Part 58 (1/2)
THE WARRANT
”Yea, madam, they are gone! They stole away at once, and are far on the way to Fotheringhay, with these same conditions.” So spoke Davison, under-secretary, Walsingham being still indisposed.
”And therefore will I see whether the Queen of Scots will ratify them, ere I go farther in the matter,” returned Elizabeth.
”She will ratify them without question,” said the Secretary, ironically, ”seeing that to escape into the hands of one of your Majesty's enemies is just what she desires.”
”She leaves her daughter as a pledge.”
”Yea, a piece of tinsel to delude your Majesty.”
Elizabeth swore an oath that there was truth in every word and gesture of the maiden.
”The poor wench may believe all she said herself,” said Davison. ”Nay, she is as much deluded as the rest, and so is that honest, dull-pated sailor, Talbot. If your Majesty will permit me to call in a fellow I have here, I can make all plain.”
”Who is he? You know I cannot abide those foul carrion rascals you make use of,” said Elizabeth, with an air of disgust.
”This man is gentleman born. Villain he may be, but there is naught to offend your Majesty in him. He is one Langston, a kinsman of this Talbot's; and having once been a Papist, but now having seen the error of his ways, he did good service in the unwinding of the late horrible plot.”
”Well, if no other way will serve you but I must hear the fellow, have him in.”
A neatly-dressed, small, elderly man, entirely arrayed in black, was called in, and knelt most humbly before the Queen. Being bidden to tell what he knew respecting the lady who had appeared before the Queen the day before, calling herself Bride Hepburn, he returned for answer that he believed it to be verily her name, but that she was the daughter of a man who had fled to France, and become an archer of the Scottish guard.
He told how he had been at Hull when the infant had been saved from the wreck, and brought home to Mistress Susan Talbot, who left the place the next day, and had, he understood, bred up the child as her own. He himself, being then, as he confessed, led astray by the delusions of Popery, had much commerce with the Queen's party, and had learnt from some of the garrison of Dunfermline that the child on board the lost s.h.i.+p was the offspring of this same Hepburn, and of one of Queen Mary's many namesake kindred, who had died in childbirth at Lochleven. And now Langston professed bitterly to regret what he had done when, in his disguise at Buxton, he had made known to some of Mary's suite that the supposed Cicely Talbot was of their country and kindred. She had been immediately made a great favourite by the Queen of Scots, and the attendants all knew who she really was, though she still went by the name of Talbot. He imagined that the Queen of Scots, whose charms were not so imperishable as those which dazzled his eyes at this moment, wanted a fresh bait for her victims, since she herself was growing old, and thus had actually succeeded in binding Babington to her service, though even then the girl was puffed up with notions of her own importance and had flouted him. And now, all other hope having vanished, Queen Mary's last and ablest resource had been to possess the poor maiden with an idea of being actually her own child, and then to work on her filial obedience to offer herself as a hostage, whom Mary herself could without scruple leave to her fate, so soon as she was ready to head an army of invaders.
Davison further added that the Secretary Nau could corroborate that Bride Hepburn was known to the suite as a kinswoman of the Queen, and that Mr. Cavendish, clerk to Sir Francis Walsingham, knew that Babington had been suitor to the young lady, and had crossed swords with young Talbot on her account.
Elizabeth listened, and made no comment at the time, save that she sharply questioned Langston; but his tale was perfectly coherent, and as it threw the onus of the deception entirely on Mary, it did not conflict either with the sincerity evident in both Cicely and her foster-father, or with the credentials supplied by the Queen of Scots. Of the ciphered letter, and of the monograms, Elizabeth had never heard, though, if she had asked for further proof, they would have been brought forward.
She heard all, dismissed Langston, and with some petulance bade Davison likewise begone, being aware that her ministers meant her to draw the moral that she had involved herself in difficulties by holding a private audience of the French Amba.s.sadors without their knowledge or presence. It may be that the very sense of having been touched exasperated her the more. She paced up and down the room restlessly, and her ladies heard her muttering-”That she should cheat me thus! I have pitied her often; I will pity her no more! To breed up that poor child to be palmed on me! I will make an end of it; I can endure this no longer! These tossings to and fro are more than I can bear, and all for one who is false, false, false, false! My brain will bear no more. Hap what hap, an end must be made of it. She or I, she or I must die; and which is best for England and the faith? That girl had well-nigh made me pity her, and it was all a vile cheat!”
Thus it was that Elizabeth sent for Davison, and bade him bring the warrant with him.
And thus it was that in the midst of dinner in the hall, on the Sunday, the 5th of February, the meine of the Castle were startled by the arrival of Mr. Beale, the Clerk of the Council, always a bird of sinister omen, and accompanied by a still more alarming figure a strong burly man clad in black velvet from head to foot. Every one knew who he was, and a thrill of dismay, that what had been so long expected had come at last, went through all who saw him pa.s.s through the hall. Sir Amias was summoned from table, and remained in conference with the two arrivals all through evening chapel time-an event in itself extraordinary enough to excite general anxiety. It was Humfrey's turn to be on guard, and he had not long taken his station before he was called into the Queen's apartments, where she sat at the foot of her bed, in a large chair with a small table before her. No one was with her but her two mediciners, Bourgoin and Gorion.
”Here,” she said, ”is the list our good Doctor has writ of the herbs he requires for my threatened attack of rheumatism.”
”I will endeavour, with Sir Amias's permission, to seek them in the park,” said Humfrey.
”But tell me,” said Mary, fixing her clear eyes upon him, ”tell me truly. Is there not a surer and more lasting cure for all my ills in preparation? Who was it who arrived to-night?”
”Madame,” said Humfrey, bowing his head low as he knelt on one knee, ”it was Mr. Beale.”
”Ay, and who besides?”
”Madam, I heard no name, but”-as she waited for him to speak further, he uttered in a choked voice-”it was one clad in black.”
”I perceive,” said Mary, looking up with a smile. ”A more effectual Doctor than you, my good Bourgoin. I thank my G.o.d and my cousin Elizabeth for giving me the martyr's hope at the close of the most mournful life that ever woman lived. Nay, leave me not as yet, good Humfrey. I have somewhat to say unto thee. I have a charge for thee.” Something in her tone led him to look up earnestly in her face. ”Thou lovest my child, I think,” she added.
The young man's voice was scarcely heard, and he only said, ”Yea, madam;” but there was an intensity in the tone and eyes which went to her heart.