The Milk Woman's Daughter
By
Angeline Hawkes-Craig
Chelsea, England, 1548, The home of Thomas and
Catherine Seymour
Elizabeth was fifteen when her lifelong nightmare
first began. Her father had died, her child brother
made king, and the only person in the world that
seemed interested in her well-being was a step-mother
who remarried three months after King Henry's death.
Elizabeth was grateful to have someone look after her
and to live in someone's household with some semblance
of family. What events unfolded here, however, she
would regret and mourn for the rest of her life. It
changed her and warped her ideals. If there were any
room for improvement on the theory of love and
marriage after the traumatic childhood and subsequent
marriages of her father, the events that took place in
Chelsea would wipe all hope for normalcy away for
good.
Thomas Seymour had asked for her older sister Mary's
hand in marriage and had been denied. He then asked
for Elizabeth's, and was also denied. The last royal
woman of marriageable status left for him to pursue
had been Catharine Parr, the King's widow. She gladly
accepted the proposal of the fit and handsome lady's
man. Trouble shortly followed. Seymour would come into
Elizabeth's room in the early hours of the morning and
smack her bottom. He would arrive when she was
scantily clad and tickle her. He was seen trying to
kiss her...what no one saw were the times he forcibly
and hastily raped her. The first time he forced
himself upon her, Elizabeth was too shocked and
ashamed to think much on it. The second time, she
begged him to leave her alone. The third time, he
resorted to force to have his way with her. And, so
her molestation continued. Until the inevitable
happened.
"Catherine. There is something I must confide to you.
It is of a grave nature and I am shamed to have done
such deeds, but I must tell you before the scandal
hits your ears in full detail." Seymour said to
Catharine softly, over breakfast.
Catherine looked up, eyebrows raised, "What scandal
now, My Lord?"
Seymour cleared his throat. This wasn't going to be
easy given his wife's advanced stage of pregnancy. It
wouldn't be an easy thing to confess at all. "The Lady
Elizabeth is with child."
Catherine went white. She dropped her knife and
clutched her bosom. Her lips quivered as if to say
something, but no words would come.
"I am the father." Seymour blurted out the rest of
the sordid affair.
Catherine gasped. "You? The father?"
Seymour hung his head. "Aye. It is true."
Catherine stood up, her napkin falling to the floor,
her knife clanging off of the table. "Where is the
little whore? I'll wring the neck of that spawn of
that witch Anne Boleyn, myself!" She grew red-faced
and irrational.
"Sit down, woman. I am not finished." Thomas ordered.
"Oh, you're finished. Finished is exactly what you
are Thomas Seymour! In my own house!" Catherine waved
her arms about madly.
"Sit down now! Or would you have all of England know
how I ravished the sister of the king and the daughter
of Henry VIII?" Seymour had said the dreaded words. He
had accepted the responsibility for his actions, but
it did not make the pending doom any smoother.
Catherine sat down heavily in the nearest chair. "You
raped her? You raped Elizabeth? She is only a child."
Mother instinct and womanly jealousy collided with one
another as Catherine tried to sort out the indecent
images and feelings in her head.
"Why?" Catherine said at last to the silent Seymour
who sat hunched and downtrodden in the chair before
the breakfast table.
"I wanted her. I took her. She pleaded with me to
leave her be, but I did not listen. My lust controlled
me." Seymour said sadly.
"More like your lust for power controlled you. You
only thought of her royalty, her line to the
succession of the throne. If you were to beget a child
upon her, cast me aside, and marry her, you could
inherit the throne in the event that she would rise
that far one day." Catherine pointed an accusatory
finger in Seymour's direction.
"I do not know." He said sadly.
"I know. I've known all along. What of Elizabeth? Her
life ruined now. Both of us to have babes by you, you
filthy dog." Catherine hissed at him.
"I have a plan." Seymour said quietly.
"A plan?"
"There is another, woman," Seymour began slowly, the
next revelation would spur Catherine's anger even
more, "That has borne me a child. She is the milk
woman."
"The milk woman? The milk woman has lain with you as
well? Is there no one you have coupled with? What of
the grooms? Do you take boys to your bed as well you
monster?" Catherine yelled.
"Quiet, woman! The whole household will hear!"
Seymour said sternly.
"I hope they do!" Catherine yelled.
"What, so you can join me on the scaffold after you
deliver your child? Elizabeth is a ward in your
household. You allowed the sister of the king to be
ravished by your own husband. That is what the courts
will say. What say you to that, want that you should
die along my side?" Thomas knit his brows together and
said harshly.
Catherine frowned. "I would never have allowed such
an atrocity. Not in my household or anywhere. I love
Elizabeth as my own daughter."
"Then, for Elizabeth's sake, hear out my plan."
Catherine sat back in the cushions and sighed. "Out
with it then."
Seymour pulled up a chair and began. "The milk woman
has my son. She has agreed to take Elizabeth's child
and raise it. I will provide for the child as I
already do for the other one. She will not know the
identity of the baby's mother. Only that she is
sparing some poor girl a ruined life. She has a
generous heart, and the fact that this baby is her own
child's half sibling, is enough to let herher
heart and home to another of my bastards."
"That and the heavy purse that you hand her
frequently, I am sure." Catherine spat quite
venomously.
"Aye. The money helps, but she truly does love
children and after the boy was born, the midwife had
to remove her woman's organ. So, because of me, she
can bear no more children. I am giving her a child, it
is what she wants." Seymour sighed loudly.
"And what of Elizabeth?"
"Elizabeth will be told her child died during birth.
The midwife is trustworthy. No one will know but you,
the midwife, the milk woman, and I. Elizabeth can then
resume her normal life without anyone ever having
known." Seymour said matter of factly.
"How do you propose keeping her out of view for her
time?" Catherine winced at the thought of a pregnant
Elizabeth. Pregnant by her own husband.
"Sickness, headaches, enough ailments befall her to
keep her secured away in her chambers after she is
noticeable."
"And Kat? How will you hide it from her? She has been
with her since infanthood, she will not leave now."
Catherine found the hole in the plan.
Seymour leaned back quite rattled that he had not
thought of Kat Ashley before now. She would have to be
told. She could be relied upon. Kat would give her own
life to protect that of Elizabeth's. "She will have to
be told."
"So the plan widens. I do not think we will get away
with this, My Lord." Catherine said angrily. "It is
not such an easy thing to make a baby vanish when the
mother is in line to the throne."
"We'll succeed. We must. All of our futures depend
upon it." Seymour stood up. "I will go tell the milk
woman that the plan is in motion."
"Does this milk woman have a name?" Catherine
wondered aloud.
"Don't make the wound any deeper than it has to be,
my wife. I have already wronged you more than once.
Don't let my misdeeds haunt you even more." Seymourd the heavy wood door and left the room.
Catherine punched the cushion next to her in a fit of
rage, and then burst out crying.
Richmond, England: March 23, 1603 Queen Elizabeth's
Chambers
"Have they found her, Dr. Parry?" Elizabeth said
weakly.
The chaplain drew closer to be able to hear all that
the Queen was saying in her weakened state. She was
asking about her daughter.
"Yes. She is on her way now." The chaplain smiled and
tucked the lavishly embroidered sheet around the frail
Queen's skeletal shoulders.
Elizabeth smiled a peaceful smile. She had been
searching for years now. After the events that had
taken place in her youth, she had vowed never to marry
or have children. Never to place herself in a
vulnerable position to a man again. But there was a
part of her soul that was leftand wanting. She
craved the baby that had died before it could cry. She
longed to hold her own child in her arms and touch its
soft brow with her own lips. This pain refused to go
away. There had been miscarriages. She had been long
involved with the Earl of Leicester, Robert Dudley, or
Robin to her. They had many babies, but none of them
survived long enough to be born alive. It would have
complicated matters greatly in the event they had been
born live, so maybe things were for the best. She
never could get rid of the emptiness she had inside
though, or the ache she felt in her heart and in her
arms because there was no baby to nestle there.
That is when Kat, on her deathbed, finally told
Elizabeth the truth. Her baby had not died at all. She
had been born healthy and beautiful. Kat knew the name
of the milk woman whom the baby had been given. She
knew that Seymour had got a child on the dairywoman
and so that her own baby had been raised with a
half-brother. Family. Elizabeth was grateful for this
small token on Seymour's part at least. He had not
cast his bastard, her baby, on complete strangers. Her
baby had been loved after all. But, not by her. She
had never even been given a glimpse of her child's face...and the lack of
that round, chubby
visage haunted her still. Her baby was alive. After
that, Robin had led a secret force of men to track
down and find her missing baby, but there were many
roadblocks. There had been two women by the same name
in Chelsea, both milk women, both with a son. Then
both original milk women married or re-married several
times, leading to various name changes at each stage
of the way. One milk woman managed to completely
vanish on them for a period of years, until she
resurfaced near the Scottish border with a new
husband. One up and died on her. Finally, now, after
all these years, they had found her daughter.
Her Robin was dead now. Most of the men who had
originally searched for the missing child had gone to
their graves still on the quest. But, now, finally, on
her deathbed, the one remaining man who knew of her
daughter's existence, Dr. Parry, her favorite
chaplain, had located her daughter. There would be no
babe to hold in her old, withered arms now though. Her
baby girl was fifty-five years old and a grandmother
herself. The very fact that they had found her
daughter alive was a blessed miracle in itself. Having
been raised with the peasant class, life expectancy
was not long or hearty for such individuals. Elizabeth
smiled to herself, but not every peasant has strong
Tudor blood coursing through their veins.
The doord to the room and a cold gust of wind
blew in, chilling the room. A servant jumped from his
perch on a stool and threw more logs onto the fire,
causing an enormous burst of flames to rise up and
roar, warming the room and bathing it in an orange
glow.
A heavy bosomed woman waddled in, clad in a tan skirt
and white blouse, white cap on her head of gray hair.
She stopped in her tracks once the door closed behind
her.
The chaplain waved her towards the bed.
The woman slowly approached the dying Queen and then
fell humbly onto her knees and bowed her head.
Elizabeth smiled. "No. No. Get up. Come closer. Let
me look upon you."
The woman inched closer and was directed to a spot to
stand by Dr. Parry.
"Ah. I can see your face now." Elizabeth said
hoarsely, near a whisper.
"Aye, mum. I mean, Your majesty." She curtsied.
"Please." Elizabeth struggled. "Call me Elizabeth. It
has been so long since I last heard my name."
The woman raised her eyebrows and turned
questioningly to the chaplain, who smiled and nodded
that it was permissible if the Queen wished it.
Elizabeth struggled to raise herself up.
"Now, don't go and tire yourself out now, mum. I
mean, uh, Elizabeth." The woman reflexively, fluffed
the pillows up around Elizabeth so she could half sit
and half lay, tending to her like a sick relative.
"Thank you." Elizabeth smiled and laid back for a
moment, gasping for breath.
"Maybe I should come back when you are stronger?" The
woman asked, smiling.
"There won't be a time when I am stronger. I am
dying." Elizabeth stared vacantly out into the room
for a few moments.
"Certainly not." The woman choked on the words. "You
look as fit as a fiddle to me."
Elizabeth laughed and coughed.
"What is your name?" The Queen asked after a bit.
"Anne." The woman answered.
Elizabeth smiled. Anne, after her mother. She
wondered if Seymour had had a hand in that, or had
that been purely coincidental. The milk woman never
knew that Elizabeth was the baby's mother.
"Anne was my mother's name." Elizabeth said softly.
"Aye. It was now, wasn't it," Anne smiled and said
warmly.
"Are you happy? Has your life been a happy one?"
Elizabeth asked the stranger before her, asked her
daughter before her, because she really wanted to
know.
The woman's face lit up brightly. "Never a happier
woman there has been in all of merry old England,
mum!"
Elizabeth smiled and stifled a laugh. "How so?"
"Well, I don't measure my wealth in gold or treasures
like you have in this fine palace here, but I have had
a happy life. I had a mum and a brother that adored
me, and I adored them. I was married for a goodly
number of years to a loyal and honest man who never
beat me or said an unkind word to me. Worshipped me
like a queen, he did!" She laughed.
Elizabeth smiled and thought to herself, he should,
she was a princess this peasant wife of his.
"And, children? Do you have children?" Elizabeth
wanted to say so much more, but didn't know if the
time was right.
"Aye! Six strapping sons! Three live here in London,
one at the university, one is a barrister, and one
married the daughter of a far wealthier man. The other
three live in the village back home. Married, all with
children. I am a happy grandmother. I live in the home
of my youngest son, with he and his three children and his
pretty little dumpling of a wife." Her exuberance was
uplifting and Elizabeth had to restrain from smiling
so much.
Elizabeth listened to her describe her grandchildren.
Six sons! Six healthy, hearty sons. Like her father.
Strapping and big, Tudor blood in the veins of
all...all heirs to the Tudor throne! Her throne need
not pass to a Scottish heir...six heirs stood waiting
right here! Her throne could be secured for lifetimes
to come. Her joy welled up inside of her, easing some
of her pain.
Anne stopped and watched Elizabeth who was lying
there smiling.
Elizabeth grew aware of the sudden silence. "Do go
on. I'm not dead yet." She laughed.
Anne sighed. Visibly relieved. She didn't want to be
responsible for talking the half-dead Queen into her
grave.
"My oldest boy, don't see him very often. He is
trying to move up in the world and it just isn't
fitting for him to be seen with his old dairywoman of
a mother like I am. So, I understand and stay away. He
sends me money from time to time however, so I know he
hasn't completely forgotten me." Anne smiled
understandingly.
Elizabeth felt her face grow warm. How dare he! Not
be seen with his mother! His mother was a Tudor
princess, the Queen's own daughter! Not good enough to
be seen with, the upstart! Elizabeth felt the anger
welling up inside of her. Her temper had not decreased
with her strength.
Anne looked at Elizabeth strangely now. Perhaps the
Queen was too warm? She turned and suggested this to
the chaplain at her side.
He crossed the floor and cracked a window letting in
a trickle of fresh air. Elizabeth was too far-gone for
it to matter much now even if the old doctors had
advised against the cool night air.
Elizabeth studied Anne's face. Anne looked a lot like
Elizabeth had at fifty-five. But, Anne had inherited
the solid sturdiness her father possessed. She was a
large, strong, big bosomed woman. Elizabeth had always
been a willow reed, possessing her mother's graceful
body. Anne seemed intelligent too. She had inherited
the Tudor intelligence and passed it to her sons. It
wasn't every day that peasant boys became barristers
and university men. They were an obvious source of
pride for their hard-working mother.
"What color was your hair, when you were young?"
Elizabeth asked suddenly, curious.
"Red! My mother, god rest her bones, always said that
I got my red hair from my real mother. That was all my
father, Thomas Seymour, would tell her. You see, I was
a bastard of Seymour's as was my brother." Anne was so
candid with the Queen. Elizabeth felt like she had
known Anne for all times. Anne did not seem to be in
the least bit intimidated by the fact that she was
here speaking with the Queen.
Elizabeth sucked in her breath. So, she had been told
as much as the poor woman had known. No secrets there.
That was good. And, red hair! Just like hers had been.
Her red-haired baby girl.
"Your mother told you all of this?" Elizabeth said
softly.
"Aye. My mum was a truthful woman. A good woman.
Loved me like her very own. Never spoke ill of anyone,
not even the wretched girl who cast me aside." Anne
wiped at her teary eyes.
Elizabeth swallowed hard. She wanted to cry out, "I
never cast you aside!" She never knew. She had been
told her baby was dead. Oh, how her arms ached to hold
that baby. The baby was standing in front of her now,
a grown woman. A grandmother. A happy, free woman who
had loved and lived her life how she wanted to, not
having to harken to the wishes of others or serve the
higher purpose of being royalty.
"Maybe your mother was sickly or too young to raise a
baby?" Elizabeth wanted to soften the thoughts.
"Aye. My mother once told me she thought that my real
mum may have been but a child herself when she borne
me. She was always thankful to that girl or woman,
whomever she might be, for my mum loved me with her
whole heart and she loved the girl or woman who
delivered me into this world so that my mum could love
me." Anne smiled, apparently not bearing much ill will
towards "her real mum." Elizabeth felt a little
relieved and smiled.
Elizabeth coughed and wheezed.
"Perchance, I should come back another day, when Your
Majesty feels stronger?" Anne asked Elizabeth again.
Elizabeth smiled. "Aye. That would be a wonderful
thing to look forward to, Mistress Anne. I should
sleep now."
Anne kissed Elizabeth's bony little hand and turned
and went into the hall.
Outside, Dr. Parry asked if she needed her horse
brought to the doors for her.
"Horse? No horse for me, sir. Can't afford a beast. I
walked here for the Queen's sake." Anne looked down at
her worn and dirty shoes. The chaplain hadn't noticed
them in the darkened chamber of the Queen.
"I will send for the Queen's carriage then. Elizabeth
would want you taken home safely after your loyalty in
coming all this way especially on foot. You are a
devoted subject, Mistress Anne." Dr. Parry smiled at
her.
"Still don't know why the Queen would want to see a
lowly milking woman like me." Anne laughed.
"She likes to talk with her subjects. She makes no
difference be you milking woman or princess." The
chaplain smiled and thought on the irony of his
statement.
"It was nice to have been in her presence. She is a
great Queen." Anne said teary eyed again.
"Aye, that she is. More than you'll ever know,
Mistress Anne." Dr. Parry reached inside his pocket
and procured a large purse of gold that the Queen had
instructed he give to Anne earlier. "This is a gift
from Queen Elizabeth. She also has arranged for you to
move into a manor house in Chelsea. A gift to you and
your family. Maybe now, those sons of yours can visit
their mother without all the shame or reduction in
status?" Dr. Parry asked, one eyebrow raised.
Anne gasped. "I, well, me, well, bless me soul!" She
finally managed to exclaim. "Why, why does the Queen
give such generous gifts to me? What have I done for
her? Just a bit of a walk, that's all! Bless me." Anne
kept uttering, shaken up, shocked at Elizabeth's
generosity.
"The carriage is here, Mistress Anne. A man from
London will be in Chelsea to give you the deed to the
manor, and the keys. A monthly allowance has been
granted to you for your lifetime, as a thank you for
your unquestioning visit upon the dying Queen. You
have made her happy with your loyalty." Dr. Parry
smiled.
Anne blinked back tears of joy. "Long live the
Queen!" She said sadly.
"Long live the Queen." Parry echoed Anne's
sentiments. He would miss his queen deeply.
Anne left for the carriage. Dr. Parryd the door
to Elizabeth's chamber and crossed over to her massive
bed.
Elizabeth stared at him with hollow eyes.
"Has she gone then?" Elizabeth asked.
"Aye. She has gone. I sent her home in your carriage.
It seems the Mistress Anne walked all the way from
Chelsea to Richmond at your bidding." Parry said
astonished still.
"Walked? All that way? Just to see me?" Elizabeth
smiled. So, her Anne had her walking strength. She
truly was a sturdy Tudor.
"I also told her of the manor and monthly stipend you
have arranged." Parry continued.
"Did she question it?"
"Yes. She was amazed at your generosity. You quite
made her happy, My Queen." Parry smiled warmly and
drew up a chair close to Elizabeth's side.
"Good. Good." Elizabeth said tiredly, weakly.
"I thought she looked like your father." Parry said
abruptly.
Elizabeth smiled. "I thought the same thing. She was
definitely Henry's grand-daugher."
"And your daughter." Parry said matter of factly.
"Why didn't you tell her?"
Elizabeth sighed for a very long time and then
coughed. She wheezed and gasped for breath. Then she
smiled. "She has had a happy life, Parry. Loved and
married the man she wanted. Has healthy sons who are
doing what they want to without having to think of
some grander scheme, or some foreign policy."
"You wanted to spare her?" Parry asked suddenly aware
of the gift Elizabeth had given her only child.
Elizabeth sighed again. "All of my life there has
been this scandal, or that danger. Never knowing if
poison awaits me at table, or arrows await me on my
barge. Whose dagger waits to finds its sheath in my
heart? What plot is brewing, now, even as I lay dying
in my bed, an old woman, tired and sick?"
Parry nodded, he understood.
"I gave my daughter life all of those many years ago.
And today, I gave her life again. She could never be
happy being Queen. What does she know of being Queen?
No. Let her go. She is never to know. Let her be
happy." Elizabeth wheezed.
"But six sons? Six sons could secure the Tudor line."
Parry questioned her motives.
"Six sons could all end up with their heads on the
block when James decides to claim the throne."
Elizabeth said sternly and knowingly. "I will not kill
my own grandsons. I will not rob my daughter of her
children, like I was robbed of my child."
Parry knew Elizabeth was right. Tudor blood or no,
there would be mass chaos if new rivals for the throne
were introduced at so late a date. And with Elizabeth
dead and out of the picture, who would know the truth
save he, and he would be an easy head to chop.
"Promise me, Parry." Elizabeth was too weak to finish
her request.
Parry nodded his head. "The knowledge of your
daughter's existence dies with me, Your majesty."
Elizabeth smiled. "Thank you."
She sucked on her scrawny finger, and stared at him
with hollow pools of watery eyes. A tear rolled down
her wrinkled, aged, once beautiful and young, face.
She looked at Parry and smiled. "I would have liked to
have held my baby girl. Just once. Just once."
Elizabeth's head lulled over to one side and she died,
eyes closed, looking like she had been deep in sleep.
Dr. Parry began to pray for the deliverance of
Elizabeth's soul into God's hands. The servant left
the room and the bells began to toll.
"Long live King James!" Parry could hear the voices
in the corridor say.
He covered Elizabeth's Queenly head, and placed her
crown upon her bed.
"Farewell, My Queen. England will never know a
stronger or more loving Queen than you, Queen
Elizabeth." He knelt at the foot of her bed until the
diplomats began filing in to pay their last respects.
He crossed to the window and flung it cool air
flowing in and cleansing the room of the odor of
death.
Out of the window, in the dim light, he could see
farther away, nearing the gate and exiting onto the
road, the Queen's carriage taking Elizabeth's baby
girl home to Chelsea once again.
© 2002 Angeline Hawkes-Craig
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