Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
give that life. It was the only way to repay the debt she owed, perhaps had
always owed from the moment of her birth. She would justify her birth
and her existence that had cost so many lives, her own mother’s among
them. Bloodshed and waste, bitter controversy and religious war had
attended her entry to this world. But she could atone for it by becoming
the greatest monarch in the history of her country. She could atone for it
all when she was Queen—and she
would
be Queen. Suddenly, for the first
time, she was sure of it. She had been right to hold her ground, to refuse
Savoy, to spurn hope of sanctuary and safety.
The people pressed about her litter in hope and she swore in that
moment never to betray their trust. Now when she was only twenty,
when her coronation might be ten, even twenty, years ahead, when the
world had narrowed to the short distance between one prison and another,
she could swear to do it. Now, surrounded by guards, without benefit of
an abbey and choirs and candles, without the holy oil of the annointing
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and the high solemn voices—now in the midst of a hot, loving crowd she
took the final vow of service.
t t t
All semblance of a royal progress ended at their destination.
The old stone palace of Woodstock stood on a small slope, surrounded
on all sides by enormous trees. Even from a distance Elizabeth could see
the broken windows and the crumbling stonework. The privy gardens
were choked and overgrown with weeds and the countryside littered
with uprooted trees. Winter was evidently unkind in this area.
Bruised and weary from the constant jolting of the broken litter,
Elizabeth stood on the uncut grass and stared with horrified disbelief at
the dilapidated building. It had not been in use as a royal residence for
many years and it was not difficult to see why.
Bedingfield escorted her to the primitive little gatehouse, where he
told her four rooms had been prepared for her use.
“
Prepared
?” Elizabeth blew on the chimney-piece and a thick cloud of
dust flew up into his heavy face.
“I can’t stay here—the damp is running down the walls.”
He glanced in a cursory fashion at the mildewed tapestries and the
paltry furniture. A fierce draught blew in through a broken window and
the ancient rushes were alive with cockroaches.
“I shall see what can be done about the window, madam, but I have
no orders to lodge Your Grace elsewhere in the meantime.”
She bit her lip and turned away. Mary had been right—she had been
a great deal better off in the Tower! She sat down wearily on the rickety
window-seat and stared out at the bleak countryside through the hole
in the dirty green glass. Dimly she became aware of Bedingfield’s angry
voice in the next chamber.
“How can I be expected to keep her close confined if only three
doors out of the four can be locked? You—fetch me a locksmith from
the village—and you, arrange the rota for her guard. I want sixty soldiers
around the house by day and forty at night. I want—” He broke off
abruptly as he suddenly saw her standing in the doorway. “Your Grace
desires something? I shall send your ladies to attend you.”
He treated her as though she were a high-born leper, avoiding her
company and the touch of her hand on his. Her eyes narrowed as he
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bowed curtly and withdrew from the room; she had heard the tales about
him—taciturn, intractable, immune to all female charm.
So he thought he could safely keep his distance, did he?
We’ll see about that, gaoler! she thought. A month from now will see
you eating out of my hand like a tame wolfhound. You’ll go the way of
all the rest, my friend. I swear it!
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Chapter 2
P
hiilip of spain sat with stiff dignity beneath the canopy of
estate and his bride sat beside him. She was smiling and holding his
cold hand and chattering nervously like a young girl, though she was by
no means a girl, and he could see, with a flicker of mild distaste, that it
was some considerable time since she had been one—rather longer than
he had been led to believe by Renard and his father.
Grey spectacles of distaste had coloured Philip’s view of England since
the moment he landed in a summer downpour. Had he been a man
to show his feelings, he would be kicking his personal attendants in his
private apartments, strangling Renard, or maybe losing his frustration in
the soft curves of a whore’s body, on this, his last night of freedom. Instead
he sat here dutifully performing in this public peep-show, following the
Emperor’s orders to the letter, as always. No one could say he hadn’t
done his best—he always did his best. He had been impeccably charming
to these crude barbarians; he had drunk their foul beer, kissed the Queen
on her dry lips and tried not to notice that none of her simpering women
were on the right side of thirty. But all the time he was bored and
wretched and a little voice at the back of his mind whined persistently:
What have I done to deserve this?
The same thought found an echo in Mary’s mind, but on a note of
ecstasy rather than despair. She could not tear her eyes away from him,
this handsome symbol of her unity with Spain and the Catholic Church,
her husband—her
lover
! She kept him endlessly at her side, while they
conversed in broken foreign tongues, but at last, with her rigid sense of
Susan Kay
etiquette, she knew she could delay the moment of parting no longer.
One more night alone in the big state bed and then tomorrow—oh,
tomorrow!—she would be a woman at last.
“What shall I say?” His hand was on her arm, his bland face vaguely
anxious; he had a horror of losing his dignity in public, of being made to
look foolish and inadequate. “What shall I say to your court, madam, as I
take my leave—the correct form of address?”
His French was surprisingly poor, it took her a moment to follow his
meaning. And then she smiled gently.
“Goodnight, my lords and ladies,” she said slowly, in English.
He practised the phrase with grave persistence and Mary listened
indulgently. They had told her he was serious and moody, that he never
smiled, but he had smiled upon her tonight—smiled upon everyone. She
never noticed how cool and expressionless the china-blue eyes remained.
She thought only how truly Renard had spoken; they had indeed sent
her perfection itself !
Philip bowed courteously to the nobles of England and mumbled the
objectionable line; and at long last his duties for that day were behind him.
A lifetime of unremitting duty lay behind Philip, who had spent his
twenty-seven years mastering the rigid servitude of a Spanish prince. In all
of Europe there was no court which equalled the cold formality of Spain
and Philip had learned to subordinate his own personal desires beneath
the needs of the state. This would be his second marriage. The fruit of
the first remained behind in Spain—Don Carlos, a deformed, half-witted
creature of whom Philip was secretly bitterly ashamed. No one spoke
openly of Carlos’s disabilities because nobody dared to; but Philip knew
the Emperor looked now for a sane heir, rather than a gibbering lunatic.
He was stuck in this miserable, rain-sodden land until he produced the
goods and this time the raw materials were less than promising. A with-
ered old maid in place of the lusty little cousin he had first married—he
was frankly less than hopeful. He lay alone in his bed the night before his
wedding, stiff as a sacrificial offering on an altar, and wondered why God,
whom he had always served so faithfully, should have chosen to lay this
extra burden upon his shoulders.
For if he
had
to marry one of Henry Tudor’s misbegotten daughters,
surely it was only human to wish that it might have been the younger one.
t t t
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Winter crept on Woodstock, making the tumbledown palace bleaker and
more uncomfortable than ever. Sir Henry Bedingfield felt old and cold.
Seven months of his prisoner’s company had changed him almost beyond
recognition, into a weary elderly man pressingly aware of his years.
He had come to this post in full command of his faculties, a wooden,
uncompromising, vigorous knight who knew his orders and his own
mind. Accordingly, he had been quick to dismiss Elizabeth Sands, an
outspoken girl overready to complain on her mistress’s behalf. He had
believed that by exerting his authority so early and in so cavalier a fashion,
he would totally demoralise his prisoner. With the loss of her friend, she
was quite alone in a house full of unfriendly women and he ought, from
that time on, to have had little further trouble with her.
But the incident merely served to mark the beginning of his prob-
lems. Nothing cowed her. Nothing discouraged her endless, outra-
geous demands for one indulgence after another. She had even asked
for an English Bible, in spite of the Heresy Bill which was presently in
Parliament. He couldn’t understand her. She was like an irritating moth
flitting round him in a dark room and there was no way he could avoid
the touch of her wings against his face. Slowly he was being ground
down, reduced to a state of dithering mental anarchy which found him
“marvellously perplexed whether to grant her desires or say her nay.”
There were times when she flatly refused to speak to him. She would
withdraw to her room in a huff and against his will he would find himself
coaxing her out again, wooing her to walk in the gardens. Day after day
he scurried between her rooms and his own like a hunted lackey. Her
pitiful tears wrung his hard heart; her continual indispositions caused him
countless hours of anxiety; her outbursts of temper unnerved him. And
her smile—he had learnt to fear her smile above all else; it manipulated
him mercilessly. He was like a puppet dancing jerkily on the strings of her
emotions. She even persuaded him to act as her secretary and write her long
list of complaints to the Council in his own hand. Afterwards, he was in
such a flat panic at what he had done that he was forced to send a desperate
covering note with the document excusing, “this my evil writing, trusting
Her Highness will forgive my rudeness, and you, my lords, also.”
What had happened to him? He did not know. He only knew that he
was behaving like a fool and that all his letters to the Council marked him
as a very silly old man, so interminable and confused were they.
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He resorted frequently to his written commission from the Queen, by
now much thumbed and rather crumpled, seeking desperately for some
indication of where he had gone wrong.
“Item: he shall, at convenient times, suffer our said sister for her
recreation, to walk abroad and take the air in the garden…as he himself
shall be present in her company.”
Behind this apparently innocuous instruction lay long hours of panting
up and down the winding gardens locking and unlocking endless gates
behind the teasingly restless figure of “our said sister.”
“Item: he shall generally have good regard not only to the Princess,
but shall also do his best to cause the country thereabouts to continue in
good and quiet order.”
But down in the village the Bull inn was swarming with her unde-
sirable friends, of which the most suspicious was her Steward, Thomas
Parry, who complained loudly of the fare provided for his mistress and
exhibited “great doubts” over the strain on her funds.
Bedingfield was so terrified of what might be hatching down at the
Bull, that he summoned three of his brothers from their comfortable
estates and begged them to keep watch for treason.
But inside the house, he was mesmerised by the endless circles Elizabeth
ran around him. At every opportunity he besieged the Council, with many
apologies, to grant “the importunate desires of this great lady,” and he wrote
“this great lady” without realising how much it betrayed his capitulation to
hostile outsiders. He was harassed from morning to evening by an endless
series of smal crises, while his charge mimicked his orders to his face and
cal ed him “gaoler,” and uttered al manner of reproaches “too long to write.”
But the day she called him gaoler, he went down on his knees and
begged her not to give him that harsh name.
“I am only an officer appointed to serve you and guard you from
danger on the Queen’s instructions.”
“God bless the Queen,” observed her sister sharply, “and from such
good officers, dear Lord deliver me!”
She looked down on his bowed head and knew a moment of intense
satisfaction. This old stallion had had more kick in him than most—but