Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
hand to her head and removed the central pin which held her heavy hair
in place.
The next gust of wind brought a mass of loose curls tumbling wildly
about her face. She cursed loudly and reined to a halt; when Bedingfield
glanced round in alarm she gave him a helpless shrug and in that moment
the young man drew abreast of her horse.
“Your Grace! We had word you would pass this way today. May I
offer you the shelter of my own poor house in this abominable weather?”
She gave him that smile and held her hands out to be lifted from
the saddle.
“Sir,” she said gaily, “if you were to offer me the shelter of a pig-sty I
would be grateful.”
“Madam! I can’t possibly allow this!” Bedingfield had leaned over to
take her arm aggressively. Anxious, blustering, he was quite unable to
deal with the slightest change in plans and also most uncomfortably aware
that she was not to be trusted with any young man of unknown loyalty.
She rounded on him furiously.
“Why, in God’s name?”
“Madam—my instructions—”
“I
know
your instructions. I have them by heart if you remember, but
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I don’t recall any item that says I shall sit under a hedge to do up my hair
simply because you refuse to countenance a simple act of chivalry.”
“I repeat, madam—I cannot permit you to enter this gentleman’s house.”
She stared at him stonily. “You should be ashamed to call yourself
a knight!”
She jumped down from her horse without assistance and swept across the
road to sit down under the hedge in question. Two of her women hurried
over to her and began to do battle with her hair. Bedingfield was left holding
her horse’s bridle and staring at the young man in embarrassed silence.
Presently she came back, with the sable hood jammed on her head and
her green riding habit covered with mud.
“Well,” she demanded coldly, “are you satisfied now?”
Clumsily he lifted her into the saddle and groped for her gloved hand.
“Your Grace knows I bear you no ill will. To receive discharge from
this service without offence to the Queen would be the joyfullest tidings
that ever came to me, as our Lord Almighty knows.”
She laughed outright as she looked down on him.
“Oh yes, I know how dearly you would love to be rid of me, Sir
Henry. And, who knows, it may be sooner than you think, if I’ve misread
the reason for this summons, after all.”
As she slipped her reins out of his quivering hand, she was amused by
his horrified glance. Clearly he had not considered the possibility that he
might be taking her to her death.
She rather hoped that Mary had not considered it either.
When they arrived at Hampton Court she was hustled in the back way
so that none should see her and was packed off at once to the Gatehouse,
once more the disgraced prisoner, almost the poor relation. The doors were
locked upon her and for more than a fortnight she paced her rooms like a
caged lioness. Oh, what a fool she had been to raise her hopes; nothing was
changed. She had two heated confrontations with Gardiner and then the
dreadful silence closed in again, leaving her to imagine the worst.
She lost track of time and the days began to merge into each other in
endless tedium; even Woodstock had been better than this isolated limbo.
Outside her window she could hear the laughter of the courtiers who
came and went into the palace, but she had no part in their world. It was
as though she had ceased to exist.
And then, at ten o’clock on a cold spring evening when she had
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just begun to go to bed, the door opened to admit Susan Clarencieux,
Mary’s Mistress of the Robes. Behind her came Bedingfield, grey-faced
with fright.
“Madam, you are commanded to wait upon Her Majesty at once.”
Elizabeth stood up. Her women had removed her coif and brushed
out her hair which now hung to her waist.
“Now?” she whispered stupidly. “Now?”
Across the room her eyes met Bedingfield’s and saw them mirror
her thought.
Queens don’t give audiences at ten o’clock at night. I am going to my death
and he knows it.
Bedingfield shuffled across the room to take her cloak from the arms
of a trembling maid. Wordlessly he wrapped it around her shoulders,
fastened the clasp, and pulled the hood over her head exactly as though
she were a small child.
“Come, Your Grace.” His gruff voice was hoarse as he took her hand
and began to guide her forward. In the doorway she glanced back at her
terrified attendants and asked them to pray for her, since she could not
tell whether she would see any of them again. Bedingfield, she noticed,
made no protest to that, but his hand on hers tightened its pressure. She
was suddenly very glad of him.
It was pitch black and cold as she followed torch bearers over the
gardens to the foot of the staircase which led to the Queen’s lodgings. A
guard stepped forward and gestured to Sir Henry.
“You are to remain here, sir, with the rest of Her Grace’s attendants.”
So it was to be a dagger in the dark, after all! But why bring her all
the way to court to do it and how would they explain it to the people?
She glanced at Bedingfield’s face and saw there were tears glistening
in the eyes of that stern, upright figure. He feared the worst and so did
she, and hardship made odd allies. She reached out and squeezed his thick
arm, then turned and went alone into the darkness.
Breathlessly she mounted the stairway, spinning round at the sound of
footsteps behind her. Susan Clarencieux was mounting the steps in her
wake and motioning her through the door ahead, so perhaps after all she
was not to be murdered. But it was still a full minute before she found the
courage to step over the threshold into Mary’s bedchamber.
The Queen was hunched against her pillows and her distended figure
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was obvious beneath the coverlet. At the far end of the room stood a
tapestry screen and Elizabeth, who did not recall it, wondered whether
this interview would be heard by Mary’s ears alone. Where was Philip
after all this time? Why had he not chosen to show himself ? She glanced
again at the silent screen and wondered.
At the foot of the bed she fell on her knees and let the hood fall back
to reveal her loose hair.
“Madam, I am your true and loyal servant whatever reports have said
of me.”
Silence. Mary’s short-sighted eyes peered down at her, sliding over her
white face and away again. She did not offer her hand for the formal kiss
and her voice was grim.
“You will not confess your fault, I see. Pray God your tale is true.”
“If not I will look for neither favour nor pardon from Your
Majesty’s hands.”
That answer, though mildly made, seemed to anger Mary. As her face
creased into a frown and she twisted the bedclothes over the swollen
mound of her stomach, Elizabeth found her eyes drawn irresistibly to
that visible evidence of her own danger, the unborn child which was the
living symbol of her own destruction. Once that child was born her posi-
tion would be hopeless; she would be lucky even to be offered exile…
“So,” said the Queen darkly, “you have been wrongful y punished then.”
Elizabeth bowed her head hastily.
“I must not say so to Your Majesty.”
“But you will to others!” snapped the deadly little voice from the bed.
“Is that not so, sister?”
It was useless. This interview, like the last, was sliding away from her,
and every word she spoke increased the Queen’s hostility. She said at
last in a voice only just above a whisper, “I most humbly beseech Your
Majesty to have a good opinion of me.”
Oddly enough that childish request seemed to touch Mary in spite of
herself. She gestured irritably for the girl to get off her knees and waved
her hand as though dismissing the whole sordid business. She seemed
suddenly too weary to continue the conversation.
“You may be speaking the truth—God knows!” she muttered and
then repeated in Spanish, “
Dios sabe
!”
Elizabeth whirled round instinctively to look at the screen and a
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moment later a small, sombrely dressed young man stepped out and
stopped to look at her. He bowed and walked towards her, his pale eyes
fixed on hers. She knew who he was; she also knew that she should
curtsey, but she remained defiantly standing. For a moment he stood
gazing at her, as though he expected the sheer force of his presence to
force her to her knees; their bright, fair heads were exactly level. There
was a long, long moment of silence before he realised she would not
submit, and then he spoke for the first time.
“You are welcome to court, my sister.” He held out his hand and
drew her close to kiss her formally on the lips as befitted the greeting of
a sister-in-law.
And when he released her, having prolonged the moment just a
second or two longer than was strictly necessary, Mary saw that his eyes
were smiling at last.
t t t
Across the brilliant green English countryside they galloped ahead of
their attendants, hunting, hawking, spending the long spring days in idle
companionship. In the light evenings they danced and raised their wine
goblets to each other beneath smiling eyes and slowly, inexorably, relent-
lessly Philip found himself falling in love against his will and against all the
promptings of both conscience and common sense.
Years later, he reflected bitterly that it had been inevitable. He had
been as vulnerable as a puppy to her charm, miserable, disillusioned, frus-
trated. And she had set out to catch him like an angler with a fish, until
at last there he was, hooked and helpless on the end of her line, labouring
under the incredible delusion that their feelings were mutual.
He had never meant it to happen. He had intended to observe her
closely for treasonous intent, sound her religious beliefs, and finally
see her married safely to his vassal, the Duke of Savoy. He had tried to
prepare himself and be armed against her wiles, for Renard had warned
him darkly that “she has a spirit full of incantation.”
But no armour of Spanish dignity was proof against her; she cut
through his defences like a knife through butter, effortlessly, casually, as
though she were not even trying. He might have been any other hand-
some young man in her company, rather than the omnipotent heir to
half the world. When she spoke to him it was as an equal, occasionally,
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he suspected through her teasing, as a superior. Her speech was littered
with lies and insincerities; he tried to cling to his doubts and suspicions
of her, but she laughed them away. And no one—man or woman—had
ever laughed at Philip before. In all the dark formal years in Spain, years
of duty and discipline governed by a rigid code of etiquette, he had never
met a woman like Elizabeth. In all the hard cruel decades which followed
he never met her like again. A few brief weeks he was held fascinated,
like a wild animal dazzled by a bright light, weeks which later seemed
to exist in a vacuum and hung in his bitter memory like a locket, which
from time to time he would take out and examine with slow disbelief and
wonder—did it really happen? Sometimes it seemed to him that he spent
the rest of his life in penance for it.
They had told him she was clever; on close acquaintance, he found
her brilliant and was intimidated by the formidable list of her accomplish-
ments. He considered it a personal affront that any woman should be
fluent in six languages.
“Is there anything you cannot do?” he asked her at length, stung to a
jealous awareness of inferiority.
She smiled demurely.
“I can’t swim, Your Highness.”
“If you ever learn,” he said softly, “I shall
kill
you for it.”
His command of English was still uncertain. It was quite possible he
had misused the word. But as she stared into his steady eyes she knew
he meant exactly what he said and was amused by the knowledge. After
that, she went out of her way to flaunt her talents and her charm. And all
through that spring, while he deliberately engineered occasions on which
he might be alone with her, he was swept off his course like a helpless
twig on the restless tide of her energy.
“No, we shall not hunt today,” he said as he followed her to the
window one dark morning. “Can’t you see it’s raining?”
She looked out of the glass and laughed and said in her faultless Spanish,
“That’s not rain—it’s only a fine drizzle that will soon lift. In England
Your Highness must learn to call such weather fine and be glad of it.”
Must
!
He stared at her. It was more than twenty years since anyone of lesser