Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
investiture and witness the Virgin Queen of England tickling the neck of
the new-made Earl who knelt before her. Robin looked up at her with a
familiar grin and she parted her lips in a burlesque of a kiss, while Andrew
Melville held himself rigid to suppress his burning desire to stride up and
slap her presumptuous face. He had already suffered a great deal from the
English Queen in the preceding weeks. On more than one occasion, she
had backed him into an impossible diplomatic corner, demanding to know
whether he considered her to be more beautiful than his own mistress.
Who was the better musician, the better dancer? He had grown scarlet
with embarrassment beneath her wicked gaze as the outrageous questions
became increasingly personal and he was uncomfortably aware that her
attendants were doubled up with amusement at his acute discomfort.
“And which of us is the taller, Sir Andrew?”
“My mistress stands several inches above Your Majesty.”
“Ah, then she is too tall, for I myself am exactly the right height for a
woman—do you not agree, sir?”
What could he say? How could he ever face his own mistress again?
He had never in his life been made to look such a wooden idiot, but
this investiture was the final straw. How dared she insult his Queen by
offering this shabby adventurer, the man who was commonly reputed to
have murdered his wife in order to find a place in the royal bed? And how
dared she publicly demonstrate the relationship which was obviously still
between them as though her original suggestion had not been insolence
enough! Tickling his neck on a solemn state occasion—what did they do
in the privacy of her apartments if this was how she behaved in public?
And as for that disgusting suggestion that the three of them should form
one household—he glanced up and quailed, for the ceremony was over
and she was bearing down upon him once more. And if she made one
more tasteless remark—just one!—he was going to throw diplomacy to
the winds.
“Well, Melville—what do you think of my new creation?”
350
Legacy
“No doubt he will adorn his place,” said Melville drily. “He is fortu-
nate indeed to have a princess willing to reward him for his services.”
She knew what he meant by that and was amused.
“I detect a certain lack of enthusiasm, Melville.” She glanced point-
edly at Darnley, who bore the Sword of State and a bored expression. “I
hope you don’t prefer that long lad over there for your mistress.”
Melville was startled. How in God’s name had she got wind of their
interest in Darnley? Did she want Darnley for herself ? Certainly her
tone implied that she would not consider Mary’s interest in him in a
friendly light.
“Why, madam,” he replied hastily, “no woman could prefer that
beardless lady-faced boy to so fine a man as Lord Leicester.”
She smiled coyly, inclined her head in approval of his answer and
beckoned the new Earl to her side. Melville drew aside in some relief.
As far as he could tell, he had assuaged her suspicions, but her attitude
had confirmed his private opinion: Darnley was a good catch that must
be netted with the minimum of delay. For if she knew, she would stop
it—her tone had made that quite clear.
The reaction in Scotland to the Earl of Leicester’s suit was exactly
what Elizabeth had hoped for. Mary was blind with rage and deaf to
the most elementary promptings of common sense. Neither her advisers
nor her half-brother were able to reason with her and persuade her to
call Elizabeth’s bluff. The insult was intolerable. The Horsemaster, the
murderer, the son of a traitor and—worse than any of these—the cast-off
lover! How dared Elizabeth try to pass him on as though he were a well-
worn slipper whose comfortable fit she could heartily recommend. It was
disgusting—
disgusting!
—and she would not give the proposal a moment’s
serious thought, no, not even with the subtle promise of the English
succession as a wedding present.
Rage stripped away the mask of patience and restraint which Mary
had cultivated for nearly three years, exposing her raw emotions to the
air. And Elizabeth allowed Darnley to escape to Scotland at the precise
moment when she judged her cousin to be ready to fall in love with
the first handsome candidate who crossed her path. Darnley was an
English subject—he would bring Mary nothing but his Tudor blood
and his remote claim to the English throne, as Mary’s outraged bastard
brother, James, did his best to point out to her before it was too late. As
351
Susan Kay
he watched his half-sister’s helpless infatuation take its natural course,
James pleaded, begged, and finally threatened; while Elizabeth, apparently
furious at the turn events were taking, demanded Darnley’s immediate
return to England. The open hostility from James and Elizabeth was
sufficient to convince Mary that Darnley must be a good match. He
was also a Catholic and the most handsome and charming young man
she had ever had the good fortune to meet. The choice seemed patently
obvious to her—she was heartily tired of humouring her enemies. Her
marriage to Darnley was conducted in almost indecent haste, simultane-
ously satisfying a physical lust and a personal spite against her half-brother
and her English cousin, the two people she had begun to hate more than
anyone else on earth.
Within a month, the marriage was celebrated by civil war. James led
her outraged Protestant nobility in open rebellion against her and she
rode into the field against him, nursing a devastating personal knowledge
of the perverted drunkard who was now her King-Consort. The peace
which Mary had so skilfully preserved in Scotland since her arrival was
shattered beyond repair, while in England Elizabeth smirked as the new
Earl of Leicester paid out his thousand gold pieces and seriously began to
wonder if she had second-sight.
After six months of degradation and misery with a debauched brute for
a husband, pregnancy was Mary Stuart’s sole triumph, all she had to show
for the marriage that had split her kingdom and turned her half-brother
into a traitor. Only the devotion of her closest adviser, the stunted little
Italian musician David Riccio, saved her from abject despair, as slowly
and carefully he began to rebuild the bridges which her hasty marriage
had destroyed. It was soon obvious to Darnley, to the Scottish lords, and
to the anxiously watching English councillors that Mary was receiving
too much good advice and that something drastic would have to be done
about it. So on a bitter March night, with a savage brutality unparalleled
even in Scottish history, Riccio was stabbed to death in the presence of a
mistress six months gone with child. Darnley held Mary while the Lords
Ruthven, Morton, Lindsay, Kerr, and Douglas plunged their daggers into
the little Secretary in a frenzy of blood lust; he stood by, with quiet
satisfaction, while Kerr pressed a cocked pistol against Mary’s side and
threatened the life of his unborn child. He was a king at last, taking a
kingly revenge on an inferior rival, and his conscience never stirred; but
352
Legacy
later, alone with his wife, his sense of self-preservation did and the signs
of nervous agitation were unmistakable to Mary. She had neither time
nor strength to waste voicing her loathing of this spineless traitor—that
could come later when she was safe. Now she needed the pitiful craven
to engineer her escape, and she began to play mercilessly on his fears
with such success that a mere night later saw her riding with Darnley to
the safety of Lord Bothwell’s castle at Dunbar. And when the news was
brought to England, Elizabeth astonished her own advisers by applauding
the courage and cunning by which Mary had won free of her enemies.
“I’m only sorry she didn’t stab Darnley with his own dagger at
Dunbar!” she cried. “The mean-minded knave should be boiled alive for
the way he’s treated her.”
It was too much for Leicester’s logic. He had to point out to her that
it was she who had sent the mean-minded knave to her cousin in the first
place, but she did not appear to hear as she stalked up and down the room
with an angry swish of brocade.
“They say he held her and forced her to watch it all—a helpless girl
carrying his own child.”
“Madam, that helpless girl is your deadly enemy, you’ve said so your-
self before now. And you knew Riccio was to be murdered. I showed
you Randolph’s letter weeks ago—you approved of it.”
She shot him a look of hostility.
“I approved the principle, not the means. Neither you nor Cecil told
me that it was to be done in her presence with the poor devil clinging to
her skirts and screaming like a stuck pig. They say her gown was soaked
with blood—”
Elizabeth stood in the centre of the room, clenching and unclenching
her hands. They were alone, so he could not accuse her of play-acting for
the benefit of watching ambassadors.
“If I’d known it was to be done like this I’d have warned her—I swear
I would.”
He was silent, trying to reconcile this angry sympathy with the cold
cunning of her diplomacy. Increasingly, he was beginning to see the
woman and the Queen as quite separate entities. A pity one never knew
which one would be called to face!
At last he said cautiously, “Well, it’s done now. Does it really
matter how?”
353
Susan Kay
“It could have caused her to miscarry.”
Robin shrugged. “I’d say it’s not too late, even now, to hope for that.”
“
Hope
?”
she picked up an inkwell from her desk and flung it at him
wildly. “You think I hope for the death of unborn children? God, what
an insensitive pig you are. Get out of my sight and don’t come back until
you’ve wiped that gloating smile off your face.”
He picked his way carefully over the trail of ink and bowed himself
out of the room, reflecting that it was rarely possible to know just what
she would welcome. Evidently the only kind of treachery she seemed to
approve of was her own.
In the corridor beyond he met Cecil, who glanced at his ink-splashed
doublet with a quizzical expression.
“Still angry, I see,” the Secretary remarked. “This is perhaps not the
time to seek audience.”
“Not unless you aspire to decapitation by inkwell,” said Leicester drily.
The two men exchanged a guarded smile. For a fleeting moment there
was an alliance of puzzled male sympathy, as strong and irrational as that
which had suddenly united Elizabeth with her sworn enemy.
They withdrew together beyond the Privy Chamber, civil with each
other now, as political necessity had increasingly forced them to be.
“What do you make of this business with the Scottish Queen, Sir
William?”
Cecil frowned and glanced round cautiously to ensure they would not
be overheard.
“I think it a great pity they allowed her to escape. Given time and the
right support, she will regain her full power and influence in Scotland.”
Leicester gave him a heartless little smile.
“Time is the one thing no one can give her—from what I hear she
has no hope of surviving the birth. Three more months, Sir William, and
God may resolve our problem for us.”
Cecil sucked in his lower lip and gnawed the edge of his greying beard.
“The fortunes of every Englishman may now depend upon the fate
of Mary Stuart in childbed. I hope you’re right, my lord—indeed I hope
you’re right.”
354
Chapter 3
A
ll the windows of the great hall had been pushed open
and a gay riot of music and laughter spilt out into the sweet
dusk beyond. It was a sultry June evening and not a breath of air stirred
the silent trees in the rambling riverside gardens of Greenwich, as Sir
Andrew Melville rode hell for leather into the empty courtyard and
tumbled from his spent horse. Grooms hurried forward to take the
reins from his hands and he paused a moment to draw his sleeve across
his sweating face, before stumbling through the clouds of midges into
the palace.
In the hot, airless corridor beyond the Great Hall he encountered the
Secretary of State who stiffened visibly at the sight of him.
“Melville! What news?”
“It’s a son, Sir William—a fine, bonny prince.”
“And your Queen?” Cecil’s voice was sharp with anxiety.
“A hard and difficult labour—but, God be thanked, the doctors say
she will recover.”
Cecil gave him his cold hand.
“You bring us wonderful tidings,” he said stonily, his sombre face
as fixed and unsmiling as a death’s-head. “I know Her Majesty will be
overjoyed when I inform her.”
Melville made a quick step towards the door of the Great Hall.
“But surely I should deliver news of such moment in person.”