Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
“You are mad,” he said quietly, “quite mad, if you think I will be
party to such an arrangement.”
She sighed wearily. “Is your pride to be greater than mine? If I can
live with your wife, surely you can live with my husband. Bend a little,
Robin—think of the child.”
“Oh, God, if that’s all!” he burst out suddenly. “How can you
delude yourself like this? Christ, you’re forty-five—the chances of your
conceiving a first child at your age must be virtually nonexistent.”
Her eyes narrowed into blazing slits of hostility. She could forgive him
his marriage, even his physical assault on her, but that blow to her insane
vanity was beyond the pale.
She was Queen again now, as taut and dangerous as a baited cat.
“You’ll be sorry for that,” she said, and flinging her cloak around her
shoulders she turned to go.
“Why?” He barred her path to the door and caught her arm. “Because
I’m the only man in England who dares to cross your will and tell you
what you don’t wish to hear?”
“Get out of my way—I was mad to come here! If you don’t want your
son to sit on the throne of England that’s your loss, but mine will. I shall
marry the Duke of Alençon and fill my womb with or without your aid.”
“Not while I live,” he said furiously. “Not after tonight.”
She laughed in his face.
“You honestly think you can stand against me in this? Do so, if
you dare!”
“Oh, I’ll dare.” There was a note of deadly, acid calm in his voice
now. “I’ll break your world in two like an apple before I stand by and see
you marry another man. Leave me alive now and I’ll split the Council,
the court, and the whole country on the issue. By God, I’ll make things
so hot you’ll think you already burn in hell!”
“So be it!” She inclined her head curtly and there was silence, as after
the formal challenge that precedes a duel.
She walked out of his room as an enemy; and from that moment on
they were truly at war.
t t t
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“Burghley!”
Halfway across the room, the Lord Treasurer turned back slowly to
her desk and looked at her curiously.
“I have something to tell you and you had better sit down, it’s going
to come as a shock.”
He sat down and looked at her in sudden alarm.
“Your Majesty?” he prompted cautiously, as she rose and wandered
away from him uneasily.
“This French marriage—I intend to make it.”
His mouth fell open, surrounded by a snow-white beard.
“But Your Majesty said—”
“Never mind what I said. I’ve changed my mind,” she retorted sharply.
“It’s a woman’s privilege, isn’t it?”
He gave her a quick, suspicious glance, as though wondering whether
this was another of her jokes, and read the steely determination in her
eyes with a mixture of elation and concern. He got up stiffly and groped
for her hand.
“Do you really mean this, madam?”
“Am I in the habit of saying things I don’t mean?” she snapped and then,
as suddenly, burst out laughing. “No—don’t answer that. Just bear in mind
what I have told you and see the negotiations are conducted accordingly.
We can expect opposition in Council from—from a certain quarter. I shall
expect you to overrule it and guide the final verdict. Do you understand?”
He nodded grimly. It was not going to be easy.
“I shall do my best, Your Majesty.”
“I don’t want your best, Burghley—I want my own way. And I expect
you to see that I get it.”
“Yes, madam,” he muttered.
“That’s all. You may go now,” she said curtly and turned away.
t t t
Alençon arrived at Greenwich shortly after dawn on an August morning
which promised to be sultry. He was bundled unceremoniously into
Simier’s bed, still wearing doublet and hose, where he promptly fell
asleep after his trying journey. Simier settled in the early morning light to
scribble a note to the Queen, telling her how narrowly he had restrained
the Duke from bursting into her bedchamber.
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“…with great difficulty I got him to bed at last—” Simier eyed the
sleeping lad with an ironical eye—“and I would to God you were with
him there as he could then with greater ease convey his thoughts to you.”
Elizabeth received the note with unsmiling silence. She was in
deadly earnest now and weary of exchanging indelicate innuendoes
with Simier—when this business was concluded it would give her great
pleasure to send the French ape packing.
It took the Ladies of the Bedchamber two hours to array their mistress
for the first meeting and they were in a fine twitter of nerves as they
fastened the long rope of pearls around the white neck, placed a small
cartwheel ruff beneath the pointed chin, dressed her hair high and
decked it with shimmering diamonds. They watched her stealthily for
some sign of emotion, but she was calm and perfectly composed, her
mood unfathomable.
When Alençon was led before her at length, her eyes smiled and
coolly appraised him at the same time; she looked him up and down
with the same calculating glance she might have given to a stud horse.
She had expected nothing; she was not disappointed; he would serve her
purpose. And at least he was not ugly and hunchbacked, as his enemies
said. Plain and a little short in the leg, but the brown eyes were intelligent
and sophisticated and they rested on her with a flattering look of relief.
Alençon could hardly believe his good luck. He had come with an
air of martyrdom, prepared to marry a vain, middle-aged spinster for the
sake of a crown, in much the same sort of mood as Philip of Spain had
prepared to sacrifice himself in Mary Tudor’s bed. He was pleasantly
surprised by the woman who met his eyes. She was astonishingly well
preserved for her age, tall and elegant with an indefinable air of majesty.
So Simier had not been lulling him with the description he had sent
home in despatches. He edged closer, his critical glance sweeping over
her. The hair was a wig, but wigs were fashionable and worn by much
younger women than the Queen. There was a network of fine lines
around her striking eyes and a slight furrow on the high forehead, the
result of years of terrible decisions and constant anxiety, but she was still
a handsome woman by any count, and he was immediately conscious of
her magnetism. He stayed for twelve days, playing the attentive suitor,
and at the end of those twelve days he was a lost man, raving to Simier
of his good fortune.
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“No delays, Jean. Whatever her terms—agree to them.”
Simier inclined his head dubiously.
“As you wish, my lord.”
“Forty-five,” murmured Alençon, shaking his head in slow disbelief.
“What’s her secret, Jean—does she drink the blood of new-born babies?
They say that works, you know—never fancied it myself, mind.”
Simier turned away abruptly.
“She devours
men
, my lord—and devours them whole.”
“Then I shall be gladly consumed. Get me back as soon as this damned
country will allow, Jean—and when I’m gone, don’t let her forget me.”
All the Duke’s close attendants were aware of the change in their
master. Alençon the rake, the cynic, the irrepressible little egotist, was
behaving like a schoolboy in love for the first time. He wept when he took
his leave of Elizabeth and a shower of passionate letters swamped her in
his wake, enough, remarked the French Ambassador, Mauvissière, to set
fire to water. A superb diamond betrothal ring glittered on her finger and
Elizabeth quietly congratulated herself on uniting pure political gain with
personal ends in a masterly fashion. She had ignored her physical needs
for more than twenty years, allowing the interests of the state to supersede
them, while she squeezed every last ounce of benefit from the marriage
game. She had surmounted the huge emotional obstacle in her path at last
and she felt entitled to a taste of happiness. Now and then in the quietness
of her room she had an odd, uneasy memory of an empty cradle rocking
forlornly in the corner of an empty nursery, but she pushed it aside and
refused to dwell on it. It was absurd to even think of comparing herself
with her sister Mary. There
would
be a child and she would survive its
birth, as she had survived everything else—threat of execution, smallpox,
even poison. Did she not possess the luck of the Devil?
But England refused to share her optimism and the Duke had scarcely
left when the inevitable discontent, vigorously fanned by Leicester and
his associates, broke out in a dangerous outcry. A widely circulated and
intensely loyal pamphlet told her none too politely that though she was
the “crowned nymph of England” she was too old and too delicate to be
thinking of children and that her suitor was no less than the “old serpent
himself” and his advances “unman-like, unprince-like.”
The pamphlet was an open insult to France, and Elizabeth was savage
with anger. There was nothing for it but to reassure the Duke of her
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good intentions and she ordered every copy to be seized, condemning
the author and the publisher to suffer the public loss of their right
hands. More cruel and vindictive than anyone had yet seen her, she
declared it a pity the author could not be hanged, and she remained
unmoved when they told her that when the deed had been done he
had promptly pulled off his cap with his left hand and shouted “God
save the Queen.”
She affected to be unconcerned by the incident, but inwardly it had
deeply unnerved her. She woke in alarm for several nights and fancied
that a bloody hand was pulling the fringed coverlet on her bed. Always
profoundly aware of public opinion, she now sensed the need for firm
support from her advisers and in October she formally asked for the
advice of her Council. For twenty years they had begged her to marry,
and she expected them to beg her now, confident that Burghley could
control the divisions in spite of Leicester’s virulent opposition.
The Council sat, and went on sitting in sterile argument on a cold
October day from seven in the morning until eight at night, without stir-
ring from the room to take food or drink or to answer the calls of nature,
until at last five were for the marriage. And seven against it.
For once all Burghley’s elderly, assured leadership seemed to fail him
in the bitter debate and it was as much as he could do to keep an open
verdict. His hostile glance reached across the table and was mirrored in
Leicester’s dark eyes and for a moment it was as though the old wounds of
personal enmity had never healed. The meeting concluded in the general
agreement that the Queen must make her own decision on the issue and
there was a dignified stampede for the privy.
The following morning they waited on the Queen—Burghley, Sussex,
Hatton, and Leicester—a sombre, uneasy little group who knew their
message would not please.
“Well, gentlemen?”
Burghley cleared his throat and stared at the floor. Suddenly he could
not look her in the eye.
“The Council feels that as a whole, madam, it cannot advise you on
this matter.”
“
Cannot
advise me!” She stood up and her steady hawk’s eyes blazed
black and hard. Each councillor felt a terrible sinking feeling in the pit of
his stomach and Leicester’s dark face turned pale and tense.
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“God’s death, you call yourself my Council and dare to come in here
and say you cannot advise me!”
“Madam.” It was Sussex, anxious, trying to avert the storm he saw
gathering. “If the Council only knew your own feelings on the matter—”
She laughed shortly, bitterly, and turned away from him.
“My feelings! Which one among you has ever thought to consider
them? I looked for a unanimous request for me to proceed with the
marriage. You surely will not dare to say you doubt the wisdom of
continuing my father’s line with a child of my own body!”
Their silent, doubting faces looked back at her blankly and she
clenched her hands into fists. How dared they haggle and barter over
her as though she were a barren cow for whom no good price could be
found. Christ’s soul, the insolence—the mealy-mouthed self-righteous
insolence of these little men who surrounded her, whom she had made
and could as easily ruin by lifting one finger. Little men, little men! What
would they be without her?
“I was a fool to ever consult you all in the first place.” There was a
curious, choked sound to her voice as she flung out her hands to them in
despair. “Why am I alone to be denied children? I want a child—is there
no man among you who can understand that?”
Suddenly she began to cry, wild, hopeless sobs that shook her frame
and made her hide her face from them. Instinctively Leicester would have