Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
And as she walked, she reflected with anger that there were a hundred
things she would rather do than trail around the parched countryside at
snail’s pace in the company of a sick old man who could no longer excite
her passion.
Ricote, August 29
I most humbly beseech Your Majesty to pardon your poor old servant
in sending to know how my gracious lady does and what ease of her late
pain she finds, being the chiefest thing in this world I pray for, for her to
have good health and long life. For my own poor case I continue still your
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medicine and find it amends much better than any other thing that has been
given to me…from your old lodging at Ricote, this Thursday morning,
ready to take on my journey. By Your Majesty’s most faithful, obedient
servant, R. Leicester
The letter, written in a tremulous scrawl hardly recognisable as
Leicester’s bold hand, looked up at Burghley from among a pile of
papers on the Queen’s desk. He looked down at it with a curious
hangdog expression and wondered why in God’s name he had had to
notice it at this precise moment.
The Queen lifted her head, smiling as she pushed a pile of signed
documents across the table towards him.
“There—all done at last. You’re a hard taskmaster, William Cecil, to
keep me shut up in here on my birthday. May I go out to play now?”
He raised his eyes to hers uncertainly.
“Your Majesty?” he said vaguely.
“I said: Is that all for today?” She studied his gaunt face and added
kindly, “What’s the matter, Cecil—is your gout bad again?”
“No,” he muttered, scarcely attending, “thank you, madam—I am
much as usual.”
She laughed and flexed her stiff fingers, straightening her rings.
“Indeed you are, with a face as long as a fiddle. For a moment I
thought the Armada must be at sea again.”
She got up and went to open the window and the slight breeze from
the river disturbed the papers on her desk. Leicester’s note fluttered to
the floor and Burghley bent with great difficulty to retrieve it, staring at
it dully.
“What a lovely day,” she remarked thoughtfully. “Had Robin been
here we would have gone hunting—”
Burghley made no response. She turned in surprise to look at him and
suddenly, seeing his face in the harsh sunlight, she knew.
One hand crept slowly to her throat and the other went out to him in
a hopeless gesture of supplication.
“No,” she said dully. “Not now—not after—”
She broke off abruptly to draw a shuddering breath and turned her face
away from his pitying gaze.
Burghley put the letter carefully on the table and went over to her
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slowly, taking her trembling hand and pressing it, palm upward, to his
dry lips.
“Please believe me when I say this, madam—I am truly sorry.”
Elizabeth pulled her hand away from him and rubbed it fiercely against
her gown, for all the world as though he had spat upon it.
“When?” she demanded harshly.
He was hurt by her response and did not pretend otherwise.
“On the 4th of September,” he said, rather shortly. “At Cornbury.”
She looked up and stared at him then. Even the tardiest rider could not
have taken three days to cover such a distance. Lettice’s ultimate revenge,
as his legal wife, was to see her informed of his death like some distant
business acquaintance on the seventh—her fifty-fifth birthday. Burghley
saw her flinch and was ashamed of his momentary resentment.
“It was a peaceful end,” he murmured, hoping the fact would afford
her some comfort. “He died in his sleep. It is understood that the strain
of the journey—”
“It was my command—the journey,” she interrupted softly. “My
command.”
All that was left of Burghley’s human sensitivity curled up and cringed
as though in pain. Oh God, what a blunder!
“Madam,” he began inadequately, “I had no idea that—”
She cut him short with a curt gesture of her hand and stared out
through the window, remembering the hot morning when he had come
into her bedroom at Whitehall to take his leave. Dressed for travel, a short
cloak swinging from his huge shoulders, a plumed cap in his hand, and
the red veins bulging in his temples with the heat.
She had received him alone and he had taken advantage of it, neglecting
to bow or kneel or do any of those things which properly appertained
to the saluting of majesty. For a moment he looked at her searchingly,
turning her face gently to the cruel sunlight which flooded in from the
single window overlooking the river. Then he drew a finger over her
cheekbone and showed her its poppy-hued tip.
“I thought you and I were finished with deception,” he said
reproachfully.
He took off his cloak and told her he would have all the horses in the
courtyard returned to their stables.
“…with your gracious permission, of course,” he added ironically.
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“Robin! It’s nothing—”
“Please.” He laid a hand on her arm. “If you knew how many times
that wretched phrase of yours has put the fear of God in me you would
not say it again. I have bitter experience of the utter unreliability of your
judgement where your own health is concerned and I intend to remain at
court until I am better satisfied.”
A week ago she might have lost her temper, but now she knew there
was nothing he could say or do that would ever anger her again. She sat
down at her silver-topped table and told him very calmly, very pleasantly,
that he could go to Buxton of his own free will, or under an armed
guard—whichever suited his mood best. After that she sat in silence, with
her chin in her slender hands, watching him smack his hat angrily against
his thigh and listening while he swore.
“You have to go,” she pointed out at length when he paused for
breath. “Your wife is expecting you at Wanstead.”
“My wife,” he said grimly, “can ably fill her time with the attentions
of Christopher Blount, as she has done these several years past.” He glared
down at her. “Do you think she matters now—do you think anyone ever
mattered beside you?”
She looked at him standing there, red and fat and winded with exas-
peration, and thought sadly that she had never loved him better, not even
in the days of his glowing, virile youth. The great white feather, which
had stood so proudly in the brim of his hat, was now dangling limply, like
a broken daisy stalk. He tossed the hat down on the table and she raised
her eyebrows slightly at the sight of it.
“I hope you don’t intend to wear that to Buxton,” she said softly.
“Forget Buxton,” he snapped. “I never wanted to go anyway—the
season’s almost over. I can live with London’s stench for a few weeks
more, then we’ll go to Ricote together—as you promised.”
She removed the broken feather and began to smooth out the crum-
pled velvet brim.
“You know I can’t get away from London before the autumn. You’ll
have to come back for me.” She handed him the hat with a sigh. “I’m
afraid that’s the best I can do with it. I’ll buy you a new feather.”
“Your Majesty’s generosity is as usual overwhelming.” He was smiling
now, in spite of himself. “I suppose you think to get your own way in
the end.”
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“I usually get it,” she reminded him wickedly. “In the end.”
“Yes.” He was staring at her as though he was etching every fragile
line of her face deep into his memory. “Yes, you usually do, don’t you?
And what pray, am I to tell Margery Norris when I see her?”
“Tell her—November.”
“
November
!”
“At the earliest.”
He bent to kiss first her hand, then her thin cheek.
“You’re a very hard woman,” he remarked without rancour, as he
bowed and began to back stiffly to the door with one hand on the hilt of
his sword. “A diamond to my paltry grain of sand.”
“Robin!”
The sudden panic in her voice had made him turn sharply in the
doorway to look back at her, a black silhouette against the August sunlight.
She smiled uncertainly, made a helpless gesture of confusion.
“Write to me,” she whispered, as though it was not quite what she
had meant to say.
“Of course I shall write,” he said. And was gone.
Elizabeth stood very still watching that door shut over and over
again in her memory, and at her side, watching her narrowly, Burghley
felt cold with apprehension. Her eyes were empty, blank and cold as
marble, as though there was no one behind them. If only she would
move, speak, cry—do something he could accept as a normal manifesta-
tion of grief.
“Madam—” he whispered.
She moved away and began to search blindly among the papers on her
desk. He stepped forward, more quickly than he had moved for many
years and put Leicester’s note into her frantic hand. Her fingers closed
about it with relief and without a word she turned like a sleep walker and
went through into her bedroom, closing the door behind her.
A moment later, he heard the key turn in the lock. It was a harsh,
rasping sound, sudden, unexpected, and strangely final.
And it filled him with a curious foreboding.
t t t
For three days the Queen’s door remained locked and the room beyond
it shrouded in utter silence. The timid tapping of her ladies upon the
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heavy panels grew progressively into a frantic hammering, but there was
no answer, no response—nothing.
Questions pulsed through the palace, gathering bizarre and dreadful
answers, until Burghley could bear the suspense no longer. Accompanied
by a few members of the Council, he gave the order to have her door
broken down; and as the panels splintered he bit his lip and braced himself
mentally against what he would find.
He was the first to step into the room and see her sitting at her dressing-
table, staring into her mirror. As he limped to her side, she turned her
head very slowly and blinked at him, almost without recognition, from
glazed eyes. His glance fell to the empty spirits decanter in front of her
and he suddenly understood; oddly enough, it was the one thing he had
not considered.
His immediate thought was to spare her the indignity of discovery
and without turning round he gestured curtly to the councillors who still
hovered nervously in the broken doorway, ready to run for their lives if this
unpardonable intrusion on her privacy should be greeted with a screaming
tantrum. While Burghley’s back shielded her from view they bowed and
scuttled out beyond the ante-room, closing the outer doors behind them.
Elizabeth turned the decanter upside down over her goblet and swore
softly, finding it empty. She who had always shunned drink like the devil,
fearing to cloud her faculties and loosen her tongue, was now as drunk
as a lord.
She said vaguely, “I don’t like wine. Tell them to bring me more of
this brown stuff—aqua vitae—whatever it’s called.”
Burghley leaned over and took the empty decanter from her hand.
“Madam,” he murmured gently. “Madam, this does no good.”
“You’re wrong, Burghley—why are you always
wrong
about me when
it really matters? It helps to feel nothing, think nothing—be nothing.”
“For a while.” His voice was reproachful. “A very little while. But
you must see it’s not the answer.”
“I see nothing,” she murmured, maudlin with spirits. “My eyes are
closed for ever and I am blind.”
Leicester!
thought Burghley,
suddenly savage with frustration. God damn
him, God rot him, is he to be a greater threat dead than he ever was alive?
Aloud he said desperately, “Does it count for nothing that your
country is safe?”
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“Oh yes—the
miracle
!” She smiled strangely. “But we don’t get mira-
cles for nothing, Burghley, and I have made full payment for mine. One
gaudy hour of triumph in straight exchange for a life. The Devil drives a
hard bargain.”
He was silent a moment, immeasurably shocked, groping blindly for
the right words.
“Madam, it was a cruel loss—none knows better than I, I assure you.
But life goes on and is ill-served by such bitterness.”
“I’m not bitter,” she said wearily, “I’m burnt out. I’m no more use
to you, Burghley, or to England. I’ve no cards left to play. So release me
from our bondage and let me go now—while they still love me.”
While they still love me…
What did she see in her mirror to make her say that at the very peak
of her achievement, when she stood with her power at its zenith and the
people still chanted her name in the streets? What did she see in those
cold crystalline depths to fill her with such utter desolation?
Never in the thirty years of their association had he ever seen her look