Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Once Upon a Rose

    Page 27
    Prev Next

    drumming.

      The jailer had been considerate enough to provide

      a limitless supply of candles, which was another

      reason Kit believed he was not a prisoner of the

      king. Henry would never waste such a large store of

      tallow on a prisoner, no matter how favored

      he had once been.

      Another fact that led him to believe he was being

      held by someone else was the king's recent

      behavior. He was certainly not angry at

      Kit, for the king let his rage be known whenever a

      subject displeased him. No, someone with a very good

      cook was holding him against his will.

      He ran a hand over the new growth of beard,

      scratchy and uncomfortable, but certainly not

      intolerable enough to be called torture. His eyes

      watched the flame. He didn't even know what

      time of day it was; his dark, silent world gave no

      indication.

      His thoughts turned to Deanie, wondering if

      Suffolk had received his note. If so, it was

      possible she knew by now that he was being treated

      well. He just wanted to get the hell out of there

      without placing her in danger.

      Deanie.

      How would she look in an evening gown? Not one

      of those stiff, corseted monstrosities the women

      wore at court. No.

      He could envision her in something of satin, with a

      low-cut back, a Myrna Loy gown to show off

      her curves. No wooden headpiece, no

      layers and ties and leather bindings to hold a

      sleeve in place, but a delightfully

      machine-made dress.

      And how would her legs look in flesh-colored

      hose? So far he'd been the one to wear hose, and

      he grinned in the soft light, thinking of how his

      chums in the squadron would react if he asked

      them if his seams were straight.

      Deanie's hair could fall freely to her

      shoulders, loose and dark and gleaming in the sun.

      He would show her London, or what was left of

      it. London would see her, and the grimy eyes of the

      shell-shocked East Enders would squint at the

      sight of his Deanie.

      Maybe he could take her up in a plane,

      let her feel the thrill of flying in the clouds.

      "Duke? Another meal for you." His eternally

      cheerful jailer rattled the door and

      pushed yet another feast into the room.

      "Thank you," Kit said automatically.

      "Oh, wait."

      He could hear the man pause.

      "Did the message reach Suffolk?"

      "I don't rightly know, Sir Duke." Kit

      could almost envision the man scratching his head. "I

      believe it did, for it was not returned."

      "Thank you," Kit said again, not bothering

      to examine the irony of a prisoner thanking his

      jailer. "Oh, one more thing."

      "Yes, Duke?"

      He was almost afraid to ask. "Is my cousin,

      Mistress Deanie Bailey, also being held

      here?" He tried to make his tone conversational, so

      as not to insult the jailer, who seemed to have his own

      sense of honor and propriety.

      "No! Do you think we'd keep a lady in

      here? I'm surprised, Sir Duke, that you would

      even think of it! Why, I never ..." The man

      muttered to himself down the hallway.

      That was the answer Kit had been hoping for. The

      man was not a good enough actor to have responded with such

      force unless it was the truth.

      Ignoring the meal, which was rapidly growing

      cold, Kit settled upon the cot and, his hands

      linked behind his head, thought more about Deanie.

      She had managed to avoid performing another song

      at dinner by pleading a headache, which was in fact the

      truth.

      It was astounding how every meal of the king's was

      orchestrated with the precision of a theatrical

      performance and the solemnity of a religious rite.

      Even with but a few of his subjects to bear

      witness, the scores of servants wordlessly carried

      out their duties, from the royal napkin steward to the

      bearer of toothpicks. The king never thanked the

      silent army whose mission it was to keep apace with his

      every whim. Had he acknowledged each one, he would

      pass the day in a never-ending chain of thank-yous.

      The advantage of such a small court was that

      each course was served with astounding speed. With so

      few distractions, the king ate quickly and greedily,

      ignoring the bits of food that flew from his mouth as

      he gnashed his way through each tier of the menu.

      Finally it ended, and the women--Katherine and

      Deanie--were dismissed. Katherine seemed

      reluctant to leave, and she batted her lashes

      becomingly at the king. Upon second

      thought, the king asked Mistress Katherine to linger

      yet.

      Before he could call her back, Deanie

      slipped quickly from the chamber. He had officially

      dismissed them, so she simply pretended not

      to notice Katherine's maneuver. Just as she

      left, she saw a decidedly smug expression

      on Norfolk's narrow face.

      It was a relief to be alone, to walk through the

      halls without pretending restrained delight with

      court life. She was finally able to stop smiling.

      Her cheeks and lips ached with the artificial

      smiles she had flashed the king. He wasn't such

      a bad guy, she mused, rubbing her sore face.

      He just had no idea that a world existed beyond his own

      desires.

      The hallways at Richmond were not only

      empty, but far more modest than those at

      Hampton. This was already an old place, built

      years ago, before the more modern ideas of airy,

      spacious architecture became popular. Before

      Henry, who embraced all things modern, came

      to the throne.

      In a way, she liked Richmond better than

      Hampton. It was less imposing, more like a

      regular home than a self-conscious palace.

      She strolled through the halls with a very

      twentieth-century need to unwind and just think. She

      racked her brain for a way to get to Kit, even just

      to see him. She had to free him, for she had no

      intention of attempting a journey back to her own

      time without him.

      Then she saw a swish of fabric, green

      velvet, from the corner of her eye.

      At first she thought of Hampton, and the similar

      experience of wandering the halls alone and being

      confronted by Surrey. That thought quickly

      evaporated: Surrey was still at Hampton.

      There was no one here to harm or even threaten her--

      except for Norfolk. And he had seemed more

      than content in the presence of the king and Katherine.

      She entered the room where she had seen the green

      velvet, unquestionably the gown of a woman. The

      room was empty, with several small chairs and some

      papers on a window seat.

      "Is anyone in here?"

      For a few moments there was no response. Just as

      Deanie was about to leave, a tiny figure
    stepped

      from the shadows of a sideboard.

      Deanie's first thought was that it was a

      midget, for she was dressed as a miniature

      adult. But it was a child, a little girl attired as

      formally as the highest-ranking courtier. On her

      head was a diminutive French hood, and her

      bodice was bound so tightly that it looked even more

      uncomfortable than usual. Her hands, dimpled and

      red as if she had tried to scrub them clean, were the

      only feature that seemed childish.

      The little girl sank into a curtsy, her eyes

      pinned on Deanie's feet.

      "Hi there," Deanie said, shifting into her

      coo-at-the-baby tone.

      The girl looked up, and Deanie immediately

      realized who it was. The red hair, the

      translucent eyebrows, the dark eyes--this was

      Princess Elizabeth.

      Her face was grave, too pinched and worried

      for a child so young.

      "I just had dinner with your father," Deanie said.

      The girl's face remained impassive.

      "Are you Katherine Howard?" The princess'

      voice did not sound like a regular kid's. It was

      full of uncertain authority.

      "Heck no," Deanie responded. "I'm

      Wilma Dean Bailey, but you can call me

      Deanie. All my friends do."

      A dawning expression crossed her features.

      "I heard you sing before."

      "Did you? Why, I don't believe I saw

      you."

      A very tiny smile, small as the girl herself,

      curved her lips. "I was hiding," she whispered.

      Then she straightened. "You will not tell, will you?"

      "Of course not." Deanie frowned. "I'm no

      stoolie."

      "You are no what?"

      "I mean I will not tell. I promise."

      The princess seemed satisfied. She looked

      up at Deanie, her eyes glinting with the same

      unnerving intelligence as the king's. "Why are you so

      sad?"

      Deanie was about to deny it, when the princess

      continued. "Your songs were all sad, nothing

      happy. I am only allowed to sing religious

      songs in Latin, or happy hunting songs. Why

      are you so sad?"

      "Well, for one thing I don't know any

      Latin or happy hunting songs," she

      admitted. "But I suppose you're right. I am

      sad."

      "Why?"

      Deanie cleared her throat. "Because I miss

      someone."

      The girl nodded eagerly. "I knew that was the

      cause! You sounded just like me." With the

      lightning-swift subject changes of all children,

      she pointed to the papers on the window seat. "I

      drew some pictures today."

      "Did you? May I see them?"

      The princess narrowed her eyes in speculation.

      "You are just being nice because I am a princess."

      She spoke as if she knew it to be the truth but

      wanted someone to contradict it.

      "Well, maybe that's part of the reason,"

      Deanie admitted. "Mainly, I want to see

      your drawings because everyone else in this house is

      insufferably dull, and I'd rather draw with you than

      yawn with them."

      Elizabeth's mouth dropped open, and then she

      clapped her childish hand over her mouth and

      giggled. It was the first truly natural gesture

      Deanie had seen her perform. She half skipped

      over to the window seat and grabbed her drawings.

      When her back was turned, Deanie saw that the

      gown was frayed and much too small for a girl of

      Elizabeth's size. The back was stitched in

      delicate-yet-entirely-noticeable attempts

      to repair the garment; the thread was slightly darker

      and sewn in jagged patches. It was also obvious that

      the hem had been let down several times, then

      finally lengthened by a few inches of blue fabric.

      In an effort to make the repair job less

      apparent, as well as lengthen the sleeves, the

      same blue fabric circled her cuffs.

      How could the princess be clothed in such

      threadbare gowns when her father spent a fortune on

      his embroidered undergarments alone?

      She returned with her drawings and handed them

      shyly to Deanie.

      "Let's get closer to the candle, so I can

      see them better," she muttered, glancing at the

      top picture.

      Deanie had no idea what to expect. She

      imagined a real princess would draw the same

      sort of pictures other kids drew, of

      silly-faced dogs and smiling suns. She

      cleared her throat, ready to praise the

      imprecise lines of an elf or crude stick

      figures.

      Instead she saw landscapes,

      beautifully rendered. "No way," Deanie

      exclaimed without thinking. She shuffled through the

      pile, but they were all of the same quality,

      exquisitely drawn with pen and ink. The

      details were astounding, every leaf and rock shaded as

      to appear three-dimensional. One of the drawings

      did indeed have an animal, but it was a very

      realistic rabbit peeking from beneath a fallen

      branch. Even the animal's fur, the differing

      textures in the fuzzy ears and the sleek back,

      was done so expertly that she could almost pet it.

      "You did these?" Deanie realized her mouth must

      have been hanging open in stupid befuddlement. "These

      are amazing. I mean it--these are about the best

      drawings I've ever seen."

      Elizabeth clapped delightedly and nodded,

      her face reddened with the unfamiliar pleasure of

      genuine praise.

      "I did! I did draw them these past long

      days, when I have not been allowed to venture forth from

      this room. I did them from this window, looking down

      at the grounds through the glass." She peered

      critically at the one in Deanie's hand. "I

      saw the hare but a moment, yet I recalled him

      in most every feature. His nose looked wet."

      She crinkled her own nose in unconscious

      mimicry of the animal. "I did not know how

      to make his nose look wet in my drawing."

      "Princess Elizabeth, you are a natural

      artist," Deanie marveled. Then she looked again

      at the girl, who was still appraising her own work.

      "What do you mean? were you forced to stay inside,

      even during the beautiful weather?"

      The girl straightened and said nothing, as if

      weighing all possible answers. When she faced

      Deanie directly, her expression was one of

      disarming honesty. "Yes. My father, the king, did

      return unexpectedly to Richmond. He forgot

      that I was here, and I have been banished to this room.

      He would not wish to see me. In this remote wing

      he is most unlikely to stumble upon me."

      "That stinks," replied Deanie without thinking.

      The princess looked shocked, as if she had

      rehearsed the reaction frequently. Then she

      began to giggle again, both hands clamped over her

      mouth.

      "You're right, Mistress Deanie," she

      whispered. "I think it stinks too
    ."

      A large woman garbed in black suddenly

      appeared in the doorway. "Lady

      Elizabeth," the woman snapped, with a brief

      glare in Deanie's direction. "It is well

      past the hour of prayers and bedtime."

      "Thank you, Lady Bryan," the little girl

      replied solemnly. "I will be there anon."

      The woman left, and Deanie leaned closer.

      "Why didn't she call you Princess

      Elizabeth?"

      "Because I have been all but disowned." She began

      to gather the pictures neatly, brushing off a

      speck of dried ink from one drawing. "My father had

      my mother beheaded. Then the next lady he married

      Queen Jane"--the girl made a sign of the

      cross--"tried to bring us together, but she died."

      "Do you remember your mother at all?"

      The child beamed. "I do! She was ever so lovely,

      with long dark hair all the way to her waist, and

      her eyes were brown--much as yours are. I

      remember her laughing all the time, and running after

      me in a garden. I know not which garden it was, but

      I know it was so because it is so clear in my mind."

      Deanie reached out and touched Elizabeth's soft

      cheek, feeling the delicate skin only a child can

      have. At first the girl stiffened, unaccustomed to being

      caressed. Then her forehead creased, as if in

      deep thought. "I do remember my mother," she said

      emphatically.

      "Your mother would be very proud of you, Princess

      Elizabeth."

      "Do you think so?"

      "I know so."

      The girl stared at Deanie. Then, with a swift

      curtsy and a small smile, she began to leave.

      "Oh, wait a minute, Princess."

      She paused and faced Deanie, an inquiring

      expression on her face.

      "May I please have a few of those drawings?"

      For a moment she hesitated, then shrugged and handed

      Deanie the whole stack. "They are for you,

      Mistress Deanie. Thank you for the praise."

      Her back stiff, she left the room with

      regal bearing. Only when she reached the door

      did she turn back to Deanie, and she gave a

      childish wave of her hand before ducking through the

      door.

      Deanie sat alone in the room for a long time,

      flipping slowly through the drawings, and thinking again of

      Kit.

     

      Chapter 17

      The king saw her immediately, seated in the courtyard

      directly below his apartments. He hastened to dress

      and join her before the rest of the house stirred, before

      Norfolk could cast one of his disapproving

      grunts, before even Suffolk--beloved

      brother-in-law though he was--could overwhelm with

      his forceful presence.

      He checked his appearance in the glass, his

      privy stewards clucking in pleasure at the

      sight of their master. He knew his looks were at

      their best this morn; he had consumed neither drink

      nor food to excess for these past few days.

      Henry may not be as handsome as Hamilton, but

      by God he was king, and that should count for something in the

      eyes of a maid.

      A momentary frown crimped his forehead. Where

      was Hamilton? Subjects had disappeared from

      court before, certainly. In those unfortunate

      cases, Henry had known very well where they had

      vanished to: usually a remote corner of the

      Tower. Or the bottom of the Thames.

      This was different. He liked Kit, enjoyed his

      company as much as his excellent sport. He

      sincerely hoped nothing had happened to his friend, and

      that he would soon return to court hale and

      healthy.

      In the meantime he was more than aware of

      Hamilton's cousin. With Kit at court, she

      seemed to ignore all other men, including--most

      vexatiously--the king himself. Even as he prayed

      heartily for Hamilton's return, he prayed

      it would take but a few more days. He certainly

      wished no harm to befall Hamilton. But should

      divine providence keep Hamilton from court,

      well so be it. He would take it as a sign, a

      message from the Lord himself that Henry was to pass some

      time in the presence of the lonely Mistress

      Deanie.

      Straightening his imposing shoulders, he tilted

      his head to observe his reflection in the hand

      mirror. In truth, it was becoming ever more

      difficult to appear the way he wished to look.

      His helpful tailors had broadened his back

      to make his waist appear more slender. And if the king

      tipped his head slightly to the side, the

      unsightly double chin, a recent acquisition,

      became all but invisible. He would tilt his head

      thusly when speaking to Mistress

      Deanie.

      When his toilet was completed, he dismissed his

      servants and checked once more in the courtyard.

      She was still there, alone, sitting under a tree and

      drawing. What a fetching picture she made of

      herself, even in the Germanic gown. He had quite

      forgotten his own queen, the wife he was beginning

      to despise less the more time he spent away from

      her.

      He made his way outside quickly. Just before he

      entered the courtyard, he made a swift

      inspection of his gold-hued doublet. It would never do

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026