Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
reached out desperately to the one for whom she must not plead, clinging
to the last blind hope, which he also must cling to, that the little King, his
nephew and friend, would save him.
But if the eleven-year-old boy felt anything he gave no sign. He
attended to his common round of business and pleasure and authorised
the Admiral’s execution with the absolute indifference he might have
been expected to show at the extermination of a rat. He was disciplined,
self-contained, and unemotional, a credit to his teachers, a model of
virtue; and a travesty of a child. The malleable boy had been transformed
into a pretentious little prig, overburdened with the weight of his own
royal dignity and unhealthily preoccupied with the spiritual welfare of
his people. Under the guardianship of the Lord Protector, Edward had
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gained stature and lost humanity; and no one was more shocked than
Elizabeth to witness the result. She knew, in her own heart, that her
brother would have authorised her execution, had it come to it, as easily
as he had authorised the Lord Admiral’s—to whom he had also owed
love and loyalty. It was chilling knowledge from which grew the prin-
ciples that were to rule the rest of her life: love no one, trust no one, for
all affection is false.
The terse, cold comment which would guarantee life to herself and her
servants lay unfurled in her mind like an open scroll. For thirteen endless
days she waited for the moment to use it, but beyond that moment her
mind was a dull blank.
She sat alone at her writing desk staring into the fire until at last her
eyes were too heavy to stay open. Her head slipped down on to her
satin sleeve and she fell asleep, plunging down, down into an endless
dark corridor where there was no hope of light. She was alone, more
alone than she would be even in her coffin, surrounded by the darkness,
sobbing for Kat. But no one came, no one would ever come.
It was wet on the floor where she huddled. She put out her fingers
and felt the wetness. It was warm to her touch, viscid, somehow familiar.
Blood!
She recoiled and began to scrabble in the darkness, seeking escape.
And then her fingers, clawing outwards, touched the object that lay across
her path and she saw where all the blood had come from. There was no
light, but she saw his dismembered head—bleeding a river to drown her!
A log fell into the hearth and she started awake with a strangled gasp,
listening to her own heartbeat drumming wildly in her ears. The door
behind her opened and as she looked round unwillingly. Lady Tyrwhitt’s
personal maid bobbed an insolent curtsey.
“Sir Robert requests your presence in the Great Hall, madam.”
Elizabeth rose from her chair in a numb daze and somehow the dark
little room swam away, exchanged itself for the broad stairway and the
great panelled chamber which was full of Tyrwhitt’s people. There was
some muted whispering and nudging as she crossed slowly to the hearth
where Sir Robert and his wife stood in gloating triumph. They described
the Lord Admiral’s execution in meticulous detail, hoping to shock a
response that would justify their wasted weeks of persecution. But she
had already lived through every step of this, every look and gesture and
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word. Her eyes met theirs in a steady unwavering stare and her hard little
voice rang clearly through the cold air.
“Today died a man of much wit, but very little judgement.”
She felt the ripple of astonishment from the intently listening audience
behind her, saw the Tyrwhitts glance at each other in shock, indignation,
and disbelief at her callousness. But it did not matter; nothing mattered
now. She had fought for her life and the lives of her servants and she had
won. Now it seemed there was nothing left worth fighting for and the
angry spirit which had sustained her through her ordeal went out, like a
candle in her mind, leaving her cold and empty and totally spent.
They went on talking to her, asking questions, but their words had
lost the power to hurt. She found it difficult to concentrate on them, for
a numb exhaustion had closed in around her, shutting her off from that
world of mouthing dolls which suddenly seemed so absurdly shrunken
and insignificant. Like a beleaguered castle her mind was husbanding its
resources, boarding every window, locking every door, shutting down
unnecessary functions.
She went upstairs slowly and found her old nurse, Blanche Parry,
waiting for her. It was the first time since the arrival of Tyrwhitt that
she had seen any of her own servants, but now she looked at the woman
blankly, almost without recognition. She allowed herself to be undressed
and put to bed without argument.
And that was the last she remembered for a long, long time.
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Chapter 7
I
n hatfield park the old palace stood silent in the pale spring
sunlight. The courtyards had been empty for weeks now, and in
the stables Elizabeth’s favourite gelding tossed his head and whinnied his
protest at his mistress’s continued absence. Grooms exercised him now,
once a day, careless young lads who were paid to do it and never stroked
his nose or brought him fresh apples. His eyes were dull and sad, and his
coat was beginning to lose some of its satin sheen.
“Reckon he’s pining,” said one of the older hands, and at that everyone
in the stable glanced furtively up at the red brick mansion and away again,
before going silently about their duties once more.
Inside the house, Sir Robert Tyrwhitt said, “I quite agree, Mistress
Parry, it’s gone on long enough. I shall send to London at once,” and
stormed down the turret staircase to his own apartments.
“Well?” said his wife, rising from the window-seat, a shade less
composed than usual. “What do you think, Robert?”
Tyrwhitt shut the door with a bang; on his face was the blustering
belligerence of a very frightened man.
“I think,” he said unpleasantly, “that if we’re not very careful now,
you and I are likely to be facing a hanging mob.” He took an angry turn
up and down the room, then paused to add peevishly, “Of course, if I’d
had my way I’d have sent for Dr. Bill long ago—but, oh no, you knew
best, you were the expert. Nothing to worry about, you said, she’s only
sulking, she’ll get over it. And now—God’s blood, woman—she’s like
a skeleton.”
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“I can’t force her to eat,” said his wife defensively. “I’m not to blame
if she wants to starve herself.”
“Yes—well, you tell that to the Protector and see what he has to say
if she dies on him, a few bare weeks after the people have been told she’s
innocent. We’re responsible for her—a perfect pair of scapegoats, don’t
you see it? I can tell you this, if the worst happens you and I won’t be able
to show ourselves in London for a very long time. It will probably cost
me my seat on the Council—”
Lady Tyrwhitt was pale and shaken as she went to the table and set out
pen and ink and a sandcaster.
“You’d better write then,” she said and sat down anxiously beside him
to watch.
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The Protector reacted to the news of Elizabeth’s grave condition with
alarm and cast about frantically for anything that might hasten her
recovery, sending his personal physician, a host of kind wishes, and a
letters patent guaranteeing her estates and income.
The death of his brother had seriously damaged his standing with the
common people, who had previously fallen into the habit of calling him
“the Good Duke.” There were rumours of unrest all over the country
and he was aware of John Dudley’s increasing influence at the council
table. Certainly, if he was to have any hope of outriding the opposi-
tion gathering steadily against him, the girl’s death was the last thing he
wanted on his hands.
When the trim, dapper little figure of his personal physician was
shown into his private study, he was waiting at his desk with ill-concealed
anxiety. He waved irritably as the doctor prefaced business with a courtly
bow and correct inquiries after his own health.
“Oh, there’s nothing wrong with me, man!” He gnawed his lip and
gestured the physician into a chair. “What news from Hatfield?”
Dr. Bill leaned back in his chair and examined his master shrewdly.
The Duke was pale and strained and obviously nervous; he did not believe
that statement that all was well.
“Don’t sit there gawking—get on with it. I’m a busy man—a very
busy man. You know that.”
The doctor cleared his throat and looked ill at ease.
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“My lord will recall that I attended the Princess in the autumn. Since
that time circumstances—unhappy circumstances—have exacerbated her
condition to a serious degree. It was most unfortunate—” He broke off
abruptly under the Protector’s icy glance.
“Most unfortunate that I was obliged to execute her lover!” snapped
the Duke in furious interruption. “Well, it wasn’t a move which gave
me any particular pleasure either, contrary to public opinion. And I
don’t want your moral judgement, merely your professional opinion on
the girl’s health—so stop your damned hedging and come out with what
you think.”
“My lord—” The doctor hesitated. “My lord, I anticipate neither a
swift nor complete recovery.”
The Duke swallowed and found his throat as dry as a bone. His hand
fumbled out absently to a flagon of wine but he lacked the concentration
to pour it.
“God’s blood!” he muttered feverishly. “Are you trying to say you
expect her to
die
?”
“I am trying to say, my lord,” replied the doctor defensively, “that it
is possible.”
The Protector leapt to his feet suddenly and began to stalk wildly about
the room as though rapid movement might prevent this unwelcome news
from catching up with him.
At last he burst out angrily, “But she’s young—she’s strong—three
times as healthy as her brother, or her sister for that matter. And nobody
dies these hard days of a broken heart, least of all a Tudor, a heartless,
self-sufficient brood if ever I saw one.” He stopped and looked accusingly
at the man opposite. “So what possible reason can you give me for such
an extreme forecast?”
“My lord, she has lost interest in all that life has to offer. Unless she
can be aroused from her melancholy she will simply slip away—I would
stake my entire career on it.”
The Duke sat down abruptly and chewed his thumbnail.
“If this gets out among the common people it will finish me—God
knows, as it is there could be revolt at any moment.” He clenched his fist
and then suddenly banged it on the table with a peevish blow that made
all his papers jump and scatter. “Well—you’re the physician, God damn
you, suggest a cure! What else do I pay you for?”
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“My lord—return her governess and steward without delay. That is
all I can suggest.”
The Duke frowned at his inkwells. After a moment he said in a slow,
puzzled tone, “I should have thought they were the last people she would
want to see again.”
Dr. Bill shrugged slightly, hunching his stooped shoulders together.
“Logic is not necessary to love and loyalty, my lord. I believe their
return to be imperative to her survival.”
“Oh, very well—very well—whatever you think will help.” The
Duke waved his hand impatiently. He seemed suddenly preoccupied,
staring inwards, seeing the memory of his royal nephew calmly and cold-
bloodedly handing him the Admiral’s death warrant. Whatever crimes
Tom had committed, he had always been unfailingly good to the boy
and yet the King had never questioned that last act, had never shown so
much as a qualm of conscience. It was unnerving and it caused the Duke
to know what little loyalty he himself could expect from Edward. All his
service—less self-seeking than it often appeared to observers—had been
wasted on that small waxen doll, who had shown himself to be without
heart or compassion.
“I am a friend not won with trifles nor lost with the like.”
That single line
stood out from all Elizabeth’s correspondence to his brother and filled
him with a moment of poignant regret for the love and loyalty that he
would never know.
All his schemes, his hopes and fears seemed suddenly diminished,
almost insignificant; he knew at last, without reservation or even self-
interest, he desired above all things that she should live.
He rose and grasped the doctor’s hand, wringing it hard, with all the
moody petulance suddenly gone from his face and his voice.
“My friend,” he said hoarsely, “for love of me go back to Hatfield and
do all you can.”
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