Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
would rather be a Catholic, if only it were politically expedient. The
circumstances of her birth had allied her in a marriage of convenience
to the Protestant Church, but her personal taste inclined distressingly
towards Catholic ritual and her private chapel was a hotch-potch of the
new and old religions. She liked music and candles, even a crucifix,
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and was downright rude to her married clergy. But, much as it grieved
him, there was nothing he could do about it; he knew better than to
pass comment.
And just now, there were more pressing concerns than her orthodoxy.
“May I ask what Your Majesty intends to do with the Scottish
Queen?” he ventured at length. Waiting in vain for her answer, he
continued uneasily. “I trust you don’t intend to bring her to court.”
She glanced over her shoulder and gave him a wicked smile.
“Would the monstrous regiment of two women be more than your
sanity could bear?”
“I merely suggest it may be as well if the two of you do not meet. It
might cause—complications.”
“You think she may win me for a friend? Oh Cecil, how little you
know me.”
He smiled thinly. “Of late Your Majesty has shown some sympathy
for her plight. I beg you to remember that she is still your enemy.”
“But this alters everything. The bird has flown to me for protection
from the hawk, and by God I’ll see she gets that protection—from you if
need be. I shall clip her wings and put her in a golden cage where she will
sing safely for the rest of her life.”
“Mere imprisonment,” he said discontentedly, “will scarcely restrain
her violent appetite for your crown. Madam, such mercy on your part
is suicidal.”
She shook her head slowly.
“You call it
mercy
to wake day after day in a living grave?”
He avoided her eyes and knew his instinct had been true; certainly a
meeting between the two of them must be prevented at all cost.
He said bleakly, “She will demand to see you, madam, and I beg you
to refuse. It is hardly fitting for you to receive a harlot accused of such
outrageous crimes.”
Elizabeth laughed. “Move her to Bolton Castle then, under guard.
But, Cecil—no little accidents on the journey. I want her alive.”
“To sow a canker of treason throughout the land?”
“To stand between me and Philip. She is the most valuable hostage in
the history of Europe.”
“And the most dangerous,” he said bluntly. “This puts a premium on
your murder, madam—your life hangs by a thread from this moment on.”
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“Then you must be vigilant, my Spirit.” Elizabeth held out her hand
to him. “I trust you beyond all men and you have never failed me yet.”
“Then don’t set me an impossible task,” he burst out suddenly as he
closed her fingers between his own. “The best spy system in the world
could not protect you under such circumstances.”
“Assassination is the occupational hazard of any monarch,” she
said calmly.
“But to court assassination in this manner is madness. As long as you
have no heir and the Scottish Queen lives in England, you will never
know a minute’s peace. I can’t answer for your safety, not now. No man
could. All I can promise you is that sooner or later a dagger or a bullet or
a poisoned cup will do its work. For God’s sake, madam, reconsider your
decision and dispose of her.”
“Stop panicking,” she said gently. “I shall dance on your grave even
yet. Always supposing that you don’t desert me first, of course.”
“
Desert
you!” he stiffened in horror. “What do you mean, madam?”
She turned back to her desk and began to tidy her papers casually; she
was not looking at him now.
“Ten years of loyalty is something of a record for you, isn’t it, Cecil?
Some would say it was high time you were looking for your next mistress.”
He was not a demonstrative man, but he went down on his knees then
in a clumsy gesture of obeisance and pressed her fingers to his dry lips.
He said, “I would rather die than desert you, madam. You are the last
person on this earth that I shall ever serve.”
She had not expected that and found she had to bite her lip to
govern herself. She raised him to his feet and looked into his worn face,
wondering a little at her power to trap the heart and loyalty of such a
hardened man. He had been a chameleon before she swore him into her
service, but he would not change colour again, she knew it.
The moment was charged with emotion. She had only to take one
step towards him and their unique relationship would be altered for ever.
Instead she stepped back from him and allowed him to recover his
composure; she did not want him to become like all the rest, reduced to
the squalid level of panting for her body. She let the dangerous moment
pass them by and knew it would not come again.
And yet she was still curious. Precious little material gain had come his
way through serving her—he was not even a member of the peerage. So
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what held him? What had she done to deserve such unswerving loyalty
from the most accomplished politician in all Europe?
When she asked him, he smiled and sighed and replied with flattering
exasperation, “Madam, I would to God I knew the answer myself.”
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Chapter 4
T
rouble came to england in the wake of the scottish queen,
just as Cecil had feared, and rather sooner than he had first antici-
pated. Fear of Mary and the action that Spain might take on her behalf,
jealousy of Cecil’s undisputed position with Elizabeth, and sheer terror
of the Queen’s uncertain health were soon concentrated in a cabal of
her foremost Privy Councillors. The intensely vigorous life which the
Queen led no longer lulled the men who surrounded her into a false
sense of security; they were morbidly obsessed with the possibility of her
death. It was obviously necessary to make some provision for that event
now that the next heir was resident in the country, to find some way of
circumventing the possible accession of a Catholic queen who would take
revenge on her rival’s supporters.
To protect their own interests, Elizabeth’s closest advisers, with
the notable exception of Cecil, sought to ensure against the future by
arranging a marriage between Mary Stuart and the foremost Protestant
peer of the realm, the Duke of Norfolk. Norfolk had buried three wives
already; he was confident of controlling Mary and his confidence won
over the anxious men who formed the English Council and who were
now convinced that disaster was about to overtake them at any moment.
Superficially, it seemed they had good cause for concern, for rela-
tions with Spain had been strained to breaking point. In December 1568
Spanish ships carrying bullion intended for the payment of Philip’s armed
forces in the Netherlands were harassed by pirates and forced to seek
refuge in an English port. When Elizabeth discovered that the money was
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a loan from Genoese merchant bankers, she promptly entered negotiations
to transfer that loan to herself, leaving Philip and his commander, Alva,
in desperate straits. For a time the incident looked certain to precipi-
tate war; but Elizabeth and Cecil were quietly confident that Philip’s
hostile gestures would prove as empty as his coffers. Both politically and
economically they had him in a stranglehold; for the time being they held
all the trump cards and could afford to gamble high.
Lesser minds found this hard to accept and soon a combination of fear
and outright panic had concentrated into a conspiracy to sweep Cecil
from office to the block. Cecil’s execution was the bait they dangled
before Leicester and he charged after it with a will. Remembering bitterly
how readily the Queen would have abandoned him after Amy’s death,
Leicester was suddenly convinced that in the face of united opposition she
would desert Cecil too.
So Leicester allowed his fellow conspirators to talk him into the role
of spokesman and on a cold Ash Wednesday he got to his feet in Council
and told the Queen bluntly that England would be ruined unless Cecil
answered for his policies with his head.
It was the first and last time he ever dared to challenge her face to face
in public, and within minutes he was wondering what had possessed him
to open his mouth in the first place. White-lipped with fury, she whipped
him with scathing contempt, until he bent like a stalk of corn before the
blast of a hurricane. Soon he was cowering on his knees and then to his
relief she turned her searing rage on the rest of his confederates.
When she had chastised them all to her complete satisfaction, she
swept out of the room with Cecil at her side, for all the world like a
tigress with her cub, leaving Leicester collapsed in his seat at the council
table with his head in his fine hands.
Terror and jealousy warred within him. She could not have defended
Cecil more vehemently if he had been her lover. What was the secret
of her relationship with that colourless statesman which transcended all
other ties? She had begun lately to bestow deeply symbolic nicknames on
the men who were closest to her, an echo of the playful dragon allegory
she had created in the Tower for her own amusement. Robin was her
Eyes, Hatton her Lids, Cecil her Spirit—her familiar spirit some said, and
to Leicester the implication was obvious. Without her Eyes she would
be blind, but without her Spirit she would be dead. If it came to a fight
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to the death between the two of them he believed he knew which she
would support. They were a formidable combination and now that they
had closed their ranks against him, Leicester could see that his blunder had
merely served to bind them even closer together. Theirs was an unholy
union that no mere lover could ever hope to put asunder.
One by one, crushed and nervous, the councillors stole away from
the chamber, until at last Norfolk and Leicester were left alone in the
chill atmosphere.
Norfolk rolled his quill back and forth across the polished oak table
and said peevishly, “She never wraps it up, does she? Spares no one’s
feelings!”
“Neither woman in her anger nor man in her lust,” muttered Leicester,
misquoting deliberately and darkly. “I feel drained, don’t you—as though
she’s sapped every ounce of blood out of my body.”
A great pity she hasn’t, thought Norfolk maliciously, it would be an
improvement that’s long overdue. When I mount the English throne
with Mary Stuart, I’ll make sure you are not around to bask in the sun!
Aloud he said, “As I see it, there’s only one course left to us, and that’s
to take a lesson from the Scots—they have a quick way with overmighty
ministers. I suggest that we arrest Cecil and finish him ourselves, since we
can’t persuade her to do it for us.”
Leicester emerged from his hands in alarm.
“Are you out of your mind?” he breathed. “She’ll hang the lot of us!
If you persist in this mad plan, I shall have no alternative now but to warn
her of it.”
Norfolk bowed ironically and flicked his small, pie-dish ruff in an
insolent gesture.
“The loyalty of the Earl of Leicester to Her Majesty has of course
always been beyond question.”
Robin took the premier peer of the realm by the throat and lifted him
forcibly out of his chair.
“I’m afraid I didn’t quite catch that, Norfolk. Perhaps you would care
to repeat it.”
Duels at court were expressly forbidden by the Queen, and Norfolk
felt it was safe to speak freely. There had always been hostility between
the two of them—once they had almost come to blows on the tennis
court. Despite being an earl and one of the most powerful men in the
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kingdom, Leicester still never had such a thing as a handkerchief about
him. When he had casually helped himself to the Queen’s to wipe his
sweating face, Norfolk went purple with rage and threatened to break
his racquet over the Earl’s head for his presumption. Now they made
uneasy allies in a bid to rid themselves of Cecil, whose influence threat-
ened them both.
Norfolk’s smile was calmly superior and he made no attempt to free
himself from Leicester’s grip.
“I have said it before and I say it again, Leicester—you will not die
in your bed unless you give over your preposterous pretensions to Her
Majesty’s hand.”
Robin laughed shortly and flung the Duke back into his chair with a
force that winded him.
“Well—I’m not alone now, in my pretensions to the hand of a queen,
am I, Norfolk? And since Elizabeth has said that the Queen of Scots may
soon find some of her friends the shorter by a head, I beg leave to suggest
that it may be you, my lord, who will not die in bed.”