Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
of prosperity. There was no one else who shared the memories of her
traumatic childhood and miserable adolescence, no one else who made
her laugh and forget her worries as he did, covering his ambition with
a cloak of sincere affection so that she was almost—almost—tempted to
believe in it. No, there was no one else she would ever love as she loved
him. Without him, her world would be cold and empty, a gorgeous,
glittering, lonely shell, and she who had prided herself on her ability to
face life in splendid isolation was suddenly terrified at the prospect of that
existence. To be alone—utterly alone for ever—would be a living death!
God damn it, she would not send him away—and the devil take any
man—yes, any man—who tried to spoil what little happiness she might
find in Robin’s company. His company was all she wanted. Was it too
much to ask to remember that she was human?
She turned as the door opened and Mary Sidney bobbed an apologetic
curtsey on the threshold.
“Your pardon, madam—but Sir William Cecil is waiting in the
ante-room and begs to remind you that you promised him an hour
this evening.”
King Cecil
!
All her furiously bottled-up rage rushed out at the thought of that
whey-faced lawyer. What did he want now? More nagging about the
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damned succession? All he cared about was pushing her into bed with
some crowned nonentity; he didn’t give a damn whether or not she
would be happy, just as long as she did her duty and gave England a
son. And if she died in childbirth, he would stand beside her coffin with
reproachful eyes and say she had failed them all! She wanted to storm out
into the ante-room and stuff his state papers down his throat, to scream
and kick and shout:
I hate you—it’s all your fault!—
to behave as she had
done as a spoilt, wilful two-year-old when she could not have her own
way. Years of deadly danger had forced her to learn a rigid self-discipline
but, beneath the iron core of control, that petulant little girl still existed.
She was always there, threatening to break out, and sometimes it was very
hard to keep her out of sight.
Swallowing her temper, Elizabeth crossed the room slowly and delib-
erately, took a book from a table, and settled herself to read.
“I’m busy, Mary. Tell him—” She paused and met her friend’s even,
puzzled stare. “Tell him to wait.”
Cecil waited almost thirty minutes in the antechamber, chafing at the
delay which kept him from the stack of papers waiting in his room. Mary
Sidney sat in the window-seat and uncomfortably avoided his questioning
gaze each time he pointedly glanced at his timepiece.
When he was finally admitted, the sight of Elizabeth sitting idly in her
chair turning the leaves of a book was the final straw. How dared she treat
him as though he were the lowest counting clerk!
Stiff-necked with indignation, he informed her of the progress their
troops had made in Scotland. There seemed every opportunity of a
favourable peace treaty in which England would dictate the terms.
She patted a yawn and he had to put a hard grip on himself to hold
his tongue.
“I hoped the news would please you, madam.”
“I think you are quite pleased enough for both of us,” she said
unkindly. “And since this is so plainly a personal triumph for you I feel
you should see it through to the end.”
“Madam?” He was alert and uneasy.
“You will travel to Edinburgh and handle the terms of the treaty
yourself.”
So she was sending him away from court! Why? What was she about
to get up to behind his back?
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She saw his face stiffen with alarm and laughed at him.
“Poor Cecil. You’ve no spirit for such a journey, have you? But
I’m sure my cousin’s Protestant subjects will make you very welcome.
Take Mildred with you if you can’t bear the separation. The Scottish
air may bring a little colour to your sour face—God knows, it wouldn’t
come amiss!”
“I find it rather difficult to believe in Your Majesty’s concern for my
comfort.” He was coldly incredulous. The jibe at his wife was intolerable.
She shrugged indifferently.
“I desire it as I would my own.”
“But it is Your Grace who destroys it!” he burst out at last. “Forgive
me, madam, it is my duty to warn you of danger. Your conduct with
Lord Robert Dudley will be your ruin.”
She looked at him calmly and he was unaware that he had just set fire
to a very short fuse.
“Guard your tongue, my friend,” was all she said. Her voice was
deceptively mild and again he was misled.
“I believe it was Your Majesty who asked me to speak my mind
plainly, without respect to your personal will.”
Her book snapped shut and her eyes blazed suddenly hard and hostile.
“You may say what you like over matters of state, but leave my private
life to me. I’ll brook no interference there from anyone.”
“Madam, you have no private life. Your smallest action is a matter of
state, you are the Queen—”
“Yes, Cecil, as you so rightly say but seem to be in danger of forget-
ting, I
am
the Queen. And I warn you now that the man who tries to use
the spur with me will take a fall from which he’ll never recover!”
She stood up suddenly and he stepped back from the smouldering fury
in her eyes.
“You may leave me now, Cecil. Come back and speak to me again—”
She turned her back on him and spoke spitefully over her shoulder—
“when you have remembered your place!”
As he stared at her jewelled back something Sir Thomas More had
once said of her father echoed ominously in his mind.
“
If the lion knew his true strength it were hard for any man rule him
.”
And now he was finding it hard—perhaps impossible—to rule the
lion’s cub. He had thought himself in partnership with this splendid
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young lioness, but now he saw how easily she might break the chains of
discipline and dignity, and turn upon him with rending claws, as the great
Henry had turned on his loyal servants Wolsey and Cromwell. Never
trust a cat, the least domesticated of all animals!
Bowing coldly, he left the room with heightened colour and in the
doorway of the Privy Chamber met Robin Dudley, who inclined his
head curtly and said with a smirk, “Good evening, Mr. Secretary. I trust
you had a pleasant interview with Her Majesty?”
“I believe, my lord, that you would know that better than most,” said
Cecil icily. “And now, if you will excuse me, someone in her Grace’s
court must see to the business of the realm!”
Robin watched triumphantly as Cecil stalked away into the Presence
Chamber.
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Chapter 8
M
ary of guise stared out over the stone battlements of
Edinburgh Castle into the grey mist of another freezing
Scottish dawn.
Never before had the narrow little streets of her capital city seemed
quite so bleak. Sixteen years she had looked out upon them alone, sixteen
years since her husband had died and left her to fight for the rights of a six-
day-old daughter. She would not look out upon them much longer—her
fight was over. She had lost; and just for once she had not expected to.
The English troops had been so heavily defeated at Leith, at the very least
she had expected a breathing space, time in which to receive help from
France. But the slaughtered troops had been replaced with unbelievable
speed to continue the besiegement without mercy. And in France, the
uncovering of a Protestant conspiracy had drained the forces of her Guise
relatives. Whatever aid came now from Mary’s homeland would be too
late to save French influence and the Catholic faith in Scotland.
Crossing the battlements with a slow, dragging step, the Queen Mother
returned to her rooms. They were bleak rooms, as cold and comfortless,
even in summer, as the life she had led in this barren land since the day
she had sent her little daughter to safety in France. She would never
forget that French galley drawing slowly out of Dumbarton harbour, its
precious cargo a five-year-old child, queen of the most barbarous country
in Europe. It had been a mighty slap in the face for the English, who had
hoped to take her captive to London; but now those wretched years of
separation seemed so pointless.
Legacy
Long, hard years they had been since that day she rode away from
Dumbarton harbour, years filled with treachery and violence that had
found her many enemies and a handful of loyal friends. And when she
thought of friends, she thought of the Earl of Bothwell, surely the most
unlikely man in this world to embrace a lost cause. Bothwell was a lone
wolf and a loyal villain, the one member of the Protestant kirk who
refused to run with Knox’s pack. And it was Bothwell who had waylaid
that three thousand pounds of Elizabeth’s and embarrassed the English
government—not that Elizabeth had been embarrassed for long. Her glib
lies had disgusted Bothwell, who lied himself when it suited him as well as
the next man, but had never thought to see a woman sink so low. She did
not share his surprise or even his outrage, for it was the underhand which
ruled the world now, the stab in the back rather than the honourable
duel. It was the age of the serpent, and the tongue of the English snake
was long and forked in the darkness. No one could yet be sure how far
it reached.
But whatever followed this humiliating peace with England would not
be Mary’s concern. Her battle was over and with it her life—the doctors
had been plain and already she felt distant and indifferent. An hour later,
when they brought the news to her bedside that a delegation of English
commissioners, headed by Sir William Cecil, was on its way to Berwick,
she did not even turn her head on the pillow.
t t t
Cecil was glad of his lawyer’s training, his ability to function with
passionless efficiency while his mind was totally preoccupied with another
matter. Reports from his spies came in a steady and unencouraging
succession from England. The Queen and Lord Robert were everywhere
together—they were shut up for hours at a time in the palace—they were
alone— There seemed little doubt that their affair was rapidly moving
towards some kind of emotional climax and Cecil was in a mad fidget to
get back to the scene.
He cursed and railed against them in private, but it never affected his
work for a moment as he juggled the complicated legal details which
would result in an invaluable diplomatic triumph for England. The
Scottish Regent had died shortly before his arrival; a military disaster in
Tripoli had prevented Philip’s active interference by obliging him to look
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to his own territories; France was still desperately occupied overthrowing
the Protestant conspiracy of Amboise. Never had there been a more
perfect opportunity for the English to throw the French out of Scotland
and place power in the hands of the Protestant nobility, led by Mary
Stuart’s bastard brother, James.
By the 6th of July his work was completed. The Treaty of Edinburgh
formally recognised Elizabeth’s right to the English throne. The French,
but for a mere handful of troops, were finished as a power in Scotland
and the government of the realm could be safely left in the hands of
Protestant allies. All that remained was the acquisition of Mary Stuart’s
signature to ratify the document, and the back door to England would
be firmly locked. Cecil knew he had reason to be well pleased with his
achievement and the knowledge raised his spirits, causing him to view his
recent fears and discontent in a new light.
Whatever was happening in England, Elizabeth had to be grateful for
this, for it altered her whole standing in Europe. He had made her as safe
as she could ever hope to be, and what had Dudley to offer to compare
with that? It would surely win back her trust, that unique and deeply
satisfying trust which had been his before Dudley stepped between them
with his malicious innuendoes.
Suddenly, he could not wait to get back with his wonderful trophy;
he was as eager as a hunting dog to lay a rabbit at his master’s feet. She
would not pat him on his head and say: “Good boy,” but she might lay
those beautiful fingers on his arm for a moment and tell him he was her
right hand. It was the same thing really, he supposed wryly, but what did
it matter if only he could win her back again?
And perhaps he had been wrong to suspect her motive in sending
him away, for who else could have handled this tricky business half so
well? She had been right—he had needed this break from court, this