Friday, July 25, 2014

Gertrude

 

 
 
 
 

He's mad. He must be mad; what could he be thinking, putting on an offensive thing like that before me, his father and the entire court? A player-king poisoned by his brother, who snatches the crown...such a clever one, my son. Very subtle in his art. Always ready with words to use as doves or daggers. Years of schooling in Wittenberg have not helped; they breed blasphemy there like rats. He has long fancied himself subtle, even as a child, but I could see right through to his soul. A mother knows. But now the love between us is forgotten; only the misty memory of it creeps through Elsinore like a ghost. 

My skin crawls; it's chilly in this little chamber, but I will call no servant to lay the fire. Rage will warm me, and I can wrap this woolen night-robe around my shivering shoulders. It's a lovely thing,  crimson-dyed, trimmed with black velvet and diamonds. A wedding gift, still new. It'll enrage him to see me wear it. Good.

The diamonds on the sleeves throw the weak candlelight over the bare room: the writing-table with its wine jug and cup, the carved walnut chest banded with silver. And an arras, with a scene of...I squint a little, for my eyes are no younger than the rest of me. I forget their names, but I learnt the story of it during my first long winter here: a girl determined to honor her murdered brother even on pain of death, her sister held back by her duty to the king and state. Good dutiful daughters both. Either would be preferable to what I've got.

A raging maniac, loyal to none but his own passions, who only a few moments ago shouted nonsense to the king's back as we left the great hall. I sent word with one of those silly fools who hangs about him as artfully as a ball-and-chain - Rosenstern, I think his name is: "Bid the lord Hamlet to attend me in my closet at once." Who knows whether he will come, or how soon. Still I must prepare. The only other décor in this little chamber hangs above the stone mantel: two gilt-framed portraits on either side of the Venetian mirror, which is kind enough to show my eyes like two sunken pitch-balls, hair springing from my head like wires. Wine; wine will settle me. The pitcher clanks against the cup and the sweet dark drink stains the rushes on the floor. Is it my hand that shakes so? I must settle myself, I must. In smoothing my hair and cinching the girdle of my robe, I cannot quite keep my eye from the portraits.

Yes, I kept them both. What of it? A woman is expected to mourn her dead husband, and a queen is more than a woman; if I'd taken that one down, they would have thought that unseemly as well. More whispering for the back stairs.

Ah, Horvendil. I knew him before he was Hamlet, the great scourge of the Polacks, uniter of the Danish territories. The man presented to me as husband on my fifteenth birthday was merely governor of Jutland - a middling office which he had to share with his brother Feng, no less. Our union was to guarantee the alliance of that nothing little province with the isle of Zealand and, across the sea belt, Scania. My father was nothing if not astute - old Rorik Ringslinger never did anything without benefit for himself - though he also reassured me that he had taken care to determine whether Horvendil's manner was gentle. He did not give me to Feng, though he was the older of the two; their mother had borne them in the January and December of the same year. He said it was because Feng had a soldier's calling, and would be away too often on foreign wars. I thought then - and, to be honest with myself, still think it on dreamy midnights when the sighing and struggling has subsided - that my father did not trust him.

A gentle man, or a restless one? You tell me which makes the better king.

The pitcher clanks the cup again; sweet music. It's all very well for a man wearing a gown and wig to ape a queen onstage, but what of what the audience does not get to see? Why not begin at the beginning of the story? A squeaking boy to play the role of a fifteen-year-old girl lying half-smothered beneath the hairy bulk of a man two times her age. My father had been right about Horwendil's manner, and I know he meant to be gentle. But such a scene on stage would turn the tragedy into comedy; the gallery would see only the heaving and snorting, and roar with merriment.

It's always murder and death, wantonness and lust. That's all they understand. No one would watch a play about the pain and terror of childbirth, the loneliness a warrior-king's wife must endure. Off gaining glory and trampling the Norwegian forces as my first and last child slipped into the world on a river of blood. We must secure our little prince's kingdom, he said later, but of course that was an excuse. Such father-son handdowns are preferred by the Germanic folk, but not here in Denmark. There was no reason to be certain the child would live, let alone one day be approved by the electoral which had confirmed Horwendil as king after his victory over Norway. That was when my husband changed his name. If he'd truly done it all for the security of the little creature mewling at his nursemaid's dug, he would have sent Fortinbras's head on a spike back to his silly sister-regent. She might have miscarried the arrogant whelp who even tonight paces at our very borders, sniffing like a hound that scents blood.

That part, too, missing, cut from the tale as pages from a book. He pours the vial in the sleeping king's ear, snatches up the crown, and beskue, he's the king now. No electoral approval, no enemy at the gates, no prince uninterested and untrained in statecraft, hundreds of miles away. 

And no player-brother looking into the player-queen's eyes, seeing what she needed and knew not how to ask for. Telling her that he'd done it for her, her above all. And that joy at finally being seen, desired, valued, welling up and flowing out, washing away the crime to make the land green and soft once again.

Shall I tell him this? Will he even listen? There's a clattering below; even through the heavy door the sounds of shouting, of nonsensical notes played on a pipe still come through, though I must hold my breath to hear them over the air pounding my ears. He will come; he dare not fail to come. I can be patient; I can wait. 

I waited three decades for him who my son calls uncle. Does it not strike you as odd that the player-brother skulked around for thirty years before finally pouring his poison? Clever and daring as he is, do you not think he would have found a way to get crown and queen much earlier than that, perhaps even while the princeling was but a boy? And that player-queen, a lad in his twenties with evening stubble showing through his paint...the kind who play old women! I have filled and rounded with the years and am no longer the stick of a girl shuttled off to a distant territory while my brother Wyglef was crowned king of our land. I shall tell my son that some women ripen like apples in their autumn, that not all are like that simpering girl who her father hopes to marry to him. The foolish thing has probably yielded to him already, though surely not out of lust; she thinks more of having coaches and servants than of the poetry he writes to her. It would suit her foolish old father's ambitions for her belly to swell with a prince's seed. As if farming out semi-royal bastards weren't a tradition.

Indeed, I have conjured the old fishmonger, for when I open the door to call for another pitcher, he is waiting outside, ready to scuttle in here to blather something about how a queen should address her own son.  He thinks I cannot speak. But if I can get him off-balance at the beginning, I can best him. I know him. Once when the nurse had a fever I held him to my own teat, his small wrinkled lips smacking and sucking for hours until the milk finally came. I will be strong yet sorrowful, will shame him for this dishonor to his father and to me.

Because, since I cannot bear a falsehood, or even a guilty secret, I must amend my earlier words: I waited three decades to marry him. But I did not wait for his pleasure, or mine. He was away so much, fighting alongside the English, overseeing the Jutish regions, that we seldom had a night steal together after that first time. And it wasn't adultery; the night before I pledged my troth to Horwendil, Feng came to my outer chamber - I no longer remember on what excuse - to find me weeping with fear and loneliness. He comforted me. The next night I was still raw, and bled a little, which satisfied my husband. And late that autumn, my son was born. He has never thought to wonder at his own copper-gold hair against his father's sable. Before my own hair turned the color of old pewter (which in truth goes well with my skin and makes my eyes like the sea on a cloudy day), it was pale as well.

The portraits waver a little; does one move? No, up close they're simply paint on wood. Two brothers. One's beard may be copper-gold and the other's sable, though the brows, noses, and cheekbones are similar. My son thinks he is very clever, and he's largely right. But he fails to see what is in front of him while he flails after phantoms.

The pitcher one last time. The two faces look on, and I know not what either would say to me now. My own face, tinted the color of blood rubies, looks at me from the swirling cup and then drains away.

I hear him coming.
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