I was not sorry. Did I not owe everything to this generous woman who had so much love in her heart, who had a spirit strong as a mighty oak, as soft as the feathers on a dove’s breast? She had seen enough in me to lift me from obscurity to my strange life in the royal household. I owed her everything. No, I was not sorry to sit with her as her life ebbed.

“Is Isabella here?” she asked.

“No, my lady. She is in France with her husband.”

“Of course.” Philippa’s lips tried ineffectually to smile. “I’m astonished she hasn’t washed her hands of him.” She managed a breath of a laugh. Then: “Where is Lionel…? Ah, no…I remember now.…” Tears sprang to her eyes, for her beloved Lionel was dead. In the wine-fueled aftermath of a glorious marriage in Italy to the Visconti heiress, Lionel had succumbed to some nameless fever. Philippa sighed. “I am so weary, Alice.…”

I bathed her face and lips, my mind gripped with fear.

“Read to me from my missal. The prayer to the Virgin…”

So I did, and it gave her comfort.

“Am I dying, Alice?” The assent stuck in my throat. “I see it in your face. Tell me this, if the first reply is too hard. Will it be long now?”

“No, Majesty. It will not be long.”

“Bless you. You have always been honest. Is the King still in England?”

“Yes, my lady. He is in London—at the Tower.”

“I need him.” Her breath barely stirred the air. “Send for him. Tell him…tell him not to delay.”

“I will, Your Majesty. Immediately.”

“Will Edward blame me?” she wept. “For diverting him from his duties in France?”

“No, my lady.” I wiped away the tears from her cheeks, a task that she was unable to do for herself. How could I not weep with her? “The King will never blame you. He loves you more than life. The King would never forgive you if you did not tell him how you suffered.”

I thought about Edward’s sense of duty. It was what I admired in him. When the French had marched into Ponthieu and threatened the security of Gascony itself, Edward had abandoned his policy of peaceful coexistence and begun to plan for a new war, reclaiming his relinquished title of King of France. Some might whisper that he was too old to plan such a sustained invasion—not like the old days—but what choice did a man of such pride have? The Prince, still laid low, remained too weak to lead an army, so therefore Edward must resume the mantle of command. He was King. All that he had achieved in his lifetime must not be thrown away. So in that very month, he had sent John of Gaunt to Calais. Edward and an army would follow. Even now he was at the Tower, organizing the invasion.

But now he would not. He would come to Philippa’s side, whatever the cost. England’s power in France would weigh lightly in the balance if the Queen was in need. I prayed he would be in time. The shade of death squatted in the shadows in the corner of the room, obscene in its presence, growing stronger as the days passed.

Edward arrived by royal barge that beat its way against the tide along the Thames, and I went down to the landing stage with others of the household to greet him. Perhaps to warn him a little. I had not seen him for six weeks, and the change in him was unmistakable.

Oh, I doubt it was noticeable to a subject who simply saw the outer glory of the King of England. Still fair and upright, still handsome with regal presence, he had a smile and a word for those who had rowed him from the Tower. His tunic flattered his broad shoulders. The golden lions stitched against the red were truly resplendent, and the sun gilded his hair as the barge was maneuvered into the river landing.

But I was aware of the change from the moment he stood up from his seat at the stern. Once, he would have stood for the whole journey, dignified but approachable, the leader of his people, to see and be seen. Now he sat. Furthermore—I saw it even if no one else did—he took his page’s arm as he stepped from barge to land, not heavily but enough to give him stability. He stretched as if his limbs were stiff, and his first strides were uneven. The lines around eyes and mouth were more deeply engraved than when I had kissed him farewell. Oh, Edward! How grief and the passage of years can leave their mark. How the burden of duty can wear away the body’s resilience. My first thought was to go to him, to kiss away the sorrow that darkened his eyes, but I kept my distance. This was no time for greetings from the King’s lover. I had no place in this homecoming, and I knew nothing I could do would assuage Edward’s suffering. For a moment I wished I had not come, but stayed at the Queen’s side, where I had an acknowledged role. And I felt a cold foreboding for the coming days.

No Queen. No place. No position. No reason for Alice Perrers to remain at Court.

I pushed away the bleak thought as fast as it assaulted me. Nothing new here, merely the imminent inevitability of it. Now, in this moment, all that mattered was Edward’s reunion with his stricken wife.

The steward bowed. I curtsied. Edward acknowledged the waiting group of courtiers. I actually took a step backward, but the King’s eyes sought me out.

“Mistress Perrers.”

“Your Majesty.”

“Speak to me of my wife.” His voice was low and harsh with unshed tears. “She is dying?”

“Yes, Sire.”

“Does she know?”

“She is aware. She regretted asking you to come.”

“I could not leave her. How could I? She is everything to me.”

“Yes, Sire.”

I swallowed hard. The heartrending affirmation could not have made my situation clearer. I stepped back again as the King turned to stride up the steps toward the castle, his vigor restored with the urgency to get to Philippa’s side before it was too late. But he halted with his foot on the bottom step and looked back.

“Come with me. She will need you.”

And although I shrank from the task, I obeyed.

So I was witness to their reunion. It hit me harder than I could have imagined, illuminating as it did the lack in my own life. The love shone between them, undiminished by death. Briefly the image of William de Windsor stole into my mind, whether I wished it or not—typical of the man himself. There was something between us, but nothing like this. I could not imagine love like this, beyond the physical, beyond the passage of time. Philippa raised her hand from the bed linen and placed it into the hand of the King, her lord and her love. Edward fell to his knees at her side.

“Dear Edward. You came.” The words were slurred but I heard the pleasure in them.

“Did you ever doubt that I would?”

“No—Alice said you would come.” She glanced momentarily to where I stood beside the door, but I had no importance for her. All her focus was on the man at her side. “What a marriage we have had. All these years.”

“I would wed you again. Tomorrow. This very minute.” Edward smoothed the thinning, matted hair back from her brow.

“And you have as much charm as ever.” The gasp might have been a laugh.

“You are all I ever wanted.”

The words struck me with such force that I stepped back against the tapestry—I could feel the stitching and the underlying stone solid against my back—to give them space. You should not be here! My conscience was implacable.

“When we are separated…” I heard the Queen whisper.

“No!”

“When we are separated,” she repeated, “will you grant me three requests, my dear lord?”

Edward inhaled. “Lady. Whatever you ask, it will be done.”

“Then—settle my debts. I can’t bear that they be left unpaid.”

“You always were extravagant.”

The gentleness in Edward’s reply caused my tears to overflow.

“I know. Will you do it? And then fulfill the gifts and bequests I’ve made.”

“I will.”

“And at the last—Edward, my love, will you lie beside me in Westminster Abbey when your time on earth is finished?”

“Yes. I will.”

Edward bent his brow to her hand. They remained like that, the room still about them, and I left them to their solitude, closing the door quietly. They did not notice. They did not need me.

I walked unseeing through the antechambers, making my way to climb to the deserted wall walk. My thoughts were appallingly self-absorbed, but I could not redirect them. I wept for the two I had just left, but where would I lie when I was dead? Who would lie beside me, at his or my request? I was as alone and friendless as I had always been, except for this fast-fading woman and her broken husband. Who could I call friend in the royal household? No one. Who would even have a thought for me? William de Windsor might—but his was a self-interest as strong as mine. Wykeham would condemn me.

So I wept out of grief for Philippa and Edward and myself. And out of fear of a future I could no longer see.

Her last moments came on the fifteenth day of August, when Wykeham gave the Queen the last sacrament. We were with her, Edward and young Thomas of Woodstock, and all her damsels, who wept bitter tears, as did the household, from falconer to meanest scullion. Philippa had left her mark on the lives of everyone who served her. I prayed for her comfort and her soul, touching for the final time her foot beneath the sumptuous bedcover with its embroidered sprawl of Plantagenet lions. Near the end, she raised her hand to beckon me, and whispered, her words barely stirring the air between us.

“Promise me!” she begged.

“I promise.”

Did she know what she had asked of me? Did she understand how heavy the burden would become? I think she did not, yet I would do it. I would continue to repay the debt I owed her.

The King held the Queen’s hand as she drew her final breaths, and kissed her forehead.