<SPAN name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></SPAN><hr />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_289" id="Page_289"></SPAN></span><br/>
<h3><i>CHAPTER XVIII</i><span class="totoc"><SPAN href="#toc">ToC</SPAN></span></h3>
<h3><i>To the Tower</i></h3>
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<p>Whether or not Brandon would have found some way to deliver the
princess safely home, and still make his escape, I cannot say, as he
soon had no choice in the matter. At midnight a body of yeomen from
the tower took possession of the Bow and String, and carried Brandon
off to London without communication with Mary. She did, not know of
his arrest until next morning, when she was informed that she was to
follow immediately, and her heart was nearly broken.</p>
<p>Here again was trouble for Mary. She felt, however, that the two great
questions, the marriage of herself to Louis, and Brandon to any other
person, were, as she called it, "settled"; and was almost content to
endure this as a mere putting off of her desires—a meddlesome and
impertinent interference of the Fates, who would soon learn with whom
they were dealing, and amend their conduct.</p>
<p>She did not understand the consequences for Brandon, nor that the
Fates would have to change their purpose very quickly or something
would happen worse, even, than his marriage to another woman.</p>
<p>On the second morning after leaving Bristol, Brandon reached London,
and, as he expected, was <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_290" id="Page_290"></SPAN></span>sent to the Tower. The next evening Lady
Mary arrived and was taken down to Greenwich.</p>
<p>The girl's fair name was, of course, lost—but, fortunately, that goes
for little with a princess—since no one would believe that Brandon
had protected her against himself as valiantly and honorably as he
would against another. The princess being much more unsophisticated
than the courtiers were ready to believe, never thought of saying
anything to establish her innocence or virtue, and her silence was put
down to shame and taken as evidence against her.</p>
<p>Jane met Mary at Windsor, and, of course, there was a great flood of
tears.</p>
<p>Upon arriving at the palace, the girls were left to themselves, upon
Mary's promise not to leave her room; but, by the next afternoon, she,
having been unable to learn anything concerning Brandon, broke her
parole and went out to see the king.</p>
<p>It never occurred to Mary that Brandon might suffer death for
attempting to run away with her. She knew only too well that she alone
was to blame, not only for that, but for all that had taken place
between them, and never for one moment thought that he might be
punished for her fault, even admitting there was fault in any one,
which she was by no means ready to do.</p>
<p>The trouble in her mind, growing out of a lack of news from Brandon,
was of a general nature, and the possibility of his death had no place
in her <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_291" id="Page_291"></SPAN></span>thoughts. Nevertheless, for the second time, Brandon had been
condemned to die for her sake. The king's seal had stamped the warrant
for the execution, and the headsman had sharpened his ax and could
almost count the golden fee for his butchery.</p>
<p>Mary found the king playing cards with de Longueville. There was a
roomful of courtiers, and as she entered she was the target for every
eye; but she was on familiar ground now, and did not care for the
glances nor the observers, most of whom she despised. She was the
princess again and full of self-confidence; so she went straight to
the object of her visit, the king. She had not made up her mind just
what to say first, there was so much; but Henry saved her the trouble.
He, of course, was in a great rage, and denounced Mary's conduct as
unnatural and treasonable; the latter, in Henry's mind, being a crime
many times greater than the breaking of all the commandments put
together, in one fell, composite act. All this the king had
communicated to Mary by the lips of Wolsey the evening before, and
Mary had received it with a silent scorn that would have withered any
one but the worthy bishop of York. As I said, when Mary approached her
brother, he saved her the trouble of deciding where to begin by
speaking first himself, and his words were of a part with his
nature—violent, cruel and vulgar. He abused her and called her all
the vile names in his ample <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_292" id="Page_292"></SPAN></span>vocabulary of billingsgate. The queen was
present and aided and abetted with a word now and then, until Henry,
with her help, at last succeeded in working himself into a towering
passion, and wound up by calling Mary a vile wanton in plainer terms
than I like to write. This aroused all the antagonism in the girl, and
there was plenty of it. She feared Henry no more than she feared me.
Her eyes flashed a fire that made even the king draw back as she
exclaimed: "You give me that name and expect me to remember you are my
brother? There are words that make a mother hate her first-born, and
that is one. Tell me what I have done to deserve it? I expected to
hear of ingratitude and disobedience and all that, but supposed you
had at least some traces of brotherly feeling—for ties of blood are
hard to break—even if you have of late lost all semblance to man or
king."</p>
<p>This was hitting Henry hard, for it was beginning to be the talk in
every mouth that he was leaving all the affairs of state to Wolsey and
spending his time in puerile amusement. "The toward hope which at all
poyntes appeared in the younge Kynge" was beginning to look, after
all, like nothing more than the old-time royal cold fire, made to
consume but not to warm the nation.</p>
<p>Henry looked at Mary with the stare of a baited bull.</p>
<p>"If running off in male attire, and stopping at inns and boarding
ships with a common Captain of <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_293" id="Page_293"></SPAN></span>the guard doesn't justify my
accusation and stamp you what you are, I do not know what would."</p>
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<p>Even Henry saw her innocence in her genuine surprise. She was silent
for a little time, and I, standing close to her, could plainly see
that this phase of the question had never before presented itself.</p>
<p>She hung her head for a moment and then spoke: "It may be true, as you
say, that what I have done will lose me my fair name—I had never
thought of it in that light—but it is also true that I am innocent
and have done no wrong. You may not believe me, but you can ask Master
Brandon"—here the king gave a great laugh, and of course the
courtiers joined in.</p>
<p>"It is all very well for you to laugh, but Master Brandon would not
tell you a lie for your crown—" Gods! I could have fallen on my knees
to a faith like that—"What I tell you is true. I trusted him so
completely that the fear of dishonor at his hands never suggested
itself to me. I knew he would care for and respect me. I trusted him,
and my trust was not misplaced. Of how many of these creatures who
laugh when the king laughs could I say as much?" And Henry knew she
spoke the truth, both concerning herself and the courtiers.</p>
<p>With downcast eyes she continued: "I suppose, after all, you are
partly right in regard to me; for it was his honor that saved me, not
my own; and if I <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294"></SPAN></span>am not what you called me I have Master Brandon to
thank—not myself."</p>
<p>"We will thank him publicly on Tower Hill, day after to-morrow, at
noon," said the king, with his accustomed delicacy, breaking the news
of Brandon's sentence as abruptly as possible.</p>
<p>With a look of terror in her eyes, Mary screamed: "What! Charles
Brandon.... Tower Hill?... You are going to kill him?"</p>
<p>"I think we will," responded Henry; "it usually has that effect, to
separate the head from the body and quarter the remains to decorate
the four gates. We will take you up to London in a day or two and let
you see his beautiful head on the bridge."</p>
<p>"Behead—quarter—bridge! Lord Jesu!" She could not grasp the thought;
she tried to speak, but the words would not come. In a moment she
became more coherent, and the words rolled from her lips as a mighty
flood tide pours back through the arches of London Bridge.</p>
<p>"You shall not kill him; he is blameless; you do not know. Drive these
gawking fools out of the room, and I will tell you all." The king
ordered the room cleared of everybody but Wolsey, Jane and myself, who
remained at Mary's request. When all were gone, the princess
continued: "Brother, this man is in no way to blame; it is all my
fault—my fault that he loves me; my fault that he tried to run away
to New Spain with me. It may be that I have done wrong and that my
conduct has been <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_295" id="Page_295"></SPAN></span>unmaidenly, but I could not help it. From the first
time I ever saw him in the lists with you at Windsor there was a
gnawing hunger in my heart beyond my control. I supposed, of course,
that day he would contrive some way to be presented to me...."</p>
<p>"You did?"</p>
<p>"Yes, but he made no effort at all, and when we met he treated me as
if I were an ordinary girl."</p>
<p>"He did?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Horrible."</p>
<p>Mary was too intent on her story to heed the sarcasm, and continued:
"That made me all the more interested in him since it showed that he
was different from the wretches who beset you and me with their
flattery, and I soon began to seek him on every occasion. This is an
unmaidenly history I am giving, I know, but it is the truth, and must
be told. I was satisfied at first if I could only be in the same room
with him, and see his face, and hear his voice. The very air he
breathed was like an elixir for me. I made every excuse to have him
near me; I asked him to my parlor—you know about that—and—and did
all I could to be with him. At first he was gentle and kind, but soon,
I think, he saw the dawning danger in both our hearts, as I too saw
it, and he avoided me in every way he could, knowing the trouble it
held for us both. Oh! he was the wiser—and to think to what I have
brought him. Brother, let me die for him—I who <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_296" id="Page_296"></SPAN></span>alone am to blame;
take my life and spare him—spare him! He was the wiser, but I doubt
if all the wisdom in the world could have saved us. He almost insulted
me once in the park—told me to leave him—when it hurt him more than
me, I am now sure; but he did it to keep matters from growing worse
between us. I tried to remember the affront, but could not, and had he
struck me I believe I should have gone back to him sooner or later.
Oh! it was all my fault; I would not let him save himself. So strong
was my feeling that I could bear his silence no longer, and one day I
went to him in your bed-chamber ante-room and fairly thrust myself and
my love upon him. Then, after he was liberated from Newgate, I could
not induce him to come to me, so I went to him and begged for his
love. Then I coaxed him into taking me to New Spain, and would listen
to no excuse and hear no reason. Now lives there another man who would
have taken so much coaxing?"</p>
<p>"No! by heaven! your majesty," said Wolsey, who really had a kindly
feeling for Brandon and would gladly save his life, if, by so doing,
he would not interfere with any of his own plans and interests.
Wolsey's heart was naturally kind when it cost him nothing, and much
has been related of him, which, to say the least, tells a great deal
more than the truth. Ingratitude always recoils upon the ingrate, and
Henry's loss was greater than Wolsey's when Wolsey fell.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_297" id="Page_297"></SPAN></span>Henry really liked, or, rather, admired, Brandon, as had often been
shown, but his nature was incapable of real affection. The highest
point he ever reached was admiration, often quite extravagant for a
time, but usually short-lived, as naked admiration is apt to be. If he
had affection for any one it was for Mary. He could not but see the
justice of his sister's position, but he had no intention of allowing
justice, in the sense of right, to interfere with justice in the sense
of the king's will.</p>
<p>"You have been playing the devil at a great rate," he said, "You have
disobeyed your brother and your king; have disgraced yourself; have
probably made trouble between us and France, for if Louis refuses to
take you now I will cram you down his throat; and by your own story
have led a good man to the block. Quite a budget of evils for one
woman to open. But I have noticed that the trouble a woman can make is
in proportion to her beauty, and no wonder my little sister has made
so much disturbance. It is strange, though, that he should so affect
you. Master Wolsey, surely there has been witchery here. He must have
used it abundantly to cast such a spell over my sister." Then turning
to the princess: "Was it at any time possible for him to have given
you a love powder; or did he ever make any signs or passes over you?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no! nothing of that sort. I never ate or drank anything which he
could possibly have <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_298" id="Page_298"></SPAN></span>touched. And as to signs and passes, I know he
never made any. Sir Edwin, you were always present when I was with him
until after we left for Bristol; did you ever see anything of the
sort?"</p>
<p>I answered "No," and she went on. "Besides, I do not believe much in
signs and passes. No one can affect others unless he can induce them
to eat or drink something in which he has placed a love powder or
potion. Then again, Master Brandon did not want me to love him, and
surely would not have used such a method to gain what he could have
had freely without it."</p>
<p>I noticed that Henry's mind had wandered from what Mary was saying,
and that his eyes were fixed upon me with a thoughtful, half vicious,
inquiring stare that I did not like. I wondered what was coming next,
but my curiosity was more than satisfied when the king asked: "So
Caskoden was present at all your interviews?"</p>
<p>Ah! Holy Mother! I knew what was coming now, and actually began to
shrivel with fright. The king continued: "I suppose he helped you to
escape?"</p>
<p>I thought my day had come, but Mary's wit was equal to the occasion.
With an expression on her face of the most dove-like innocence, she
quickly said:</p>
<p>"Oh! no! neither he nor Jane knew anything of it. We were afraid they
might divulge it."</p>
<p>Shade of Sapphira!</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_299" id="Page_299"></SPAN></span>A lie is a pretty good thing, too, now and then, and the man who says
that word of Mary's was not a blessed lie, must fight me with lance,
battle-ax, sword and dagger till one or the other of us bites the dust
in death, be he great or small.</p>
<p>"I am glad to learn that you knew nothing of it," said Henry,
addressing me; and I was glad, too, for him to learn it, you may be
sure.</p>
<p>Then spoke Wolsey: "If your majesty will permit, I would say that I
quite agree with you; there has been witchery here—witchery of the
most potent kind; the witchery of lustrous eyes, of fair skin and rosy
lips; the witchery of all that is sweet and intoxicating in womanhood,
but Master Brandon has been the victim of this potent spell, not the
user of it. One look upon your sister standing there, and I know your
majesty will agree that Brandon had no choice against her."</p>
<p>"Perhaps you are right," returned Henry.</p>
<p>Then spoke Mary, all unconscious of her girlish egotism: "Of course he
had not. Master Brandon could not help it." Which was true beyond all
doubt.</p>
<p>Henry laughed at her naïveté, and Wolsey's lips wore a smile, as he
plucked the king by the sleeve and took him over to the window, out of
our hearing.</p>
<p>Mary began to weep and show signs of increasing agitation.</p>
<p>After a short whispered conversation, the king <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_300" id="Page_300"></SPAN></span>and Wolsey came back
and the former said: "Sister, if I promise to give Brandon his life,
will you consent decently and like a good girl to marry Louis of
France?"</p>
<p>Mary almost screamed, "Yes, yes; gladly; I will do anything you ask,"
and fell at his feet hysterically embracing his knees.</p>
<p>As the king stooped and lifted her to her feet, he kissed her, saying:
"His life shall be spared, my sweet sister." After this, Henry felt
that he had done a wonderfully gracious act and was the
kindest-hearted prince in all Christendom.</p>
<p>Poor Mary! Two mighty kings and their great ministers of state had at
last conquered you, but they had to strike you through your love—the
vulnerable spot in every woman.</p>
<p>Jane and I led Mary away through a side door and the king called for
de Longueville to finish the interrupted game of cards.</p>
<p>Before the play was resumed Wolsey stepped softly around to the king
and asked: "Shall I affix your majesty's seal to Brandon's pardon?"</p>
<p>"Yes, but keep him in the Tower until Mary is off for France."</p>
<p>Wolsey had certainly been a friend to Brandon in time of need, but, as
usual, he had value received for his friendliness. He was an ardent
advocate of the French marriage, notwithstanding the fact he had told
Mary he was not; having no doubt been bribed thereto by the French
king.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_301" id="Page_301"></SPAN></span>The good bishop had, with the help of de Longueville, secretly sent
Mary's miniature to the French court in order that it might, as if by
accident, fall into the hands of Louis, and that worthy's little, old,
shriveled heart began to flutter, just as if there could be kindled in
it a genuine flame.</p>
<p>Louis had sent to de Longueville, who was then in England, for
confirmation of Mary's beauty, and de Longueville grew so eloquent on
the theme that his French majesty at once authorized negotiations.</p>
<p>As reports came in Louis grew more and more impatient. This did not,
however, stand in the way of his driving a hard bargain in the matter
of dower, for "The Father of the People" had the characteristics of
his race, and was intensely practical as well as inflammable. They
never lose sight of the <i>dot</i>—but I do not find fault.</p>
<p>Louis little knew what thorns this lovely rose had underneath her
velvet leaves, and what a veritable Tartar she would be, linked to the
man she did not love; or he would have given Henry four hundred
thousand crowns to keep her at home.</p>
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