Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
and turned to look back across the lawns to where the little crowd still
hovered around the archery butts, uncertain whether they could consider
themselves dismissed or not. “Come—you had better take me back. They
are beginning to talk.”
“Talk about what?” he demanded irritably.
“They say you come too often to my rooms—and I to yours.”
“Oh, for God’s sake—you never come alone!”
She shrugged and began to retrace her steps across the lawn, with the
train of her russet shooting costume trailing over the parched grass.
“The Council doesn’t like your familiarity with me.”
“You mean
Cecil
doesn’t like it.”
She was silent and Robin knew his guess had been correct.
“I can’t begin to understand why you put your trust in that man. He’s
a treacherous, self-seeking bastard.”
“I hear much the same song of you from him—admittedly in a lower
key,” Elizabeth gave him a quick sidelong glance. “Why do you dislike
him so much?”
“He betrayed my father. If it hadn’t been for him—”
“If it hadn’t been for him,” Elizabeth cut in sharply, “I would be dead
now at your father’s hands.”
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Robin shook his head.
“Your life was never in any danger—only Mary’s. Father swore you
would not be harmed.”
She looked at him incredulously.
“And you believed him?”
“He gave me his word. And no matter what he may have done as a
public man, once Father gave his word to any of us—”
Elizabeth’s glance was suddenly curiously full of pity.
“Your father gave his word before God to your mother. He also gave
her thirteen children.” Her voice was quiet and controlled. “Shortly
before Edward died he offered to divorce her and marry me. I refused. If
I had not done so I would now be your step-mother and what you ask of
me would be near incest.”
He was silent, utterly stunned, demoralised by this final disillusion-
ment with a dead man. He could not question the truth of her assertion.
Even Elizabeth would not lie on such a matter.
“Robin,” she said gently, “I would not have told you that for all the
world—but when you speak so lightly of treachery in a loyal man—”
“I understand,” he muttered stiffly. “It ill becomes me. And I see now
that you were right. Once Father had you in his hand your life would
not have been worth a farthing piece. So when Cecil castigates me for
a traitor’s son you naturally listen to him. Under the circumstances you
would be a fool to do otherwise.”
“I don’t always listen to Cecil’s tales,” she remarked lightly, “or to
his advice.”
He turned to her eagerly, grasping her hand so hard that she winced.
“Is he out of favour?”
She smiled evasively. “Let’s just say that some of his pearls of wisdom
have fallen on deaf ears lately. Now forget him and fetch my bow. I still
intend to win this match against you.”
He smiled suddenly.
“And I still intend to beat you hollow—
madam.”
She laid her fingers lightly on his arm.
“That’s why I love to shoot against you. You’re the only man in this
court who would dare.”
t t t
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“Here is a great resort of wooers and controversy among lovers,” Cecil
wrote irritably in October. “Would to God the Queen had one and the
rest were honourably satisfied.”
Certainly he had some cause for complaint. The court was a veritable
bear garden of foreign envoys and lesser suitors, all clamouring for attention
and all quite shamelessly encouraged by the most sought after young lady
in Europe. She discouraged no one. They sent expensive gifts and while
they were all planning to marry her, they were far too busy to consider
any less friendly line of action. Let them all come, bearing jewels, furs and
tapestries—she was quite happy to play them off, one against the other.
She was quite blatantly enjoying the farce, but Cecil was not amused.
“It can’t go on much longer, madam—it really can’t. You must—” He
quailed as she looked up pointedly from her papers. “It is—essential—that
you marry soon.”
Elizabeth rose from her chair and arched her back like a lazy cat; he
had never noticed before how decidedly feline all her movements were.
“Who can I marry?” she inquired with studied innocence. “The people
will resent a foreigner, the nobility will resent an Englishman—you must
admit that doesn’t leave a lot of choice.”
“Surely the Earl of Arran, as a Scot, would offend no one.”
“Except me!”
“Madam!” He flung out his hand hopelessly towards her. Of late all
his gestures had become a little more exaggerated when he spoke to the
Queen. “I thought you liked him!”
“I liked him so well I hope never to see him again,” she said drily.
“But, madam, you said—”
“I said nothing of any consequence.”
“Yet Arran was convinced of your intentions.”
“My dear Cecil, they are
all
convinced of my intentions. I spend a
great deal of time and effort to that very purpose. When I marry—
if
I
marry—I trust it will be a man with more to sustain his role than six stiff
inches of manhood. A mind for one thing wouldn’t come amiss. Arran
was more than half out of his—surely you noticed.”
Cecil coughed to cover his discomfort.
“A few unfortunate mannerisms, madam, nothing to cause real concern.”
“I fear they would concern me greatly,” she said coolly, “in the
bedchamber.”
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He looked at the floor and she eyed him with amusement.
“Arran is overbred and unstable—like half the crowned heads in
Europe. I will go virgin to my grave sooner than raise a brood of vacant
lunatics to menace England after my death.”
“They’re not
all
madmen,” he began uneasily.
“No? You’d call the King of Sweden sane? Perhaps you should read
some of his love letters. And the Spanish heir tortures live rabbits in
his private apartments—roasts them alive on a spit so that he can hear
them scream.”
“Rabbits?” he echoed vaguely.
“Distant relatives of yours, perhaps—they too are obsessed with
perpetuating the species.”
“With respect, madam,” he said pointedly, “this matter deserves
serious discussion.”
She gave him a hard little smile that made her lips look like a closed
trap and said silkily, “I stand corrected, Mr. Secretary.”
It would have silenced any other man, even Robin. But Cecil had
courage. In spite of the sudden prickle of sweat above his upper lip, he
had his teeth into the subject now and he did not mean to let go without
a struggle.
“Your Majesty, I repeat, the present situation is insupportable. Your
suitors—”
“My suitors,” she interrupted with a hostility that was now unmistak-
able, “are a box of rotten apples. Show me one without a maggot big
enough to consume me and England too and I’ll marry him tomorrow!”
Retreating hastily from his blunder he said uncomfortably, “Madam, I
don’t deny there are grave difficulties—”
“I’ve had enough of the subject,” she snapped. “If you have nothing
else to say then get out of here and leave me in peace.”
“Your Majesty.” He inclined his head automatically and began to talk
of other business, giving in to her once more as he was finding it neces-
sary to do with increasing frequency these days. She was easily ruffled of
late, flippant and cantankerous by turns and it was extremely difficult to
judge which way her mood would turn. Their relationship was suffering
in consequence and he believed he knew the reason why. There was only
one man in this court who could make her behave like an adolescent girl
in love, stubborn and intractable, blind to all reason. Robert Dudley,
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Susan Kay
that undesirable young upstart, a married man it was true, but with a
meek little wife who kept herself discreetly in the country, childless
and divorceable. If the Queen should choose Robert Dudley to be her
consort, Cecil had a shrewd idea what his own fate would be.
They began to discuss arrangements for armed men to march on Scotland;
and the atmosphere between them as they did so was decidedly frigid.
t t t
Soft yellow candlelight filled the Queen’s bedchamber, winking on the
jewels of a select little group of courtiers, the favoured, privileged few
who had spent the evening in her company. Talk and laughter faded
slowly in their wake as they kissed her hand and began to file out into the
Privy Chamber.
Robin lingered long over kissing her hand. He was always the first
to arrive and the last to leave and now he stood with her hands in his as
though force alone would make him tear himself away.
She was beautiful tonight, an elegant column of black velvet stamped
with golden oak leaves, her chin framed by a ruff of finely worked lace.
Slowly, deliberately, he drew her forward into his arms and there was a
breathless silence as their lips met. For a long moment she was locked in
his urgent embrace, and then at last she drew away and pressed her hands
against his shoulder, gently pushing him back. He whispered something
in her ear; those by the door heard her laugh softly and saw her shake her
head, then he bowed deeply, reverently, and backed out of the room, his
eyes never leaving her face. The door closed behind him and she stood
staring at it, smiling, oblivious to the tense, uneasy glances her women
exchanged as they materialised from the corners of the room and came
forward to begin the arduous ceremony of the Disrobing. Nobody spoke;
nobody dared. Elizabeth sat down at her dressing-table and stared into her
mirror with distant eyes.
Lettice Knollys removed the little pearl-studded cap and began to
brush the Queen’s long hair until her arm ached. Lettice was one of her
many Boleyn cousins, a light-natured, impudent chit of a girl with a sharp
malicious tongue that often amused her cynical mistress. But the woman
who watched her now in the mirror was not preparing to be amused.
She had caught Lettice smiling very warmly at Robin this evening, and
consequently felt less than cousinly towards her.
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Legacy
When the brush tugged at a tangled curl and flew from Lettice’s grasp,
she was more than ready for her.
“I’m sorry, Your Majesty—”
Elizabeth turned very slowly from the mirror, holding the moment for
her embarrassment.
“Take care how you treat your Queen’s possessions,” she remarked
pointedly.
The cold formality of Elizabeth’s challenge covered Lettice with
confusion as she groped uncertainly for the brush.
“Shall I—shall I continue, madam?”
“Thank you.” Elizabeth took the brush out of the girl’s quivering
hand. “I think I would prefer to keep what little hair is left after your
clumsy ministrations.”
“I’m truly sorry, madam—I swear I never saw the snarl.”
“Yes—I have observed your eyes to be elsewhere more than once
this evening.”
Lettice turned a dull brick-red and tiny beads of perspiration broke out
above her upper lip.
“Madam, I beg—”
“I have no further need of you tonight, Lettice. You may withdraw.”
Lettice curtsied and hurried out of the room and the Queen leaned
her chin on her hands, still staring dreamily into the mirror. It was seldom
necessary for her to put anyone in their place more than once; she put
Lettice out of her mind as easily as she might have closed a book.
“Your Majesty—I must speak to you.”
Elizabeth dragged her eyes unwillingly from her reflection and looked
up to find Mrs. Ashley at her side, nervously twisting her wedding ring.
“What the devil’s wrong with you, Kat? You look as though all the
hounds of hell are on your tail.”
Kat slipped painfully to her knees and groped for the Queen’s hands.
The hounds of hell would be the least of her worries once she had said
what she knew she must.
“Madam, forgive me—forgive me, but I must say this. Lord Robert
Dudley—” She hesitated, groping for the right words, and Elizabeth
sighed faintly.
“Madam, to allow him such freedom—such liberties with your
person—”
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Susan Kay
Elizabeth smiled and touched the faded face at her knee with affection.
“Kat! Lord Robert is like a brother to me. Why shouldn’t he kiss
me goodnight?”
Kat glared up at her through red-rimmed eyes. When a brother and
sister kissed like that there was a very ugly word for it.
“Such behaviour will ruin your reputation,” she insisted.
Elizabeth picked up the brush and began to brush her hair lazily.
“If you continue to cluck like an old hen I shall simply ignore
you, Kat.”
In all her years of tending Elizabeth, Kat had never once lost her
temper. But she lost it now.
“You can’t behave like this—do you think the people will stand
for it?”
“Kat—”
“By Christ’s soul, madam, I would I had strangled you in your cradle