Authors: Shirley McKay
The pedlar mumbled again, and the baxter found himself irritated by his smoothly stubborn face, bulging like a haemorrhoid. What business did he have in persisting in his obstinacy?
The countryman interpreted, sulking and reluctant, and the baxter found that he was prickled too by the southern cadger's whining English voice. Why did they think they were never in the wrong?
âHe says that there was a boy, a student from the college, came to wipe his face when he was lying on the ground. A boy with black hair. And, he thinks if enquiries were made in the colleges, that boy might be found, to tell the truth of it.'
âAbsolutely not,' the baxter said. âThat maun be a lie, else he was dreaming on the ground. There was no student there. For the very guid reason that, the masters at the colleges prohibit them the fair.'
The last thing he would sanction, in his court, was the risk of an appeal to the university. The collegers he knew would argue black was white. His gild had wrangled hard enough, in troubles in the
past, with the man Hew Cullan. And while
that man
no longer troubled them at large, Giles Locke was as bad. The scholars had no business with the powder court, and the powder court would have none with them.
âThis court finds the charge against you to be proved. And ye will spend the rest of the day, and the night, in the goif stok,' he said.
The cadger asked, wearily, what that might mean.
âThe pillorie or jougs, whichever one is free,' a bailie spelled it out.
The southerner shrugged. âThen, you will have his death on your hands.'
âCome, I will not hae that,' the baxter remonstrated. âYou will not tell me, cannot tell me, that a man who is fit to tramp the length an' breadth of Scotland is not fit enough to last a few hours in the goifs or jougs.' Lily-livered loun, he thought. âWhat age is he, then?' he considered at last. With a man that was so weathered, it was difficult to tell. Fifty, perhaps? Three score and ten? The man had been a dustifute no doubt for thirty years. And that leathered a man, and made him impervious. Perhaps, after all, a night in the goif stok was not punishment enough, for such a kind of man.
âHow should I know? I do not know him.' The cadger was surlier now. His part in the process was done. âBut you can surely see that if you put him in the stocks your bangster bullies' stones will kill him in an hour. You might as well tie the beggar to the butts, and have them shoot their bows at him.'
There was truth in that. The baxter looked for answer to the other bailies, scratching at his head. They had locked the hot youths in the strong room for a while, to let them cool off. But it was plain that no charge would be levelled against them.
âWe could keep them there, until he serves his time,' one of them suggested. The baxter disagreed. âWe cannot do that. Sin they have done no wrong, there would be a riot, see?'
Injustice of that kind would wreak havoc in the town. The powder jurisdiction would vanish in a puff, and its failures would be tested in a higher court. The baxter chose instead a more expedient course.
âThen he shall pay a fine, and be whipped out from the fair. You shall gang an' a'.'
âWhat have I done?' the cadger whinnied then. A snivelling sort of man. His kind were all alike.
âYou provoke us, by coming at an unpropitious time, when any decent man would have had the judgement to have kept away. Go, sir. We have been guid to you. Ye shall have an hour, to set upon your path, before we loose the men whom you have so offended, they bay for your blood. Go, and thank us, now.'
The cadger saw his cause was lost, and he was himself complicit in offending them, by no more certain cause than his sorry Englishness.
âShow up your purse,' the pedlar was told. And he drew it out, wordless, from under his cloak.
A handful of coins, not amounting to much, that were Scots, and a single English one. The baxter scooped this up. The Scots pennies he tipped back in the purse, and handed it back to the pedlar. âNow, on your way.'
He was not a cruel man. And he would not send a pedlar out into a world that was hard on him enough, without the means to prove that he was not a vagabond.
The bailie beside him suspected his softness. âWhy did ye dae that?'
âBecause we do not want the death of a stranger, here, on our hands. If he will die, let him dae it in a parish far from here.' His kindness, his softness, must not be suspected. The man could not help it that he was an Englishman. Though he could, and should, have helped his coming here.
âThat is not what I meant. Why did you take the coin that has the English whore on it? That bastard Jezebel?'
The baxter turned over the bright coin in his hand and scrutinised the portrait of the English queen Elizabeth. He was a pragmatist at heart, which made him the perfect judge for the powder court. He was surprised that his friend had to ask. âD'ye not ken? Their money is worth more than ours.'
Part I
Chapter 1
The Queen's Highway
Tout commencement est difficile
[French proverb, written in the glass at Buxton Hall: Every beginning is hard]
London, July 1586
The house had a stillness Hew mistook for quietude, its inner life in shadow at the close of day. The windows were shut fast against the hum of flies, the vapours of the river bed, swollen after months of rain, swilling to the surface of a heavy heat. He expected, at this hour, to find the family freshened from their evening walk, coming from the cooling air to settle down at cards, the green baize in the parlour cleared of supper things. But the boiled beef platter had been left untouched, the wheaten loaf uncut, the primrose pat of butter melting in its dish. The cards were closed up in their box, the lute lay in its corner, soundless. The Phillips family sat reflective, silent and apart.
âMary has miscarried her child,' Frances said, her slight voice a brittle and strained note of brightness, resonant still in the gloom. Frances had wrapped in a white muslin square a translucent-skinned boy, whose whole she could hold in the palm of her hand, light as a leaf and as perfectly formed, while Mary had turned her small face to the wall, and drawn up her shoulders, narrow and hard.
âThe midwife says she will not have a living child, that there is a fault, deep inside her womb. It cannot be helped,' Frances said.
Joan Phillips clicked her tongue, distant in the haze like the strumming of a grasshopper. She was vexed at the midwife, at Thomas, her son, who confounded her hopes, at Mary most of all, her fault gaping wide like a cleft in a rock. They had been married for less than a year.
Joan's husband William looked up from the chiselled oak settle, where he sat brooding and hunched. âThomas must be told. Indeed, he must be told.'
The loss of a grandchild was vexing to him, though Thomas was a boy he found difficult to fathom, secretive and staid. He set himself apart, spelling out his surname in the manner of the French. That
Phelippes
was a person William did not trust, whose purpose was obscure to him, a sad thing in a son. Children were a blessing, and indeed, a trial, for his daughters were more loving and expansive than his sons, yet their chitter-chat and prattle sometimes frayed his nerves. They had cost him dear enough, in frippery of gowns. If there was one among them, closest to his heart, then it must be Frances, his dead brother's girl. And that was like his perverseness, Joan would have said. He had brought Frances up to attend to his accounts, and in the careful rows of reckoning that lined his record books, in a neat, narrow hand, lay all that William Phillips wished for in a child. Yet he knew what was right, and proper to be done. The woman upstairs, with her face to the wall, had troubled his conscience. Her fault was a grief to him, in his old age.
Phelippes was at Chartley, on business of the state. And Hew had his suspicions what that business was. âHow does Mary now?' he asked.
Frances said, âShe takes the loss hard, but will not for the world have us send for Tom.'
âThomas does important work, and must not be disturbed,' said Joan. âThe child will be dead, still, whenever he returns.'
William Phillips shrank from the starkness of this confidence.
âThough that may be true, he should be informed. We look to Tom Cassie, his servant, to take to him a letter, but that idle friar-fly is nowhere to be found.'
Tom Cassie could be traced within the hour, if he were still in London. Had word been sent to Walsingham?
âNo, indeed,' sniffed Joan, who held the Master Secretary in a high esteem.
Hew sensed the warming up of an earlier argument, left to stew and simmer through the afternoon. William Phillips shifted, troubled, in his chair. âWe did not think it right, to cumber such a man with so small a thing.'
Frances asked, quietly, âShould we have done?'
Hew was in no doubt. It was well-advised to put the case to Walsingham, who would take the trouble of it safely from their hands. Instead, he chose to offer, âI can go myself, if Cassie is not found.' He told himself he saw, and understood the consequence. Frances smiled at him. And William Phillips leapt upon it, reckless in relief.
âYou are an honest friend, Hew. Have I not said so before? It is proper that Thomas should hear this from someone he knows and loves well. Take the grey gelding. Set out at once. Or stay, twere better to hold fast until the break of day, for little shall be won by riding in the night, of safety or of speed. You shall have a purse, and a letter for my son, and whatever else you will that shall expedite your going, and relieve our burden here.'
Frances whispered, âThank you. For surely, she will want him. She cannot be unfeeling, as my aunt Joan thinks.'
Whatever Mary felt, her answer went unheard. The old man laboured at his letter, sorrowful and ponderous, and Hew made preparations to ride out to Staffordshire. He had time enough to call at Seething Lane, and lay the business bare, time enough to search out Francis Mylles, to call up Phelippes' servant from the pits and shadows where he knew he lurked. However, he did not.
Hew was thankful to escape the soup of that great city, before the dust and throng began to stir and stream into the morning sun. He liked the waking hour, when tousle-trousered prentice boys unlocked the shuttered workshops, when the clear-skinned milkmaids clattered through the streets, and the country market sellers filled the air with flowers. He bought bread from the baker, still warm, and set north to the Bishopsgate, and the Berwick road. He would follow the highway to Grantham, over the course of three or four days, resting for a while at Ware, and at the Crown in Caxton. At Grantham, he would find a guide to ride with him to Staffordshire. And if the grey horse flagged, he would hire another. Grey Gelding was accustomed to him, and the path ahead; he could fall back in the saddle and rely upon the horse to follow in the footsteps of the royal post boys, whose hollow hooves and horn blasts sounded out the way. In the warming sunlight, he allowed his thoughts to drift.
Three years had passed since he had travelled for the first time on that stretch of road; then, he had been bearing south, and borne against his will, kenned nothing of the highway that had swept him southwards but the stony brack of rubble rattling through the carriage to the marrow of his bones.
It had baffled him to see, when he was set on foot to walk upon the path, how broad and flat and fair it was, burnished by the dust of a thousand years of horses, kicking up their hooves. For all that, he had found that he could neither walk nor stand â like a shipwrecked seaman, falling on his feet, his limbs had lurched and floundered, thrown him to the ground.
He was kept there in that coach for breathless hours on end, hidden from the ranks of Walsingham's own party, let loose at night for sake of nature's easement, washing in the rain that had puddled in the stable yard and shaking loose his limbs. His body had been bowed and buckled, crueller than the rack.
âI assure you, not,' Walsingham had said, with a mirthless smile, when that case was put to him. Walsingham had suffered too. It had sorely pained the man to have to share his cart. From Berwick, he
had ridden with his men on horseback, while his strength allowed. When his strength gave out â for he was far from well â he had come banked in a thick raft of furs, sniffed at a nosegay, closing his eyes, repelling all offer of comment or question. Once, he had vomited, discreet and disdainful, into a cloth-covered bowl.
It had taken Hew a while to come to understanding it, and to his proper self. He came upon it helpless as a newborn child. He had been stolen from the guards who had taken him from prison, on his way to trial, and forced to undertake a bruising, jagged journey, that had ended here in London, at the house in Seething Lane. There, he had been placed inside a panelled room, left with bread and blanket, lying in the dark, to make sense of the turmoil swilling in his mind, through what pleading or prayers could keep him from madness. He had fallen to a fever, caught upon the road, and had come to his beginning there exhausted and discomfited. The house in Seething Lane appeared a soothing sanctuary, following the deprivations of the coach.
Later, there were books, paper, pens and ink. In those first few days, he was not allowed to write, and struggled to make sense and shape of what he found. His impressions of London, first formed in that place, were muted and confused. Gradually, he saw the house at Seething Lane become the opening to a world, of which, in that beginning, he had known nothing at all.
In Walsingham's house, he had never heard the raising of a voice, nor seen a sharp blade glimmer, from the safety of its sheath. Yet within its vaults, and quiet trance of doors, where keys turned smooth and soundlessly, he felt a deep unease; the locking of those doors came after in his dreams, and woke him in a sweat. The house saw constant traffic, quiet and enduring as the sluggish Thames, the oil slick revolution of its smooth machinery, turning through the night. When he was shown its heart, and saw its inner works, he was astonished to find out how fallible it was, how much of it depended on a line of human frailty, a balancing of aspirations, promises and fears.