Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
Cecil’s cool eyes looked him up and down, from dust encrusted beard
to muddy riding boots.
Susan Kay
“You could not possibly appear before Her Majesty in such a state,
Melville. You are familiar with Her Majesty’s fastidious taste and if I may
say so without giving offence, sir—you do stink of horse and sweat. Go to
your chamber and rest and I will see food is brought to you. Her Majesty
will receive you tomorrow.”
“
Tomorrow
!” Melville opened his mouth to protest further, but the
resolute little figure had already turned away and begun to thread his way
through the swirling mass of silks and satins. Melville crept close to the
door to watch.
The Queen was dancing with Leicester, but at the Secretary’s approach
they swung out of the measure and stood waiting for him to reach them.
Leicester murmured something in her ear. She laughed, tapped his cheek
playfully, and stepped forward alone to hear what Cecil had to say.
Even from that distance Melville saw the colour leave her complexion.
She staggered back a step and fell into the chair behind her, turning her
face away from the company and covering it with one long white hand.
The music died in mid-beat, the dancers froze and stared as a cry of savage
anguish tore through the summer air and splintered the gay, informal
atmosphere into a deathly hush.
“
The Queen of Scots is lighter of a fair son and I am but a barren stock
!”
For a dreadful moment no one moved, then Cecil made a quick
commanding gesture. A clutch of women rushed around her, closed her
from sight, and a moment later hurried her from the crowded room.
Melville drew into the shadows as they swept past, but Cecil, limping
slowly in their wake, caught a glimpse of his triumphant face, and his own
lips set in an angry line.
He went at once to her private apartments expecting to be refused
admittance, but, to his surprise, he was shown into her bedchamber
almost immediately. He found her alone, standing with her back to him
and with one hand resting against a carved bedpost. She did not look
round, but with her free hand she made a quick, furtive gesture and he
guessed that she was hastily wiping away tears.
“You’ve come to scold I take it. ‘An appalling loss of self-control in
public, madam!’ So what do you propose as punishment? Shall I go to
bed with no supper?”
Standing there, listening to her petulant defiance, he suddenly saw her
as she must have been as a child and he forgot to be angry.
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“It’s not my place to criticise you, madam,” he said gently. “I came
merely to tell you that Melville saw and heard it all.”
“And will tell his mistress, who will gloat!” She clenched her fist.
“Well, I’ll give him the lie tomorrow. I’ll dance with joy for him—I’ll
even be godmother to the infernal brat! Will that suffice?”
“For Melville, no doubt,” he said grimly, “but not for the rest of
your countrymen, I fear. Madam, you described yourself as barren—have
you any idea what uproar that will cause among those who fear for the
Protestant succession?”
“Oh, the succession—good God, I’m not dead yet!”
“Not yet—pray God not for many years—but the birth of a Scottish
prince will cause a public outcry for your own marriage from Parliament
and people alike.”
She swore softly and swung away from him.
“Cecil, I rule this country and I rule it well—is that not so?”
“You know it is, madam.”
“Then why can’t they be content? Why must they try to force me in
to something that I cannot—”
She broke off and he stared at her in silence. After a moment he went
over and put his hand on her arm.
“Is it still Leicester?” he asked quietly. “Is it?” She did not answer and
he shook his head.
“If I had known it was going to mean this—” He stopped as he saw
her look and continued hastily, to cover his slip, “I sometimes think Your
Majesty does not mean to marry at all.”
She turned away from him impatiently.
“Is it a crime then, not to marry?”
“Madam,” he was suddenly aghast at the implication behind her
truculence,” in your case it would be a crime against the state—aye, and
an unnatural crime at that. No woman can be happy in your position,
alone and childless.”
She looked over her shoulder with a sudden, mocking smile.
“You speak very knowledgeably on the pleasure of womanhood,
Cecil—when did you last climb out of childbed?”
He refused to be baited or side-tracked. He had come here tonight to
know the answer to one question and he did not intend to be gainsaid by
any of those “answers answerless” with which she placated the Commons.
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And because the empathy between them was now so sound, she knew
the question in his mind, and held up her hand to stay him.
“Don’t ask it, my friend—believe me, you don’t want to know the
answer. I have reasons against marriage that I would not divulge to a twin
soul. All I will tell you now is that I do not mean to marry—ever!”
He went out of her presence like a man in a trance.
t t t
Among the first to make capital out of the birth of Mary’s son was the new
Earl of Leicester. Still flushed with the triumph of his title, he brooded
long and hard over Elizabeth’s curious outburst and managed to convince
himself that their marriage was its only natural corollary. Nothing would
induce him to abandon his dream and he was ready to bully or grovel to
anyone who might help him attain his object. Less than a year since, he
had even approached Cecil openly, begging him to give up his plans for
a foreign marriage and to support his own suit, promising that he would
see Cecil handsomely advanced in return.
It had been rather worse than just a waste of effort. Cecil had smiled,
thanked him warmly for his confidence, and then repeated the whole
conversation to the French Ambassador, carefully accentuating Leicester’s
presumption in a manner which was calculated to infuriate the Queen
when she heard of it. Leicester had not dared to approach the Secretary
again on the subject.
His tentative overtures of marriage to Elizabeth resulted in some of the
bitterest quarrels they had ever had. There was a succession of ugly, public
scenes between them and once they were both seen to be in tears. He
simply could not understand her attitude. Since the sudden death of Kat
Ashley the previous June she had been very difficult to live with. After the
first day when she had been utterly silent and bewildered by the shock,
she had thrown herself into the pursuits which filled her life, working,
hunting, and dancing like one driven by the devil, until everyone around
her was on their knees with exhaustion. Leicester had waited patiently for
the passionate breakdown which he sensed lurking beneath the surface of
her indecent gaiety and insatiable restlessness, waited to take her in his
arms and comfort her. But it never came. If she wept, he didn’t know
about it; and whatever comfort she craved she appeared to find in the
attentions of another man.
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When she transferred her favours to Thomas Heneage, Leicester was
devastated. She announced publicly that she was sorry for the time she
had wasted on him—“and so is every good subject…” wrote Cecil with
acid triumph in his diary.
The court turned cool to Leicester and Cecil gloated quietly,
watching him panic and resort to desperate means. An ostentatious flir-
tation with Lettice Knollys brought him nothing but a long exile from
court and the knowledge that there was little to be gained by provoking
the Queen’s jealousy.
Exile was costly and showed him great glaring gaps in his own
defences. His enemies closed in gleefully, reviving the scandal of Amy’s
death by persuading her half-brother, John Appleyard, to intimate that he
knew more than he had said at the time. There was loud talk of payments
to Appleyard by his brother-in-law and a strong implication that they
had bought his silence. Leicester’s recall to court came only just in time
to warn his enemies off. John Appleyard faded back into the limbo from
which he had been bribed to emerge, and for the time Leicester was spared
the indignity and the danger of answering these libellous accusations.
The incident had unnerved him and shown him the depth of his
dependence on the Queen’s protection; he was less the man for the expe-
rience. He dropped Lettice hastily and rushed back to court in a hopeful
mood, expecting to find the Queen waiting tearfully for him with open
arms, as all his women waited for him after a quarrel. Instead he found her
so surrounded by younger men—Heneage, Christopher Hatton, the Earl
of Ormond—that he could hardly get near her, and he was aghast at the
apparent ease with which she seemed to have replaced him. It was hard,
very hard, to admit that he might not be indispensable to her happiness.
And she played her part so well that only a man as perceptive as Cecil
could have gauged the depth of her suffering.
Jealous, frightened, tormented beyond endurance, Leicester cursed the
cruel fate that had made him want the one woman who did not want
him. Savage desire had begun to eat into his nature, making him ruthless
and haughty and aggressively virile. He snapped his fingers about the
court and a woman was his—any woman, except the one who mattered.
He took them all wherever he found the opportunity, without love
or gratitude or inner satisfaction, and indulged in violent fantasies. He
wanted to drag Elizabeth from her exalted pedestal and rape her in full
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view of the court; he wanted to beat her into abject submission and cover
that alabaster body with bruises. He suspected that she had a taste for
rough handling, but he lacked the basic courage to follow that conviction
to its logical conclusion. For he just might be mistaken; and, if he was,
he knew that raping Elizabeth would be the last mistake he ever made.
So he was forced to stand by and watch while she behaved like a
goddess promising favours to a fawning group of humiliated men. None
of them could resist the oblique suggestion that at any moment she might
indeed be prepared to take a lover—or a husband—from their midst and
so they hovered like moths around a candle. She had a cruel genius for
stalking men’s hearts.
When she could bear the game no longer, she softened at last, agreed
to see him alone, and laughed at his jealousy, telling him that all her
friends were men and he need read no more than that into it. He was
unconvinced, but so grateful to be taken back into her affections that he
returned meekly to the place she had allotted him, like the lap-dog she
had once called him. Her attendants tiptoed discreetly from the room
and he sat at her feet in the bright firelight. There was a relaxed and
comfortable silence between them and neither of them spoke, as if they
feared to disturb some magic spell.
It was as though they both felt it was the only way to avoid another
quarrel.
t t t
It was a bad year for lovers. While Robin was struggling to cement his
return to favour, the Queen of Scots began to eclipse all lesser events
with the scandal of her own private life. With a sudden, shocking pace
her life was circling in a downward spiral to disaster beyond her control,
and Elizabeth watched with genuine horror as her rival fell helplessly into
the trap of personal relations, which she herself had eluded so successfully
eight years before. No one shed any tears when the villainous Darnley
met his deserved end in an explosion at Kirk-o’-fields, but everyone
knew—or at least believed they knew—that Mary’s lover, the Earl of
Bothwell, was responsible for it.
Mary now stood on the edge of the very same disaster which had once
threatened her royal cousin. Her only hope of escaping the consequences
of Darnley’s murder was to abandon her lover to his fate and a public
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execution. It was a plain choice between her lover and her crown, and
Elizabeth, who had already made that painful choice, was filled with a
terrible foreboding, a sharp, anxious sense of watching her own younger
reflection in a mirror, rushing relentlessly towards self-destruction.
For the first time, acting a little out of self-interest, but a great deal
more from a wealth of sympathetic understanding, she stretched out her
hand to Mary in a gesture of real friendship with a frantic, scolding letter
that begged her to come to her senses before it was too late.
“Oh, madam, I should not fulfil the office of a faithful cousin or an
affectionate friend if I studied rather to please your ears than to endeavour