The King’s Daughter. Christie Dickason
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Название: The King’s Daughter

Автор: Christie Dickason

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Историческая литература

Серия:

isbn: 9780007341078

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СКАЧАТЬ my letter after all! I felt my hands fly into the air like startled doves and quickly clasped them together in my lap.

      His small lumpy bulk leaned forward. He braced his elbows on the chair arms, so that his long feminine fingers dangled from awkwardly suspended hands.

      I looked away. I wished those eyes would stop looking at me and at my clasped hands. I wished the room were not so strange and close, nor hung with tapestries of bloody battle scenes. I ached to be back at tedious, familiar Combe. I had misplaced all my rehearsed lies. I was sick with waiting.

      ‘Why are you here, my lord?’

      He hesitated. My throat tightened. I tried to swallow but had forgotten how. I saw his eyes go to my throat. He watched me struggle. I managed to swallow on the third try.

      ‘His majesty has instructed me to speak with you.’ He looked back at my eyes. ‘About these recent dreadful events.’

      I stared back, afraid now to trust any sound that might come out of my throat. With effort, I unclenched my fists.

      ‘Were you ever acquainted with Sir Everard Digby?’

      I shook my head, cautiously truthful. To my knowledge, this was no lie.

      ‘A traitor whom I have recently examined in the Tower, along with several of his companion devils.’

      ‘Is he one of those who would have blown up Parliament?’ The frog in my throat was quite natural, I told myself. In the circumstances.

      Cecil smiled slightly, inviting me into complicity. ‘This young knight, Digby, had a very different task—to take you prisoner.’

      I met his invitation as blankly as I could. All I could see in my head was Digby—for that must be his name—standing with the coins of sunlight dancing on his shoulders and head.

      Go away! I begged him. Get out of my thoughts! A treacherous heat began to bloom in my chest.

      ‘A plausible young knight,’ said Cecil. ‘Well-formed and fair-haired. His family’s estate is not far from Combe. Until he married, I’m told that many ladies had their eye on him.’

      All at once, I saw the truth, Digby had confessed. He had confessed to our meeting in the forest. Cecil knew!

      I shook my head, helpless to stop the red fire that stained my chest and flooded up my neck. Cecil knows everything, I thought.

      ‘I never met a man who gave that name.’ I frowned slightly, as if trying to recall. I understood very well. Digby had taken me down with him just as I feared. Had not taken my advice to flee, not in time. Good man or bad, he had turned out to be a trowie after all.

      Cecil watched the telltale blush reach my cheeks and rise upwards until the roots of my hair felt ablaze. ‘You might perhaps have smiled on him once?’ he prompted gently. ‘Perhaps not knowing who he was? He’s held to be handsome and is only a few years older than your grace. Any young woman might smile on him.’

      The Chief Secretary was toying with me. I could bear it no longer.

      ‘Is this an examination, my lord?’ I demanded.

      ‘Should it be?’ he asked mildly. He looked around the room. ‘Do you see a clerk? Or witnesses to an examination? Should you be examined?’

      ‘No,’ I whispered.

      On the far wall, one of the tapestries heaved. ‘By God, it is an examination!’

      I leapt to my feet and turned. I had heard that Scottish bellow before. In the corner of my eye, I saw Cecil wriggle off his chair.

      With a flash of rings, my father knocked aside the edge of a woven battle and stepped out of the alcove behind it. ‘Anatomise her, man! Ye’re too nice!’ The king staggered in his excitement, his restless body made clumsy by the urgencies of his mind.

      Cecil stared at the floor.

      The king stopped in front of me, blocking my view of Cecil. ‘Aye, Bessie! Y’ know very well it’s an examination! And you’d best thank God to be here in Coventry and not locked in the Tower with your friends!’

      ‘“Friends”?’ I repeated faintly.

      ‘You’d be examined there, right enough! And not so gently, neither!’ The king turned on Cecil. ‘Why didn’t you ask the questions I prepared? What have y’done with them?’

      ‘I meant to come to them by degrees, your majesty.’

      ‘There’s no degree in being dead! And no degree in treason!’ The king held out his hand. ‘Give me my questions and act as my clerk. I will play Solomon. I’ll examine this treacherous whelp of mine, who seems to have terrified you into degrees!’ His over-large tongue dammed and slowed the flow of words pouring from his brain. His bright, hungry magpie eye probed at me.

      From the table beneath a window Cecil took a densely written paper and gave it to the king. He returned to the table and sat on the stool behind it. Now I saw the waiting pen and ink.

      ‘That devil Digby’s in the Tower,’ said my father. ‘We know by his own confession that he and his fellow fiends meant to make you queen of England! After I…your king and father…had been blown sky-high, murdered, along with your precious brother.’

      ‘Never, my lord father!’ I whispered.

      ‘What do ye have to say to that?’

      ‘What sort of queen would I have been…?’

      He jabbed a finger at me. ‘A compliant one. Controlled by Papists, ruling at the will of Rome.’

      ‘I had rather been murdered in Parliament with you than wear the Crown on such condition!’ I spoke that truth with all my heart.

      The small eyes skewered me. ‘Fine words!’ He pulled at his lower lip with finger and thumb. ‘What are you?’

      ‘I don’t understand.’ I glanced at Cecil but he was head-down at the table, recording our words.

      ‘What…are…you?’ the king repeated slowly and loudly, as if I were simple. ‘Do I know you?’

      ‘I’m your loyal daughter, sir.’ I felt my own temper begin to rise.

      ‘D’ye think me a fool?’

      ‘I think you many things, sir, but never a fool!’

      We both drew breath and stared at each other. Cecil’s pen stopped scratching.

      The king shook his list of questions in my face. I blinked but did not move. ‘I ask you, just as your friends in the Tower were asked,’ he said. ‘Are you a Papist?’

      Refusing to step back, I fixed my eyes on my father’s thick padded jerkin, diamond hatched with stitching that held the thick lining in place to turn aside attacking knives. ‘Never!’

      ‘I know that you are a Papist!’

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