Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
am held in chains. I have no counsel. You have deprived me of my papers
and all means of preparing my defence…”
This had begun to go rather well. Several of the commissioners began
to look shaken and ill at ease, but Burghley and Walsingham held the
trial with a firm rein and swamped sympathy with raucous argument.
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It became a personal duel between Mary and the cold, white-bearded
gentleman who had stood behind her rival for thirty years—the formi-
dable little figure of William Cecil.
“Ah, you,” sobbed Mary at last, “you are my adversary!”
“That is true,” said Burghley with superb calm. “I am the adversary of
all Queen Elizabeth’s adversaries—”
Fearful of the verdict that would be taken at Fotheringay, Elizabeth
ordered the Commission back to London to finish their business in the
Star Chamber. At the end of October, unable to influence the outcome,
she received her sombre foremost councillors in silence.
“And the verdict?”
“Guilty, Your Majesty.”
Her eyes flickered a moment over their faces.
“Was the decision unanimous, gentlemen?”
“Unanimous save for one voice—Lord Zouche declared himself still
unsatisfied as to the guilt of the Scottish Queen.”
Lord Zouche was a brave young man. She wished she had the courage
to say she shared his doubts, but she dared not test their loyalty so far.
She turned away and slowly they filed out, until only Burghley remained,
hovering at her side like a bird of prey.
“Forgive me, madam—but we are all agreed that her sentencing
should be handled now by Parliament.”
So they were bringing in their ultimate weapon, secure in the knowl-
edge that she could not hold out against the demands of the Commons.
“
Parliament
!” she echoed dully.
Burghley lifted his hunched shoulders.
“The burden will be better shared, madam—and the world’s opinion
better satisfied. I strongly advise that the writs go out at once for assembly
next month.”
“Hold your damned Parliament then if you must,” she spat, and
walked out of the room. In the doorway she threw over her shoulder
bitterly, “But don’t expect me to open it, will you?”
And she did not.
t t t
Along the mud-sloughed roads Leicester rode on the last stage of his
journey to court, his mind full of the disasters from which his urgent
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recall to England had snatched him in temporary respite. A hopeless cata-
logue of military skirmishings designed to threaten the Duke of Parma’s
minor garrisons had culminated in the mad charge he had led at Zutphen.
He had fought like a madman on that field and his dreams still dripped
blood and the bitter memory of his brave nephew, Philip Sidney, dying
of the savage wounds received that day. He wondered how he was going
to face the Queen, what he was going to say to explain away the dreary
cycle of failure which had hounded his every move. It had been hard to
keep his mind on military action once he knew from Walsingham what
was afoot in England. He had begged to be recalled immediately, but the
Queen had insisted he remained at his post until the conduct of his affairs
was satisfactorily arranged.
Now as he turned into the courtyard and swung down from his
horse, he wondered what kind of reception he could expect. Abuse?
Recriminations? Demands for an accurate account of his expenses? It was
more than a year since he had seen her and there were many young men
at court only too eager to step into his shoes during his absence—that
virile toad Raleigh, for one, would have wasted no time, he was certain
of that. And Hatton, too, would have been making hay while the sun
shone. It was this uncertainty of his reception which had prompted him
to bring his step-son, the young Earl of Essex, back to court with him.
If she must smile on another man let it be Essex rather than Raleigh.
He could control Essex for as long as the boy remained his financial
dependant, but since his sojourn in the Netherlands, his fear of Raleigh
had become obsessive—
By the time he had stripped and washed his muddy face and dressed
again, the formal summons to the Queen’s presence had arrived. He
went nervously along the corridors, limping a little under the burden of
increasing obesity, and the combination of speed and anxiety caused him
to mop his red face with a handkerchief. He was bitterly aware that the
strains of the last year had not improved his physique. What would she
think when she saw him at last, a bloated old man with receding white
hair, who had failed her miserably?
He had expected a formal audience, but to his surprise he was shown
into her withdrawing chamber and her women, evidently on her instruc-
tions, immediately curtsied and withdrew, leaving them alone. For a brief
moment, before he bowed, he looked into her ravaged face and was
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shocked at the change in her; like him she appeared to have aged ten years
in the last twelve months.
All his carefully rehearsed excuses went out of his head, and he held
out his arms to her like a schoolboy.
“Will you kiss the conquered hero?” he demanded jauntily. “Or make
him live on bread and water to pay for his miserable failures first?”
She walked up to him, keeping a tight hold of herself, and poked him
ungently in the stomach.
“Bread and water wouldn’t come amiss, would they—what on earth
have you done to yourself out there, you bloated toad?”
He kissed her thin hand impudently. “I’ve been eating for two,
madam, since it’s damned obvious you haven’t been—you promised to
eat while I was gone.”
She smiled suddenly. “And
you
promised not to.”
He shrugged. “Well—a lot of promises have gone under the bridge
since then.” He took both her hands and put them around his neck and
saw the happy tears brimming in her eyes at last.
“Oh, Robin,” she whispered against his doublet. “Thank God you’ve
come home safely.”
“You should have let me come before,” he said gruffly, holding her
close. “How do you think I felt all those miles away from you, knowing
the danger you were in—I should have been here—”
“You’re here now,” she said. “That’s all that matters.”
He grimaced slightly. “Here to face my critics—I imagine there are
quite a few of them waiting to tear my campaign to pieces.”
She looked up into his lined face and said angrily, “If they’ve got
anything to say they can say it to me—I’d like to see the man among
them who could have done any better. Anyway, you won’t be here to
face them—I’m sending you straight to Buxton to take the waters.”
“Then—you don’t need me at court?” There was an anxious note in
his voice suddenly and she touched his face.
“It’s precisely because I need you with me that I’m sending you away.
It frightens me to see you looking so ill. When you come back, I shall
need all the support you can give me, Robin. They found her guilty—
you know that by now, I suppose—they’re going to try to force my hand
at last.”
He said nothing. He had come back to England for the precise
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purpose of joining his voice to those of his colleagues who were urging
her to sign Mary’s death warrant; but somehow it did not seem the
appropriate moment to tell her that. She appeared to be under the
impression that he was going to help her to make a stand against them
all and there would be time enough for her to learn over the next few
weeks that she was wrong.
t t t
Stone walls shut out the outside world, enclosing Mary in a strange
serenity. The pealing bells and heartfelt psalm-singing, which had greeted
the news of her trial and sentence all over London, could not penetrate
Fotheringay’s grim silence.
She had watched indifferently from a doorway while Paulet ripped
down her cloth of estate, because in law she was a dead woman and
unworthy of such trappings. Her calm smiles and idle speeches infuriated
the humourless Puritan; he could sting her neither to fear nor anger, and
his futility mocked him. In the bare stone patch where the cloth of estate
had stood, she hung a cross and pictures of the Passion. She would not be
troubled much longer by Paulet’s spite; she had only a few weeks left to
live and she did not wish to mar them with futile outrage.
Approaching death with the peaceful resignation of one who has
knowingly taken a fatal gamble and lost, she had no regrets at her rejec-
tion of Elizabeth’s promise of leniency. A proud and noble martyrdom,
for the sake of her faith, was better than a shameful life lived out in
prison as the object of Europe’s contempt. She would leave this world
with spirit and courage and hope, glad of the merciful release for, “
In my
end is my beginning.”
It was her motto.
She wrote a restrained and dignified letter to Elizabeth, requesting
burial in France, thanking her for the priest who had been sent to comfort
her last days, and inquiring ironically whether Elizabeth wished her to
return a diamond, which had been the pledge of friendship between
them, now or later. But she finished on a note of quiet threat:
“Do not accuse me of presumption if I remind you that one day you
will have to answer for your charge, and for all those whom you doom…I
desire that my blood and my country may be remembered in that time.”
The letter was her last barb against her cousin but, in order to be
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permitted to send it at all, Paulet made her wipe her face with the sheets
of parchment to prove that they had not been lanced with poison.
If there was peace in the winter-bound world of Fotheringay, it was not
mirrored at Greenwich where revelry had ground to a halt and the corridors
were hung with whispers. The Queen made few appearances in public. She
was harried day and night by advisers, clamouring for her signature on the
death warrant, and had taken refuge in her private apartments.
The heavy velvet curtains of her withdrawing chamber were drawn
against the icy winter winds which buffeted the casements and she sat
close to the fire, laced into a heavy cloth of silver gown, chewing the
scarlet paint off her long nails and staring moodily at the carved and
gilded ceiling.
Her supper, untouched on a silver tray beside her, caught her attention
at last and made her clap her hands irritably.
“Take it away,” she said curtly.
As Elizabeth Throckmorton curtsied nervously and removed the
offending tray from the room, the Countess of Warwick laid her embroi-
dery aside with a frown and left her seat by the hearth to kneel at the
Queen’s feet.
“Madam—” Her voice was a stern reproach and Elizabeth looked
away guiltily.
“Tomorrow,” she muttered.
The Countess sighed and gripped her hand.
“You said that yesterday, madam—and not so much as a manchet of
bread has passed your lips all day. It can’t go on! Another week like this
and the only death warrant you will have signed is your own.”
Elizabeth freed her hand and stood up wearily.
“Burghley is waiting in the ante-room, Anne. Send him in, if you please.”
“I know where I’d
like
to send him,” said the Countess, getting with
difficulty to her feet. “It’s a disgrace the way they’re hounding you,
madam—Robert knows my mind on the matter, Lord knows I’ve made
it plain enough.”
The Queen smiled faintly. Leicester was Lady Warwick’s brother-in-
law and the Countess seldom gave him any quarter.
“Anne! You know he couldn’t stand against the entire Council in this.”
The Countess sniffed.
“When did he ever stand against anyone, begging your pardon, madam?”
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“I won’t have him maligned in my presence,” said the Queen sharply.
“He is not well.”
Lady Warwick curtsied with unruffled calm. She was a trusted friend
who knew her mistress well and was not afraid to speak her mind on any
subject.
She said with asperity, “I shall tell Goodrowse to prepare you a sleeping
draught,” and went to admit the old Lord Treasurer.
Burghley came into the room leaning heavily on his staff and snapped
his fingers to the Queen’s remaining women, signing them to leave. For
a moment he awaited Elizabeth’s angry reaction to his unprecedented
impertinence, but she was staring into the fire as though she had not
even noticed. Too exhausted to care, he thought quickly, and for once
his excitement outweighed his concern. If he ever had a chance to master
her will, it was now—
He surpassed himself with his own eloquence that night, and she
listened, supine in her chair, like a snake mesmerised by its charmer,