harry! You have known him almost longer than anyone. When he loses his temper, everyone relies upon you to calm him down.”

“What of Will Compton?”

“Oh, yes. Will can also restore Prince Henry to his better self, but it takes him twice as long.”

“Do you ever wonder what he will be like when he becomes king?” Harry asked, his face pinched with worry. “You know Prince Henry lacks his father’s self-control.”

Snaking one hand out from beneath my cloak, I reached across the brazier to touch Harry’s forearm. “As long as he gets his own way, or thinks he has, all will be well,” I said.

Another humorless snort of laughter answered me.

Use that, Harry. Prince Henry won’t want you to go to the Holy Land. Let that be your answer to your father.”

For a long time we sat listening to the wind howl outside the chamber window. I could say little more. I consoled myself with the thought that it would be weeks yet, perhaps even months, before anyone could set sail. The destruction of King Philip’s fleet was proof enough of the foolishness of travel by sea at this time of year.

“He has never asked anything of me before,” Harry murmured.

Scrambling to my feet, I circled the brazier and fell to my knees beside him and hugged him tightly. “Stay here, Harry. You belong with Prince Henry. You cannot abandon a brilliant future for an uncertain fate.”

My face was so close to his that I could see the agony of indecision in his eyes.

“Someday Prince Henry will be king. He’ll make you a knight, if his father has not already done so. Serve him well and you’ll end up a baron at the least, or perhaps even a viscount. Kings reward loyalty, Harry.”

He still did not look convinced, so I searched harder for an argument that would convince him.

“Prince Henry will need you beside him when he passes his sixteenth birthday and begins training for the lists. With your jousting experience, you’ll know how to keep His Grace safe from injuries while he learns how to fight in tournaments.”

Like dawn breaking, relief flooded into Harry’s face. “I knew I could count on your good sense!” He leaned over and squeezed me so tightly that I let out a squeak of protest. Grinning, he released me and stood. “That excuse is one my father will understand. He will see that I have no choice but to stay with the prince.”


TO ENTERTAIN KING Philip there was more dancing, as well as hunts and tennis matches, bear baitings and horse baitings. Then, a week after Candlemas, Queen Juana arrived.

The very next day, the Lady Mary and her household and the princess dowager and her attendants left Windsor to go ahead to Richmond Palace. King Henry was to follow with King Philip in a few days.

“Such a pity,” the Lady Mary murmured as we set out aboard one of the royal barges. The Thames was open again and our journey would be far easier and far swifter than it had been by road.

“What is, Your Grace?”

“That Queen Juana remains behind at Windsor when she and the princess dowager have only just been reunited.”

“They will be able to spend time together at Richmond.”

But the princess shook her head. “No, they will not. By the time King Philip and my father join us there, Juana will be on her way to Plymouth, where their ships are being repaired.”

“But they cannot hope to sail for many weeks yet.”

Mary looked more solemn than her years. “It is a ploy, Jane, to keep Catherine and Juana apart. Do you not remember who their father is?”

“King Ferdinand of Aragon,” I said slowly, comprehending at last. At the time of the marriage between Princess Catherine and Prince Arthur, King Ferdinand had been England’s ally. But now, no doubt because he had refused to pay the remainder of Catherine’s dowry after Arthur’s death, King Ferdinand and King Henry were at odds. King Henry feared that the two sisters might somehow conspire against him to aid their father.

A tournament was held at Richmond to entertain King Philip. Charles Brandon acquitted himself well. During the next weeks, Charles continued to pay court to me and even stole the occasional kiss, but he made no further attempt to spirit me away to some secluded chamber. I convinced myself that he was being careful of my reputation.


KING PHILIP TOOK his leave of the English court in early March. In early April, Sir Richard Guildford, newly pardoned by King Henry, sailed from England for the Holy Land—without Harry. By then, Charles Brandon seemed to have lost all interest in me. I consoled myself by flirting with Harry, and with Will Compton, neither of whom took me seriously.

Then in September word came that King Philip had died suddenly during his visit to Spain. Rumors flew. Some said his wife, Queen Juana, had poisoned him in a fit of jealousy. Others suggested King Ferdinand was the villain, since it was Ferdinand who would not govern Castile for Philip and Juana’s six-year-old son, Charles.

I pitied Queen Juana. She had lost her beloved husband and was said to have run mad with grief. But I felt much greater sympathy for Harry Guildford. The news arrived in England in October that Sir Richard had reached Jerusalem only to die there.

I was never certain how Mother Guildford felt about her husband’s fate. She did not permit her emotions to show. When she asked me to step into her lodgings on a fine, sunny morning in mid-November, murmuring the name “Charles,” I assumed she wished to discuss plans for the Lady Mary’s betrothal to Charles of Castile.

King Henry and King Ferdinand were friends again. They had agreed that King Henry’s daughter Mary would marry King Ferdinand’s grandson Charles and there was even talk that King Henry himself might marry King Ferdinand’s widowed daughter Juana. The ceremony to bind Mary to Charles was scheduled to take place in a few weeks. She would not leave England for several years, but as soon as she was officially betrothed, she could call herself queen of Castile even though Queen Juana was still alive. Everyone in her household would also be elevated in importance.

“Sit, Jane,” Mother Guildford said, indicating a wooden stool. She had the luxury of a chair with a plump cushion to pad the seat. Her lips were pursed tight and she had a look of disapproval in her eyes.

“Is something amiss, madam?”

“I could not help but observe, Jane, that you showed a marked interest in Master Charles Brandon during the king of Castile’s visit and afterward.”

I folded my hands primly in my lap and said, “He is a handsome man, madam. Few women could avoid noticing him.”

“Was your heart engaged, Jane?”

I thought about that for a moment before I answered. “No, madam.”

“I am relieved to hear it.” Her posture relaxed a fraction. “Still, better you hear the news from me than elsewhere. Master Brandon has wed a wealthy London widow, Lady Mortimer.”

I sighed. “I suppose, if I’d had a large dowry, he might have made an offer for me.”

“Consider this a lucky escape. Master Brandon’s treatment of gently born young women leaves much to be desired.”

I started to defend Charles, but she cut me off, wagging a finger at me. “Remember this, Jane: What happens away from court is not always known to us here until much later. Nor do we always hear the whole story behind some of the rumors that do reach us. Charles Brandon was betrothed to another young woman at the same time he was courting you. Mistress Anne Browne was once a maid of honor to Queen Elizabeth. He kept her as his mistress for years after the queen died, and she bore him a child.”

“If he was betrothed to her, why did he not marry her? Indeed, how could he marry someone else?” Betrothals were supposed to be almost as binding as marriages.

“An excellent question, and one for which I have no answer.” Mother Guildford looked thoughtful. “I do not believe we have heard the last of this matter.”

Shortly after that conversation, Charles Brandon returned to court. He did not bring his new wife with him. He continued to be one of Prince Henry’s boon companions, along with Tom Knyvett, Lord Edward Howard, Ned Neville, Will Compton, Harry Guildford, and Harry’s older half brother, Edward.


IN THE SPRING following King Philip’s visit, King Henry was seriously ill. I was seventeen and horribly afraid that he, too, might die and leave behind a son too young to rule for himself. The king recovered, but he was sick again the following year. His physicians said it was only gout, and he was well enough by the end of February to receive two envoys from King Ferdinand. One was Francisco di Grimaldo, an elderly Italian banker. The other was the new Spanish ambassador, Don Gutiene Gomez de Fuensalida. They had come to discuss Catherine of Aragon’s still unpaid dowry.

The princess dowager seemed doomed to live out her life in poverty in England. Her father would not take her back and King Henry refused to permit her to marry Prince Henry, the most sensible solution. Francesca de Carceres, having had no better offer, escaped by eloping with old Master di Grimaldo.

In the summer of my eighteenth year, King Henry collapsed while out hunting. This time one of his doctors, John Chambre, a man already made memorable by his extremely large nose, dared speak the truth—the king had consumption and was likely to die of it.

Prince Henry accompanied his father on pilgrimages to Walsingham and Canterbury to pray for a cure. The Lady Mary went, too, taking me with her. It did no good. We watched the king grow steadily weaker and knew that before long the disease would kill him.

King Henry VII did not want to die, especially not before his son was eighteen and of full age to inherit. That day would come on the twenty-eighth of June in the year of our Lord fifteen hundred and nine. King Henry was determined to hold out until then.

That January, I turned nineteen. Over the next weeks, the king’s health continued to deteriorate. He had acute pains in his chest and difficulty breathing. He asked that the Lady Mary come and sit by his side and told her to bring me with her.

A few days later, we were joined in the sickroom by the king’s mother, Lady Margaret Beaufort, Countess of Richmond. The countess was a small, birdlike woman who dressed like a nun and wore a hair shirt under her habit. She was only fourteen years older than her dying son, but seemed likely to outlive him by a good many years.

She did not speak to me. She never did. I was not certain why she’d taken a dislike to me, but over the years she had gone out of her way to ignore my presence in her granddaughter’s household.

At the end of March, King Henry made a new will. On the twenty-first day of April, he once again sent for the Lady Mary and for me.

“She has no business here,” the countess said when she saw me enter her son’s bedchamber.

“I asked for her,” King Henry whispered. He was so weak that his voice carried only as far as the foot of his bed.

The countess allowed me to stay, but only until the king fell asleep. Then she sent me away.

I met Prince Henry just arriving at his father’s sickroom door. “Is he any better?” he asked.

I shook my head and felt tears well up in my eyes.

“I want to be king someday,” the prince said, “but not yet.” He seemed reluctant to enter the bedchamber.

“Your presence will comfort him, Your Grace.”

“A pity you cannot stay in my stead, Jane,” Prince Henry said with a rueful laugh. “I hate the sight and stink of illness.” But he went in and I went away and the king died the next day.

Since Prince Henry was not quite eighteen, his grandmother proposed that she serve as regent. Henry refused. He did not intend to be governed by anyone. He sent the countess to Cheyney Gates, a house adjoining the palace of Westminster but not actually a part of it, and arranged for his father’s lying-in-state and burial himself. He also set the date for his coronation as King Henry VIII. And then, in the chapel at Pleasure Palace, he quietly married Catherine of Aragon.

On the twenty-fourth day of June, they were crowned together as king and queen of England. I watched the procession that preceded the ceremony from the windows of a house in Cheapside in London. It was quite near the inn in which my mother and I had stayed when we saw Perkin Warbeck put in the stocks. How different this was! I was still a spectator, but now I stood beside Mary Tudor, princess of England and queen of Castile.

Nearby was Mary’s grandmother, the Countess of Richmond. As usual, she pretended not to notice my presence. I shed no tears when, a few days later, word reached us at court that the Countess of Richmond had choked to death on a bone while eating roast swan.

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