Read The Tudor Vendetta Online
Authors: C. W. Gortner
Then she said with a touch of dry mirth, “I created you Master of my Horse, my lord Robert, not steward of my palace. I would see all my guests lodged as befits their station. We have this entire city at our disposal; surely, not every nook is taken? And if my lord Secretary holds these new arrivals of his in such esteem, then surely so must we.”
She was playing by the rules of the game she had long established, the implicit warning in her tone indicating she would tolerate only so many liberties from him in public. Humiliation darkened Dudley’s face. Unlike the other nobles, he remained defiantly clean-shaven, doubtless because a beard would have detracted from the taut virility of his youth. I tended to forget he was still a young man, only twenty-six, in fact, a year older than both Elizabeth and me.
Cecil said, “We are honored, Majesty, by your gracious consideration. Master Walsingham has been abroad these past six years, as you know, and serves in my employ. I assure you, he shall prove a valuable asset to your reign.”
“I have no doubt.” Elizabeth accepted the goblet a page brought her. Before the page could pour from his decanter, Dudley burst up the dais to take charge of it and serve the queen himself. “You are welcome to our court, Master Walsingham,” she went on, with a grateful nod at Dudley. Save for the one brief glance we had exchanged, she had not looked at me again. I wasn’t certain how to interpret it. Was she pleased I was here or had my presence brought with it uncomfortable reminders of everything I knew about her?
“Alas,” she went on, “I regret we cannot talk more at length, for as you can see”—she motioned to the row of courtiers already queuing up to greet her—“I’m going to be occupied most of this night and, I’m afraid, for the next few days. Have Cecil arrange a convenient time. He now oversees my council and,” she said with pointed emphasis, “my daily schedule.”
Still, her expansive smile after this speech conveyed more delight than I’d ever seen her display, clear proof that after years of sidestepping those who yearned to see her fall, including her own sister, our late queen, she was enjoying her newfound power. Cecil had always been her most stalwart champion, as dedicated to his own self-preservation as hers. He had worked tirelessly to steer her past the scaffold that loomed over her during the past reigns, recruiting informants like me to ensure her safety. She could not have chosen a more capable man to rely upon, as I had good cause to know. When it came to protecting Elizabeth, no one was more lethal than Cecil.
“Your Majesty, it would be my privilege.” Walsingham bowed again. Elizabeth nodded and beckoned Cecil to the dais, obliging Dudley to step aside as she and her secretary took a few moments to converse. Dudley scowled. He and Cecil had never been friends; Dudley may not have known exactly how deep Cecil’s hatred of him ran, but he knew enough to suspect that the man who had once served his own father could never be trusted, and I took a moment to savor his discomfort before I reached for our bags.
Then I felt his attention fixate on me once more. Looking up, I saw his mouth twisting into a malignant smile. I had seen that same look on his face throughout my childhood, whenever he decided to make my existence unbearable by waylaying and thrashing me or chase me into the stable loft so he and his hellion brothers could strew my belongings in the hog sty. Again, I schooled my expression until Cecil left the queen and bustled back to Walsingham and me. “Her Majesty has allocated a room for you in the lower part of the palace,” Cecil murmured. “It is not spacious, but private enough. I’ll take you there.”
As we departed from the hall and the courtiers surged forward eagerly to receive their favor from the queen, I did not look around.
* * *
We moved through the galleries, where tapestries and smoke-stained paintings hung on the walls, the light of tapers in sconces ebbing into patches of darkness that brought out the glow of the icy moon outside. Much here remained unchanged, portions of the palace still raw and bunted in scaffolding, an ever-evolving transformation that had begun under Henry’s reign. When I had first come here, I’d found it a bewildering labyrinth designed to trap the unwary. Now, I easily recognized certain turns and isolated courtyards beyond the bays, having spent enough time racing its passages that I would never get lost again.
Cecil’s voice brought me to attention. “I’m relieved you are both here at last. I trust the voyage wasn’t too difficult, given the hasty nature of my summons?”
“Not at all,” replied Walsingham. “And lest it be of concern, I had my papers crated and shipped separately as requested. They should arrive at the assigned warehouse in a few days. The rest of it was destroyed.”
“Good, good.” Cecil nodded. “I’ve no reason to think you were marked abroad as one of my agents, or indeed that anyone outside my immediate circle knows what kind of work you do, but one can never be too cautious these days, especially with Her Majesty about to declare herself. I needn’t remind you that as a Protestant queen, whom Rome and Europe’s Catholic princes believe to be illegitimate, she is in a vulnerable position until she can prove her strength.” He paused, grimacing. I found it strange he’d yet to direct himself to me, behaving as though I truly were Walsingham’s servant. “Indeed, we have Catholic nobles in this very realm who, if I know them at all, will seek to resist Elizabeth’s rule and even undermine it. We mustn’t let our guard down now that she has the throne but rather ensure she does not lose it.”
Walsingham frowned, though Cecil’s report did not come as a surprise. Since I had known Elizabeth, she had been in the midst of peril. However, I had hoped she would find relief now that she was queen, and I finally ventured to make my opinion known. “Surely, she can count on some measure of safety?”
“Safety?” Cecil regarded me in astonishment. “She’s less safe now than she ever was. We face entire nations of would-be assassins.” He ticked off each menace on his fingers. “First, we have France, where her cousin Mary of Scots resides and already claims to hold superior right to England by virtue of her own Tudor blood. Then we have Spain, where our late queen’s widower Philip II holds out hope that he may yet win Elizabeth’s hand, yet his sole true desire is to make this kingdom his. Last but not least, we have His Holiness the pope in Rome, who would muster every Catholic force he can to depose Elizabeth.” He paused again. “Does any of this sound safe to you?”
I resisted the urge to scowl. Cecil always had the ability to make me feel like a gauche squire, easily duped. “No, it does not,” I said. “But does she not also have the entire realm and treasury at her command, not to mention the fact that we sit on an isle—”
“The realm is divided,” interrupted Cecil, “and our treasury near bankrupt. Between Mary’s catastrophic reign and the exodus of our tradesmen because of her persecution, she has left us on the brink of ruin. Our coinage is debased, revenue in arrears, and religious and political stability most uncertain. We have much work to do if we are to shore up our defenses. In the meantime, Her Majesty’s sole protection lies in our intelligence and her royal person, which we must offer in marriage as soon as possible, so she can provide the realm with an heir—and not become an international scandal because of her dalliance with Dudley.”
The moment I heard his pronouncement, I understood he was about to thrust me into another unpleasant assignation. When I saw him exchange a meaningful look with Walsingham, I could not contain my anger any longer.
“God’s teeth!” I swore, coming to a halt. I had to hold my tongue as a cadre of courtiers hurried past, late for the festivities in the hall and trailing cloying perfume. As soon as they were gone, I said, “Have I been brought all this way to be your fishmonger?”
Cecil said coldly, “I believe it is treason to compare our sovereign to a bawd.”
“Aren’t you doing just that?” I said, eyeing Walsingham, who remained impervious. “Did you know about this?” I demanded. “Is that what all my training was about, all those days and nights of memorizing ciphers and waving a sword until my shoulders bled? I thought I was to be an intelligencer, not some common lackey brought to court to—” I returned my glare to Cecil. “To stand guard over the queen’s bed like a eunuch.”
Cecil pursed his lips. As the tension between us thickened, he motioned Walsingham to a nearby window seat. Taking a moment to collect his thoughts, Cecil said, “I believe we struck a pact: I protect you and you protect her. I expect you to abide by it.”
“I have abided by it,” I retorted. “Indeed, I’ve done nothing but abide. Lest you forget, I gave up everything to do your bidding. I nearly died for it. I had to go into exile and leave Kate”—my voice quavered, despite my efforts to control it—“without explanation, because it was safer for her to think I had abandoned her than risk her falling prey to those who would do me harm. All of this I have done for you without question.”
“Oh, I wouldn’t say that,” he said, with some asperity. “On the contrary, if memory serves, you have done nothing but question me from the hour we met.”
“Because you were never fully honest with me!” I had to pause, draw in a ragged breath. I was tired and out of sorts. Seeing Dudley in the hall had rattled my nerves and fatigue dragged on me like wet wool. This was not the time or place for a confrontation, and still I could not help myself. The last thing I wanted was to be a pawn in another gambit against Dudley, with my own life at stake. Taking Cecil by the arm, I drew him further away from Walsingham.
“You saw how Dudley reacted when he saw me,” I went on in a low voice. “He’s hell-bent on vengeance because I thwarted him. I helped Elizabeth escape when his father ruled in her brother’s stead; I brought his family down by working to see her sister Mary to the throne. And the last time I went up against him, when he was imprisoned in the Tower, I coerced letters from him that would have incriminated Elizabeth in his plot to depose her sister. Dudley hates me. He always has. He also has the cunning, if he sets his mind to it, to realize we keep a secret from her—about me. If he discovers I am part Tudor myself, the last-born son of her own aunt, Mary of Suffolk, it will be my doom. He knows Elizabeth will not take kindly to any threat to her throne. Her own father King Henry had men beheaded for less.”
“Your imagination runs away with you,” said Cecil. “Dudley will never find out the truth of who you are. Moreover, even if he did, no one would believe him, much less Elizabeth. His enmity toward you is so overt, it makes him look desperate.” He stepped closer. “The threat to your well-being is less pressing than the threat he poses to this entire realm. He may wish to see you ruined, but he is far more committed to his own aggrandizement. Need I remind you that he has always sought the crown of king-consort?” When I did not answer, Cecil nodded. “No, I see that I do not. You know as well as I do how high Dudley aims, and once a woman loses her virtue, regardless of her rank, she has lost it forever. One moment of weakness on her part, and Dudley could win the biggest prize of all. If he does, then we will all indeed be at his mercy.”
The gravity in his tone gave me pause. “You talk as if you believe she would actually marry him. Have you any proof that she … that they have…” The words stuck in my throat. The very thought of Dudley and Elizabeth becoming lovers sickened me.
“No, I have no proof,” admitted Cecil, to my relief. “But you also know there has always been that possibility. She cannot see, or doesn’t want to see, how dangerous he is. Now, for the first time in her life, everything is hers for the taking—or so she believes. Becoming queen has clouded her judgment. Like most inexperienced new monarchs, she gives no credence to the wolves waiting to devour her. And we both know that Dudley is the worst wolf of all.”
I had to agree. Nevertheless, I still thought he discounted Elizabeth’s capability. She might love Dudley but after having fought so long to obtain her throne, I did not think she was about to surrender power to anyone. Still, the very fact that Cecil had reason to doubt sent a chill through me. I was not sure I wanted to hear all the reasons why he harbored such a fear.
“He’s still married, isn’t he?” I countered. “She’ll never consent to be his mistress.”
“For now, yes, but it is the only obstacle that impedes him, and I’ve reason to believe that obstacle may soon disappear. His wife is gravely ill. My informants report she has a malignant growth in her breast. Should she die…”
“Does Elizabeth know?” I said, dreading his response.
“Yes. I told her. Indeed, I warned her that to show favor to a man like Dudley can only blacken her reputation. She would not heed me, saying that while she may have made me her secretary of state, my purview does not extend to her private affairs. One of her first official acts was to grant Dudley a title. She has also appointed apartments for him close to hers, where they can be seen daily, practicing the latest dances, playing the lute, sharing books and God knows what else. He’s even invited his so-called astrologer, Dr. Dee, to devise a propitious date for her coronation. It’s an outrage: the queen of England consulting that madman who believes himself a conduit for spirits—and all because Dudley whispers ceaselessly in her ear.”
“I … I had no idea it had gone so far.” My stomach knotted. The last thing I wanted was to once more find myself thrust as a wedge between Dudley and his ambitions.
Cecil said, “It’s gone further than even that. Even as she dallies with him, the papists fling doubts of her legitimacy against her, citing Rome never sanctioned King Henry’s union with her mother. Not to mention that any prince who cares to pursue her will think twice if they learn they must compete with her Master of Horse. Already gossip spreads abroad, making my job even more impossible. Dudley is a blight. He must be excised, eliminated as a threat.”
“And you expect me to do it?” I exclaimed. “His former squire, who helped ruin his family? You want me to—what? Stab him through the heart in a duel over her honor?”
Cecil sniffed. “I hardly think killing him is necessary, much as the idea might appeal. Dudley cannot be other than who he is; in time, given enough incentive, he will show his hand. Until then, however, we need someone to distract her. She requested that I bring you to court. After Dudley, I daresay there isn’t a man in all of England she likes more, nor one better suited to remind her of it.”