The Murder in the Tower: The Story of Frances, Countess of Essex

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The Murder in the Tower: The Story of Frances, Countess of Essex Page 26

by Jean Plaidy


  This was victory. The King was longing to give honors to Villiers; and if the Queen asked a favor how could he refuse her—particularly when it was one which it would please him so much to bestow?

  It was St. George’s Day and outside the King’s bedchamber George Villiers waited with his patrons. With James were the Queen and Prince Charles and it was known that the Queen was going to ask a favor of her husband.

  At last the summons for Villiers to enter the bedchamber was given and the young man went in.

  Robert who had heard a rumor of what was about to happen could not believe it until he came to the door of the King’s bedchamber and saw a group of his enemies there—among them the excited young man on whom he knew they had fixed their hopes. He was in time to hear the summons and see the handsome youth walk into the bedchamber, and an impulse came to him to push them aside, to stride into the bedchamber, to upbraid the King before them all; but he remembered James’s words when he had not very long ago awakened him at what the King called an unseasonable hour. James had warned him then.

  But how could he stand by and see this young man made a Gentleman of the Bedchamber when he had shown the King so clearly that he resented the office being given.

  He curbed his anger. Frances would have spurred him on, but she was not with him now; and when he had to make his own decisions he was never as fiery as she would have him be.

  He wrote a hasty message to the King, asking James to make Villiers a Groom of the Bedchamber instead of a Gentleman, if he must grant the Queen’s favor and give the young man some office.

  Haughtily he called a page and bade him take the message to the King.

  James received it, read it and thought sadly: Will he never learn his lesson?

  He then knighted George Villiers and appointed him one of the Gentlemen of the Bedchamber.

  That ambitious man, Sir George Villiers, had no wish to quarrel with the Earl of Somerset who still held the highest offices in the Kingdom. George Villiers knew that he had a long way to go before he was as powerful. If he could make a truce with Somerset, let him know that he had not thought of attempting to step into his place, he was sure he would more quickly climb in the King’s favor.

  He therefore sought an interview with Somerset. When he heard who was asking to see him Robert was angry, with the most violent of all anger—that born of fear.

  The fellow must be sure of himself, since he asked an audience of him. Who did he think he was? Did he imagine that because he was a Gentleman of the Bedchamber he could become on friendly terms with the most important ministers?

  Villiers came to him, his handsome face wearing an expression of humility.

  “My lord,” he said, “it is good of you to grant me this interview. I come to ask that I may serve you in whatever way you choose for me so to do. I have always wanted to take my preferment under your favor. I offer myself to you as your most humble servant.”

  Robert’s anger was suddenly uncontrollable, because he saw himself in this young man, as he had been in those early days when the King had become so enchanted by his grace and beauty. It was a cruel thing to be asked to witness oneself on the decline, the new star about to rise.

  “Get you gone from my presence,” he said, his mouth tight, his eyes smoldering. “You shall enjoy no friendship or favor from me. One thing I will give you—and that is sound advice. Listen, fellow. Attempt to come creeping to me again and I’ll break your neck.”

  “So this is how you keep your promises to me?” stormed Robert.

  “My promises to you?” answered James. “What mean you? What did I promise and not give you?”

  “You have taken that young fool into the Bedchamber.”

  “I am the King. I select my own Gentleman, you should know.”

  “Gentleman! And who is this gentleman?”

  “If you refer to Sir George Villiers, I’d say he was as good a gentleman as Robert Carr was when he first came to Court.”

  “I asked you, if you must favor him, to make him a Groom.”

  James was stern. “I wished to make him a Gentleman, and must I remind you again that I am the King?”

  But Robert could not curb his anger. He was worried about Frances. He was beginning to feel that he was married to a woman whom he did not know. He was losing his hold on the King. His whole world had become insecure; and he was alarmed, though he did not entirely know why. He needed the advice of shrewd men; but those who had advised and befriended him were dead. Northampton! Overbury!

  The memory of Overbury depressed him more than ever.

  He cried out: “You are untrue to your promises. You have not dealt fairly with me.”

  “Robert,” said James, and there was more sadness than anger in his voice, “I dismiss you now. Go to your own apartments, and do not come to me again until you remember that though I have humbled myself in my regard for you, I am the King of this realm and as such your master.”

  “You have turned against me.”

  James laid a hand on Robert’s arm.

  “Nay. Cast off your sullenness, throw away your tempers. Only do that and you shall see that my love for you has not changed. I am a faithful man, Robert; but I cannot say how long my love for you will last if you goad me so. Go now and think on what I have said. Reflect well, Robert. Be my good friend once more and you shall see that my love for you has not diminished.”

  Robert left the King and, pacing up and down his room, he realized how foolish he had been.

  James was his friend and James was a faithful man. He might in time feel a great affection for Villiers, but that need not affect his love for Robert Carr. He must be sympathetic, understanding; he must not give way to these nervous tempers.

  He held the Privy Seal; he was the Lord Chamberlain; he was still the most powerful man in the Kingdom.

  He must regain his old sweet temper; he must explain to Frances that although the King loved him and had given him his great possessions, he would be a fool to continue to bully James who had hinted that he could not endure much more of it; he must be wise, calm, serene.

  And when he endeavored to be so, James was his affectionate self once more.

  But he was beginning to smile rather fondly on Sir George Villiers—not, he wanted everyone to know, that this interest in the young and charming man in any way changed his abiding affection toward my Lord Somerset.

  James was happier than he had been for some time. He was delighted with the new young man whom he had nicknamed Steenie because of his likeness to St. Stephen; and Robert was being his old self, understanding that the friendship between them was too deep to be disturbed by a new fancy.

  James had been on a tour of the south, for it was necessary to show himself to his people from time to time, and was resting at Beaulieu when he heard that Sir Ralph Winwood had ridden from London because he wished to speak to him on an urgent matter.

  James had never greatly cared for Winwood but he believed him to be a good minister and he received him at once.

  Winwood seemed over-excited and it must, thought James, be news of some importance to have brought him so far to tell it, since James would shortly be returning to London.

  “Your Majesty,” began Winwood, “a strange rumor has come to my ears and it disturbs me so much that I could not rest until I had laid it before you.”

  “Let us hear what it is,” said James.

  “It comes from Flushing, Your Majesty, where an English boy has recently died in great distress on account of a crime he helped to commit in England.”

  “What boy is this?”

  “He was an assistant to Dr. Paul de Lobel, Your Majesty, and he declares that Sir Thomas Overbury died by foul means in the Tower and that he was bribed to poison the clyster which was administered to him.”

  “Ha!” laughed James. “There are always rumors of this sort.”

  “This seemed more than a rumor, Sire. The boy was in great distress and made a full confession on his death bed; he m
entions certain people in connection with the case and I believe there to be such persons living in London as those he named.”

  “What persons are these?”

  “A jailer of the Tower, and a Dr. Franklin … a man of shady character, Your Majesty, even perhaps a dabbler in witchcraft.”

  At the mention of witchcraft James’s face darkened.

  “Look into this matter, Winwood,” he said, “and report to me what you find.”

  THE LITTLE FISH ARE CAUGHT

  Since the marriage of the Earl and Countess of Somerset, life had been good for Anne Turner. When she awoke in her luxurious bed in some palace or large country house she thanked the day Jennet had brought Lady Essex to her. Anne was a beautiful woman, a fact which had not been so obvious when she was living obscurely in Hammersmith as it was now that she was at Court.

  She had even become a leader of fashion and many women had taken up the yellow ruffs which she wore because, as they were so becoming to her, they believed they would be to them.

  It was a good life, and all because she had done an inestimable service to a rich and noble lady. Frances would never forget; in fact Anne was determined that she should not, and although she never reminded her that they had committed murder together, she made sure that Frances remembered.

  Frances was her friend and patron and she had become one of the many ladies in the retinue of the Somersets. She saw the good life stretching out ahead of her and was determined never to return to Hammersmith.

  Her servants came to dress her, and while she sat at her mirror and they arranged her beautiful hair, they chattered to her of Court gossip because she always encouraged them to do this. It was important to carry little scraps of information to the Countess; and now that Sir George Villiers was becoming so prominent, Frances always liked to hear the latest news regarding him.

  This day they had another piece of gossip.

  One of the maids had a lover who was servant to Sir Ralph Winwood, and Sir Ralph had just returned from a visit to the King. He had left in a great hurry it seemed, and when he had returned had been very busy. He had had long and secret talks with several people—but servants were the great detectives and secrets could not long be kept from them.

  “Such a pother, Madam,” said the maid, “and it seems that it concerns a long dead gentleman. He died in the Tower and it was by poison.”

  Anne had begun to watch the maid’s face in the mirror, but the girl did not notice how fixedly she stared.

  “They’re going to find out who poisoned him. They’re going to follow up the trail because he was once a very important Court gentleman, a friend of my lord Somerset, no less.”

  Anne stood up; she was afraid the girl would see that her face had whitened.

  “Did you hear this gentleman’s name mentioned?” she asked, trying to make her voice sound casual.

  “Oh yes, Madam. It was Sir Thomas Overbury.”

  Since Frances had known that she was pregnant she had felt more at peace. It was true that Sir George Villiers had cast a shadow over her security and would have to be watched; but she felt equal to deal with that young upstart. Each passing week, she reminded herself, took her farther from the divorce and the death of Overbury.

  Therefore she was unprepared for the news Anne Turner brought her. As soon as she saw Anne’s face she knew that something important was wrong and her heart began to pound with terror.

  Anne looked over her shoulder to make sure they were alone.

  “No one can overhear,” said Frances.

  “A most distressing rumor. Winwood is investigating Overbury’s death.”

  Frances stared at Anne for the moment, unable to speak, so great was her horror.

  “My maid was chattering about it.”

  “Maids’ gossip.”

  “Her lover serves Winwood. I do not think we can afford to ignore this, even if it is only gossip.”

  “But why … in God’s name why … now … after all this time?”

  Anne shook her head. “We must act quickly … I think.”

  “How?”

  “It is certain that Weston will be interrogated. He was his jailer at the time.”

  Frances nodded. “You must see him, Anne. You must make sure that he will know exactly what to say, or I fear he will betray us all.”

  “Thank God you have good friends.”

  Good friends!—thought Frances. Northampton dead. Robert in ignorance of the plot in which he was involved—and Sir George Villiers standing by, ready to snatch his power.

  “Go, Anne,” she said urgently. “Go at once and see Weston. Warn him. It is always better to be warned.”

  In a tavern some miles from London a lady in a cloak, the hood of which partly concealed her face, impatiently waited in the room which the innkeeper had set aside for her to receive her guest.

  A Court lady, mused the innkeeper. One could always tell. And this was a secret assignation with a lover. The innkeeper was not displeased. This might be the beginning of a succession of visits from Court ladies and gentlemen; it would be well to let them know that he was an innkeeper who could be discreet.

  When the lady’s guest arrived he proved to be a disappointment for he was a somewhat shabby fellow. Was the lady having a love affair with her groom? Perhaps this was the reason why they must meet well away from the Court.

  Anne’s reception of Richard Weston was certainly unlike that of a woman receiving her lover.

  “Weston,” she cried, “so at last you are here! I thought you would never come.”

  “You are distressed, Madam.”

  “So will you be when you hear what I have to tell. We shall all be more than distressed if we do not take the utmost care.”

  She then told him of the rumor.

  Weston turned pale and began to tremble. “I only acted in this under orders,” he burst out. “It was nothing to me whether Sir Thomas Overbury lived or died.”

  “You were eager enough to help when you knew how well paid you would be.”

  “I was acting as a paid servant, remember.”

  “This is no time for such talk. We have to decide what we shall say if we are questioned, for it is imperative that we all tell the same tale. If anyone asks how you acquired your post in the Tower, you must tell them that Sir Thomas Monson recommended you for it.”

  Weston nodded.

  “And you must find out how much Sir Gervase Helwys knows of that matter, and when you have done this, send a message to me by way of your son. I will go to order some feathers and he must tell me then. We must be very careful. This may be an idle rumor but should it be more than that we must be prepared. You should in no way mention my name or that of the Countess. Do you understand?”

  Weston said he did. He was perplexed. How was he to sound Sir Gervase who, he was certain, knew that there had been an attempt to poison Sir Thomas Overbury? Had he not intercepted Weston when he was actually carrying poison? Had he not taken it from him?

  But of course Weston had never told Anne Turner this.

  It was all very unsettling.

  Sir Ralph Winwood was pondering on the Overbury matter. It was true, of course, that there were always rumors of poison to accompany any death, and Overbury would be no exception—particularly as he had been a man of some standing in Court, had been sent to the Tower on the smallest of accusations and had died there.

  He could question Weston, who had undoubtedly been Overbury’s jailer; and if Overbury had been poisoned, could this have happened without the knowledge of Sir Gervase Helwys who, after all, as Lieutenant of the Tower, should know what was happening to his prisoners.

  If he were going to look for reasons for Overbury’s death he would more likely find them among the people of some position rather than the underlings.

  Sir Gervase had become chief suspect in the mind of Sir Ralph Winwood; and while he was pondering this the Earl of Shrewsbury invited him to his house at Whitehall.

  By a strange coincide
nce, Shrewsbury told him that he wanted him to meet, among others, Sir Gervase Helwys, the Lieutenant of the Tower, a man of many qualities, added Shrewsbury, but stopped short, seeing the expression which crossed Winwood’s face.

  “You do not agree?” asked Shrewsbury.

  “I am in no hurry to meet that man … at a friend’s table.”

  “But what is this? I do not understand?”

  “First,” said Winwood, “I would like to know that he is not involved in an unpleasant scandal.”

  “What scandal?”

  “I am thinking of the death of Sir Thomas Overbury. There is a rumor that he died by foul means and as Helwys was Lieutenant of the Tower at that time it seems likely that he was involved.”

  “But this is shocking,” cried Shrewsbury.

  And when Winwood left him he called at once on Helwys and told him of his conversation with Winwood.

  Helwys was horrified. His one idea was to absolve himself from blame. He knew that there had been something very suspicious about Overbury’s death and had been prepared to keep silent in order to please important people. Now he felt the need to break that silence to please Sir Ralph Winwood.

  He went to him and asked to speak to him alone.

  Winwood regarded him coldly and Helwys burst out: “Sir Ralph, my lord Shrewsbury has talked to me of your suspicions. This is a terrible thing and I hasten to tell you that I am in no way to blame for the murder of Overbury.”

  Ah! thought winwood. He admits it is murder.

  “I think,” said Winwood, “that you could best help me and yourself by telling all you know.”

  “Weston is the man who can help you,” cried Helwys. “He was sent to work at the Tower for the purpose.”

  “It was you who engaged him?”

  “Yes, because I was asked to do so by some important people.”

  “What people?”

  “Sir Thomas Monson, Master of the Armory, asked me to allow the man to wait on Overbury.”

 

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