Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
for Burghley’s second son, Robert, had grown into a sprawling palace,
nothing short of a playground for the Queen’s pleasure. On her first
visit Elizabeth had complained about the size of her chamber. Burghley
had had it enlarged to such enormous proportions that it was now big
enough to sport its own fountain; and the rest of the house, year after
year, had grown around it, like some monstrous, extravagant weed curled
in a stranglehold around the Cecil purse. Every visit she made there cost
them at least three thousand pounds.
In the privy garden, deeply sunk and surrounded by a nine-foot hedge,
Mildred found the only spot which afforded her a sense of escape from
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Elizabeth’s strident domination. There she sat for several hours, brooding
among the figs and plums that grew along the wal s, while the house towered
above her, a pink brick façade with blue slate turrets and gilded weather vanes
which seemed to mock al her austere good taste. How could Burghley have
built anything so vulgar! The house
was
the Queen—unforgettable, ostenta-
tious, overbearing—and Mildred hated it, hated to feel it sitting there self-
satisfied in the sunshine, looking down on her with al its calm superiority.
No woman, thought Mildred angrily, had the right to make other
women feel so colourless and drab, or to be so slim and upright at the age
of fifty-four that merely to look at her was to feel as plain and stout and
purely functional as a carthorse. No woman had the right to such presence!
She had always been out of her depth in the company of the Queen, her
dull bluestocking image overshadowed by all that effortless brilliance. But
never before had Elizabeth made it quite so plain that, in the final analysis,
Mildred and all the comfortable domesticity she symbolised counted for
nothing. The Queen had merely to raise her little finger and Burghley, the
devoted husband, the loving father, and doting grandfather, would turn his
back on everything he held dear to follow her shining trail.
“I am nothing,” Mildred told the smug house savagely, “
nothing
,” and
great tears forced themselves between her scanty lashes to roll sombrely
down her unpainted cheeks.
Shadows were falling across the garden by the time Burghley came
painfully down the steps to the stone bench where she still sat.
“I thought I would find you here, my dear,” he began cordially.
“Would you care to take a turn with me in the Mulberry Walk? It will
be cooler there.”
He was grey with fatigue but his faded blue eyes were alive again, alert
with a joyful anticipation such as she had not seen there for many months.
She got up immediately and took his arm and they went slowly down
the brick-walled walk, past the seventy-two mulberry trees that led to the
Great Pond.
“So,” she said a trifle impatiently, when five minutes’ silence had still
produced no voluntary information from him, “what happens now that
you are forgiven?”
“I’m not forgiven,” he replied quietly. “I never hoped for forgive-
ness—only for the chance to serve her again. I thank God that of her
mercy she has seen fit to grant me that favour.”
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Every nerve in Mildred’s body screamed out in protest, but was given
no voice.
“You have accepted the post,” she murmured dully, staring at the
fountain ahead. “You will return to court.”
Burghley smiled faintly. “My dear, I could hardly refuse.”
His absent smile, his utter certainty of her acquiescence, were unbear-
able. For a moment she regretted all the years of patient self-restraint and
wished she might throw one of Elizabeth’s famous tantrums here in the
grounds of his own house. But even as she thought of it, she knew she
had neither the spectacular temperament nor the essential physical frailty
which enabled Elizabeth to make an exhibition of her instability without
looking either ugly or ridiculous.
“How long are we to be honoured by Her Majesty’s presence?” was
all that emerged at last in a rather dry tone from between her thin lips.
He coughed, as though realising that this, of all things, might be the
final straw.
“Perhaps a month.”
So it was not enough to break his heart and then make him jump
through a hoop like a performing dog; it was necessary to bankrupt him
as well!
Not trusting herself to speak, she withdrew her arm stiffly from his
hand and began to march back up the Mulberry Walk.
“Mall!”
She stopped. He never called her that, except behind the privacy of
the bed curtains; in the hours of daylight she was always Mildred, respect-
able, serviceable.
“If you want me to say no—” He hesitated, staring miserably at the
gravel walk. “I could plead my growing infirmity. If I do, I know she
won’t ask it again. It could be as you wish—the house—the family.”
And you would be in the grave before the Spaniards come, thought
Mildred sadly. So what is the point?
“Whatever you choose to do,” she said loyally, “I will support you,
William. Don’t refuse her just to humour me.”
The relief in his face made her want to weep. He squeezed her arm
gratefully and they went back into the house with their marriage intact.
t t t
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So Burghley returned to court to resume his post as Lord Treasurer and
having drawn her chief minister back into her web, Elizabeth turned her
power on every man at court, deftly weaving the separate threads of their
loyalty into one strong fabric. Transfigured by her own sense of purpose
she was irresistible. No one escaped the network of her charm, neither
courtier nor councillor. Poets and pirates, rogues and time-servers were
suddenly united in her service, as Elizabeth alone was capable of uniting
them. Never before had Leicester, watching her with awed fascination,
been quite so strongly reminded of a queen bee; and indeed her influence
over the hive held the same sort of primitive mystery. Like workers and
drones, men fell into their appointed places around her, blindly, without
questioning why they placed their lives at risk in a hopeless cause.
For it
was
a hopeless cause, Leicester was certain of it. He looked at
the odds against them with the cold logic of a mathematician and knew
that no man in his right senses would put a single gold crown on their
chances of survival. A handful of modern ships and an army of ignorant
amateurs! What serious hope had they against Philip’s huge vessels and
Parma’s savage, disciplined troops? The very thought of them bearing
down steadily upon Plymouth ought to be enough to make any sane man
abandon the Queen to her enemies and run for his life.
Only no one would desert her, least of all himself—that was the
miracle. And when he looked into her face, he knew that in spite of the
facts, in spite of the logic, they were going to win.
This self-styled mother of the people was suckling them all, from some
bottomless well of strength, with an intoxicating brew that played tricks
with a man’s normal healthy sense of self-preservation. Each man who left
her presence went out in a state of crazy euphoria, quietly convinced of
his innate ability to walk through fire unscathed.
Her power was a tangible force he could no longer rationalise or
dismiss; and curiosity consumed him. He simply could not help it any
longer—he had to learn from whence that power came.
And what she offered in return for it!
“Elizabeth.” In his mouth his tongue felt dry and swollen, suddenly
heavy with dread. What was it Burghley had once said?
A very dangerous
accusation—some might say it constituted an act of treason…
It could take him to the block.
Equally—it could take her to the stake.
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She looked up and arched her pencil-line eyebrows in mild surprise.
“Are you still here? I thought you would have been at Tilbury by
now, drilling that army of raw recruits.”
He looked down at the floor.
“Before I go—will you answer me one question?”
She sighed and turned a page over; she was really very busy.
“Ask away then, but quickly. Burghley’s waiting outside.”
“Are you a witch?”
The words hung on the air for him to hear, aghast. How could he
have asked it like that, without a grain of sense or subtlety, leaving neither
of them any avenue for escape?
She looked at him in silence. Slowly she rose from her chair, a shadow
curling upward until to his terrified sight she towered above him, all-
pervading, all-knowing. It was a hot, hot summer’s day and all his senses
throbbed and buzzed. Instinctively he passed a hand across his eyes.
“Robin?”
He blinked, and found her standing beside him, a full head shorter
than him, as she had always been, her cool hand on his sleeve.
“This heat,” he muttered and wiped his brow with her handkerchief.
She smiled and patted his stout girth.
“This padding doesn’t help. Now—you are not to tire yourself unduly
at Tilbury, do you hear?” She frowned faintly, as the memory seemed to
strike her. “What was it you wanted to ask me?”
Was it possible that she had been paying him so little attention that she
had genuinely not heard his tense mumble?
Or was she offering the only safe way out for them both?
He would never know; he would never dare to ask it again.
He laughed a little unsteadily and said it was no great matter. Then he
went out to tell Burghley that he might go in.
t t t
In mid-May 1588, a vast crocodile of Spanish ships sailed under its
unwilling commander into storms and torrential rain. Medina Sidonia
was horrified by “such summer seas as had never been in living memory,”
sudden tempests which scattered their precise formation and wreaked
such havoc that they were forced to shelter at Corunna until the middle
of July. By then, they had lost time and the vital element of surprise. The
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English fleet was rapidly mobilised, and as Medina Sidonia pored over
that dossier of instructions from Philip for the conduct of the campaign,
Elizabeth gave full discretion to her Admiral, Howard of Effingham, and
his vice-admirals.
On the 19th of July the Spanish fleet, a stately crescent with horns
seven miles apart, was sighted from the Lizard and through the summer
dusk the beacon fires sprang up, blazing a trail of warning lights across
England to the Scottish border.
London seethed in a fever of activity. The court moved to St. James’s
Palace, while the beacon signals sent a wave of mustering, training, and
arming throughout the south. Boys slipped away from their mothers’
clutches and flocked down to Tilbury, where Leicester’s army lay
encamped. Huntingdon’s force in East Anglia swelled daily, while
Hunsdon’s bodyguard sprawled to the west of London in defence of
the Queen’s person. The Council met in terrified debate and begged
the Queen to withdraw inland to deeper security, knowing that if she
were taken the main purpose of the invasion would be complete. She
began to talk instead of going down to the coast and Leicester wrote in
a flat panic, “I cannot consent to that for upon your well-being consists
everything—preserve that above all.”
Candles burnt all night at St. James’s Palace, and Leicester rode
between Tilbury and London, attending conferences until three in the
morning. And at last, in August, he and the rest of the Council gave way
to her determination.
She would go to Tilbury to review her army in person.
t t t
The great Spanish sea serpent had rolled relentlessly towards the Cornish
coast and anchored at nightfall just off Dodman Point on the 19th of July.
Next day Howard’s personal pinnace carried the formal English challenge
to the Spanish commander and with propriety correctly observed, the
battle was on.
The small, modern English ships snapped at the huge vessels and darted
away. Howard’s flag ship was rammed, but before the Spanish galleons
could close in on their prey, small boats had towed her head around and
she escaped with remarkable speed. The Armada ran a gauntlet of the
English ships up the Channel, unable to get closer than three hundred
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yards to the swift, sharp-shooting English vessels. Medina Sidonia had
discovered the first flaw in Philip’s instructions. How could they grapple
the enemy ships and board to settle the affray with hand-to-hand fighting
and superior numbers, when they could not get close enough to site the
first hook? “Their ships are so fast and nimble they can do anything they
like with them,” bewailed the Spaniard’s official log-book after the first
day’s engagement.
The Spanish Admiral was growing desperate. He had sent frantic