The Boleyn Deceit (The Boleyn Trilogy #2)
Prelude
“You will not tell me what I can and cannot do with my own son!”
If there was one thing to which George Boleyn was accustomed, it was his sister’s temper. Anne had never been known for her retiring personality, which was just as well or she would never have caught Henry’s eye.
And if she had not become the wife of one king and the mother of the next, George knew he would still be a minor gentleman of enormous ambition and small fortune. That meant he did not rise to Anne’s anger. “I am not telling you, the council is. The council that Henry’s will put in place.”
“My son is king now!”
“In name and spiritual right, yes. But he is ten years old, Anne. In practice, it is the regency council that will rule England until William is of age.”
A regency council that had pointedly excluded Anne.
There had been child kings before in England, and often their mothers were central to the organization surrounding them.
But Henry Tudor, for all his flaws, had always possessed superb political instincts.
He had known that even after all this time, passions ran high against his wife.
Anne could not be allowed anywhere near her son except in the most limited maternal capacity.
George Boleyn was another matter. Six months before his death, Henry had made him Duke of Rochford, and in his will the late king named him not only a member of the regency council, but bestowed on him the position of Lord Protector of England until William turned eighteen.
Not that George had any illusions about the solidity of his position.
He was just slightly less hated than his sister and he would hold power only as long as he could keep the other council members from turning on him.
“You are mother of the King of England,” he said in a softer voice, gentling Anne into listening. “William loves you and that will never change. I know that you would not jeopardize his position for misplaced pride. You would not risk the Catholics combining against him.”
“They would not dare!” But her protest was halfhearted.
They would dare all too well, for in their eyes Henry had left only one legitimate child—the Lady Mary, thirty years old and as stubborn and righteous as her mother before her.
Henry’s son or not, religion made William’s position as a boy king precarious.
George took his sister’s hands. “Look around you, Anne. Look at where we are standing.”
Grudgingly, she ran her eyes around the high-ceilinged privy chamber in the heart of Windsor Castle’s Upper Ward, reconstructed by Edward III for himself and his queen, Philippa of Hainault.
In the midst of winter, the queen’s apartments were a haven of warmth with blazing fires, walls softened by exquisite tapestries, the richness of polished wood, and the sheen of silver and gold décor.
“We have won, Anne,” George continued with persuasive conviction. “We have broken the chains of Catholic tyranny and opened the way to a new world. William is the promise of all we hoped and dreamed. I will not let him fail.”
As well as a formidable temper, Anne possessed a formidable mind, and she knew he was right. That didn’t stop her from saying caustically, “And yet you will allow Norfolk a seat on the council despite his attainder. If Henry had lived just one day longer, the Duke of Norfolk would be dead.”
“But Henry didn’t live one day longer. And to further punish the duke now would only enrage the Catholics. Don’t worry about him—I prefer my enemies close enough to control. Besides, Norfolk is William’s great-uncle. Pride will stay his hand for now.”
Anne shook herself free of George. Fiercely, she retorted, “You had better be right. And you had better be my voice on that council. William is my son, no one else’s. Don’t you forget it.”
“I won’t.”
But even as George kissed his sister on the forehead, he thought, But if William is to be what we want, the world will need to think of him only as Henry’s son. It is a king I am creating now, whatever the cost.