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Authors: Claire Letemendia

BOOK: The Licence of War
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Pembroke did not smile. “I have been faithful to my bargain with His Majesty, and have kept my nose clean of intrigue. What does he want of me next?”

“It is I who want something of you.”

Pembroke studied him incredulously. “Why were you not arrested by the militia? The City is crawling with them after His Majesty’s recent plot and the murder of that officer last night.”

“Murder, my lord?”

“A captain of the Trained Bands was found mortally wounded in the street near Westminster Abbey. With his final breath, he described his attacker as a tall, dark man who muttered words in Spanish to his accomplice in crime. Whoever they are, the militia are searching for them. And the description fits you rather well.”

A trickle of sweat coursed down Laurence’s spine. “I hadn’t even heard about it. And nor had I anything to do with the King’s designs upon the City Corporation. That was all an error, in my view.”

“An
error
? I should hand you over to Parliament.”

“You could, but His Majesty still possesses those incriminating letters of yours. He’s been faithful to his side of the bargain, in hiding your treachery from the world. I am asking you to hide
me
for a bit.”

Pembroke scowled. “Thank heaven I can trust my servants or your neck would be in a rope, and I would be ruined.”

“My lord, I believe you were at a banquet on Thursday, at the Merchant Tailors’ Hall. Are you acquainted with Sir Montague Hallam of the Vintners’ Company, who also attended?”

“He has supplied my cellar for these twenty years.”

“I would like one of your servants to deliver a message to his wife.”

“Would you, indeed. What does it concern?”

“A private matter between the two of us.”

“It’s said she is a woman of extraordinary allure,” Pembroke observed, with a seamy interest that amused Laurence.

“She is. She and I were … close, before her marriage.”

“So she was your mistress. Was it for her that you came to London?”

“Yes, my lord.”

“I did tell you once that you had balls.” At last Pembroke smiled. “I was about to sup. Would you join me?”

“Gladly, my lord,” Laurence said. “I’m famished.”

The next day, Pembroke announced that he must go to his sitting in the Lords. “It is best for me to observe my normal routine, though most of the benches are vacant these days, and I shall have to listen to
some interminable debate about the tax on coal. Write your message, and I’ll have it dispatched in the afternoon.”

Laurence composed a note in crabbed handwriting to Lady Hallam from a Dr. Niger, saying that the powders she had brought with her to London were extremely bad for her general health, and whoever had prescribed them was ignorant of their longer term effects. She would be in danger of her life if she took them in a dose with any other substance, and on no account must she send for more. He added that she should not trust any other apothecaries in town, because most of them were charlatans. He begged for her word that she would do as he advised, and he would write again to prescribe an effective remedy for her complaint.

Pembroke demanded to read the note. Laurence feigned embarrassment and prevaricated, but eventually surrendered it. “What manner of complaint has she, Mr. Beaumont?”

“One that she contracted from me.”

“I doubt Sir Montague will catch it off her,” Pembroke said, with a braying laugh. “He told me himself that he has not had a prick stand in years.”

Over the course of two more days Laurence waited in agonized suspense for Isabella’s reply, as he imagined Price must have waited for that of Mr. Devenish. Then towards evening, a cask of wine arrived from Sir Montague. At the bottom of the cask was a corked vial, and inside it a slip of paper. “
‘Iacta alea est,.’ ”
Pembroke read aloud to Laurence. “The die is cast. What does she mean by that?”

“She has taken the powders.”

“ ‘And please desist from offering me your advice. Look to your own future health, instead.’ Dear me, sir, she will not forgive you for infecting her! I presume that you will soon be on your way, though before you go,” Pembroke said, in a solemn voice, “I want to propose a new bargain: a favour of you, in exchange for information I gleaned today at Westminster. I shall have to confirm it, but if it is true, it will be of vital import to His Majesty.”

“Please, continue, my lord,” said Laurence, almost too heartsick to listen.

“I want you to plead my case with the King. Tell him that I repent. I cannot ask him to destroy those letters, yet a measure of
his
forgiveness would be a huge relief to me. We were friends, he and I, and if he would think less ill of me, I would leave the world comforted.”

Laurence felt moved, despite all he knew about Pembroke: there were tears in those grey vulture’s eyes. “And what have you for him, in return?”

“Tidings of another conspiracy against him,” said Pembroke, “or, to be precise, against his nephew, Prince Rupert.”

“By God,” breathed Laurence, after Pembroke had explained. “I only pray I can report to Oxford in time.”

VI
.

Laurence sprinkled sand upon the wet ink, and showed Pembroke the safe conduct he had forged, with the Earl’s assistance. “How does it appear to you?”

“Quite well done, though if it doesn’t convince the militia, I won’t lift a finger to save you. And should it come out that you were here, I’ll say you forced me at gunpoint to hide you.”

“I’ll corroborate your story, my lord.”

Pembroke regarded him mournfully as he stuffed the paper into his doublet. “I have to confess that I appreciated your company, sir. I am without friends or family. I lost my eldest son to fever before he could cement our fortunes through marriage, my daughter’s husband was slain at Newbury fighting for the King, and I am estranged from my wife, and from my finest treasures, which she keeps squirrelled away at my old family seat. I have nothing much to live for, and I foresee no benefit from this war. I fear that it will prove my undoing, that of my line, and that of England, too.” Pembroke cleared his throat. “Will you require a horse tonight?”

“Yes, thank you. My lord, I am pleased that we’re no longer enemies.”

“Then work your magic upon the King, as you have worked it upon me, and persuade him of my contrition.” Pembroke gave Laurence a sudden, sly look. “Do you ever ask yourself what might have happened, had my scheme succeeded?”

“I do. In fact, I had a bad dream about it.”

“One last thing,” said Pembroke. “If you think you had me fooled that you risked your neck to come here and warn your mistress off some quack medicine, you are mistaken. But I don’t want the truth. The less I know, the sounder
I
sleep.”

“This safe conduct has not been properly authorised by Parliament,” barked the lone sentry at Tothill Fields. “I must search you, and afterwards you may ride to Derby House and apply to the Committee of Safety.”

“You’ve no right to a search if you’re not about to let me pass,” Laurence said, as rudely.

The man grabbed his horse’s bridle. “We’re on orders, sir. Dismount.”

It was the dead of the night, and beyond the torches at the fortification gates, Laurence could see no more than a yard ahead through the relentless snow. Thanks to Pembroke’s expert taste in horseflesh, he was mounted on an animal bred for the chase. If he could burst forward and gather up speed, he could jump the gates, and he calculated that even a skilled marksman would have no clean shot at him once he was over. He slipped his knife from his doublet, swung one leg out of the stirrup and across the saddle as if to obey the sentry’s order, and with a silent apology to both Pembroke and the horse, jabbed the blade into its skin, below the withers. It screamed, and the sentry had to let go and dodge or be trampled as it charged off, with Laurence clinging on sideways.

He managed to regain his seat and prepare for the jump, flattened against its neck. As it landed, he dared a glance behind him:
nothing but a white wall of snow. He heard the crack of pistol fire, and a ball whizzed by, and another; more sentries on the walls above were shooting at him. He was nearly clear of their range. Then a flash blasted towards him from an odd, oblique angle, and he felt as though a scalding fist had smacked into the muscle at the back of his right shoulder. Numbness spread instantly along his arm and his hand went limp. He dug his knees in hard as the frightened beast careered on, panting and snorting. They vaulted hedges and crashed through bushes and orchards, and forded a shallow stream; but on the far bank, after a while, they plunged into open countryside.

Laurence reined in. He took off his cloak to swab the beast’s wound, superficial compared to his own. Clumsily, with his knife, he cut a strip of fabric that he rolled up and packed beneath his doublet over the hole in his flesh. With a second strip of cloak, he made a sling for his right arm; the cold would stem the bleeding that had spread stickily down his sleeve. He knew he might have an hour or so before the shock wore off and his strength would ebb. He threw the remains of his cloak about his shoulders and spurred on the horse, hoping it could take him some distance before it tired.

He tired first and slumped in the saddle, his face buried in the animal’s mane, gritting his teeth at every jog and bounce as its pace reduced to a trot, and then a walk. He seemed to see ghastly images: of Isabella in a dank prison cell, and of a man in a long coat towering over her; of Prince Rupert, defiant yet resigned, surrounded by enemy troops; and of Tom’s despairing face shattered by a hail of fire.

When Laurence next squinted up, an orange trail glowed among the clouds to the east: dawn was breaking. The bleak, snowy fields around him provided no clue as to where he was, and though he felt utterly frozen, his shoulder and back throbbed acutely and blood had soaked through his makeshift sling. The desire to sleep overwhelmed him, and he dropped the reins. Then he heard Seward’s voice in his ear. “If you do not keep going, you will die.” Too stupefied to
understand how this could be, he nudged the horse to a trot. “A little further, my boy, a little further,” Seward was saying. As the horse ambled on, Laurence’s lids drifted shut; and he saw no more images, only darkness.

CHAPTER EIGHT
I
.

A
ntonio had ambushed a second soldier in London, this time with out shedding a drop of blood: he had throttled the man with his belt. He and Diego had then stripped the corpse of hat, breastplate, clothes, boots, and other belongings, including sword and pistol, and divided up these English items for a disguise. Blessed again by God, they had passed unquestioned through the defences, each wearing half of the dead soldier’s orange sash. Yet the weather had now deteriorated beyond belief: massive dumps of snow, and cold bitterer than in the Low Countries. They could hardly go ten miles a day and the light waned unnaturally early. Overnight they burrowed into deserted barns or hedgerows, teeth chattering, their faces, fingers, and toes frozen, huddled together like sheep in a storm. Every soul that they encountered had treated them with overt hostility, and Antonio swore they had been misdirected whenever they asked for the Oxford road. By the eighth day of their journey, in view of Oxford’s walls, their horse caved beneath them and they had to plod the last few miles into town.

With the influx of troops and Royalist camp followers into the city, food was expensive and shelter scarce at any price. So when Diego at last secured them a corner on the floor of a common flophouse, Antonio proposed that they celebrate their luck at the neighbouring tavern.

They pressed through a crowd of drinkers, men and women. Antonio had been chaste as a nun since quitting Spain, and the sight of these English females in their immodest garments tantalised him; many of them were inebriated, which would be considered scandalous
for their sex in Spain. “I might find a little sport here among these whores,” he said to Diego.

“You can’t be certain they’re whores, Don Antonio – look what passes for wine in this establishment, and it costs more than a barrel in our homeland,” Diego said. “We should buy fresh horses before our money runs out, and ride straight to the Lady Elena’s house.”

“I will not call on her dressed like a beggar.”

“Isn’t that what you said you were?”

Antonio shrugged. “Go to our quarters and stake out our patch of floor. I’ll join you later.”

“Be careful,” were Diego’s parting words.

While Antonio was finishing his cup, the crowd began to thin. A woman bumped up against him and cast him a saucy glance as she staggered towards the entrance. He watched her leave, and decided to follow. She crossed the courtyard, and disappeared into the nearby stables. Approaching cautiously, he peered in; skirts hoisted, she was urinating on the straw. Why waste coin on a trollop such as her, he thought. The instant she dropped her skirts, he lunged in and pounced, seizing her by the shoulders, and spun her about, slamming her face first against the wall. Before she could utter a cry, he whipped her skirts over her head, stuffed a wad of the fabric into her mouth, and leant on her with his full weight, forcing her legs apart with his knees. Drawing his hungry sex from his breeches with one hand, he delved for her cunt with the other. He had a finger inside her when she spat out the cloth and yelled, “Get off me, you poxy bugger.”

“Who’s there?” shouted a male voice.

Antonio shoved her aside and adjusted his clothes; she was scrambling away, still cursing. Blinded by the glare of a lantern, he unsheathed his sword.

“Beaumont?” gasped the man. “Dear God you’re not, but you’re a damned close copy. Who
are
you?”

As he stepped back in surprise, Antonio tore past, and out down the street to the flophouse. Pausing only to sheathe his sword,
he darted through the door and trod round the other sleepers to Diego’s corner. “Wake up!”


Qué?
” mumbled Diego.

“You will not believe: a moment ago, someone mistook me for Beaumont.”

“What do you mean,
Beaumont
?”

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