Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
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Susan Kay
Richmond at once. Arriving with time to spare, he went up the water
steps and into the palace where some jumped-up official in the Presence
Chamber informed him that he was late for his audience. Mendoza took
out his time-piece pointedly and examined it with compressed lips, but
the usher only shrugged insolently and opened the door to announce him.
In the room beyond, Mendoza found the Queen lying on a cushioned
couch and he checked in astonishment. There was a pinched look to her
face which suddenly caused him to feel positively genial as he bowed over
her hand.
“Good afternoon, madam. I trust I find you well.”
“You do not,” she announced peevishly. “I have been troubled by a
pain in my hip for several days.”
The look which accompanied this implied:
And you are to blame for it,
as you are for everything.
She had actually screamed that at him during a
previous meeting.
He schooled his expression into appropriate lines of sympathy.
“I’m sorry to see you suffering, madam.”
“Yes,” she said ironically, “I have no doubt you would arrange a very
speedy end to all my sufferings were it in your power to do so, Mendoza.”
He did not answer that, knowing how near the truth it was, and their
interview minced along the usual irritable lines, winding its way inevitably
to the question of the Spanish treasure. Mendoza, at first patient, became
patronising and belligerent in quick succession. He begged leave to point
out that the patience of His Most Catholic Majesty, though great, was not
without its limits. He begged leave to remind her—
Elizabeth sat upright on the couch, with two bright spots of colour
flaming into her thin face.
“Hold your damned rattling tongue, you insolent minion—I will hear
no more!”
Something snapped in Mendoza. After all these months of holding his
temper in bare restraint, he began to shout like a hysterical woman.
“Then if you will not listen to words, madam, you may shortly hear
cannon in their place!”
Her eyes narrowed suddenly and riveted his as she leaned forward a
little from her cushions.
“Speak to me like that once more, my friend,” she said softly, “and I
will put you in a place from which you will not speak again.”
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She meant it—he could see that. Diplomatic immunity would count
for nothing with this woman if she were pushed too far. The steely hold
of her eyes battered down the last of his defences and in a moment of stark
terror, he began to flatter her, fingering his ruff with a nervous gesture,
smiling uneasily, and curbing an urgent desire to urinate.
“Your Majesty has misunderstood my meaning—I spoke in jest,
merely to take your mind off your pain. No threat was intended—indeed
no. Who would wish to gainsay such a beautiful lady as Your Highness?”
The eyes released their hold and permitted him to step back from the
precipice. There was an acrid tang of sweat emanating suddenly from
his clothing and she held her pomander pointedly to her nose when she
dismissed him.
As he bowed stiffly and backed out, he reflected on the depth of his
hatred for her. It seemed to have taken control of his whole personality,
colouring and dominating every aspect of his existence. There were
times—today was one of them—when he could cheerfully have daggered
her without pausing to consider the cost. His only comfort was the certain
knowledge that her days were numbered—Spain, the Papacy, the Guise
party in France, she could not hold them off her trembling throne much
longer. It was a miracle she had lived so long.
It was true that many of her Catholic subjects remained loyal to her—
the English had no
zeal
, it was his continual complaint! Yet Mendoza
knew that the Council lived in daily dread of a Catholic assassination,
and deplored the moderation to which the Queen had clung throughout
her reign. The act of conversion to the Catholic faith had been made
illegal since Elizabeth’s excommunication and in that measure lay the core
of Mendoza’s hopes. In Douai, the famous Jesuit College was presently
training a whole new batch of young priests for their calling in England;
and once this formidable, dedicated band had infiltrated the country, their
avowed mission would be to sweep a wave of conversion across the land.
Faced with a steady growth in the numbers of English Catholics, Mendoza
knew that Parliament would panic, raising a clamour for harsher measures
which even the Queen could no longer ignore. There would be active
persecution at last, and under persecution even the most loyal and docile
Catholic might be prepared to put an end to England’s cunning Jezebel.
Mendoza went out of Elizabeth’s presence convinced that her charmed
life was in sight of its end, and determined to further that end himself by
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any means available to him. In the doorway he almost collided with the
Earl of Leicester, who smiled and bowed with mock civility, receiving in
return a salutation so curt it was almost a snarl.
Leicester went across the room and eyed the Queen cautiously before
sitting uninvited on the arm of her couch. Although she had been
expecting him and showed pleasure at his arrival, he was never entirely
sure of his welcome these days. The final departure of Alençon for his
armed mission in the Netherlands had made her more unpredictable than
ever and Leicester, above anyone else at court, found it necessary to tread
very gingerly around her moods.
“Something appears to have bitten Mendoza.” He looked at her
shrewdly. “Or would it be nearer to the truth to say
someone
?”
Elizabeth sank her teeth into a fruit sucket and smiled.
“He is a trifle ruffled, I grant you. Probably consequent on the fact that
he just declared war.”
“War?” Leicester stared down at her in alarm. “You mean
real
war?”
Elizabeth laughed shortly. “I don’t imagine even Mendoza would dare
to threaten me with toy soldiers!”
She sat upright on the couch and Leicester sank down into the space
she had made for him, looking extremely shaken.
“Good God!” he muttered, studying her face with anxiety. “This
could be serious.”
“Oh, I don’t think so. I’m afraid Philip simply won’t oblige him in
the matter, not while I continue to hold Mary under lock and key. Poor
Mendoza will have to ease his spleen by sticking pins into my wax effigy
a little longer.”
Recal ing the ambassador’s expression of demonic rage, Leicester was
uneasy. Like most men of his age, he had a very healthy respect for al mani-
festations of witchcraft and he did not take such an accusation lightheartedly.
“If you really think that then the Spanish dog ought to be arrested and
sent packing.”
Elizabeth sighed.
“I can’t expel Mendoza without indisputable evidence that he intends
me harm—and I don’t have any evidence.”
Except, this stupid pain in my hip…which in anyone else I might call rheuma-
tism, only of course I know it’s not…it couldn’t be…by God, I’ll hang the first
doctor who dares to even suggest it…
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She stood up with slight difficulty and the great drum farthingale flung
out a wide sweep of pearl-encrusted skirts about her hips.
“Don’t lose any sleep over Mendoza, Robin. If that spineless little turd
was really capable of doing me any mischief he’d have done it by now, I
promise you.”
“And the treasure?”
“The treasure stays.” She smiled suddenly. “Only consider how it
would distress dear Francis if I returned it.”
“Quite,” conceded Leicester drily. “And we mustn’t upset dear Francis
must we?—I thought you were going to hang the knave!”
“I will, when I find a piece of rope long enough to do it.” Elizabeth
glanced out of the window where the sun was peeping sulkily through
patches of cloud. “Saddle that new gelding for me, Robin, and we’ll ride
out in the park when I’ve changed my gown.”
As she walked away from him towards the Privy Chamber, he suddenly
noted the slight, but unmistakable, limp which marred her old graceful
carriage and the sight made him frown.
“Madam,” he called after her quickly, “let us play cards or back-
gammon instead—it will be more restful.”
She stopped abruptly with her back still towards him and every muscle
in her body tensed with sudden fury. She had been confident it didn’t
show, would have sworn she could defy the most observant eye to pick
out that one tiny, disabling detail so symbolic in her mind of encroaching
age. But he had noticed—the one person in all the world from whom she
would have died to conceal it!
“
Restful
?” She repeated the word slowly as though it was an obscenity
and wheeled round to fix him with a look of absolute loathing. “It’s not
rest I need, Robert Dudley, but exercise. And be assured I’ll find it with
a man who’s nimbler on his feet these days than you are!”
The door of the Privy Chamber slammed in his face and he sat down
on the couch with rueful resignation. She had not forgiven him for
Alençon and there were times when he felt she never would. He never
knew for sure now just when she would turn on him without warning or
provocation; since the birth of his son to Lettice she had been downright
hostile on occasions. Once she had appointed his old enemy, Sussex, to
inquire into his previous liaison with Douglass Sheffield, seeking proof of
a pre-contract which would automatically invalidate his union with her
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cousin. There had been no proof, thank God, and the matter had served
no purpose other than to make him look an absolute fool in the eyes of
the court and drive Lettice into a transport of vindictive rage. For some
considerable time his home life had been conducted in frigid silence, and
he knew in his heart that that result had been the Queen’s only motive
in the whole distasteful affair. Yet, curiously, he could not hate her for
it. In a warped way, it had made him love her all the more, for he was
satisfied that her attempts to humiliate him made her suffer at a far deeper
level than he did himself. He had a family and she had nothing—nothing
but the crown which had cost her so dear in terms of private happiness.
In spite of his bondage, he had snatched a small part of his life back from
her, setting up one petty boundary beyond which she could never pass.
He felt able to cope with whatever she might choose to do against him,
for he understood that she was a deeply unhappy woman. And because
of that understanding, he found he was able to forgive her a great deal.
t t t
The Parliament of 1581 was, as Mendoza had anticipated, panic-stricken at
the rising level of recusants. Elizabeth was faced by a bill which prescribed
the death penalty for anyone found guilty of converting a subject to the
Church of Rome. She moderated it as far as she dared without alienating
Parliament, insisting that conversion itself was treasonable only if accom-
panied by withdrawal of allegiance to her; but she was forced to accept
that recusants should be taxed out of existence by staggering fines, far
beyond the reach of the majority of her Catholic subjects. She didn’t like
it and she made no secret of the fact, but Burghley had made it plain that
there was now no choice.
In May of that year the most famous Jesuit priest of all entered England.
Edmund Campion had once been Leicester’s cultured protégé and had
stepped in court circles, basking in the warmth of the Queen’s friendship
and favour; but now he travelled through England like a hunted fugitive.
For over a year he eluded all Walsingham’s efforts to capture him and
his stature and reputation soared in the eyes of the Catholic population
as he slipped from village to village, ministering secretly to the spiritual
needs of the persecuted. He was doing more than the entire Jesuit force
to put heart into the Church of Rome in England and his supporters
were beginning to think him invulnerable, when Walsingham’s spies
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finally took him on a hot July day from a priest’s hole in Berkshire and
imprisoned him in the Tower.
t t t
Elizabeth stood very still in the window embrasure, twisting the coro-
nation ring that of late had begun to grow uncomfortably tight on her
finger. Leicester, who had brought the bad news to her, stood beside
her, glad even of this tragedy which had suddenly brought them so
close together.
“It had to happen,” he said softly, “sooner or later. With Walsingham’s
spies all over the country it was inevitable. I didn’t find out until today
or I would have told you sooner—they put him in Little Ease to make
him talk.”
“
What
!” The Queen swung round and stared at him. Little Ease was