Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
this after a quarrel with the Queen and she was a woman who appreciated
crude emotions in a man. Not for Lettice the well-mannered lover. She
had married one, for the sake of a title, and wished him dead within a
month. When Leicester flung her across the narrow Indian couch and
took her with a bruising violence that was little short of rape, she writhed
with ecstasy beneath the savage beating of his body in hers.
The arrangement had been in existence for some time now. There
had been other women, of course, over the years, even a bastard son to
Douglass Sheffield, but somehow it had been inevitable for him to drift
back into this old liaison with Lettice. He needed Lettice; she preserved
his sanity, slaking the fire which the Queen delighted to raise.
When at length he lay beside her, with one arm across her breast,
relieved of his fierce tension and desire, staring at nothing, Lettice wanted
to laugh out loud. Oh, how he loved to be the master, to remind himself
that he was truly a man; and how well their mutual need of each other
suited them both; he chained to a frigid mistress, and she to a mild, meek
bore of a husband. If she knew whenever he took her in this angry manner
that his thoughts were not really of her, it made no difference to the
intensity of her pleasure. She lived for his moods of naked savagery and
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revelled in the animal-like quality of their fierce lovemaking. Leicester
satisfied her as no man had ever done before and when at last he rose
in moody silence, dressed, and left her, she lay alone on the old couch,
treasuring her bruises and thinking smugly of Elizabeth.
Danger enhanced the quality of this stolen pleasure. Lettice knew she
risked her position at court, possibly even her life, every time she accom-
modated Leicester’s frustrated manhood. There was only one step more
perilous and already her perverse, possessive nature had begun to set itself
on the idea of secret marriage. It was impossible, of course, while her
husband lived, but he was a weakling and his service in Ireland was taking
a heavy toll of his health. Ireland had hounded better men than Walter
Devereux to their dispirited deaths. And if she should ever be fortunate
enough to find herself a lusty young widow, there was only one man who
would do now for her next husband.
Her throat was dry with excitement at the thought. To goad Leicester
into a permanent, legal relationship, to make him relinquish his vain
pursuit of that royal butterfly—it was madness, sheer insanity, almost a
death wish for the pair of them. He would never do anything so grossly
suicidal—or would he? She remembered a night not long ago when he
had drunk deep and given free rein to his resentment in a burst of inebri-
ated self-pity.
“I was full of hope after her last illness, Lettice. We were so close
that I truly began to think—” He had turned away angrily. “But I was
wrong, of course—I’m always wrong about her. And now it’s all just as it
was before—Hatton, Ormond, Oxford—Tom, Dick and Harry for all I
know—I must take my place in line again and wait until she remembers
to throw me a smile. I can’t bear it, Lettice, it’s destroying me. I never
know for sure just how far she goes with them, but one day she’ll goad
me too far. There’ll be one laugh and one slap too many—and I’ll kill her,
I swear it. I’ll put my hands round that beautiful white neck and squeeze
every last mocking breath out of her body. And when she’s dead in my
arms, she’ll be mine at last—mine only!”
“Treason,” said Lettice softly. “You know that’s treason.”
He went to stand at the window, staring bleakly at the swaying trees,
and for once she was moved by pity for the depth of his despair.
“Come here,” she said. He came back to the bed and lay down beside
her dully.
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“There is a better way to kill Elizabeth,” she whispered, “a way that
may just leave your head on your shoulders for you to enjoy it.”
When she had told him, he laughed and slapped her bare buttocks
and told her she was an impertinent little minx. She could see he had not
taken her suggestion seriously and at the time it had angered her, made
her aware of the inferiority of her position as his mistress. But she had had
the good sense not to show it and they had parted amicably.
“My dear,” he had said, in a sudden excess of maudlin gratitude, “if
only it were possible.”
The seed was safely sown, and each unkind rebuff from Elizabeth
would nurture it tenderly—Lettice was quietly confident of it.
Now she slipped off the couch and began to dress slowly, fastening the
lawn ruff over the red love bites on her neck, and smiling with soft malice
into a tiny pocket mirror.
“You had better be careful, Elizabeth, my bastard bitch cousin,”
she whispered to her reflection, “very, very careful with your precious
possessions from now on, or I may deal you a blow which will make you
wish you were dead.”
t t t
While the court was on progress at Leicester’s castle of Kenilworth later
that year, news came of an event which seemed calculated to destroy the
new alliance between England and France.
Elizabeth was out riding with a small party of courtiers when a despatch
from Francis Walsingham, her ambassador in Paris, was brought to her side.
Leicester brought his horse alongside hers as she opened the seal and
began to read. He saw the look of incredulous fury which stole over her
face and heard her curse vehemently under her breath.
“Bad news, madam?”
“I must return at once!” she said curtly and swung her horse’s head
around. They rode back in total silence and he hurried after her to her
private apartments, where she flung herself into a chair.
“Find Burghley—have him brought to me at once, and the rest of you
women, out of my sight. Leicester—you stay!”
She was in no mood to be questioned, that was obvious, so he took
up his position beside her chair and waited until Burghley hobbled into
the room.
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“Sit down,” she said before he got the chance to bow, “and read this.”
Burghley took the despatch. As he read, his white eyebrows knit
together and his normally bland features hardened.
While he absorbed details of the most unprecedented religious massacre
in history which had taken place on St. Bartholomew’s eve in France,
Elizabeth paraphrased the more horrific passages for Leicester’s benefit.
“…the Protestants lie dead in their thousands, the nobility in Paris, the
rest in villages throughout France. Women, children, and babies—yes,
babies
!—were dragged from their homes and butchered in the streets—
the River Seine is choked and rotten with festering bodies. And all done
at the hands of the French king—or, to be more precise, his damnable
mother—simply because she botched the assassination of a political rival.”
“Not
Coligny
?” murmured Leicester, aghast. Coligny was the leader of
the French Protestants.
“Yes, he’s dead! The rest were murdered for fear of revenge when blood
lust took control. Catherine has wiped out the entire Protestant faction in
France—the Puritans here will make an endless meal out of this!”
Burghley looked up from the despatch and announced with awesome
pomp, “Madam, this is the greatest crime since the Crucifixion.”
She had expected this and her glance was suddenly hostile.
“Oh, for God’s sake, Burghley, spare me the noble sentiments—I
happen to know that were this only a massacre of Catholics you person-
ally would be lauding it to the heavens. Why is it that all bigots are such
hypocrites?”
Burghley flushed as red as a beetroot at her rebuke and Leicester was
unable to resist a smile. There was an uncomfortable silence as the Queen
swept angrily up and down the narrow stone room across an oriental carpet,
then stopped and glared at Leicester, who turned off his smile hastily.
“Well? And what have
you
to say about this—as if I couldn’t guess!”
Catching sight of Burghley’s pleading glance, he coughed and took up
his cue at once.
“Madam, when the news of this gets out the fury against the Scottish
Queen will become uncontainable.”
She put her hands on her hips in what he read as an uncomfortably
threatening gesture.
“You dare to tell me to my face that Mary is responsible for this
outrage?—the woman is a friendless prisoner, not a second Eve.”
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“The Daughter of Debate can scarcely be called friendless,” Burghley
interposed quietly. “She is the Queen of the Castle and her friends will
be held responsible for this, justly or not.”
“Then God preserve her from her friends, my lords, as I once prayed
he would preserve me from mine!”
It came on an angry note and the two men exchanged looks of alarm.
These odd moments of personal and political sympathy with her rival were
quite beyond their comprehension. Leicester cleared his throat hesitantly.
“Surely Your Majesty will not continue to protect her after this?
France is in no position to object to her execution now—it’s the perfect
opportunity to be rid of her.”
“I fear I must agree with Leicester, Your Majesty,” said Burghley drily
and the Queen laughed outright.
“I suppose that is indeed a miracle—the two of you in agreement after
all these years! But you waste your breath, both of you. I will not take
responsibility for the judicial execution of a sister queen.”
“Assassination then, madam,” suggested Leicester, a trifle too smoothly.
Elizabeth frowned.
“If she dies mysteriously in an English prison every finger will point
to me.”
“She could be returned to Scotland,” said Burghley calmly. “The
Scottish Regent would no doubt be glad to execute her for us—at a price,
of course.”
Elizabeth walked away from them, as though suddenly deep in
thought. Whatever the price, it would be too high, she would see to
that. Once it was accepted that a sovereign was answerable for common
crimes, like any ordinary man, the whole concept of monarchy would
be in the melting pot. She wondered why they could not see what a
dangerous precedent it would set. They were too obsessed with Mary to
see the issue objectively, worrying at her life like dogs with a bone, blind
to all reason. Even a man as astute as Burghley was unable to divorce
himself from the present and see that Mary dead might ultimately be a
great deal more dangerous than Mary alive.
She glanced at the two men, so dear to her in different ways, both
desperately trying to read her mind. The advice they gave was but an
echo of what she could expect to hear from her Council and the country
at large. “Cut off her head and make no more ado with her,” Parliament
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had said months ago. “The axe must give the next warning.” One day
there was going to be real trouble with Parliament; Elizabeth sensed it in
the growing outspokenness of the Commons. Each session seemed just a
little more difficult to rule than the last, testing her powers of autocracy,
making her stoop to flattery and dissemblance. She was not afraid of the
Lords—they were easily brought to book—but she had a deep, instinctive
wariness of conflict with the Lower House. Their readiness to consider
judicial disposal of a monarch filled her with foreboding, for what was
done once might be done again.
So—play for time now—dissipate their energies on a wild goose
chase by pretending interest in Burghley’s plan. Negotiate terms
for Mary’s execution in Scotland, knowing she could thwart them
whenever she chose—indeed, she could probably rely on the greedy
treachery of the Regent to do that for her. And in the end there would
be another negation, one of those perfect impasses for which she had
gained a formidable reputation.
She turned to Burghley and sighed.
“You may approach the Regent, my lord, but be discreet. I shall want
exact details of his terms before we proceed any further.”
Burghley exchanged a quick look of triumph with Leicester, and
Elizabeth bit her lip to curb a smile. How easy it was to manoeuvre them
all when she wished, little men—little chessboard men—who never felt
the hand that moved them.
“As for the French,” she continued calmly, “my ports will naturally be
open to refugees—but there are to be no attacks on French shipping. A
little restraint now will salvage the alliance.”
“But not the marriage, of course,” said Leicester aggressively.
“No, not the marriage, I fear.” She answered Leicester without
looking at him and glanced obliquely at Burghley. “I will leave it to you,
Robin, to keep the French Ambassador out of my sight until I can bring
myself to receive him civilly.”