Dorset drew her to him and began to make violent love to her.
‘Promise me, Jane,’ he said. ‘Swear you will help. Amuse yourself with Hastings ...’
‘What you suggest is ... is ...’
He stopped her with his kisses. He was laughing. ‘You’ll do it, Jane,’ he said. ‘You’ll do this for me.’
Jane felt half ashamed, half excited. She was glad to escape from Dorset. When she was with him he was irresistible but she fervently wished that she could fight off the violent passion which he inspired in her. She wanted love. She had it astonishingly enough from Edward. There could be none to replace him but he was gone now and it was no use brooding on the past.
Since she had left Dorset she had thought a good deal about Hastings.
She had always told herself that she disliked him. She had never forgotten that experience when she had been about to take the ale which her maid had brought; she remembered still the frightened look in the girl’s eyes and then her confession. Often she had wondered what would have happened if she had drunk the ale and gone into a deep sleep while Hastings was let into the house and carried her away.
Hastings himself had often looked shamefaced and had even told her how he repented that act. She had shrugged his apologies aside. She had told herself that was in the past and of no importance now for he would never attempt such an action with her again. The King had laughed at it. ‘Forgive poor old Hastings,’ he said. ‘He’s a good friend to me. I trust him and that means a great deal. What he did I am afraid we would all have done if the idea had occurred to us.’ She had protested and made Edward see that men who thought they had a right to treat women so were rogues. He agreed with her, and said: ‘But then you are so beautiful, Jane. A temptation to us all, and did I not take you away from that virtuous goldsmith of yours?’
She could sound Hastings. He always looked at her with a kind of brooding tenderness nowadays which made her feel differently towards him.
When she next saw him he was on the way to Westminster to talk with the Protector. They were arranging when the coronation should be, she knew. Dorset had said that the Protector would put it off for as long as possible because once the King was crowned he himself would cease to be so important.
She smiled at Hastings. He immediately hesitated. She supposed she had never done that spontaneously before.
He paused and bowed low. ‘Greetings, Mistress Shore,’ he said. ‘’Tis a fine day.’
‘It is so,’ she answered.
He was still pausing, looking at her with that obvious admiration.
‘You grow fairer than ever every time I see you,’ he said.
‘You are gracious.’
‘Jane.’ She saw the hope leap into his eyes. It had been easier than she had thought.
They supped together. He talked soberly of the death of the King. ‘A sad blow to us both, Jane,’ he said. ‘Nothing will ever be the same for either of us again. You miss him sorely do you not?’
‘Most sorely,’ she confirmed.
‘He was a great man ... a great King. He possessed all the qualities of kingship. That he should go like that ... so suddenly ...’
‘He lived too heartily,’ said Jane. ‘I often told him.’
‘He could not help it. He was made like that. Do you know, Jane, I am twelve years older than he was. Think of it, I have had twelve more years of life.’
‘My lord, I hope you have twelve more left to you.’
‘Now that you are gracious to me, I could wish it,’ he said.
That night she became his mistress.
It was easier than she had thought. He was kindly, tender and he loved her. That was obvious. He told her during that first night together how bitterly he had regretted that first approach. He had always felt that if he had tried to woo her as she deserved to be wooed, perhaps he might have been successful before Edward found her.
‘I have a feeling, Jane, that you would be faithful to the one you loved.’
‘I always was to Edward.’
‘I know it well. He knew it. He loved you for it and although he could not repay you in the same vein he often said what joy you had brought to his life. What of Dorset, Jane?’
She shivered. ‘He is in hiding. I do not want to see him again.’
‘Dorset is not a good man, Jane.’
‘I know it well. I am glad to be free of him.’
Hastings seemed well satisfied with that.
Chapter XII
DEATH ON TOWER GREEN
So Jane Shore was now Hastings’s mistress. It was a matter which was talked of throughout the town. Jane was popular with the citizens; so was Hastings.
Gloucester listened with distaste. He had always deplored Edward’s way of life and had on more than one occasion told his brother that it was no way for a King to live. Edward had laughed at him, had called him a monk, and said he could not expect everyone to be like himself. Hastings had been such another; it was something Gloucester had always held against him. He had reason to be grateful to Hastings for he had kept him informed of what was happening in London and in fact had been the first to tell him of Edward’s death. But now that Buckingham had joined him and had shown himself to be so single-mindedly his man he was moving away from Hastings.
His brother’s chief advisers had been Lord Hastings; Thomas Rotherham, Archbishop of York and Lord Chancellor; John Morton, Bishop of Ely; and Lord Stanley. Rotherham had shown himself up as a weakling by handing the Great Seal back to Elizabeth when she was packing her treasures to go into Sanctuary. He was not the kind of man Gloucester wanted about him. Morton was a good man but he had been a staunch Lancastrian and had only become Edward’s minister when it was certain that there was no hope of Henry’s being restored to the throne. It was a matter of expediency and Gloucester did not like such men. Stanley had not a very good reputation for loyalty and had previously shown himself ready to jump whichever way was best for Stanley; there was one other reason why Gloucester would not trust him too far. He had recently married Margaret Beaufort, that very strong-minded woman, who was descended from John of Gaunt and was also the mother of Henry Tudor. That upstart of very questionable parentage had of late begun to hint that he had a claim to the throne as grandson of Queen Katherine the widow of Henry the Fifth through a liaison – though the Tudors called it marriage – with Owen Tudor. Royalty on both sides, said Tudor, counting Katherine of France as his grandmother and John of Gaunt through his mother.
These had been Edward’s men. It sometimes happened that when there was a change of rule there had to be a clean sweep. He wanted none of them – except perhaps Hastings. Buckingham was at his right hand. Buckingham was royal and the second peer in the land after himself. Then on a humbler scale there were Richard Ratcliffe, Francis Lovell, William Catesby ... men who were his tried friends and had been over the years.
He was going to need staunch and trusted friends. The position was dangerous. If he were defeated by the Woodvilles they would have no compunction in destroying him. He was fighting not only for what he believed to be right but for his life.
It would be good to see Anne who was coming south for the coronation which was fixed for the twenty-fourth of June.
He met her on the outskirts of London and as soon as he saw her he was appalled by her frail looks. She always looked more delicate than ever after an absence. He had hoped that she would have their son with her although he had known that the little boy’s health might have prevented his travelling.
Anne smiled as he took her hand; there was sadness in that smile for she noticed how he looked eagerly for their son and the disappointment on his face when he realised he was not with her. ‘Welcome to London, my dear,’ he said.