The Thorne Maze (15 page)

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Authors: Karen Harper

Tags: #Suspense, #Fiction - Historical, #England/Geat Britain, #16th Century

BOOK: The Thorne Maze
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“Within a few miles. You must not allow your bargemen to put in anywhere along the river until you are well past London.”

Mary sniffed so hard behind her veil that it bobbed. “Do you think I would take that chance, since I have cheated disease and death once? Though, trapped as I am with this body and face, I sometimes think I might have as well have died then!”

The depth of fury in Mary’s voice surprised the queen, for she usually seemed so stoic. Had she gravely misread her friend? “It will be good for you to be home again,” she assured Mary. “At least Robin said you rode out at night—but alone?”

“Yes, rode, walked. At home I am oft surrounded by people, but here—in the midst of your busy court—I feel even more alone.”

A rebuke? An accusation? Elizabeth almost argued with her that she had tried to lure her out among company, but she decided to shift the subject. “Mary, Robin was teasing me, was he not, when he said you’ve heard Catherine Howard’s ghost in the hall?”

“I have heard—things, but then I’ve been so overwrought these last few days it might have been the raving in my own head. It is here I was admired, courted, and beautiful. I almost take leave of my senses sometimes to think how things once were. And now you have everything at court, and I have nothing, and I wish I could do something to make you understand.”

Mary choked back a sob and turned toward the window. Her shoulders heaved once before her hands gripped the sill as if she could control herself that way. Though Elizabeth could not see her ravaged face through that veil, she fancied she could—and the ravaged soul, too.

Yet it could not be, the queen thought, that her dear friend was the one who wrapped the garters—where would a recluse get those garters?—around her throat and threatened her life to teach her how vulnerable and alone one could be. Or for revenge: Elizabeth had survived the pox with but a few marks while Mary caught a more virulent form while nursing her.

“I shall visit you when I can at Penshurst,” Elizabeth promised, on the verge of tears herself. She wanted to hug Mary farewell but could not. “Meanwhile, God keep us both safe. Come, Kat. We all have much to do to leave this place.”

Kat followed to the door, then hung back. “I hope you liked the new scarves, stockings, and garters I sent you, Mary, the riding gloves, too,” Elizabeth overheard before Kat closed the door.

“What garters did you send Mary?” she demanded in the hall.

“A whole array of them just to lift her spirits. But I fear they didn’t help one whit, for catastrophe still clings to her.”

Kat went blithely down the hall while Elizabeth stood stunned. Those last portentous words described not only Mary but herself.

 

 

An hour later, the queen paced back and forth, fanning herself in her withdrawing room while her court churned in chaos around her. She kept the windows closed with the plague so close, but she could still hear voices and noises. In her own state apartments and throughout the vast hive of the palace, courtiers and servants packed in a panic. When the queen traveled, her furnishings, hangings, plate, wardrobe, and closest servants traveled with her. Her Controller, her Cofferer, and the heads of her twenty household departments scurried to report to the Lord Chamberlain that they would be ready to depart at first light on the morrow.

The queen would move in public procession to her manorhouse at Hatfield, farther from the great liquid highway of the Thames where the plague could spread at will. Because Hatfield House was dwarfed by Hampton Court, only fifty of her chosen retainers and thirty servants would go with her, though her guard would be doubled en route. Some courtiers were preparing to return to their country houses, or, if they were very necessary or ambitious, to find accommodations near their queen. Hatfield was thirty-eight miles away, a three-day trip, so couriers had been sent out to arrange for two nights’ royal accommodations.

“It would not be three days if you’d agree to travel mounted with a band of my men, instead of in that jolting bucket of a state coach,” Robin had groused earlier. “We could make it in one long day as we could cover nearly eight miles an hour in this good weather, and you, my queen, are the most eminent of England’s horsewomen.”

“You might as well go prate to Cecil—and then listen to his arguments against me,” she’d told him.

“Cecil and I agree on this?” he’d asked, amazed.

“He simply feels these are not the times to go in open progress among my people. But they are my people, and they must see their queen and know she is not made fearful by the Black Death, nor anything else any villain this side of hell can devise!”

Word had spread that the queen was as bold as ever, even if she would be visiting her shires of Surrey, Buckingham, and Hertford earlier than she’d originally planned. If she surprised the good people of her realm in a premature visit, that was life—for lately, life had surprised her, too.

The sudden move also played havoc with the murder investigation the local authorities had planned, but the queen could not ask her people to remain here to be questioned as the plague approached. Templar was already dead; others might soon be if they did not flee. Besides, she had the desperate feeling that Templar’s killer and her attacker would find her again—or even be traveling with her. She would be ready, no matter how upset Cecil was that an enemy along the route of her cavalcade could shoot a long bow or firearm at her. This murderer, she was certain, preferred more intimate encounters.

“The people must see their queen—serene and in splendor, Cecil, and that is that!” she had shouted to end all discussion.

Now she waited for her guards to announce various people she had sent for. “Ned Topside, Your Majesty,” Clifford called out from the door set ajar, and swept it open for Ned to enter.

“Ned, I have not sent for you.”

“But I needed to tell you—about Darnley,” he ended in a stage whisper as he rose from his bow. “And I told your guards you had sent for me.”

“All right then, tell me quickly of Lord Darnley. Did you meet with success?”

“For the first time in my six years of serving you, Your Grace—well, I told you it wouldn’t work.”

“’S blood, nothing is working as it should!” She whacked her fan against the wall, so hard she broke its ivory ribs, then went over to slam the door herself.

“Yet, Your Grace, though he didn’t fall into the snare we planned for him, I learned, I believe, all I need to know.”

“Stop making contrary speeches, man. Spit it out!”

“Though, thank the Lord, I didn’t have to prove it, Darnley definitely desires men, if any of that is of interest.”

“Of interest, yes, but hardly news.”

“And he seemed shocked to see that two bricks instead of one were missing from the arch in the grape arbor.”

“Now that is useful—perhaps. That means either he is guilty of pulling out the first one, or that, since the arbor is his evident assignation spot, he merely noticed a difference. Anything else?”

“He said his mother has caught him at his—ah, preferences before, but she needs him for her plans, so abides his behavior. And, oh yes, he admitted he has easily gotten out alone at night.”

“So weapon and opportunity, even motive when it comes to attacking me, but why kill Templar? Ned, I believe you have managed more than you realized. Even when we think we are in a dead end, there is yet another turn to come.”

“Your Majesty,” Clifford’s voice boomed out through the door, “you have summoned the Countess of Lennox, Margaret Stewart, and she awaits without.”

“Go, then, Ned, with my thanks. I will need you, Meg, and Jenks to keep close to me on the way. Remember, but for the few on my Privy Plot Council, no one else knows that I too have been attacked—except for the one who did it.”

Elizabeth threw her broken fan into the empty hearth and stiffened her backbone as her cousin Margaret swept into the room, arrayed in black brocade despite the heat of the day. As Ned ducked out behind her, she looked taken aback either by the stifling room or the queen’s expression. Now, as Margaret curtsied, then rose, the queen’s gaze skimmed her gown, looking for snags or tears.

“Your Majesty,” Margaret began when the queen nodded her permission to speak, “I am eternally grateful you will allow the earl and Lord Darnley to go to Scotland to reclaim our lands, and what better time than now when you are reducing the size of your court for a country respite and haven from the plague.”

“The earl may depart when he will, but Lord Darnley may go later. Even as I am loath to part with your company, cousin, I find it difficult to let our charming Lord Darnley depart. When his father is certain that the tenor of the times in Scotland is safe for your heir, he may join his sire.”

“But just the other day, you had changed your mind to let them depart anytime. Why not our son now, too?”

“Shall I change my mind again to let none of you go—or to return you to house arrest at Sheen, where I am sending poor Templar Sutton’s body to be buried since London is now off limits?”

“I—no, of course not,” she faltered, obviously taken aback by the outburst. “Your wish is indeed my—our command,” she said, but her olive-hued complexion blanched white as almond paste.

Elizabeth and Cecil had argued late last night over her keeping Darnley around too, but she had cited two reasons, neither of which she would share with this snide harpy. Firstly, it was ever her practice to keep high-placed, hostile courtiers under her nose to better smell out their reeking, treasonous plans. Secondly, even before Ned’s report, Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley, had been on the list of her possible attackers, though she had several other candidates, too.

“You must excuse me for I have important people to see,” the queen informed Margaret with a dismissive nod.

She could tell the woman took her ambiguous comment with the intended barb. Margaret dropped a jerky curtsy and huffed her way to the door, nearly colliding with Mildred Cecil, who waited just outside to be announced. Ordinarily, the queen would have been appalled to see that Mildred barely moved aside for a woman of royal blood, but it perversely pleased her to see Margaret thrown off balance in more ways than one.

“The countess believes I’m as mad as Tom O’Bedlam anyway,” Mildred said in feeble apology as she rose from her curtsy. “After all, she was at the baby’s christening where I—I shouted at you and should not have, Your Grace.”

“But you were ill then, still recovering from childbirth, and are obviously better now. Sit with me here,” Elizabeth invited, indicating two chairs. She looked Mildred’s black skirts over too as she turned, sat, and arranged her gown, but saw no snags or tears. “You are not mad in the slightest, are you, Mildred, however sad or fretful sometimes?”

“Only mad at myself for not meekly accepting whatever burdens our heavenly Lord would allow. After all, He gives us strength to bear up under—and fight back against—all our earthly trials.”

Her voice was so keen-edged that Elizabeth paused before observing, “Your lord loves you very much, you know.”

Mildred nodded stiffly; tears glazed her eyes. “I thank you, Your Majesty, that you are keeping me with your court to go to Hatfield, though, of course, my lord and I can move immediately into our nearby manorhouse at Theobalds to give someone else a chamber. My lord husband said that he would rent no one chambers at Theobalds to keep it as a retreat for you, and he wishes to show you the new property and his grand schemes for it.”

“I certainly want to see Theobalds too, but will need Secretary Cecil with me at Hatfield until then. And you are welcome to stay also.”

“But I—I hear you are keeping Bettina Sutton with you.”

“I can hardly cast her off now, especially since we have heard that the plague is spreading in London as well as creeping up the Thames. And, frankly, Cecil says he wants to counsel her on financial affairs. As busy as he is, it is good of him.”

“Oh, yes, very good.”

“I sense you do not like Bettina.”

“It’s only that she saw my outburst at the christening. No, Your Majesty, it is not only that,” she corrected herself, sitting up straighter and gripping her hands hard in her lap. “It is that I have gathered from some of the current law students my lord has sponsored, who have dined at our table, that Bettina Sutton is a bedswerving lightskirt, and has carried on as such under poor Templar’s nose!”

The queen sat back in her chair. Now that, if it were fact, led to many new ramifications. And Mildred had never been the sort to gossip.

“Current students?” the queen queried. “But Bettina would be much older than they are.”

Mildred tried to stifle a sniff. “She’s trifled with current—and former, I’m afraid.”

“Such as Christopher Hatton?” Elizabeth asked, recalling how Bettina had seemed so smitten by him. “Or Jamie Barstow?”

“I don’t know for certain, though it would not be for her lack of setting snares, I take it.”

“Mildred, did you try to talk to Templar about this and have words with him? Could Bettina have known you told him such, and perhaps feared … But I am getting ahead of myself.”

“I only know what I overheard and believe to be true. Will you dismiss her from your presence now?”

“Not until I know the facts. I do know a woman’s sullied reputation can be a fragile thing. But you have helped to open my eyes to new possibilities. I am glad to see you calm and much yourself again.”

Mildred rose as the queen did. “Yet my lord always says that I am not myself, does he not, Your Grace?”

“He worries for you. He is very proud of you and the children,” Elizabeth assured her as she nodded her leave to depart.

“Some
of the children,” Mildred muttered as she curtsied and hurried out the door.

 

 

Jenks had to admit Meg Milligrew sat a horse well, especially for a girl who’d been reared in London. Her deceased husband had once been a bargeman and had taught Meg to row and swim, not ride. Jenks himself had made her a middling horsewoman, about the same time Ned taught her to read and say her words better and not slouch. So why did Meg have to choose Ned Topside over him when Ned hardly knew she was alive, not as a desirable woman anyway?

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