The Noble Assassin. Christie Dickason
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Название: The Noble Assassin

Автор: Christie Dickason

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Историческая литература

Серия:

isbn: 9780007383818

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СКАЧАТЬ young and hoped to be valued, even if not loved.

      In spite of many offers, I was not tempted to repeat the carnal experience with another man. I hid my distaste with flirtation and outrageous talk. For the next several years, I was that rare case, a woman who was as virtuous in life as she was painted in verse.

      ‘I will sleep in my old parlour,’ I say now. ‘A smaller bed will do.’

      Mudd disappears to arrange it.

      I summon Sir Kit to the little parlour and call to a groom to bring us warmed wine and tobacco pipes.

      Kit brings with him a faint odour of horse and cold fresh air. His new leather jacket creaks as he shifts in his chair, smiling at me. I feel that he would rather be in motion, but will sit for the moment to please me.

      ‘Now, tell me all the gossip,’ I order. ‘How has London entertained itself in my long absence?’

      ‘Very ill, without you.’

      ‘Kit! Please don’t turn courtier on me or I’ll have your knighthood revoked. Tell me the worst.’

      ‘Lord Bacon is on trial for corruption. His old enemy Coke leads the prosecution.’ He grins with glee. His firm chin wears a stubble that it had lacked on our ride to Warwick, but otherwise, he looks no older. ‘With Killer Coke sniffing after him, he’s done for.’ Coke had also prosecuted the Gunpowder Plotters. All of them were executed.

      I pass Kit a long-stemmed clay pipe and light my own with a coal from the fire.

      ‘Rumour . . .’ He draws on his pipe. ‘. . . whispers that Buckingham already has his eye on Bacon’s house, York Place.’

      ‘My neighbours do not improve,’ I murmur.

      ‘Buckingham still climbs in the King’s favour.’ ‘That may not be entirely bad.’ I had plans for Buckingham.

      We finish our pipes with the special relish of wickedness. Smoking defies authority. The King loathes the ‘stinking weed’ tobacco. My friend Henry Goodyear had written that courtiers at Whitehall are forced to huddle in furtive groups in the open air if they want to share the fashion for smoking pipes.

      Sir Kit drops his voice. ‘Buckingham now controls all access to the King . . . and I know this from more than gossip during riding lessons.’ He takes my mug and warms my wine again with the poker. ‘He drives others from the court.’

      ‘My friends?’

      ‘Southampton.’ The poker hisses in his mug. ‘Cranborne and Suffolk . . .’

      ‘So many?’ All these men were old friends. Henry Wriothesley, Third Earl of Southampton. Lord Cranborne, the son of my old protector and friend, Robert Cecil.

      ‘And what of my dear old letter-writing friend, Sir Henry Goodyear?’

      ‘He’s with the King, in all things. Sings the praises of a Spanish marriage for the Prince.’

      Perhaps to be trusted, perhaps not.

      The number of safe allies at court has dwindled. ‘And Arundel?’ I ask. ‘Does he still chase after antiquities with his old hunger?’

      From a prominent Catholic family, Thomas Howard, Earl of Arundel had survived the taint of Catholic treason after the Gunpowder Treason against the King in 1605. Who could blame him if he found art safer than politics?

      Kit sets the poker carefully on a trivet. ‘He now woos Buckingham.’

      ‘And so must we all, from what you say.’ I upturn my mug and drain it with an unladylike gusto that would have made my husband purse his lips and look up to Heaven.

      Neither of us asks after the other’s family. Kit’s wife, like me, has failed to breed, and like me grows near the end of her child-bearing years.

      ‘Now I will inspect the gardens, before it grows too dark.’ I call the steward.

      His face bleaches when I say what I wish to do. ‘Tonight?’ He swallows.

      ‘Is there some difficulty?’

      ‘None, madam.’

      The house groom kneeling by the fireplace grows intent on placing a new log. I glance at Kit but he is engrossed in buttoning his coat.

      The Bedford House gardens run in a long narrow belt along the wall, beyond the outbuildings at the far end of the big courtyard and the stable yard to its right. Beyond them and our wall lies the open space of Covent Garden – forty acres of rough land and patches of wilderness. Standing below the garden wall, I can hear the voices of people using the diagonal track that cuts across the Long Acre between Drury Lane at Holborn and St Martin’s Lane near the Royal Mews.

      At first, I see no cause for the steward’s ill-concealed distress. The box hedges in the small knot garden just behind the house have been neatly trimmed. No weeds or other disorder explain his unease. I head for the arched gate to my right that leads to our kitchen gardens, orchard and the small wilderness that provides coppiced garden stakes and firewood.

      ‘There’s little to see there at this time,’ the steward warns. ‘And the paths will be muddy.’

      ‘Frozen mud.’ I go through the arch and stop. Edward would have called it ‘theft’, a crime punishable by hanging.

      Before me lie row upon row of neatly tended cabbages, late turnips, and the remains of vast onion beds. A long line of old diamond-paned windows leans against the wall, protecting dung-heap hot beds, recently dug over. I see a vast bean patch with dried haulms hanging on some of the tripod supports. A mountain of frosted carrot tops rises from the corner of another cleared and newly manured plot. Far more vegetables are being grown here than could ever be needed by the skeleton-house family left in residence when the owners of Bedford House are elsewhere.

      I know that we lease some of the garden to local people who lack growing space in the crowded city. But those gardens lie beyond a farther, locked gate. This is private land, for the use of Bedford House only. The knuckles of Mudd’s clenched hands gleam white under his skin.

      ‘Your labour, our land,’ I say mildly. ‘I see no difficulty with your enterprise, so long as you pay fair rent.’

      ‘Of course, Your Grace! It’s just that I . . .’ He makes the wise choice and swallows his excuse.

      ‘How long have you been growing vegetables to sell?’

      He clasps his hand over his mouth, then mumbles, ‘Two years.’

      I weaken in the face of his distress. And the thought of how little Edward pays him. ‘We shall calculate what you owe . . . and start from now.’

      He drops to his knees on the frozen earth. ‘Madam, I thank you! God bless you!’

      ‘But when you next undertake commerce using someone else’s land, ask permission first. Or you might find yourself hanged after all.’ Before he can begin to weep and protest his gratitude any further, I tell him to get up or else he will freeze his knees.

      The truth is that I need all the allies СКАЧАТЬ