Later, replete, we rose and dressed and crept out of Durham House to return home. There, in our own bed, we made love again, more slowly this time, and I confided in Will my fear that I might be barren.
“I want children, Will,” I whispered.
“Children come as God wills.”
“What if it is not my fate to bear a child?”
“Then it may be I should say a prayer of thanksgiving.”
I sat straight up in bed to stare at him. “What?”
He tugged me back down beside him and tucked me in close against his side. “I mean only that I could not stand to lose you as I lost my sister.”
“Many women die in childbed, it is true.” My breath caught on a sob, thinking of Kathryn. “But others have large families with no ill effects—my mother; my grandmother, Jane Warwick. Even Anne Somerset.” She had seven more children living besides Lord Hertford, the Somerset heir, and the daughter she’d just married to Jack Dudley.
“We must leave it up to fate,” Will said in a soothing whisper. He kissed me gently on the cheek, the forehead, the lips. I cuddled close to him, secure in his love for me. I resolved to stop fretting about our lack of children. What we had already was unique and precious.
Out of respect for Will’s wishes, I did not mention Mary Seymour again for some time after that blissful night and, when the delegation from France arrived, I did my best to make them feel welcome. I must have succeeded. One wrote a poem to my beauty. Another gave me an enameled chain worth two hundred crowns as a parting gift.
36
By the time Yuletide came around again, celebrated with masques at Greenwich and Westminster, I was too busy to dwell on my continued barrenness. Besides, I believed Will when he insisted he was content to have a wife he loved and who loved him. I knew what a rare gift that was when so many of those around us existed in loveless arranged marriages. Some were happy enough. Other couples came to love each other in time, although not, I thought, with the passion Will and I shared. But far too many, like my brother William and my young uncle, Lord Bray, were shackled for life to women they could not abide.
Will and I were blessed. We certainly wanted for nothing except a child. We had wealth, honors, land, and no fewer than 154 domestic servants to look after us.
We spent Twelfth Night at Cowling Castle, finally reconciled with my father. Once our marriage had been declared legal, he’d been obliged to accept it, but it had taken some time for him to get over his annoyance with me for having defied his wishes.
In the spring, Will left England at the head of a delegation to the French court that numbered 251 men, including a personal entourage of 62. My brother William went with him. So did Jack Dudley, Lord Lisle, and John, Lord Bray, my mother’s brother. Their mission was to bestow the Order of the Garter on King Henri II and to negotiate for a bride for King Edward.
This embassy to France was a most prestigious one. It was a great honor for Will to lead it. But his departure meant we would be separated for months. I dreaded that, even more so when I realized that, with him gone, I would be in an ambiguous position at court. I could continue to live there without my husband, but so long as the young king did not have a wife, such an arrangement would be awkward. Instead, I decided to retire to Esher, a small manor near Hampton Court.
I planned to move there right after Will left for France. Our parting was as painful as I’d feared. We made love with near frantic intensity on the night prior to his departure. Then I went with him to the dock in the morning, demanding one last kiss before he climbed into the waiting rowing boat that would carry him out to his ship. I watched him clamber aboard and continued to stare at it as the fleet caught the tide and sailed away. I stood with my hand shading my eyes, my gaze intent, until Will’s flagship was nothing more than a speck in the distance. Only then did I mount my horse and ride hard for Esher. It was more than a day’s journey, but I did not stop to rest until I was too exhausted to do anything but fall into a bed at the nearest inn and sleep till sunrise.
My fine, large house overlooked the River Mole, and while Will was away, I redecorated every room to suit my fancy. That passed the time for a week or two, but I was already growing desperate for distraction when, to my delight, I discovered that one of my near neighbors was that same Lady Browne I had met at Chelsea. Her dower house at West Horsley was a mere eight miles distant, an easy ride for an accomplished horsewoman.
“We are both named Elizabeth,” she remarked the first time I paid her a visit.
“As are half the women in England,” I reminded her. “Those not named Catherine, Mary, or Jane. My friends call me Bess.”
Her lips quirked up in a rueful smile. “And I am known as Geraldine, thanks to that wretched sonnet the Earl of Surrey wrote to me when I was but a child. He meant well—he thought to praise my virtues so that I would attract a noble husband—but I would have been far happier to have remained unnoticed.”
“You did make an excellent match.”
“Sir Anthony was very good to me.”
Geraldine had something of Jane Warwick’s calm demeanor. I found her company soothing and we exchanged several more visits over the next few weeks, until an outbreak of the sweat put an end to such diversions, as well as to my plans to journey to Cowling Castle to see my family during Will’s absence.
The sweating sickness was no respecter of rank. The last time it had ravaged the land, hundreds had died, healthy one hour and ready for the winding sheet the next. As summer advanced, the death toll climbed.
Only England was afflicted, not France, for which I was thankful. But every day brought more letters from family and friends telling me of loved ones lost. A particularly terrible tragedy befell Catherine, dowager Duchess of Suffolk. Her sons, the young Duke of Suffolk and his brother, both King Edward’s longtime companions, died within a day of each other. I had barely absorbed the enormity of her loss when Will’s sister, Anne Herbert, sent word that the duchess had also lost the third child in her keeping.
Two-year-old Mary Seymour was dead.
I had no close friends among my ladies with whom I could share my grief, or the terrible guilt I felt. If I had insisted upon adopting the queen dowager’s child, she might still be alive.
But there were deaths everywhere. Even the Duke of Somerset’s household was afflicted, although none of his immediate family died. Then one of my own ladies succumbed, and I realized that no place was safe. If Will and I had taken Mary Seymour in, or if we had been blessed with babies of our own, we could have lost them to this terrible illness. A child could die as easily at Esher as anywhere else.
In the lonely, lonesome days that followed, I grew introspective. I had never had occasion before to look so deeply into my own heart. What I discovered there were unsettling truths. I had concealed my true feelings even from myself.
I had the capacity to love deeply. That was to my credit. But I had long since given all that love, every bit of it, to my husband. I did not have any to spare for a child. That was the real reason I had not pursued the adoption of Will’s niece. And it was why, although I was saddened by the fact that I had not given my husband an heir, I now realized that I would not have been a good mother. I’d desired a child only because I’d known I should want children. That was expected of women, even though so many of the babies they bore would die young.
Had I truly possessed a maternal instinct, Will would never have been able to talk me out of raising his sister’s child. He had not had to work very hard to convince me to leave her with Lady Suffolk, because all I’d truly craved was for the two of us to be together. A child, even one of my own, was not necessary to my happiness.