Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: #Nonfiction, #History
to preserve your honour; therefore I will not conceal from you what
most persons say about the matter, namely that you will look through
your fingers at taking vengeance for this deed and have no intention to
touch those who have done you this kindness, as if the act would not
have been perpetuated unless the murderers had received assurance of
their impunity.
“…I exhort you, I advise and beseech you to take this thing to heart
and let no persuasion hinder you from manifesting to the world that you
are a noble princess and also a loyal wife.”
She sanded the letter and stared down at it, gnawing the paint on
her lower lip. After a moment she pushed it across the ivory inlaid table
to Leicester, who read it in silence, arched his fine dark eyebrows, and
handed it back.
“Well?”
“A remarkable achievement, madam—anyone who didn’t know you
better would say that was written from the heart.”
His tone made her look up a trifle sharply. “When I ask your opinion
on a matter of state I expect to hear a Privy Councillor reply—not a
petulant lover.”
“I’m not your lover,” he reminded her.
“Be glad of it. One of us must maintain a little common sense. Or
would you prefer to stand in Bothwell’s shoes?”
“Poised to marry his queen—is that so far from my desire?”
“When lovers play for kingdoms desire is not enough. A marriage
between Mary and Bothwell will cost her the crown, and that, as I believe
I have told you before, is the last thing I want. So”—she tapped the letter
with a brisk forefinger—“is that strong enough to make any difference?”
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Leicester raised his broad shoulders in a noncommital shrug.
“That rather depends on how much he means to her. Not all women
abandon their lovers when the going gets rough.”
Elizabeth tucked her bottom lip under her teeth and let her mocking
gaze travel slowly over his extravagant suit, from rich doublet slashed with
gold-thread embroidery to soft leather boots studded with pearl buttons.
“You look singularly unabandoned to me, Robin.”
He followed her gaze and smiled faintly…
“The well-kept lap-dog! I sit on a jewelled cushion chewing whatever
bones you choose to throw to me, and come to heel when I’m called. I
know damned well what I can expect if I don’t.”
She laughed outright.
“You know where the door is, Robin—I shall not lack for company
if you go.”
“And you know I couldn’t stay away from you if I tried.”
“I know you couldn’t afford to stay away,” she said softly. “I’m afraid
it’s not quite the same thing.”
He was silent a moment, staring at her.
“Take any man at court,” he said at last, “use him as you have used me
all these years, and see if pillage alone will hold him.”
She left her desk and went over to him, stroking one long finger over
his taut cheekbone.
“Why do you treat me as you do?” he asked seriously. “If you love
me, why does it give you pleasure to give me pain?”
“I don’t drink and I don’t whore,” she countered lightly. “Surely I’m
entitled to one unfortunate habit.”
“It’s not a habit,” he said quietly. “It’s an obsession.”
Her soul quivered like a plucked lute string and she stepped back from
him, unnerved.
“I know,” she said uneasily, “that I am not always—kind. I try to
make it up to you.”
“Oh yes,” he conceded wearily, “with lands and money and fine
titles. I can’t complain you’re not generous. You give me everything I
want—except yourself.”
“And my crown.”
“Keep your precious crown,” he snapped suddenly. “God only knows
how much I’ve grown to hate it.”
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“And me,” she whispered, looking away from him. “You hate me
too, don’t you?”
He put up his hands to cup her chin between his fingers.
“Sometimes,” he said slowly, as though each word gave him
pain, “there are hours, even whole days, when I think I’m quit of
you for good. I can tell myself that I despise you, that I’ll never care
for you again, and for those few hours I’m a free and happy man,
gloating over my possessions and ogling your women. But you are
a fever in my blood. Each time I think my manhood restored you
strike me down again. You fall ill and I am sick with terror; you
smile and melt away all my resentments. If I could find a doctor to
cure me of my love for you, believe me, madam—I would make
him a wealthy man!”
She laid her head on his shoulder and his arms stole around her,
holding her very close.
Don’t stop loving me, Robin—don’t ever stop. Because the day you do, my
dearest, my beloved—God help me—I know I shall kill you for it
.
t t t
Mary paced her ill-lit chamber with Elizabeth’s letter in her hand. It was
more than an hour since it had been delivered and still she could not
dismiss its urgent wording form her mind.
I exhort you, I advise and beseeeh you—
It was not the sort of letter she had ever expected to receive from
the woman she regarded as her worst enemy, and the naked warmth
of its friendship had shocked and shamed her. Was this woman really a
contemptible whore, a bastard bitch devoid of all Christian feeling? How
easy it would have been for Elizabeth to stand by and laugh, to make the
sort of cruel and tasteless comment that she herself had made in similar
circumstances:
The Queen of England is going to marry her horsemaster, who
has killed his wife to make room for her.
Suddenly she was deeply ashamed of that quip.
In all the weeks of her tempestuous relationship with Bothwell, no
word of warning from friends or ministers had penetrated the crazy
fortress of her infatuation. But this letter had moved her, unnerved her,
made her suddenly begin to question her own actions with torpid bewil-
derment, like someone stirring at last from a drugged sleep. Elizabeth
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was the only woman in Europe who truly understood what it meant to
choose between a lover and a crown.
If only she was here. If only I could talk to her. Throckmorton was right. I
could have trusted her—
In an agony of doubt she turned at the sound of footsteps on the private
stairway and a moment later Bothwell was before her, towering above
her with his magnificent weatherbeaten face laughing down into hers, a
face hard and brutally handsome, like rough-hewn granite. Here was a
man indeed, a man who, given the opportunity, might even have tamed
her cousin, and for a moment she wondered just how hard Elizabeth
would have fought for her honour, that dark night on the floor of the
Exchequer House.
He seized her exultantly and swung her round as though she were as
light as a doll, but carefully, gently, remembering that already she carried
his child.
“What’s amiss, my little white Queen? You look as though you’ve just
seen a ghost—not Darnley’s, I trust.”
It was the tasteless joke of a tasteless man and she shuddered as she
handed him Elizabeth’s letter.
“You had better read this—it concerns you.”
He read it in silence, then cursed and flung it on the floor with an
angry laugh. “So the Virgin Queen offers you the advice she took so well
herself ! But that bitch’s game won’t work for you, madam. You’ll never
keep me for a tame bird as she keeps Robert Dudley—I’m no horsemaster
or kept man. I’ll leave you to your enemies first, so take your choice.”
For a long moment Mary hesitated, weighing her future in the balance,
until he bent her backwards in his arms and took her chin between his
strong fingers in a vicious grip that made her cry out with pain.
“I am your destiny. You’ll marry me and we’ll fight for your crown if
we have to. Tell Elizabeth to go to hell—it’s where she belongs anyway.”
Gladly she surrendered to his will and stood perfectly still while he
tore off her cumbersome gown and carried her through into the tiny
bedchamber. And while they made wild, passionate love on the very brink
of disaster, the Queen of England’s letter lay face down and forgotten on
the stone floor of the ante-room.
Disaster followed Mary like a patient spaniel from that day on
as, relentlessly, the very scandal men had expected to see in England
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years before was enacted inexorably, like a morality play. Mary married
Bothwell and swore that she would follow him to the end of the world
in a white petticoat before she would abandon him. And it was the end
of the world, as she had known it. Scotland rose against Bothwell in
the righteous fury of a civil war and the lovers gathered their forces at
Carberry Hill, only to watch their followers melt away in a bloodless
battle which betrayed the utter hopelessness of their course. Torn from
her husband’s side, Mary was stripped of her power, imprisoned on the
lonely island of Lochleven, and forced to the final act of abdication. But
for the fear of Elizabeth’s retribution she would have been executed,
and increasingly Mary looked on her cousin as the only friend left to
her in a world turned suddenly treacherous and hostile. For a few short
months, in spite of the miles between them, each felt a curious closeness
to the other, two women against an army of men. Elizabeth was working
furiously for her release and reinstatement, confident that it could only
now be accomplished on terms favourable to herself, when Mary plunged
everything into chaos by escaping. Her few days of wild liberty ended in
a resounding armed defeat at the battle of Langside, and Mary fled across
the bleak Scottish countryside as a fugitive in fear of her life.
In May 1568, against the advice of her staunchest supporters who
begged her to flee to France, Mary turned to the last relative she trusted.
She crossed the Solway into England in a tiny fishing boat, wearing the
only gown she possessed, to throw herself upon the mercy of her cousin
and dearest friend—Elizabeth.
t t t
“Well, madam, you have the wolf by the ears now, and no mistake.”
The comment fell from the Secretary’s lips, as flat and heavy as a lump
of lead, and she did not trouble to stop writing or look up.
“That’s not an original remark, Cecil. I had expected better of you.”
He promptly began to give it in a tone deliberately casual, but spiced
with malice.
“I hear she is holding a pretty court in Carlisle, madam, for all her
ragged state—a dispossessed princess makes a most appealing damsel in
distress. I hear it said on all sides that, even in rags, she is very beautiful.”
Elizabeth looked up at that and eyed him with respect; he was perhaps
the one man at court who would have dared to mention it.
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“You have no scruples, have you, Cecil? You would have made a
good woman. Are you actually daring to suggest that I have good cause
to be jealous?”
“Jealous of your people’s loyalty, madam. Remember that most of
your northern lords are Papists. Within months the whole of the North
could be aflame beneath her banner. The Catholics—”
“You,” she interrupted waspishly, “have Catholics on the brain.”
“Certainly I maintain that the statutory measures against them are
hopelessly inadequate under the present circumstances.”
She pursed her lips angrily; she was beginning to grow annoyed.
“Did you learn nothing at all from my sister’s reign, Cecil?”
“Madam, I fail to see—”
“Then open your bigoted eyes and look around you, my friend.
Perhaps you will see that the majority of my Catholic subjects are
quiet, law-abiding folk whose only real desire is to live out their lives in
peace. It’s my belief that half of them couldn’t give a damn who is on
the throne. But start a reign of terror and they’ll begin to care heartily
enough—they’ll take up her cause like a crusade and you and the rest
of my godly Council will have so much to answer for you’ll still be
excusing yourselves on the Day of Judgement. I’ve told you more times
than I care to remember that persecution is the last resort.”
“The last resort will come, madam, no matter how you try to avoid it.
If the Pope should excommunicate you now in favour of Mary, the very
word Catholic will become synonymous with traitor. Parliament will cry
out for action against them.”
“And you can’t wait for that day to dawn, can you, Cecil—you
and the rest of your Puritan mob? Well, I can tell you this much—I’ll
stand against it as long as I am able. I will make no windows into
men’s souls!”
She leapt out of her chair and swirled away from him in her billowing
russet skirts, and he sighed inwardly. She was a sad disappointment
to him in religion and indeed he had the sneaking suspicion that she