Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
to cry or faint at her feet; the last thing she could afford, in her tenuous
position, was to draw the hostile attention of the bride’s father-in-law.
“Kat, fetch Lady Dudley some wine. I’m afraid the excitement has
been too much for her.”
Kat departed with a hard, accusing look at her mistress and returned
with a goblet of malmsey. Amy accepted it with a trembling hand and
took a few gulping draughts. Slowly the colour crept back into her face
and her lips set themselves into a thin, sulky line.
“Amy.” Elizabeth leaned forward a little to touch a ruffle at the girl’s
wrist. “Don’t look for kindness at court or anywhere else. The world is
a hard place.”
“Certainly,” said Amy pointedly, “it is full of cruel people.”
Elizabeth smiled faintly.
“I have found treason in trust and learnt to strike before I am stricken.
Let us dispense with pretence—there can be no friendship between us. I
fear neither of us desires it.”
“Robert shall know how unkind you have been, madam.”
“Only if you are fool enough to speak of it. What I told you was the
truth and if you have any sense you will learn from it. Open your mind
to his world and study the things that interest him. Be prepared to grow
with him, Amy, because if you don’t you’ll wake up one day and find
him gone. And believe me—the woman who takes him from you won’t
be prepared to give him back without a fight.”
Amy sat still with her hands clenched in her lap. She was no longer
shocked or offended; she was simply sick with terror in the face of a
declared enemy. She fixed wild eyes on the figures before the throne,
until at last Robin turned, intercepted her distress signals, and hurried
back, vaguely irritated by her obvious inability to hold her own for less
than five minutes without him.
Side by side they still sat; Amy agitated, almost dishevelled, as after
some physical encounter of which she had plainly got the worst; and
Elizabeth, with her finely chiselled poise, looking very—very as he had
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never seen her look before. Was it beautiful or merely mysterious? He
could not have said, but on impulse he bowed over her hand and begged
her to dance with him. Amy drew in her breath sharply but he ignored it.
Elizabeth glanced at Amy, laughed and shook her head.
“My lord, you should ask your wife.”
“I have the rest of my life to dance with my wife.” He was annoyed,
a little drunk, inclined to be heartless and belligerent. “And you owe me
this measure, madam. Listen.” The musicians were striking up a haunting
refrain. “Remember the day we learnt this at Hampton Court?”
“Greenwich.”
“Well—wherever! ‘
Andante andante
,’ you said and pinched me because
I went too fast.”
“You’ll always go too fast, Robin Dudley—”
They were out of Amy’s hearing by now, but not out of sight. Her
jealous eyes followed them, two bodies joined by the perfect harmony of
rhythm. They laughed rather more than was in keeping with the sombre
stateliness of the measure and when it was over they stood for an endless
moment talking.
Saying what?
screamed a voice in Amy’s head.
There was no opportunity to ask. Even as Robin raised Elizabeth’s
hand to his lips, his eyes resting all the time on hers, a crowd of laughing
women descended on Amy and bore her away to the bridal chamber.
There she was undressed, teased mercilessly, and put naked into the big
bed to wait for Robin.
“Don’t worry,” someone said kindly. “After the first time it’s not
so bad.”
“Oh, don’t cozen her with nonsense, you know very well that it takes
months—you take my advice, my dear, and give him a son quickly. Once
you’ve done your duty they take their pleasures elsewhere and leave you
in peace.”
The matrons drew off, arguing good-naturedly and Amy lay very still,
trying not to overhear snippets of their dreadful tales.
“…it’s the last thing a man does before they put him in a box, you know.”
“Aye—they’re all the same there—well,
most
of them, hey?”
The conversation became muted, laced with sly laughter.
Oh, Robert,
why don’t you come and send them all away
?…
He came at length, wrapped in a long satin robe, and it seemed to
Amy as though he had brought the entire court on his heels, a host of
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vulgar, drunken wedding guests who milled around the bed, laughing
and shrieking like grotesque devils from the mouth of hell.
But there was one who did not prance or shriek or sing rude innuen-
does, one who was stone-cold sober and whose slender presence terrified
her more than all the rest.
She shut her eyes and did not open them again until the noisy multi-
tude had jostled itself out of the room. What she saw then made her
shrink into the shelter of Robin’s warm nakedness.
Elizabeth was standing alone beside the bed. One hand rested lightly
on the bedpost and the other on the curtain, so that her sweeping Boleyn
sleeves unfurled like an angel’s wings. Candlelight made a red-gold halo of
her hair and softened the sharp contours of her face to a gleam of extraor-
dinary beauty. Beneath her hand, Amy felt Robin’s body stir and stiffen.
No one spoke. Elizabeth laughed suddenly and swept the curtain across
the bed, shutting them together in the little brocaded prison. They did
not hear her leave the room, but they knew instinctively the moment she
was gone; it was as though something beyond this world had withdrawn
to its own sphere.
The room was very quiet after the noisy crowd. Robin lay rigid
beneath the sheet, staring at the dividing curtain, and Amy sensed some
fierce emotion had him in its grip. Before she could speak, he had
wrenched the curtain aside with a violent jerk and strode naked into the
room. By the hearth he paused to pour a goblet of wine and she watched
him throw it down his throat as though it were water.
“Robert.”
“Be quiet!” he snapped.
“But I don’t understand—what’s wrong?”
“I said be silent, God damn you! Didn’t you promise to obey?”
He flung the empty goblet across the room. It bounced off the wall
and he stood staring at it for a long time. At length he returned to bed and
made love to her in the rough, selfish fashion she had been led to expect.
Afterwards he was moderately kind and wiped away her tears, reassuring
her until she fell asleep beneath his arm.
He lay awake, with her hair streaming across his bare chest and watched
the room grow steadily lighter. He thought of Elizabeth, wondering what
it would be like to lie beside her in the half light: and suddenly he was
filled with a hollow sense of loss.
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All through the next day, as he followed the hunt, he was dogged by
a curious depression which spoilt his pleasure in a good kill. He lingered
over cards in the Great Hall and Amy was asleep when he came up; so
he went back downstairs to find Guildford and the pair of them got
roisteringly drunk.
It was a curious relief to have been spared that nagging disappointment
two nights in a row.
t t t
Once installed in Norfolk, it was less easy to avoid his wife; and when
nothing in the length and breadth of that whole country gave him any
satisfaction, he began to escape to court as often as he could without
exciting comment. Discreet inquiries from his mother over the state of
Amy’s health, coupled with puerile jests from Guildford (“Not got that
mare of yours in foal yet, Robin?”) suddenly focused a new light on his
nebulous dissatisfaction. How could a man be content, burdened with
a barren cow who showed no sign of giving him a son and heir? After
eighteen months he had at last succeeded in convincing himself that
the sole cause of his bitter frustration was this persistent inability to be
presented with a miniature replica of himself. And one dull, rainy evening
at Syderstone saw them quarrelling peevishly on the subject.
“Perhaps if you came a little more often to my bed—” she said on a
sudden sob.
He turned away impatiently.
“For Christ’s sake, Amy—I’ve sown seed enough in you to father a
dozen sons by now.”
“That makes it my fault, of course.”
“I suggested you should see a doctor. I never
said
it was your fault.”
“But it’s what you meant.” Amy bit her lip. “And you were right.
There’ll be no child. How could there be, when a witch overlooked me
on my marriage bed?”
His irritable stride up and down the room halted abruptly; he swung
round to look at her with the curious, cautious look that people reserve
for the mentally deranged.
“Of all the brain-sick gibberish—” He stopped and his tone changed
sharply as understanding dawned. “God’s blood—you mean Elizabeth,
don’t you?”
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The casual use of that Christian name stung Amy like a pebble from a
sling and made her reckless.
“Everyone knows her mother was a witch—the King himself accused
her. And it’s passed on in the blood to the next generation, like the
French Pox. Father says that every witch—”
He took a step towards her and slapped her silent; his face beneath its
tan was quite white.
“If you say just one more word,” he spat, “I’ll take my whip to you.”
“You wouldn’t dare,” she whispered, holding her flaming cheek.
He gave her a tight smile, glacial, contemptuous, and turned away
in silence.
“I’ll tell Father,” she flung after him, suddenly desperate.
“Please do,” he said evenly, from the door, “and when you do you
might also ask him to send you a lawyer.”
She began to tremble then. “A lawyer?”
“You know on what business,” he announced curtly, and went out
of the room.
She knew. It was not the first time, he had clubbed her into silence
with that hefty cudgel labelled “divorce.” She couldn’t afford to provoke
him any further by giving free rein to her jealous tongue.
She would not speak of the Lady Elizabeth again.
t t t
Robin stood alone in the half-lit hall, marshalling his resentments like a
man inspecting a regiment.
He had been a fool to marry the first pretty heiress to cross his path—just
how great a fool was being revealed more clearly to him with every day that
passed. Events were moving fast at court. As the King’s health failed, Warwick
had said it might be necessary to alter the line of succession and Guildford
was being schooled for marriage with Lady Jane Grey. Guildford—timorous
and effete, always so afraid that life might have something nasty up its sleeve.
Guildford Dudley to be King of England, for no better reason than that it
had
to be Guildford; while Robin rotted in Norfolk, married to a snivel ing
little country bitch who couldn’t even give him a son!
And Elizabeth—
He broke off there, as though faced with a grievance too painful even
to acknowledge.
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Oh, yes. She was the catalyst in his simmering cauldron of discontent.
But he would die before he admitted it to anyone. Least of all to himself.
t t t
What remained of Edward Tudor’s reign ticked relentlessly away in a
welter of petty storms. Elizabeth lived like a nun at Hatfield, impeccably
Protestant and beyond the reach of Warwick’s hand; she was not, in any
case, his primary target. If Edward died, it was Mary who stood next in
line to the throne, and it was Mary he persecuted mercilessly for her stub-
born adherence to the Catholic faith, hoping to drive the sickly woman
into exile, or better still, into the grave.
When the King created him Duke of Northumberland he was at the
zenith of his power, great soldier, wily diplomat, the most feared and
hated man in all of England. The time had come when he could afford to
rid himself of liabilities and secure his position as undisputed ruler. And
first and foremost on his list was the Duke of Somerset.
As the net of intrigue tightened inexorably around him, Somerset
confided in Mr. Secretary Cecil that he suspected some ill.
Cecil’s bland face had the look of one who has stepped straight from
boyhood into middle age. Loyalty to the Duke was a damp cloak around
his bowed shoulders, uncomfortable to wear, easy to shake off.
And Cecil said coldly, “If Your Grace is innocent you may be of good
courage. If you are guilty I have nothing to say but to lament you.”
After this rank desertion, the Duke appeared to slip into apathy, making
little effort to escape the fate that was closing in upon him so relentlessly.
They came to arrest him at Hampton Court shortly afterwards and he
accepted the charge of treason with curious indifference.
Alone in his stone chamber in the Tower, he looked back down the
inevitable path of his failure to that night of Edward’s christening. Life