Queen Of This Realm

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Queen Of This Realm Page 17

by Виктория Холт


  I agreed with her and in any case I did not want to talk of Guildford. My interest was all for Robert.

  “No one could compare with Robert,” she told me. “He excelled at all games; he could ride faster than any. I have never seen anyone manage a horse as he does.”

  “Very becoming in the Queen's horsemaster,” I said.

  She looked at me wistfully. “I believe Your Majesty has as great a regard for him as I have.”

  “Lord Robert is a fine man,” I said, and closed the conversation. I did not want to betray my feelings too strongly. But need I have worried? Didn't everyone know how I felt about Robert?

  The whole Court was saying that there would be no need to look very far for the Queen's husband if Lord Robert had not already a wife.

  But while he had a wife, marriage was impossible and this all-absorbing game of courtship could go on.

  There were times when I wanted to show him how much I understood his frustration. I took a great delight in pleasing him. I wanted him to outshine every other man at Court, which he did naturally, but I wanted him to be the richest and the most powerful… under me, of course. When the lovely old Dairy House at Kew was available, I bestowed it on him; I gave him monastery lands and a much coveted license to export wool. I also invested him with the Order of the Garter.

  Cecil asked me if I was not showing too obvious favor to Lord Robert Dudley, and I told him sharply that I would bestow favors where I wished.

  He lifted his shoulders in some exasperation and I believed he was assuring himself that once I had been persuaded to take the sensible course and marry, Robert Dudley would fade into the background. As if Robert would ever allow that—or that I would, for that matter.

  I was in love, I suppose. I could not stop myself talking about him. I arranged jousts so that he could excel and I would tensely watch his performance, knowing that as many eyes were turned toward me as to the jousters.

  I heard it said that the Tudors formed fierce attachments, and thus my father had been when he was enamored of my mother.

  Cecil was growing more and more restive. He said there were dangerous rumors abroad concerning my relationship with Lord Robert.

  “There will always be rumors about monarchs, Master Cecil,” I said.

  “Yes, Madam,” was the reply, “but these would appear to have some foundation in truth.”

  “What do you imply?” I demanded. “By Your Grace's conduct and that of Lord Robert it might seem that a stronger relationship exists between you than is fitting for you both.”

  “People are jealous of him, Cecil. When a man is gifted and handsome beyond all others, that is often the case.”

  “And when the Queen takes no pains to hide her feelings for him, Madam, what can one expect? I would implore Your Majesty to take care.”

  “Have no fear, my friend, I shall take care.”

  It was from Kat that I heard most of the new rumors. Perhaps others were afraid to tell me, and when Kat began to be worried I, too, felt twinges of uneasiness. Kat was a great lover and purveyor of gossip; yet even she realized that the rumors were going too far.

  “My dear lady,” she whispered, “I am afraid. They are saying dreadful things of you and Lord Robert.”

  “What?” I demanded.

  She turned away and did not want to tell me but I pinched her arm until she squealed with pain. “Tell me,” I insisted.

  “I dursn't,” she replied. “Idiot!” I said. “Do you think I can't guess? They are saying he is my lover, are they not?”

  She nodded.

  “They will always say such things.”

  “It is the rumors, my lady, wicked rumors… lies. There was old Anne Dowe of Brentwood. She walks the roads and learns much, she said, and she is believed to be a wise woman.”

  “Well let us hear of this wisdom.”

  “She has said that you and Lord Robert play legerdemain together.”

  I burst out laughing. “And because an old tramp says these things, should I care?”

  “You should care, my lady, for what old tramps say one day, merchants will say the next, and such tales spread like wildfire through the land. That is not all. Someone said that my Lord Robert gave you a very fine petticoat and she cried out in the company of several: ‘It is not a petticoat only that my Lord Robert gives the Queen. It is a child.' There were loud protests. ‘But the Queen has no child,' they said. And Mother Dowe answered: ‘If she has no child yet, Lord Robert has put one in the making.'”

  I felt the blood rush to my face. Although I was ready to accept Robert's passionate devotion and did not care who knew it existed, the thought of childbearing was repulsive to me. The very idea sickened me and it angered me that this was being said about me.

  Kat who perhaps knew me better than any understood this.

  She said gently: “You remember, my love, what they said of you and Thomas Seymour.”

  “Yes, wild stories of a midwife's being taken to a house in the dead of night… blindfold. What wicked lies people make up about me.”

  “You are the Queen, my love. You should remember it. They are now talking of you and Lord Robert as they did of you and Thomas Seymour.”

  “And he lost his head,” I mused. “What has happened to this woman Dowe?”

  “She was taken into prison by the Sheriff of Donberry.”

  “She shall be released,” I said. “I will show the people in what contempt I hold such stories by not treating them seriously.”

  Kat nodded.

  “And by acting in a way not to give rise to such,” she added. At which I gave her a push which sent her sprawling. She picked herself up, ruefully shrugging her shoulders.

  “It is all such nonsense,” I said. “What opportunities would I have? I am watched night and day. Am I not surrounded by councilors … ladies of this and gentlemen of that? I have no chance of being other than I am— a chaste virgin. But, Kat Ashley, if ever I took it into my mind to change that state, I should be the one to decide, and no one in this realm would stop me.”

  Kat sank to her knees sobbing.

  “Oh, my dear Majesty,” she said, “take care, take care. Remember Thomas Seymour. I nearly died of fright then.”

  “Because they took you to the Tower and you betrayed me.”

  Her teeth were chattering. “Dearest, take care, take care. Men will be the death of you.”

  “No, Kat, I will be the death of them, but I shall be in command. It is different now. Get up, you idiot, and stop sniveling. There is no need to cry for me. Everything is changed. I am the Queen now. It is for me to say what shall be.”

  She got to her feet and fell into my arms still weeping. I laughed away her tears, but I did feel a twinge of uneasiness.

  * * *

  WE RODE OUT to the hunt, Robert beside me. I told him how I felt about the rumors.

  He looked at me ardently and said: “It will not be much longer.”

  “There is too much talk. Robert, we must be more discreet. You must not be with me so much.”

  “Do you wish that?”

  “No, certainly not.”

  “Then surely the Queen's wishes should be obeyed.”

  “We must be wise. The people will not like to think that you and I are lovers.”

  “Should they not know the truth?”

  “I mean lovers in another sense.”

  He laughed. “Well, we are in thought if not in deed. Soon, I trust…”

  I shook my head and galloped ahead but he was soon beside me.

  “Elizabeth,” he said excitedly, “it is only Amy who stands in our way and she is a very sick woman. She has a malignant growth. My dearest lady, be patient… just a little longer.”

  “I do not like this talk of death,” I said. “It is not right for a man to talk so of his wife to another woman.”

  “It is right to speak the truth. Be patient a little longer.”

  “Poor girl,” I said. “Does she hear rumors of her husband's fal
seness in that house… what is it?”

  “Cumnor Place. She has always felt uneasy about our marriage … knowing that she lacks the social gifts to share in such a union.”

  “You have a great opinion of yourselves, you Dudleys.”

  “Not quite as great as the Tudors.”

  “Indeed not, and how could it be so? But I do not wish to hear of your Amy. I grieve for the poor lonely soul whose husband rarely deigns to visit her.”

  “I cannot live without the warmth of the sun.”

  “I am the sun, am I? Well, Robert. I'm glad you enjoy the warmth in which you bask. But I think you should be a little kinder to your lawful wedded wife. You neglect her most shamefully. If you do not make a good husband to one, could you to another?”

  This brought about one of those declarations of undying devotion and praise of my beauty and wit to which I so much liked to listen.

  People were noticing us so I rode on and joined other members of the party.

  I was in a strange mood that day. I was almost inclined to believe that I could have married Robert. I argued with myself that although the idea of marriage was not completely enticing, there was one man and one only with whom I would embark on it.

  It was unfortunate—or so it turned out later—that I was in this mood when the Spanish Ambassador de Quadra approached me.

  He was a very solemn gentleman and like all ambassadors more or less a spy for his master. Since the betrothal of Philip of Spain and Elisabeth of France our relations with Spain had been more difficult than ever. While Philip had been hoping for a marriage with me, the Ambassadors had been very affable. Now they were less so, but still urging their candidate—in this case the Archduke Charles.

  I was in a frivolous mood and when de Quadra threw out his hints, I couldn't help bringing Robert's name into the conversation for it always amused me to see their panic when they contemplated a union between me and Robert. The fact that he had a wife made them feel safer about it—as it did me, but on this occasion I threw aside caution.

  De Quadra remarked that Lord Robert had seemed somewhat unhappy during the hunt.

  “He fears to lose Your Majesty's especial favor on the occasion of your marriage.”

  “Lord Robert doubtless thinks of his wife. She is dead or nearly so.”

  He looked at me in astonishment and immediately I realized I had been indiscreet.

  “Pray, my lord,” I said, “say nothing of this.”

  He bowed his head, but I knew he would write at once to Philip and tell him what I had said.

  Cecil came to me that very day. He wanted to talk about the rumors regarding Robert and me.

  “They are dangerous and I have to confess to Your Majesty a certain indiscretion.”

  “You indiscreet! I cannot believe that.”

  “De Quadra talked slyly, I thought, of Lord Robert's wife.”

  “Why should he speak of her?”

  “There are rumors that Lord Robert would like to be rid of her in order to marry you.”

  “No doubt he would,” I said. “Any ambitious man would look to exchange a country girl for a queen.”

  “He said there was a rumor that Lord Robert was planning to kill her himself and that it was being circulated that the lady was suffering from an incurable illness, to which I replied that I thought the lady was well and taking good care not to be poisoned.”

  “That does not seem to me to be so very indiscreet.”

  “I was sorry immediately I said it, but I had to confess to you. I wish that you would marry. Once you did and produced an heir, we should have an end to these damaging rumors.”

  “I will think seriously of the matter,” I promised him, and I assured him that we were all indiscreet at moments and he had been honorable enough to tell me what had taken place. I did not tell him what I had said to the Ambassador.

  A few days later the news broke.

  On the previous Sunday, a day after I had told the Spanish Ambassador that Lady Dudley was dead or soon would be, she was indeed dead. She had been found at the bottom of a staircase in Cumnor Place with her neck broken.

  * * *

  I WAS NUMBED by the shock as the enormity of what had happened was brought forcibly home to me. The frivolous side of my nature retreated in shame and the sterner side took over. I had played my games too realistically. I was the first to know that in doing so I had placed myself in acute danger. When I thought of how carefully I had lived through those days when I had emerged from the Tower, how I had considered each step before I took it, I could not believe that I could have become so careless and foolish as to be involved in the death in suspicious circumstances of an unwanted wife.

  I summoned Robert immediately. I must see him—and then send him away at once. It must not appear that I was in any way implicated. How could I say that? I was implicated. Mother Dowe and thousands of others were whispering scandal about me. What had I said to the Spanish Ambassador only the day before Amy Dudley died? What had Cecil said?

  I knew that this scandal would go on reverberating round the world.

  Robert must leave Court at once and I should have to put him under restraint. I must dissociate myself with all speed from this matter. It must be shown that however great a favorite a man was, if the charge of murder was brought against him, he must face it.

  I arranged with Kat that he should come to me in secret, and when he entered the room he would have taken me into his arms, but I stood back, aloof, now the Queen.

  Yet I knew that I loved him as I never had, nor ever would, love another person. Whatever he had done, I must still love him. I would always make excuses for him. Whatever he had done, he had done for my sake.

  But more than Robert, I loved my royalty. I had to protect my future and my crown and at the moment my adored and adoring Robert was a threat to it.

  “What happened at Cumnor Place?” I asked as coolly as I could.

  “She fell from the top of a staircase and broke her neck. It was an accident.”

  “At such a time?”

  “There is no knowing when accidents will happen.”

  “Who will believe it?” I asked.

  “It matters not. You are the Queen. You will tell the people what they must believe.”

  I shook my head. “That is beyond my power. The people will believe what they think to be the truth, and there have been rumors about us, Robert.”

  He was a little impatient, even arrogant. Perhaps he saw himself already as King. Oh no, Robert, I thought. You shall not be King… not even you. This has shown me clearly which way I must go. But I did not say that to him. I wanted to know whether he had indeed murdered his wife.

  “Robert,” I said, “did you…?”

  “I was nowhere near the place,” he replied.

  But a man like Robert would not need to be. Such distasteful tasks were carried out by servants. It was dangerous to employ servants to do such deeds. Servants, in certain circumstances, could be made to talk.

  Oh, what a web I was caught up in. I should have known better. Had I not stepped into danger through Thomas Seymour? And now Robert. I should have learned my lesson.

  “The people will never accept that she died by accident at such a time.”

  “Does that matter?”

  Oh Robert, I thought, you have a lot to learn of the people and me.

  “I must be beyond reproach in such matters,” I said. “There must be no suspicion attached to me.”

  “I will defend you.”

  “Your main concern will be to defend yourself,” I said sharply. “You are the one who will stand on trial for this.”

  “On trial?”

  “Oh, we do not know what the outcome will be, but we must be prepared.”

  “You are the Queen.”

  “A queen might not survive through such a storm as this could raise.”

  “Your father killed two of his wives and was still loved by the people.”

  “The circumstanc
es are different. They were accused of treason and the axeman killed them. This is the removal of a woman who, many will say, stood in your way.”

  “Never fear. We shall come through this and then… there is no obstacle.”

  He would have embraced me but I held him off. He did not see the change in me, but it had come. Never again would I risk my throne for the sake of a man. In future I should think first of the Queen.

  “Lord Robert Dudley,” I said, “I am placing you under arrest.”

  He stared at me incredulously.

  “Yes, Robert,” I said. “There will be many questions to be answered and until they are satisfactorily dealt with, you cannot remain at Court. You must see that. Go to your house at Kew. Stay there. You will be confined to that house on the Queen's orders.”

  He nodded slowly. “Yes,” he said, “I see that, as always, you are right. I will go to Kew. I will stay there and I know that we can arrange this matter satisfactorily and when it is settled…”

  No, Robert, I thought, it can never be now, for whatever the verdict you are able to bring about, suspicion will always be there and never must a finger be pointed at the Queen with the suggestion that she had a hand in the murder of her lover's wife.

  First it must be seen that he was under house arrest.

  So he left with the guards and I knew that in spite of my previous frivolity, I was now acting like a queen.

  * * *

  IN MOMENTS OF DANGER William Cecil showed himself as the cool, wise counselor he was. He was deeply disturbed by the death of Lady Dudley.

  He talked to me very gravely and I was glad that he approved of my action in confining Robert to Kew.

  He discussed at length the danger in which I had been placed.

  “There will have to be an inquiry and the servants at Cumnor Place will all have to give evidence. Whether they will be in favor of Lord Robert who can say? But doubtless Lord Robert will know how to act.”

  “Do you mean he will be able to force his servants to say what he expects them to?”

 

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