Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
the future. It was bound to excite unrest in the Catholic North. Mary’s
refusal to ratify the Treaty of Edinburgh had nullified its most important
clause. Her claim to the English throne still stood and in all essentials they
were right back where they had started.
He was tired and vaguely depressed; his foot was throbbing with gout.
If only the Queen were not so fond of standing! He eyed a footstool with
regret and coughed discreetly, to remind her of his presence.
“Shall I draft a reply to the Scottish Queen, madam?”
“If you will.” She turned from the window. “I think I have made my
feelings quite plain. Unless she signs the Treaty and renounces her claim
I shall not guarantee her safety in English waters.”
Cecil fingered his plain buttons uneasily.
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“And if she refuses, madam—what then?”
Elizabeth raised the plumed fan so that only her dark eyes and brilliant
hair were visible above the white feathers.
“Then, my friend, it will be my life or hers in the end. Instruct
Throckmorton of my terms.”
Cecil bowed bleakly, and took himself and his gout away.
t t t
“—and so, madam, under the circumstances,” Throckmorton’s voice
quivered with embarrassment, “I fear Her Majesty is obliged to refuse
your safe conduct.”
A gasp of disbelief came from the little group of attendants surrounding
the Scottish Queen and Mary rose with icy dignity from her chair.
“Draw back,” she said to the women closest to her. “I have no desire
to make a vulgar display of
my
temper in public.”
She swept away to a pink-cushioned window-seat and the English
Ambassador, miserably humiliated, followed her.
“I’m sorry, madam,” Throckmorton said quietly. “There was nothing
I could do to spare you this—nothing anyone can do with Her Majesty in
such a mood. And yet—” He groped hopeful y for her hand. “If you would
only sign this treaty, you would find her more than amenable. My mistress
can be a loyal friend.” His voice dropped very low. “Or a deadly enemy.
I beseech you from the bottom of my heart not to win her as the latter.”
Mary smiled gently and touched his arm. She was not afraid of his
mistress, as Throckmorton so plainly was, and it was time she made that
fact quite clear.
“The enmity of the English is nothing new to me, sir,” she said
pleasantly. “Your late King attempted to prevent my journey to France
when I was but a child. I will not relinquish what I know to be my rights
simply to spare myself your Queen’s displeasure. I shall sail without her
permission, and regret only that I so far forgot myself as to ask a favour of
her in the first place.”
Throckmorton gnawed his lip uneasily.
“And if a storm should chance to throw you upon English shores,
madam?”
Mary raised her slim shoulders with indifference.
“Then your Queen may make a sacrifice of me.” She gave him a slight
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smile. “And who knows, my friend, perhaps that would be for the best
after all.”
He did not know how to answer that. It seemed the strangest thing
for her to say and he wondered what she saw as she stared past him for a
moment. Whatever it was, it made her shiver.
He bent to kiss her hand tenderly, with real regret. She was so vulner-
able—beautiful, charming, full of those feminine frailties which appealed
to a strong man; but, frankly, he would not hazard a week’s pay on her
chance of surviving any serious confrontation with Elizabeth. His mistress
had long claws and would have no compunction about using them on
any cocksure kitten who strayed across her path.
There was nothing more he could do to help Mary; an ambassador
must take care. He had given his advice and further argument would only
compromise his position with Elizabeth.
He walked out of the room sadly, and left the Queen of Scots to make
her own mistakes.
t t t
“Bitch!”
Elizabeth’s clenched fist crashed down on her desk and sent
Throckmorton’s despatch spinning to the floor.
“Stupid, stupid little bitch! Who the devil has advised her in this
madness?”
Cecil bent automatically and retrieved the scattered papers in silence.
Privately he doubted that anyone was advising the Scottish Queen at the
moment. Dictated to equally by pride and courage, she was plainly acting
on a heated emotion which boded ill for future negotiations. Intrigue,
unrest, and foreign interference were the natural corollaries to her arrival
in Scotland. Even if she held fire for a year or so to consolidate her
influence, she would be a constant menace to Elizabeth’s life. And for the
moment their position seemed stalemated.
Elizabeth stared down at her papers, fingering her temple in an uncon-
sciously fretful gesture that alerted him.
“This summer progress into Suffolk,” he began cautiously.
“Yes,” she said lightly. “What of the progress?”
“There’s still time to cancel it, madam.”
She looked up startled.
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“Cancel it? On what grounds? There’s no unrest in that county.”
“Madam, you are not fit to undertake such an arduous journey.”
Elizabeth’s eyes narrowed and she pushed her papers to one side
angrily. “Have you been talking to my women?” she demanded.
“I was concerned,” he admitted nervously, “and certainly several of
your ladies agreed—” He broke off, uncomfortably aware that he was
about to be indiscreet.
“Well,” she prompted ominously, “what have my women said? By
God, you had better tell me!”
“Forgive me, madam—but they say you are the colour of a corpse and
that all your bones may be counted.”
Elizabeth stood up and he instinctively took a step backwards.
“Damn them!” she snapped. “Damn their meddling tongues! Do
I employ them to count my bones and put the fear of God into my
chief minister?”
He was crimson with a mixture of alarm and pleasure.
My chief
minister—
had he really heard her say it?
She watched him shift his weight awkwardly from one foot to the
other and suddenly gave him a devastating smile, which caught him right
off balance. He was not in love with her; but he could see, with startling
clarity, why so many men were.
“Who was it?” she laughed. “Cobham—Northampton?”
He looked at the floor and she nodded slowly.
“Oh, yes, I might have known. Those two are the greatest panic-
mongers in this realm. Extraordinarily fond of seeing death written on
someone’s face—usually mine. Wishful thinking, I fear.” She waved her
hand as he began to protest. “For God’s sake, Cecil, confine your spying
to its proper sphere. Bedchamber gossip could be the end of you.”
“With respect, madam—my anxiety remains.”
“Without foundation, my friend—I shall outlive you all, I swear it.”
She sat down again and leaned her chin on her hands as she watched him
sigh and look unconvinced. “Listen. If ever I have the slightest intention
of departing this world I shall see that you receive a month’s notice in
advance. Even allowing for your gout, that should give you plenty of
time to flee to safety in Geneva—wouldn’t you agree?”
“
Madam
!”
She lifted her hand to silence him.
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“Sit down. I have something to show you.”
He eased himself into the chair opposite, deeply aggrieved by her
assumption that self-interest alone motivated his concern. He had a fierce
paternal feeling for her which defied logical analysis. All his life he seemed
to have been marking time and waiting for her service. And now little
else mattered beyond those hours when he was challenged, stimulated,
and alerted in every mental faculty by the most difficult and exacting
human being he had ever met.
Mildred was not amused by his obsession. She had once told him
tartly that if he could not leave the Queen outside their bedroom door,
he had better sleep alone. The incident had jolted him. In all their cosy,
domesticated existence it was the only time he ever remembered Mildred
raising her voice; and in the interests of marital harmony he no longer
discussed his royal mistress with his wife.
The Queen signed a document and pushed it across the table for his
attention. As he looked down at it, he blinked in astonishment.
It was the authorisation of Mary Stuart’s safe conduct through
English waters.
“That leaves England the moment she sets sail.”
“Too late to be of use to her?” Cecil raised a puzzled eyebrow. “Why
sign it at all then?”
“To cover myself. Should she reach Scotland in safety I shall simply
tell her Throckmorton misunderstood me—but make no mistake, Cecil.
If she slips through our fingers when we have the chance to take her,
someone will hang for it.”
Cecil rolled up the document hastily and got to his feet with difficulty.
“I shall see that the fleet patrols the Channel in search of unauthorised
vessels, madam.”
“Good.” Elizabeth laid her pen aside. “Give me five minutes alone
with her at Hampton Court or Greenwich and the Treaty of Edinburgh
will be ratified beyond all question of doubt. By God, she’ll sign it, if I
have to guide her hand with my own.”
“And then, madam?”
“And then I have no further quarrel with her. She can count on my
friendship, for what it’s worth—God knows she’ll find precious little
when she gets to Scotland.”
Cecil frowned. “All this diplomacy hinges upon her capture, madam.
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But the Channel is vast and the elements are in God’s hands. A storm—a
sudden fog—and it will be like searching for a needle in a haystack.”
“Well—you’re on the best of terms with God, aren’t you, my friend?
See what you can arrange.”
He found her cynical irreverence disturbing and coughed to cover the
break in his composure.
“I shall certainly do everything in my power, madam. If the Scottish
Queen lands in her native land with this issue unresolved I fear Your
Majesty’s fair head may not sit in safety for long.”
“Well,” Elizabeth gave him a sly smile, “that ought to cure my head-
aches permanently.”
“Quite, madam,” he said drily, “yet I and every other loyal Englishman
should prefer a less drastic remedy. And to that end—touching this matter
of the progress—Your Majesty will consider my advice?”
Her smile was disarmingly reproachful.
“I always consider your advice, William Cecil. You ought to know
that by now.”
He went out of the room feeling flattered and topsides with the world.
When the door had closed behind him she added softly to herself,
“But of course, I don’t always take it.”
t t t
Ipswich, in the height of summer, was surely the last place on earth God
made, thought Robin.
He stood at a window, pul ing uncomfortably at the high ruff that had
a stranglehold about his throat, while below him a vast, swaying crowd
chanted the Queen’s name with maudlin affection. The combined stench of
so many unwashed bodies drifted up to him and forced him to withdraw,
holding a pomander to his nose. Oh, to be at Richmond in the cool breeze
which blew in from the river, to be at Hampton in the graceful shade of the
herb garden—to be anywhere in the world but on progress with the English
court, surely the most exquisite form of torture ever inflicted upon man.
He glanced at the Queen, sitting white-faced and grim at her dressing
table, and wondered again why she did not spare herself this annual ordeal
of travelling among her people. Personally, he found all close contact
with the rabble crowd highly distasteful, and how she could bring herself
to mingle so freely with a stinking mob of disease-ridden peasants was
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beyond his understanding. He was beginning to realise that there was a
great deal he did not understand about her…
Almost a year had passed since Amy’s death and he was still unable to
make sense of his position with the Queen. She had greeted him with
quiet affection on his return to court—he might have been returning
from a holiday in the country rather than exile. She now made show of
her belief in his innocence in public, but in private she never spoke of it
and he did not dare reopen the subject. She had not apologised for her
outrageous accusations that day at Windsor, but superficially all was as it
had been between them before the tragedy. Only the smug superiority of
Cecil reminded him that his ambition was still unfulfilled.
“Whatever reports and opinions say,” Cecil had written confidently
to Throckmorton in Paris, “I know surely that Lord Robert himself has
more fear than hope…”
Now Robin stood in limbo, frustrated and insecure, weathering
Elizabeth’s wildly varying moods. She had more sides to her than a cut