Read Marbeck and the King-in-Waiting Online
Authors: John Pilkington
Their meeting, however, started badly. The following day was wet, and Prout was late. When he arrived, hatted against the drizzle, he found Marbeck waiting, looking uneasy. His reason was that the Earl of Derby's men had arrived to hold a rehearsal on the open stage in the inn-yard. But because of the weather they had called a halt and were milling about, sheltering under the galleries and fortifying themselves with bottled ale. The strait-laced Prout, as pious a man as Marbeck knew, regarded them frostily.
âDo you have a chamber to yourself?' he asked.
âI do,' Marbeck said. âBut being short of money, I had to make concessions. I must vacate it at times. It's ⦠a delicate business.'
âYou mean it's used by whores?' Prout snorted. âThen where will we go?'
Marbeck looked about. He knew Prout disliked inns, indeed seldom drank anything stronger than watered ale. Then his gaze lifted towards the galleries, where spectators paid extra to sit. Eyeing the messenger, he received a nod. So the two of them climbed a staircase and sat down in the best seats, overlooking the empty stage. It was likely, Marbeck mused, that this was the only time Prout had entered a theatre.
âI'm obliged to you for coming,' he began, then stopped short as the other raised a hand.
âI cannot stay,' Prout said, pulling his hat low against the drizzle. âBut if we're trusting one another, Marbeck, you should know that Master Secretary has no knowledge of our meeting. As far as is known you left Croft House in a hurry â to the displeasure of Sir Thomas and his wife, I hear â and rode off to none knew where.' He paused. âDoes anyone else know you've returned?'
âEdward Poyns,' Marbeck answered. âI met him in Cambridge, where he'd come from the fen country.'
At that Prout frowned. âDid he speak of his mission?'
âHe did. We talked a good deal ⦠he's one other, at least, who places his trust in me.'
They eyed each other, then Prout looked away. Marbeck sensed that the man was troubled, engaged in some debate within himself. Keeping expression from his face he waited, until the other turned to him again.
âMaster Secretary is as taut as a wand,' he murmured. âI never knew him so on edge ⦠he is terse with everyone. He sees treason behind every greeting. He keeps to Burleigh House like a fox gone to earth.'
Marbeck made no reply; he could imagine it well enough.
âMeanwhile, reports whirl about us like leaves in the autumn,' Prout went on. âThe Council meet and argue, part and whisper, then meet again, their faces full of suspicion. While England lies open to a gale, from any direction â¦' He sighed. âI do not welcome the coming of the King of Scots. I've heard little that's good about the man. He will drive the people of this country apart, as the Queen tried to draw them together.'
Raising his brows, Marbeck let him know that he understood, even shared the sentiment. Never, he thought, had Prout been so open with him before. And like Lady Celia, he too seemed to have aged a good deal in a few short months.
âSo when intelligence arrives, as it has of late, tainted with prejudice, even panic,' he continued, âit's doubly hard to sift grain from chaff. Especially when some seek to report what they think our master wishes to hear. And, I've heard it said, our new King is a man's man, and not subject to the whims and caprices of the woman who ruled us until a week ago.' He lowered his gaze. âYou follow me, I think.'
âPerhaps I do,' Marbeck said, after a pause.
âHence at times like these, loyal men may need to step back, and act as their consciences dictate. Would you not agree?'
âI suppose I would.'
Prout said nothing further. A moment went by, and an unspoken current of thought passed between them.
âWell then, I'm glad I sought you out,' Marbeck said at last. âAnd how might I serve Master Secretary, without him knowing of it?'
T
hat evening, in the parlour of the Boar's Head, Marbeck ate the best supper he'd had in days. He did so because Nicholas Prout had given him a small sum and bade him spend it as his needs dictated. Afterwards he returned to his chamber and waited until twilight, before buckling on sword and poniard and leaving the inn. Aldgate was still open, and he was soon passing along Fenchurch Street before turning down Mincing Lane, towards the church of St Dunstan's in the East.
As he walked the wet streets he ran over his conversation with Prout, as he had done all afternoon. Suddenly, from being almost an outcast he found himself an intelligencer again â though one without the authority of his spymaster Sir Robert Cecil. It was a role he had neither sought nor imagined, but his talk with the messenger had made something clear: just now, there were matters that must take priority. The loyal Prout, for better or worse, was calling upon men he could rely upon, without Master Secretary's knowledge. Cecil was cold and distant, preoccupied with the King's accession; but a small circle of intelligencers, working in secret, might act independently of him. The notion excited Marbeck, though it also made him uncomfortable. Somewhat warily he halted, as Prout had instructed him, outside a small house opposite the church, on the bend of St Dunstan's Hill. The street was quiet, the place in darkness. He glanced about, then knocked in a prearranged pattern. Soon the door opened to reveal a middle-aged woman in workaday garb, who smiled in greeting.
âMaster Sands?'
He was admitted, and followed her down a passage to a half-open door. But when he entered the candlelit room, he stopped in surprise. Three men rose from a table. One was Prout, another was a stranger with the look of an old soldier, but the third was a handsome young man in good clothes, wearing a wry smile: John Chyme, his informant of a fortnight ago, when the Queen was dying at Richmond. There was a brief silence, before Prout spoke.
âHere is the last of our party. He uses the name Sands, though some of us know him by another â¦' He turned to Chyme, who gave a nod.
âI'm glad to see you well.'
âAnd I you, John â¦' Marbeck's eyes strayed to the other man.
âHe is Llewellyn, whose house this is,' Prout went on. âOr rather it's that of his sister, who admitted you. He will not speak, because he cannot.'
By way of explanation, Llewellyn opened his mouth. Marbeck looked, and understood. At some time in the past this man's tongue had been cut out: a harsh punishment.
âShall we sit?' Prout looked somewhat embarrassed; he was unused to playing host. As they sat down the woman, who had disappeared after showing Marbeck in, re-entered bearing a tray with cups of wine and a dish of sweetmeats. She set it on the table, then departed again. As she went she laid a hand on Llewellyn's shoulder.
âThese people have my trust,' Prout said, his eyes on Marbeck. âLlewellyn served in France and the Low Countries â he has knowledge that's of value to us. As do you all,' he added, with a glance at Chyme. âAlong with your courage. For what I will ask you, is of grave import â¦' He hesitated, then: âTo come quickly to the nub of the matter, there's a scheme being set forth, that threatens England's very heart. Confronting it may tax you to your limits â even to loss of life. Hence, before we proceed, I offer you the chance to go now and take no further part. And this gathering, you will understand, never took place.'
A silence followed. Chyme merely lowered his eyes, while Marbeck glanced at the others. He saw the tension in Prout, but he sensed determination too. While Llewellyn ⦠he met the man's gaze, and saw plain courage; the kind that only those who have faced death and defied it would understand.
âI congratulate you, Prout,' he said at last. âThis company you have assembled may accomplish much â and I'm eager to hear more. As are we all, I think?'
Another moment passed; then Llewellyn smiled, and began passing round the cups.
The conversation that followed was long. And by the end of it, the plot Prout had spoken of filled the minds of all. It alarmed both Marbeck and John Chyme, as it had the others. The matter had come to Prout's notice via a written report from Llewellyn that, poorly spelled as it was, spoke eloquently enough. It lay before them now on the table. The man had penned it on his return from Holland after a hard campaign, and passed it to Prout as the only man he knew who might act upon it. For its implications were as momentous as could be: a scheme was in train to seize the English throne, before James Stuart was crowned King. Prout laid it forth to the intelligencers, though details were frustratingly scant. But when the name of the Earl of Charnock was mentioned, Marbeck looked up sharply.
âPoyns heard him spoken of, among the Papists at Wisbech Castle,' he said. âHe should have made report of it by now to Cecil â¦' But he broke off as Prout shook his head.
âIntelligencers' reports go through a new clerk just now,' he said. âHe will show it to me first, before it reaches Master Secretary. Indeed, it may not do so ⦠not yet, anyway.' He gave a shrug. âThings get lost or misplaced, at times ⦠you understand.'
Marbeck and Chyme exchanged glances, and the latter showed his surprise. âI never knew you to take such risks before, Prout,' he said.
âI've not found myself in this position before,' the messenger admitted. To Marbeck he said: âWill you tell us the gist of what Poyns told you?'
He did so, though there was little to add. When he finished Prout was fingering Llewellyn's letter, squinting at the man's fearful scrawl.
âThe Earl of Charnock's a hothead,' he said, laying it down again. âAn old-style Papist, who's never forgiven his countrymen for hounding the Queen of Scots. He and a few others like him burn for revenge as much as for a restoration of their faith ⦠and now, I believe they see their chance. The last I heard the man was in Scotland, but I cannot be sure.'
Llewellyn made a sound in his throat, and pointed to the paper. When Prout held it out he jabbed at a passage with his forefinger.
âMy friend here often passes for a deaf mute,' Prout said. âHence at times, he overhears matters that men would otherwise forbear to speak of.' He looked at Marbeck, then at Chyme. âHe heard private talk in Holland of the English Regiment ⦠that rabble of traitors who fight for Spain against our own troops. They're abuzz with new purpose â they talk of going home, even of claiming their birthright. I think we can guess what that means: a full-blown Papist rising at last. And to my mind, we may guess at the woman they propose as England's new Queen.'
âThe Spanish Infanta,' Marbeck said at once. When the others turned to him he added: âI was contemptuous of the notion, when Poyns spoke of it in Cambridge. Even when he voiced the suspicion that someone might finance such a scheme. Yet from what Llewellyn has heard, I may have dismissed it too readily â¦' He frowned. âPerhaps someone needs to go to Holland and infiltrate the traitors' regiment; someone with knowledge of the country.'
He fell silent, for he was the obvious person for such a mission. Both he and Prout knew it, though the thought of returning to that war-torn land filled Marbeck with dismay. But instead Prout shook his head.
âThat should not be necessary.'
The intelligencers eyed him, sensing further revelations. Llewellyn was nodding, and again he pointed to the report.
âThere's a name here that's not unfamiliar to me,' Prout added, after a moment. âMayhap you know it â William Drax?'
Marbeck raised his brows. âDrax ⦠the one they used to call the basilisk?'
âI've heard of the man,' Chyme said with a frown. âAs wily a rogue as ever drew sword. He was once tried as a traitor, but walked free.'
âThat he did,' Prout agreed. âIt was said he had help from important men ⦠nobles for whom he'd done private service. He's a man for hire, without scruples.' He paused, then added: âAnd he's here, raising an army in Kent.'
There was a sudden silence.
âA small army perhaps,' Prout went on. âBilleted in villages and outlying farms, so as not to arouse too much attention. Well armed and well fed, and within a short march of Dover â¦' He gave a shrug. âDo I need to say more?'
Chyme was aghast. âBut surely Master Secretary is aware of these activities, right under his nose? He could not â he
would
not, ignore such reports â¦'
âProviding they've reached him,' Marbeck broke in. A picture was forming that troubled him. âIf this army you speak of is well organized enough to maintain secrecy â and moreover, to have intelligence of its own â¦'
âIndeed,' Prout nodded. âIt's the reason we're here.'
Each man was silent, as the import of his words sank in. Suddenly it seemed that England was indeed in peril â not merely from without, but from within too. Marbeck threw a look of approval at Llewellyn. âOur nation might have cause to be grateful to you one day, my friend,' he said quietly.
Llewellyn made more signs, the meaning of which was unclear. But Prout nodded and said: âThere's a mission for you, Marbeck â not in the Low Countries, but a mere sixty miles away: to attach yourself to Drax's force. Llewellyn can offer his services as a mercenary soldier for hire, pretending only greed as his motive. But if he were accompanied by one who could move among officers as well as men â¦' He trailed off, whereupon Marbeck gave a nod.
âThen what part do I play?' Chyme spoke sharply. âI'm as eager to know what Drax and his rabble are up to as you areâ'
âI know.' Prout turned to him. âBut I need a courtier. One who may mingle with the Council, as I cannot. One who willâ'
âHang about Whitehall with the gossips?' Chyme retorted. âThe notion appals me. My lord has no need of me just now â I may as well ride north towards Scotland, to fawn upon our new King as others do. Indeed,' he added, as a thought struck him, âcould I not take word to him of this treason, so he may send troops to meet it?'