Then Bruno drew aside the heavy curtain decorated with gold embroidery. We were in a small holy of holies and facing us was the Madonna.
Kate caught her breath in wonder for she was beautiful. She was carved out of marble but her cape was of real lace and she was wearing a flowing gown of some thick embroidered material. This gown was aflame with the most glittering jewels imaginable. It was dazzling. Rubies, emeralds, diamonds and pearls had been fixed onto it. I remember thinking how heavy it must be. The Madonna's hands had been beautifully carved and rings glittered on her fingers. There were diamonds, sapphires and pearls in the bracelets which adorned her arms. But it was her crown which was almost blinding in its brilliance. In the center of this glittered an enormous diamond; and about this was clustered gems of all colors.
I thought to myself Kate will have to admit that the Madonna is richer and more sparkling than the new Queen on the way to her coronation.
Kate clasped her hands in ecstasy. She had never seen such jewels. She wanted to touch the jeweled robe but Bruno restrained her.
"You daren't. You would be struck dead," he said.
And even Kate drew back.
Having proved his point Bruno was now eager to get us out of the chapel; and I think that we were anxious to go although it was difficult to take one's eyes from that glittering figure.
Cautiously we tiptoed out, and how relieved Bruno was when he turned the key in the lock. The journey through the stone corridors seemed almost an anticlimax after being in the sacred chapel. If we were caught we would be reprimanded but he would not mention that we had seen the Madonna. We instinctively knew that in looking on that we had committed a greater sin than by merely trespassing into the Abbey.
We came out into the open and hurried to our secret meeting place. Bruno threw himself onto the ground, face downward. He was shaken by what he had done. Kate was silent; I guessed she was thinking of herself wearing that jeweled crown. But even she was subdued as we went home.
MURDER AT THE ABBEY
OUTSIDE events had thrust themselves upon us now, intruding into our home, destroying its peace. Even my mother could not escape from this. My father said the very foundations of the Church were shaken. Brother John and Brother James sat in the garden with him; they talked in whispers, their voices grave. My father talked to me as he always did. He wanted me to know what was going on and as he said to me often: "You are not a frivolous girl, Damask. You are not like Kate, concerned with ribbons and frills.
We live in dangerous times.”
I knew of the tragedy surrounding our neighbors, the Mores. Sir Thomas had made clear his refusal to sign the Oath of Supremacy which was an admission that the King was Head of the Church as well as State and that his marriage to Queen Katharine of Aragon had been no marriage; it was an admission that the heirs the King might have by Queen Anne Boleyn were the true heirs. And Lady Mary, Katharine's daughter, illegitimate.
"I am afraid for Sir Thomas, Damask," said my father. "He is a brave man and will adhere to his principles whatever evil may befall him. He has, as you know, been taken to the Tower by way of the Traitors' Gate and I greatly fear we may never see him again.”
There was infinite sadness in my father's face and fear too.
"Such a sad household it is now, Damask," he went on, "and you know full well what a merry one it once was. Poor Dame Alice, she is bewildered and angry. She doesn't understand. 'Why does he have to be obstinate?' she keeps asking. 'I say to him, Master More, you are a fool.' Poor Alice, she never did understand her brilliant saint of a husband. And there is Meg. Oh, Damask, it breaks my heart to see poor Meg. She is his favorite daughter and none closer to him than Meg. Meg is like a poor lost soul, and I thank God she has a good husband in Will Roper to comfort her.”
"Father, if he would sign the Oath this need not be." "If he signed the Oath it would be to him as though he had betrayed his God. He has been a good servant to the King but as he has said to me, 'William, I am the King's servant, but God's first.
"And yet because of this they are so unhappy.”
"You will understand when you are older, Damask. Oh, how I wish you were a little older. I wish you were of Meg's age.”
I wondered why Father wished I was older then; and I understood later.
I remember the day Bishop Fisher was executed. Then there were the monks of the Charterhouse who were most cruelly killed. They were drawn to the place of their execution, hanged and cut down when alive and fearful agonies inflicted on them. That day Brother John and Brother James came to see my father. I heard Brother John say: "What is to become of us, William? What is to become of us all?”