Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
rank had used that word to him. Her audacity amazed him.
“You are so restless,” he complained suddenly. “You dance and ride
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and shoot as though you may never be free to do these things again. If
you continue to live each day as though it was your last—”
She swung round from the window and smiled at him. “I shall burn
out like a firework before I am thirty, no? But that is no new thought—I
hear it from my governess quite regularly.”
Again he was shaken by her daring. To speak so lightly of burning
with Gardiner’s Heresy Bill now the law of the land—was she mad?
“Your governess is optimistic,” he said severely. “In my opinion you
may be exceedingly fortunate to reach twenty-two.”
“That doesn’t give me long, does it, my brother?”
Her eyes slanted a direct challenge that made him take her roughly by
the hand and lead her to the virginals. This way she had of playing with
her own danger excited his physical desire. And it alarmed him.
“Sit,” he commanded, “and play for me.”
She made a deep mocking curtsey and seated herself at the instru-
ment. He felt vaguely relieved to see her still at last, for somehow he
knew that if she went on talking and laughing and weaving her slender
body around the room, he would not be answerable for what he might
do to her. When she lost herself in the music she would forget to tease
and tantalise.
There was nothing to disturb his ears now except the tinkling notes,
nothing to disturb his eyes except those extraordinary fingers, mesmeric
as snakes, moving lightly across the keyboard and lulling him gently into
a trance-like state of contentment. He sat and watched them until the
failing light forced her to stop; then he leaned over and took her hands in
his, lifting them alternately to his sensual lips.
“You have beautiful hands,” he mused, turning them over in his grasp
and staring at them with an odd intensity, “such long fingers—almost too
perfect to be human.”
She waited patiently. After a moment she frowned.
“Is that all? I rather hoped you would go on to say they matched
my face.”
His pale skin turned furiously red.
“Madam,” he muttered, suddenly gauche as a boy, “your face is
beyond compare.”
“So is a vulture’s!” She gave him a wicked smile. “Oh—you are not
accustomed to paying compliments, are you, my brother?”
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“I am not accustomed to being
asked
for them,” he retorted drily. “In
my country no lady would dream of such brazen talk.”
She laughed and sat back on her stool, watching him.
“But this is not your country,” she said softly, “and I am not a lady—
surely the Queen has told you that.”
He looked away for a moment.
“Certainly she has told me that you are not to be trusted—as indeed
has one other.”
“What other? Come, Your Highness, you may safely tell me—was it
Renard? What did he say of me?”
“That—” Philip hesitated. “That you have a spirit full of incantation
and are greatly to be feared.”
A cold shiver touched Elizabeth’s spine. As an accusation of witch-
craft it could hardly be more plain, and superstition ran deep in Philip.
Suddenly his preoccupation with her hands took on an ominous meaning.
Too perfect to be human
—
Not since the day they took her to the Tower had she been so terri-
fied, and yet she knew instinctively that to show fear before this man
would be the worst thing she could possibly do. He would relish it and
believe at the same time that it betrayed her guilty conscience.
She leaned forward boldly and took his hand in her warm grasp.
“Is that what you believe of me, Philip?”
“I do not know,” he said slowly, staring at her very hard. “I know
nothing about you even after all these weeks in your company and I think
that is how you mean it to be. You hide your true self behind a mask.
You are charming, witty, accomplished—”
She pouted.
“You might try beautiful.”
“I might.” Against his will he was moved to smile. “Oh, I concede
you are fair of face—but beneath that pretty shell, I fear—”
“Oh dear—a natural savage at heart?”
“Madam, I would not venture to suggest what you were—at heart.”
They were very close, close enough to kiss. “But perhaps one day—I
shall find out.”
His pale eyes were locked on hers, urgently trying to suggest what his
pride and rigid breeding still forbade him to put into words. She saw with
amazement that he was desperate for her to make the first move, so that
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he could call her whore in his heart and enjoy her without a qualm of
conscience. What a prig! What a hypocrite! She wanted to slap his suave
face, but if she did that it would be an end of her, for he was not a man who
would ever forgive an insult. So it was better to play the modest virgin, to
blush and withdraw to a safe distance, while indicating with a subtle glance
that he might still pursue his elusive quarry. She dared not risk slighting
him with an open rebuff. Too much depended on his friendship and her
perilous attempt to hold it without running foul of the Queen’s possessive
heart. Already there had been whispers of peevish quarrels between Mary
and her husband, and Elizabeth suspected that she was the cause. She must
step warily, for once the child was born Philip would return to Spain and
she would be at Mary’s mercy once more, shut away perhaps year after year
until she was old and withered. At the end of that month she was abruptly
given leave to retire from court—leave which she had not requested—and
she knew her suspicions of Mary were well grounded.
A fierce tension hung over the country that spring as England waited
for the birth of a new heir. And waited. Mary was many weeks over her
time; the doctors said there was a miscalculation in their dates; the doctors
said it was quite normal. But the days slipped into weeks and the weeks
into months, while Mary lay heavy and moribund on her cushions waiting
for labour to begin. The country was explosive with unrest. Philip lived
in terror that the pregnancy might indeed prove to be a mistake, that his
wife was merely ill with a tumour and had never been with child at all.
And if that was so then the most disagreeable of his duties would have
to begin all over again, to say nothing of the humiliation which would
attend the announcement. He knew the epithet which the English would
hurl behind his back.
Another impotent ƒoreigner
!
It was August before the Queen finally accepted that there would
be no child and Philip, making his father’s abdication his excuse to go,
prepared to escape from England at the first opportunity. Elizabeth was
summoned to Greenwich and in a small panelled room the Prince of
Spain stood alone to bid farewell to his sister-in-law.
She sat on a little footstool at his feet, spreading her skirts around her
like the petals of a flower; and when he reached for her hand, she raised
her eyes slowly to his face with an expression which could only flatter his
taunted manhood, a look which promised an exquisite surrender.
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“I have things to say to you,” he said quietly, “things that must not be
heard outside this room.”
“You can trust me, Philip, surely you know that by now.”
He shook his head slightly. All he knew was that he had to trust her,
because he was too deeply lost in her coils to do otherwise.
“Savoy is very close to Spain,” he began haltingly, “and the Duke is
my vassal. If you marry him he would not be a possessive husband and I
would look to see you often at my court.”
She smiled.
“You disappoint me, Philip. I had hoped for something better than a
place in your harem.”
His breath caught in his throat. Was she telling him that in the event
of Mary’s death she would be prepared to give herself to him in marriage?
“Dare I hope—” he began and faltered.
She held out her hands to him and he lifted her to her feet; they stood
staring into each other’s watchful eyes.
“When I am Queen of England, Philip,” she said softly, “you will not
find me ungrateful for your protection.”
The bargain was now quite plain to him.
Keep me and my inheritance safe
from Mary and you shal have your reward
!
His hands moved to her bare shoulders; his mouth was dry with
sudden excitement.
“Will you not show me a little of that gratitude before I leave?”
As though on impulse she put her arms around his neck and kissed
him deeply. Drowning in her embrace, he pressed her close against his
codpiece. Suddenly she pulled away, shaken with what he could only
interpret as the violence of her desire.
“Not now,” she whispered. “Not here. Anyone could walk in.”
She saw the real horror in his eyes; to be caught in a compromising
situation would be worse than death to him. She laid a fragile hand
regretfully on his sleeve. “Wait for me, Philip—as I shall wait for you.”
He bowed and went to the door, a stiff, courtly figure in his black
suit. There he turned to look back with longing, and in his eyes was the
question he could not bring himself to ask.
“Trust me, Philip,” she said steadily, “trust my love for you—as I
know I can trust yours.”
He smiled his rare smile and was gone.
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When the door had closed behind him, she went to her own apart-
ments and scrubbed his kiss from her lips with a rough cloth.
t t t
Mary knew she must not weep. She must sit quiet and calm and listen
with borrowed dignity, while Philip held her limp hand and spoke to her
with the forced kindness she had grown to dread.
He was angry beneath that dignified exterior, and she bowed her head
before his cool eyes, shutting out the mask of pity which cloaked his
contempt. Her failure had exposed his sensitive pride to the worst of
insults. She had brought him to England and humiliated him, and now
that he was leaving and promising absently to return in a few weeks only,
he was speaking not of her, but of Elizabeth.
Always Elizabeth!
“If you wish to please me, madam, you will treat her with kind-
ness when I am gone. And in my absence the Act of Succession must
remain unaltered.”
When I am dead she will be Queen. And then he will take her…
But after she was dead, what did it matter? There was that in his face
which suggested he would not set foot again in England if she refused
him. And so anxious was she to bring him back that she agreed without
murmur to his terms.
When Philip had sailed away, pity chained Elizabeth to her sister’s
side. The empty cradle still lay forlornly in the empty nursery, mocking
its cruel inscription:
The child which through Mary, oh Lord of Might has sent
To England’s joy, in health preserve, keep and defend.
Elizabeth stood in the doorway and watched her sister rock the gilded
thing with her foot, and thought that in all her life she had never seen so
sad a sight. Impulsive words of sympathy rose to her lips, but she turned
away quickly before she could be seen, knowing she would do more
harm than good by voicing them.
With Philip gone there was nothing to keep Elizabeth at court.
She went back to Hatfield and lived as quietly as she could, while the
Protestants burned.
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Chapter 3
A
few weeks only” lengthened into nineteen long months
before Philip set foot in England once more. He stayed just
long enough to muster English forces for his war with France and
within a month of achieving this was gone again, leaving his wife
behind, once more indulging in a phantom pregnancy which deceived
no one but herself.
The war began well enough for the Anglo-Spanish troops, with a great
victory at St. Quentin; but Philip failed to make the vital march on Paris
at the critical moment and the French rallied their forces. On the 10th of
January came news of the greatest English disaster in more than a hundred
years: Calais, the last outpost of England’s influence in France, had fallen,
“the heaviest tidings to London and to England that ever was heard of.”
After that the French war dragged on and became a sieve, draining the life
force of the English crown to the point of bankruptcy.
Among the many young Englishmen who had accompanied Philip
to France was Robert Dudley. Released at last from the Tower, but not
permitted to show their faces at court, he and the rest of his brothers had
been kicking their heels in poverty around London and their country
houses until the god-sent chance of employment came. Robin had seen
Philip retire inexplicably from the furore of St. Quentin at the very
moment when Paris lay open to their troops. He was filled with contempt