Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
a grim hole at the far end of the Torture Chamber in the bowels of the
Tower, so built that a man could neither stand nor lie full length. Sunk in
utter darkness, crouched in the foul reek of their own filth, men had gone
blind and raving mad in Little Ease, reduced to poor gibbering wrecks,
covered from head to foot with lice and sores. And Edward Campion had
once been their trusted friend—
“How long has he been there?” she asked furiously.
Leicester swallowed and looked out of the window.
“Four days—so Walsingham said.”
“
Four days
! By God, I’ll break that damned Puritan’s neck!”
Leicester caught her hand as she moved to walk past him.
“You can’t blame Walsingham, madam—he’s only doing his job—and
doing it well, you have to admit.”
She compressed her lips with rage. “Yes! Thanks to him my prisons
have never been so busy, nor my streets so full of gibbets—and that
shrivelled spider gloats over every new victim, I swear he does. Well,
he won’t add Campion to his list—I shall write out an order for his
immediate release.”
“Madam, you know that can’t be done unless he recants and forswears
the Pope’s authority—do you want riots in the streets?”
Elizabeth sank on to the window-seat and bit her lip. He was right
of course—Parliament would expect her to make an example of such a
famous man. After a moment she looked up uncertainly.
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“Suppose we were to see him—you and I as old friends. Suppose
we persuade him to affirm his loyalty by one attendance at a Protestant
service—”
“Yes—yes, by God, you’re right, madam! Even Walsingham would
admit it’s worth a try for a man of such public standing.”
She stood up and the sunlight turned her curls to burnished copper.
“I don’t give a damn for Walsingham’s opinion—or even Burghley’s
in this instance! If Campion yields just one iota to show his good faith,
he can say Mass in St. Paul’s Cathedral for all I care! How soon can you
arrange the meeting, Robin?”
Leicester frowned and examined the watch which hung on a golden
chain around his neck.
“Well—he can’t be brought to court. It would have to be my house
in the Strand—say this evening?—and there would have to be witnesses
of course—Burghley and one or two other members of the Council.”
She nodded and touched his arm with gratitude.
“See to it then. And when he recants, I’ll bring him back to court in
my own barge.”
For a moment Leicester regarded her steadily in the harsh July sunlight,
disquieted by her sudden optimism. Campion had been a member of his
own household. He had known the man very well before his defection
to Rome, rather more closely than the Queen had, and what he remem-
bered most vividly about him was his absolute integrity and stubborn
sense of right. Suddenly, in Leicester’s own eyes, the outcome seemed
frankly less than hopeful.
“Madam,” he began slowly, “if we fail to move him in his resolution,
pardon will be out of the question. The Catholics will take it as a sign of
weakness and that is the last thing we dare to show at the moment. You
do understand that, don’t you?”
She turned her head away from him and looked out of the window.
“When I want Walsingham’s advice I will hear it from his lips,” she
said curtly. “Go now and make the necessary arrangements.”
He bowed and left her.
t t t
The hours that Campion had spent cramped in a space rather less generous
than a coffin would afford had bent and stiffened his joints. He stumbled
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when they dragged him out and poured cold water over his naked body,
scraping the caked filth from his skin. Dried and dressed in rags, he was
bundled into the waiting barge, bent double between his guards like an
old man, and he blinked in the cool dusk of the summer evening as the
plain prison barge floated down the dirty river.
They landed at the water stairs among a flurry of swans and he looked
up at the great house silhouetted against the clear sky, the roof rising in
four gables, terminating at the eastern end in a battlemented tower which
made the building resemble a church. Campion felt a wave of shock flood
through him. Leicester’s town house! Surely he was not to be granted the
privilege of seeing his old friend and patron after all this!
As he mounted the stairway, his reeling senses recorded the fleeting,
familiar glimpses of portraits and furniture and the smooth, polished wood
of the banisters beneath his gaunt fingers. At the top of the staircase, the
heavy double doors swung open before him and momentarily he was
dazzled by the blaze of candles from the room within. At last his eyes
focused on a small group of soberly clad gentlemen standing around an
oak table, equipped with pen and ink. Beyond them he saw Leicester
and beside him, in absolute disbelief, he recognised the Queen, dressed
in black satin blazing with diamonds, a fantastic stiffened ruff framing
her thin face. He noted that the blazing hair was a wig, the face a mask
of skilfully applied paint, and he was reminded of a wax effigy. She no
longer looked quite real and he failed to identify the gay, laughing woman
who had dazzled him with her attention more than fifteen years before.
Leicester, too, he scarcely recognised with his silver-grey hair, ruddy face,
and considerable girth, the penalty of too many years of good living and
unrestrained indulgence at the table. He felt a little shock of pity for them
both, two glittering but jaded personalities who had lost their immortal
souls for a ride on fortune’s wheel.
The Queen came a step towards him and held out a long pale hand
which shimmered with huge gems in the candlelight; as he knelt to
kiss it, he closed his eyes and felt time roll back in his feverish memory
fifteen years…
Hot sunlight playing on the stately stone buildings of Christchurch,
church bells pealing in mad welcome, the high-pitched Latin paean of
young boys’ voices:
Vivat Regina! Vivat Regina
!
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Susan Kay
Edmund Campion had shouted as loud as anyone in that crowd for the
red-haired Queen whose reputation as a scholar was a byword in Oxford.
Leicester lifted her down from the litter and the President of Magdalen
College, that notorious Puritan, hurried forward to kiss her hand. She
smiled her charming smile and admired his outfit.
“Loose gowns become you, Doctor—how sad that your opinions
should be so narrow.”
A ripple of laughter ran through the students as her words were picked
up, repeated, and passed on, and Campion had been close enough to see
the hated President blush hotly. The Queen’s eyes, dancing with sly and
subtle humour, had made the young man burn with desire to capture her
amused attention.
Later, in the long round of intellectual debates, his chance came. He
had prepared a brilliant paper on the influence of the moon upon the tides
and all the time he spoke he was aware of those eyes upon him, keen
with interest. When he had finished she smiled and beckoned him to her
side, where the Earl of Leicester still stood, tall, magnificently dressed,
flat-stomached as an athlete.
“You speak too well, sir, to be lost among this crowd again. Robin, surely you
can find a place for him?”
“It would be a pleasure, madam.”
“And your name, sir?”
“Edmund Campion, madam—Your Majesty’s most loyal and devoted servant.”
“Edmund Campion, do you acknowledge me as your Queen?” The
panelled room rushed back into his sight. The Queen’s voice was harder
and harsher than he remembered it, as though the long years had worn
away some of its musical intonation. Looking up into her face he saw she
no longer had laughing eyes.
“I acknowledge you as my Queen.” He paused, and added firmly, “As
my lawful Queen.”
“Then it is not your belief that the Pope may lawfully excommunicate
and depose me?” she continued eagerly.
His eyes flickered but did not leave her face.
“Madam, it is not for me to judge between Your Majesty and His
Holiness.”
She sighed and made a quick movement to still Lord Burghley who had
leaned forward to ask the vital question upon which the man’s life hung.
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“Campion, long ago I believe we were friends. My lord of Leicester
showed you great favour, did he not?”
“He did indeed, madam, and I was deeply grateful for it.”
“Your gratitude has taken a strange form—defection to Rome—
treason,” she said softly.
“Madam, there has never been any treason in my heart. I am a priest.
My mission is to save souls, not to engage in seditious activities.”
His eyes as they rested on her face were gentle and humorous,
and even now she could not quite see them as those of a fanatic or a
martyr. So much wit and humour in that rather gallant frame would
have brought him the Presidency of St. John’s, if not a bishopric in
the English Church, had not his sudden and unlooked for defection to
Rome ruined a promising career, making him an outcast and a fugitive
in his native land. If he recanted now he would be a trophy for the
Protestant Church. His example would weaken the roots of the entire
Jesuit mission and prove that more could be gained by reason and bribery
than by harsh, repressive laws which shed the blood of the guilty and the
innocent without distinction.
“Lord Burghley will ask you one question,” she said gently. “Think
well before you answer.”
The question, a device of Burghley’s, was to earn the title of “the
bloody question” because there was no reasonable answer that could
satisfy both the demands of the state and the demands of the Roman faith.
Burghley cleared his throat and Campion turned to look at him with
quiet respect, then bowed his head.
“If the Pope should send an army to depose Her Majesty, Edmund
Campion—what would you do?”
There was a pause, a moment of breathless stillness in the evening air.
“My lord, I would do as God should give me grace.”
Burghley grunted and pressed his lips together in vexation at time
wasted on a fool. The man had signed his own death warrant and as far
as Burghley was concerned there was no more to be said. Instinctively
he began to tidy the papers on the desk before him and had opened his
mouth to summon the guards, when the Queen shook her head and held
up her hand in a quick, commanding gesture.
“One moment, my lord. Rise, Campion, and look at me.”
He did as he was bidden and she held out both her hands to him once
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more. Automatically he knelt at her feet, pressing her fingers fervently to
his lips as though in mute apology.
“You mean me no harm, I know that, but you must recognise the
threat you present to the English Church and through that, the state.
I have a proposition to make to you and I hope you will listen.” Over
Campion’s head she saw Burghley stir indignantly and ignored him,
concentrating all her will and all her charm on the man who knelt at
her feet. “All I ask is that you show your goodwill publicly by attending
one Protestant service. I give you my word it need only be one and that
you will be free to worship as you please after that, in total freedom.
Campion, I believe you to be a good and gentle man. I am asking you to
prevent bloodshed in this land we both love.”
She was clever, he admitted that, very, very clever, and the quiet,
sane, pleading voice brought him to the very brink of spiritual chaos. It
would be so easy to do what she wanted in the spirit of self-justification,
to bend a little to the wind of necessity, and say—
What does it really
matter
?
Just once! Just once, she said, and looked at him almost tenderly,
as though she really cared, with just enough weariness in her eyes to
make him ashamed of laying yet another burden on her shoulders. She
knew exactly how to play on a man’s feelings; she was not ashamed of
emotional blackmail and he could feel himself sliding effortlessly into her
trap, lured to the rocks by a siren’s voice.
He opened his mouth to agree and closed it again, seeing the rocks on
which his soul would be torn asunder just in time. He would not barter his
place in Heaven to buy a little extra time on earth and spend it in comfort.
“Madam, forgive me,” he said gently. “I cannot do as you ask.”
She withdrew her hands from his and let them fall into her lap in
despair as the summer evening darkened steadily beyond the tall case-
ments. The reasons of state and the reasons of faith had met and clashed
and fallen apart, irreconcilable. Campion, like Sir Thomas More in her
father’s day, remained the Queen’s good servant—but God’s first. There