Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
of the Guard, it had been his duty to stand and watch while Essex’s
blood was spilt on the scaffold. Essex had been his enemy, but Raleigh
had a heart beneath his cold mask of pride and he, more than any
other, guessed what the Queen must feel. He looked at her with silent
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sympathy, white-faced beneath a red wig which seemed harsh and garish
in comparison. He had never seen her look so old, nor her dark eyes so
desolate; he wondered how much longer she would be able to maintain
that rigorous self-control.
When she rose stiffly, he offered his arm and she laid her hand on the
white ruffle at his wrist with a look that might mean gratitude. They
moved apart to the fireplace, where he threw some more logs into the
fire; her hand on his had been chill as ice.
“Shall I send for wine, madam—aqua vitae?” he said, very low, but she
shook her head slowly. She was staring at him, with haunted eyes.
“You saw him die?” she asked at last, still quiet and controlled,
betraying nothing.
“Yes, madam—he met his death with calm and courage, repenting his
error and his treatment of you.”
“Was it—” There was tremor in her voice now. “Was it clean and
quick?”
He hesitated. It was useless to lie. She would only find out later and be
enraged that he had deceived her.
He shook his head faintly. “Three blows of the axe, madam.”
Three blows! Three blows to kill the Scottish Queen and the Admiral,
a man of much wit and very little judgement. Like Essex!
She said, very low, for his ears only, “It should have been a sword.”
“Madam—” He laid a hand on her arm in concern. She had the grey,
glazed look of shock, a look he remembered seeing before now on the
faces of men who had lost a limb in battle and only afterwards begun to
register the pain.
“My thoughts are not for sharing,” she said dully. “You may leave me
to them.”
He bowed reluctantly, leaving her sitting alone by the hearth, staring
into the fire with fixed eyes.
The flames were leaping and dancing on the spitting logs, making a
strange shifting landscape of light and dark.
She felt as though she was staring into the deepest pit in Hell.
t t t
In his dull little study Sir Robert Cecil sat and dealt with the vast corre-
spondence on his cluttered desk. When the door opened to admit the
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Captain of the Guard, he unobtrusively slid a letter into the darkest recess
of an open drawer and pushed it closed. He had no desire for Raleigh to
catch a glimpse of his secret correspondence with the King of Scotland,
England’s obvious, but unnamed, heir presumptive. It was littered with
one or two darkly subtle hints that the notorious Sir Walter Raleigh, wit,
poet, and adventurer
par excellence
, was unlikely to prove King James’s
loyalest subject in the future. Cecil had no intention of sharing power
in the next reign with the flamboyant adventurer who had once been
his best friend. He was obsessed with the future and his own part in it;
and the future, as Cecil saw it, was King James. With Elizabeth he was
merely marking time, waiting with carefully concealed impatience for the
moment when that remarkable old bitch would drop dead.
He looked up now and smiled as Raleigh lowered himself stiffly into
a chair, easing the old wound in his thigh which was his personal legacy
of Essex’s exploits at Cadiz. Cecil’s physical disabilities had ruled out
any possibility of vigorous military activity when he was no more than a
boy, dreaming of conquering the world by himself. Now he saw Raleigh
bite his lip at a stab of pain and felt a faint throb of malicious pleasure
to see this magnificently-built man at the mercy of a physical weakness
which would cause him to limp for the rest of his life—however long
that life should be. He had not rid himself of Essex simply to put a more
dangerous and able man in his place and, sooner or later, Cecil mused
quietly, cold-bloodedly, it might be necessary to dispose of Raleigh too.
King James had a most unhealthy preference for strong, virile men and
Raleigh would always bear watching. Certainly he stood high in favour
with Elizabeth once more, his marriage forgotten if not forgiven, the last
of the men who remembered her with passionate friendship from the
autumn days when she had still been a handsome woman.
“To what do I owe this unexpected pleasure?” Cecil inquired at last,
turning to cast an eye over his papers in a desultory fashion. “I thought
this hour would have seen you with the Queen.”
Raleigh frowned and began to peel the feathers of a freshly cut
quill from the neatly tied stack which stood in a pewter holder on the
Secretary’s desk. “Lady Warwick tells me she has shut herself up in a
darkened room where she weeps alone and calls on Essex’s name.”
“Oh?” Cecil glanced at the ivory clock on his chimney-piece and
compressed his lips in a tight, humourless little smile. “Now, let me see—”
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He studied his papers thoughtfully and patted the stack in front of him.
“If that runs true to form we can expect her to emerge from her room
some time this afternoon, reduce her women to tears, and then settle to
state affairs shortly before dusk. I don’t suppose I’ll see my bed before
dawn in that case—thank heaven there’s nothing here that can’t wait till
this evening. It would be so much more convenient if she confined these
morbid frenzies to the hours of darkness.” He saw Raleigh raise his dark
eyebrows and he shrugged his hunched shoulders indifferently. “There’s
a great deal that requires her attention—the show must go on, you know,
even if the principal actor is no longer up to the role. Have you noticed
how violent her moods are growing? I can tell you I don’t much care for
the way she keeps that sword beside her all the time, as though she expects
an assassin behind every curtain. She gave me a nasty fright the other day,
leaping out of her chair and plunging it into the arras, then coming back
to the table and taking up our conversation just where it had left off. I
scarcely knew where to put myself. Not the first time it’s happened either,
I understand. If she keeps on like this, there’ll be no tapestries left in the
Privy Chamber. It will cost the devil to replace them—”
Raleigh looked at him steadily, with a flicker of dislike and disgust.
“It doesn’t trouble you at all does it, Cecil—witnessing the slow
disintegration of the finest mind in Europe? For my own part I find it
remarkably painful to watch.”
“Her Majesty’s mind has always been beyond a mere mortal like
myself,” said Cecil calmly. “I have never presumed to understand her.
As long as she remains capable of transacting state business that is all that
concerns me. I’m surprised it concerns you so much—I never marked
you as a sentimental man for all your poetry. And you’ve felt her injustice
more than once—look at your marriage.”
Raleigh lifted his elegant shoulders.
“I knew the price, I chose to pay it, that’s all. I could never complain
she didn’t make the risks quite clear.
“Fain would I climb but that I fear to fall…”
Cecil sighed. Everyone knew how Raleigh had once scratched that on
a window with a diamond ring to test the Queen’s affection. And how
the Queen had written below it:
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“If thy heart fail thee, then climb not at all.”
He considered it vain and ostentatious of Raleigh to draw attention
to the occasion and now said coldly, “I see you did not take her advice.
You climbed and you fell. Was it truly worth the effort to climb again?”
Raleigh smiled absently into the fire.
“My wife’s question—almost, my wife’s tone. You are surprisingly
like her and half the wives in England—jealous of the Queen.”
“Jealous—
I
, jealous?”
Raleigh turned in his chair to look at Cecil shrewdly.
“You hold no place in her heart. Do you suppose no one has ever
guessed what eats you from within, Robert?”
Cecil’s hand clenched on the desk in front of him. Raleigh would
never know it, but in that quiet, unguarded moment, he had uttered
words which would lead him relentlessly to the block in the next reign.
“She cared for
you,”
Cecil said at last, controlling his cold outrage.
“And little enough you have to show for it, apart from Sherbourne and
a justly bitter wife.”
Raleigh shrugged, twirled the quill between his fine fingers.
“‘
She gave, she took, she wounded, she appeased
,’” he quoted softly.
“Aye,” snapped Cecil. “To all her lovers.”
“England was her lover,” murmured Raleigh, suddenly lost in
thought. “The rest of us were shadows—mirror images—even Leicester!
She spurned us like spaniels and made us all fawn upon her. And then
Essex broke the mirror, shattered her world. To see her mourn, one
would think she had killed her own child—”
He fell silent, his dark face etched with lines of grief which goaded
Cecil into real rage. That a man as hard and intelligent as Raleigh should
still sit there immortalising his cruel goddess in verse was beyond bearing.
She is old, he wanted to shout, old,
old
! Can’t you see it?
But Cecil had never been admitted to the magic circle of her intimacy
and the knowledge was a poisonous awareness of inferiority in his galled
heart. He was forever on the outside looking in, of insufficient personal
stature to gain entry to her heart.
Little man
, she called him—and now he
would never know, never understand the secret of her charm, so envied
by all, so fatal to some.
“What was she to you?” he burst out unexpectedly in a tone of bitter
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frustration that made Raleigh glance at him with quick surprise. There
was a moment’s uneasy silence while Raleigh chewed the feathers of the
quill, considering the question.
“She was my friend,” he said at last, softly, looking inward, “the only
woman who has ever been that to me. She struck sparks from my mind.
Even my wife, dear as she is to me—and dearly bought—even she could
never do that. A whole era dies with her, my friend—an era, the like of
which will not be seen in England again.”
“So”—a light lit suddenly in Cecil’s eyes—“you also think the end
is near.”
Raleigh sighed.
“She puts me in mind of a candle flickering in a draught. She may go
out at any moment or burn on indefinitely.”
“God forbid,” muttered Cecil to that last, and hastily covered it with a
cough. He picked up the ragged quill that Raleigh had carelessly dropped
on his desk, disposed of it methodically in the paper-basket at his side. He
could not bear things out of place.
“I only hope your candle can produce one more flare,” he continued
with a wry smile. “The writs for Parliament go out next week and given
the present mood in London I’d say it’s likely to be the most mutinous
session she’s ever been driven to hold. She’ll need to play an ace this time
and no mistake. I pray she can rouse herself sufficiently to do it.”
Raleigh was silent and his wordly eyes were sad; like Cecil, he had
very little hope of seeing such a miracle take place.
t t t
She had killed his body, but the martyred memory of Essex lingered
on, almost more powerful in death than it had been in life. The wind
on the streets whispered his name with sad and reverent sighs, while in
the taverns new songs sprang up to mourn him in the maudlin clink of
tankards and the acrid haze of tobacco smoke.
“Sweet England’s pride is gone…” sang the men who had not troubled
to join his rebellion, yet viciously condemned those who had brought
him down: Cecil, Raleigh—and the Queen. The death of Essex had
cast a shadow over the crown and a slow, moody questioning of the
sovereign’s rights had begun to gather momentum.
Elizabeth was acutely aware of it and the knowledge weighed heavy
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on her heart at a time when there was much to cause her anxiety. Tyrone
had received his Spanish troops and she was in desperate straits to finance
Mountjoy, her new Lord Deputy in Ireland. She had sold land and jewels
and forced loans from niggardly allies in France and the Netherlands. But
it was not enough. She was forced to turn reluctantly to the one source
of income she had instinctively sought to avoid throughout her reign.
And so it was that in October, Parliament gathered to consider her
request for the extraordinary measure of taxation.
t t t
She thought of this Parliament as Pandora’s box; she did not want to
open it for fear of what she would release. But autocracy would not
serve her now, nor would age and increasing infirmity excuse her the
ordeal of a public appearance, a slow, jolting journey past sullen crowds,