Authors: Jane Caro
Blanche signals for Philadelphia and the servant to leave the room. Once the door has closed behind them Blanche sits beside me and puts her arms about me, as Kat would have done, and I sob against her breast. It is only when my weeping begins to abate that she speaks.
âFrightened how, Your Grace? Her demise has made you more secure.'
âFrightened of the judgment of the world, Blanche,
and of posterity. Frightened of the judgment of God and
the safety of my own soul.'
âGod knows that you have only done what you had to do. He will forgive you, of that I have no doubt. For posterity and the world I cannot answer, but there will be those who judge you harshly and those who applaud what you have done.'
âPerhaps it is my own judgment I fear most.' I say this in a very small voice.
âYou are hard upon yourself, Your Grace, and always have been. Those who love you wish you could see the esteem in which you are held, not just by all who know you, but by all who recognise wisdom and mercy in a ruler. You have not just grown to be a real queen, Your Grace, you have become a great queen.
Despite her words or, perhaps, because of them, I merely sob harder with my face buried in her lap. I have never felt less like a queen in my life.
Eighteen
Monsieur de Salignac looked pale under his beard. He hesitated a moment on the threshold of the audience chamber, no doubt given pause by what he saw.
My ladies and I were dressed in deepest mourning and had arranged ourselves in a semi-circle. Our faces were solemn, our demeanour that of the recently bereaved. No fanfare greeted the return of the French ambassador to court. My factotum did not announce his name or list his honorifics and titles, de Salignac walked from the door through a thick and resonant silence, the only sound that of the floorboards creaking under his weight.
âYour Majesty, I bring greetings from the King of France, and his gratitude for allowing me to return to your presence after so long an absence.'
âYour visit was much debated, my lord ambassador. There were many who felt that it was too soon.'
âMy gratitude, therefore, is all the greater, Your Grace.'
I took his arm as I stepped down from my throne, then led him quietly away from the assembled multitude, all of whom remained mute and still as I had instructed. What I had to say to the French ambassador I wanted to say in private. The revulsion that had filled my kingdom at the bloodthirsty slaughter in the French capital had been genuine and spontaneous, but I also needed my French allies to be able to save face and escape too public a humiliation. The relationship had been damaged, right enough, but I wanted it to remain intact.
It was while my court was visiting Robin's great house, Kenilworth, that we received the horrifying news about the massacre in Paris on St Bartholomew's Day. I had enjoyed the progress, as I always did, and at our destination I had admired the pageantry, fine food, wine and entertainment that my master of horse provided with such flair and distinction. It did my weary soul good to take my ease with him and to let him admire and flatter me.
The longer I spend as England's sovereign, the more I sometimes feel that the woman I used to be is shrivelling and dying inside me; the magnificence of my office so overwhelms the insignificance of the human being. It was one of the things I valued â indeed, still value â about Robin. He remembers and loves Elizabeth, the woman. When he looks at me I see myself reflected in his eyes, not just my crown. Blanche Parry has the same effect, she also knew me long before I was this icon, this queen, this Gloriana.
Whenever the weather was fine during that glorious summer (and in my memory, the sun always seems to have been shining) my master of horse and I rose early and rode after the stags that were so plentiful in the park around his great house. That morning in August we had saddled up as soon as the sun rose and the helter-skelter ride across meadow, hedgerow and country lane was fast and furious. To this day, despite my increasing years and my rheumatics, I still love nothing better than to mount a fast horse and ride like the wind.
The dogs had cornered a doe in the forest and Robin brought his horse alongside mine to ask if I wished to have the honour of the kill. Truth be told, I was secretly sorry that we had cornered the creature so quickly. It was not the killing that excited me as much as the freedom of riding fast with a strong horse at my command. I was therefore about to bestow the honour on a member of my household (it may have been Hatton, but my memory on that point deserts me) when the servants set up a hullabaloo.
âA messenger approaches, Your Grace!'
A man was riding at full gallop, waving something above his head. It was clear from his speed that whatever information he had come to impart was urgent and could not wait until our return. My heart sank; the affairs of state could never be held at bay for long.
âI bring terrible news, Your Grace.' The messenger was panting with the effort of his ride and also with the importance of his mission.
âCatch your breath, my good man, whatever it is can wait until you speak clearly. Sirrah, fetch some water for the fellow.' And water was brought. My hunting companions had gathered about me, eager to hear the tidings. It only took a few moments for the messenger to drain the cup and catch his breath.
âI bring news, Your Grace, news of a massacre in France â in Paris! A massacre of Protestants or, as the French refer to them, Huguenots.'
âA massacre?' I did not know what message the man had been about to impart, but I certainly did not expect news such as this. It took me a moment to absorb his meaning.
âAye, Your Grace, thousands have been slaughtered. Women, children â they say infants were strangled in their cribs and that the streets of Paris ran with blood. It happened on St Bartholomew's Day, they say at the order of Catherine de Medici herself!'
âBut why would the queen mother order such a bloodbath, good sir messenger? What possible benefit could there be in it for her?'
âThey say it was in response to the assassination of the Huguenot leader, Admiral Coligny. They say that the French royal family were terrified his followers would exact revenge for his death, so they decide to act in advance.'
âThat makes little sense to me.'
âHere, Your Grace, here.' And the messenger took the letter from the pouch that he had been holding crushed against his reins and attempted to smooth it out so I could more easily read its contents. âThis letter from your ambassador explains it better than I can.'
I took the parchment and glanced at its contents. It said more or less what the man in front of me was reporting.
âWe must return to the house,' I said to those around me. âThis terrible deed requires a response from the Queen of England. I must consult with my council. Our revels are at an end, good my lord,' I said, turning to Robin. âFor which you can thank the bloodthirsty mother of the King of France.'
âIs this the beginning of something bigger than a massacre in Paris, Master Spirit? Do they intend an attack on all the Protestant leaders in Europe?'
Europe was agog over the awful slaughter and all eyes were upon me, the Protestant queen, waiting to see what response I would make to the Catholic dowager queen. Cecil, who had dispatched the messenger to find me in the park, was by my side clutching a sheaf of papers. As we stood in the corner of the room, conferring about what to do next, messengers scurried in and out, adding to Cecil's growing bundle. News was flowing to my makeshift court as quickly as the fastest horses could carry it.
âI know not, Your Grace.' Cecil added yet another message to his pile. âI have been assured by our ambassador in Paris that this event simply got out of hand and that the French authorities are deeply embarrassed by the slaughter.'
He looked down quickly at the papers in his hands.
âEmbarrassed, my lord? That seems a small word for such dark events.'
I began to pace up and down in front of Cecil, Robin, Walsingham, Knollys and the others who were joining us from various parts of the great house. We had all been taking our leisure and had been roundly surprised by events. âWhat action should we take, my lords? How do we make our displeasure known yet not inflame the Catholic princes further? I have no wish to make war, as you well know.'
âWe must go into mourning, Your Grace, for the souls of the innocent Protestant victims of their bloodthirsty Catholic neighbours. I have already given orders, Your Grace, that all the musicians, players, acrobats and tumblers should be sent away from Kenilworth and that all such entertainments must cease. It is unthinkable that we should continue to make merry when so many of our fellow Protestants have suffered so much.'
âThank you, Robin. That was promptly done.'
âThere is more we should do, to protect your people, our fellow Protestants and most importantly your own person, Your Majesty.'
Robin stepped in front of me and dropped dramatically onto one knee to emphasise the urgency of his plea.
âI have sent de Salignac packing already, my lord. He has been told that he is not to return to court until I send for him and that his country is in deep disgrace. He left an hour since.'
Robin nodded his approval, but I knew that such a symbolic gesture would not suffice in his present mood.
âI recommend that we come to the aid of William of Orange, for it is he who is our best bulwark against the rampages of Catholic Europe.'
Damn Queen Catherine! Her thoughtless massacre had given my advisors the excuse they needed to push me closer to aiding the lowlanders in their fight against Spain.
âWhat sort of aid, my lord?'
âIt can be done quietly, Your Grace, but I believe we should send the leader of the Protestant Netherlands the funds and men to aid his Protestant cause.'
âAnd this can be done discreetly? Without inflaming the French or the Spanish?'
âIt can, indeed.'
Cecil joined the discussion and having retrieved a paper from his over-sized bundle, held it out for me to sign.
âI have already taken the liberty of drafting an order for 30,000 pounds to be sent to Prince William. It only requires your signature.'
I took the document. âThank you, my lord.' I turned as if to walk away.
âMay I beg a moment longer, Your Majesty. I believe there is more to discuss.' Walsingham stepped forward to delay me. âYour subjects are much disturbed by these terrible events.'
âMurders, Walsingham, murders of innocents,' Robin interrupted. âLet us not paint them any prettier than they are.'
âThank you, my lord, you are quite correct. As I was saying, Your Grace, your subjects are much disturbed by these murders, not simply from Christian sympathy at the plight of innocents, but also for fear of the safety of your kingdom and, indeed, your person, good madam.'
Walsingham held both his hands out as if beseeching me. The others, even Robin, stepped aside to allow him centre stage.
âThe bishops have called for all the Catholic priests currently held in your prisons to be put to death.'
âThat seems a little extreme, Sir Francis. After all, if they were under lock and key in England, they cannot have had anything to do with the massacre in Paris on St Bartholomew's Day.'
âNot with their own hands, Your Grace, I grant you, but, as we have seen, Catholics can communicate with one another no matter how tightly they are held and such is their fanaticism they can goad others into performing their wickedness even from behind locked doors.'
âThe Bishop of London has gone further, and called upon you to rid your court of all Catholics and to send Mary Stuart to the block.' Cecil's dislike of Catholics was almost as fervent as Walsingham's.
âAh, the Queen of Scots.' (I did not like the new fashion for referring to my cousin as if she were no longer royal. I did not like how easily they could knock a queen from her rightful throne with words.) âI wondered when her name would be mentioned.'
The men around me remained silent, but they did not have to speak. I knew that they regarded my cousin as a deadly viper I nursed at my bosom â after all, they used that very phrase so often to describe her. I knew that they saw it as feeble womanishness that I did not send her to the block whenever any of her co-religionists stirred up trouble. I also knew that they took any such event as an opportunity to pressure me to dispatch my last remaining royal relative.
It is true, Mary, I say it again; for many years the only thing that stood between you and the block was the woman you regarded as your greatest enemy. I saved your life a multitude of times, and this was another such.
If Mary, Queen of Scots, was to die at my hand, the case against her had to be ironclad. She had nothing whatsoever to do with the slaughter of innocents on the streets of Paris and, from what little I knew of her personality, would never have countenanced such a horror. She was a foolish woman, no doubt â but she had never seemed to me to be a monster.
Perhaps I erred. How is one to know what dark desires any person may hold? I had flattered myself that Catherine de Medici and I had a special relationship and that we were much alike â yet now I was being told she had ordered this horrifying slaughter. Perhaps I was fooling myself. I so desperately wanted to believe the best of my few female peers.
The dowager queen of France was a woman I corresponded with regularly and privately. Italian by birth, Catherine had been neglected and despised by her husband Henry II, the king who had died with a jousting shaft through his eye. While he lived he had elevated his mistress Diane de Poitiers above his small, plain wife. But, once Catherine was a widow, she rose through the rule of her sons â first Francois and now Charles â to be one of the most formidable political forces in Europe. I could not believe that as wise and cautious a woman would have deliberately encouraged such chaos. I felt a sense of loss as I realised all contact between us must cease, at least for the foreseeable future. We had grown so close thanks to our clandestine correspondence that she had even suggested we meet in the middle of the English Channel on a ship. I had toyed with the idea, albeit only briefly. My father had gone to France and met Catherine's father-in-law, King Francois, but life was different for kings.
Now, as a widow and queen regent for her second son, Charles IX, Catherine and I were both women exercising power in our own right. We may have had different religious beliefs and different life circumstances â she was the mother of six living children â but the political and organisational dilemmas we had to deal with were very similar. When I realised that I would now have to present myself as her enemy and her judge, rather than her friend, I confess I wept over it. I was lonely. I am lonely. To lose contact with someone I felt might actually understand what my life was like was something I could ill afford to do. It was, however, exactly what I had to do.
âI will authorise the money for the Prince of Orange, I will raise an army to fight alongside his Protestant troops, I will publicly rebuke the French ambassador when I recall him to my presence, I will command my court to go into official mourning but, my lords, that is all I will do. Enough blood has been spilt. I will add no more to it.'