Plague Child (36 page)

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Authors: Peter Ransley

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In that moment, I knew with absolute certainty that Lord Stonehouse, overcome by remorse at the hatred he had fed between father and son, had come to beg forgiveness. I saw him again as the kindly old man who had taken me in his arms when I had the pitch burn. Great treasure. It was exactly what Matthew had foretold in the pendant. Exactly the ending that a story or ballad should have. I ran down the twisting stairs into a house of turmoil, with Mrs Black colliding with me as she shrieked to Jane to get her best dress, and Mr Black and Nehemiah coming out of the shop, jaws dropping.

Only Sarah, wiping her hands on a cloth, seemed unmoved. ‘He’ll never get that thing through there,’ she said.

I ran into the yard, slipped on the ice and fell, finding myself staring at the liveried legs of a footman, then into the disdainful eyes of Jenkins, my old enemy from Bedford Square, who was placing the steps for the Countess to descend.

They were overawed, but they loved her. I never knew anyone more capable of being charming and dismissive in the same breath. Lucy Hay complimented Mrs Black on the exquisite cloth of her shawl (‘Who is your merchant?’) and Mr Black on being London’s Voice of Liberty (a phrase I could see him setting up there and then, with due acknowledgements) and begged for the opportunity to see me and Anne alone.

I feared she wanted to tell Anne she was standing in my way. So did Anne, I believe, for she refused to come down. Only dire threats from her mother and father brought her down eventually, very pale in the face, with her dress repaired. The last of the coals were heaped on the fire, wine pressed into our hands and we were left alone. The Countess kept her fur cloak on, for the coals Sarah tipped on the fire had practically extinguished it. She sipped at her wine, grimaced and, since I had swallowed mine at one gulp, poured the rest into my glass.

‘You’ve heard the news about Richard Stonehouse?’ she said in the tone of one who was quite sure we had not. I went very still, suddenly certain that his body had been found. Normally she was the most tantalising person in drawing the most from a piece of news that no one else knew, but she saw my expression and said: ‘He’s alive. Very much so.’

Relief was followed by a confusion of emotions. That, and what I had said to Lord Stonehouse, finished any hope of a position with him. He had not contacted me to tell me this, although Richard was my father and he must at least have had an inkling of the torment I had been through. A miracle. Lord Stonehouse overcome by remorse. What an idiotic fool I was! I should go back to my ballads and pamphlets – it was all I was fit for. I scarcely listened to what the Countess was saying. Richard had got back to Royalist lines. He was Sir Richard now, she told us. He was in France with the Queen’s retinue, recruiting English soldiers from Continental armies. There was still enough daylight left for me to go. I stared at my pack, which I had dropped by the door. I finished the wine, unable to meet Anne’s eyes, wishing the Countess would leave, but she rattled on, saying that Lord Stonehouse wanted to celebrate the news that his son was alive but deemed it inappropriate to hold a function for an important Royalist commander.

The fire had at last blazed up, and the Countess sighed with pleasure, dropping the fur cloak from her shoulders. The twin of the falcon pendant, which I had first seen in her carriage, was glittering between her breasts. ‘Men,’ she said to Anne, shaking her head, ‘have no idea how to resolve such a conflict of interests.’

Anne stared at her mutely. I reddened for her, sure she had no idea what the Countess was talking about, and stared into the fire.

‘Everything all right between you two?’

Anne sat bolt upright, screwing her hands together. I wanted to hold her, to protect her from this prying, inquisitive woman, who was like a bloodsucking flea, gaining her nourishment from the intimate secrets of other people’s lives.

‘I see. It seems I came at the right time.’ I leaned forward to tell her not to interfere but she held up an imperious hand. ‘I am having one of my occasions for Lord Stonehouse tonight – not on the face of it about Richard, but it will enable him to, er . . . discreetly celebrate. Warwick will be there. Bedford. Mr Pym, of course. All the right people. I want you to be there.’

I was looking into the fire and turned to stare at her. After all that had happened, she expected me to celebrate Richard’s return to life. On the other hand, Mr Pym would be there and the great earls who employed him, Bedford and Warwick, who ran the navy.

‘I don’t know,’ I said, looking away off-handedly into the fire. ‘I don’t know if I should go –’

‘Oh, not
you
!’ she said. ‘That would be not be right at all.’

She was not looking at me, but at Anne. I stared at the Countess in amazement, Anne in abject terror.

‘I need a lady in waiting. All the lively ones are in Paris with the Queen, or Oxford with the King. There is no reason why righteousness should not be attractive, but Puritan women are as dull as dumplings.’ I tried to interrupt her again, but nothing could stop her. ‘We live in an upside-down world where, as the ballad has it, war makes lords peasants and peasants lords. But for the moment I shall call you Lady Black. Men like a mystery. Come on, Anne. We have little time.’

She rose, gesturing Anne to follow her. Anne leapt up, but there her obedience ended. She backed away, twisting her hands together as if she would tear them off. ‘I cannot. I cannot.’

‘Nonsense. Of course you can.’

‘I would not know what to say,’ Anne cried in agony, ‘what to do!’

I came between them, shielding her from the Countess. ‘She’s right. It’s ridiculous. How can she have a conversation with Mr Pym? Or Lord Stonehouse?’

Before the Countess could answer, Anne rounded on me like a spitting cat. ‘Do you think I have learned nothing from you, the way you endlessly go on about politics? Nothing from there?’ She pointed to the print shop. ‘Nothing about the war? Do you? Do you?’ She turned away, tears springing into her eyes, gulping out the last words.

‘Exactly,’ the Countess said soothingly, comfortingly. ‘You listen beautifully, Anne, and ask questions charmingly, which is all men ever expect of us – isn’t that right, Tom?’

She smiled at me sweetly. I hated her. I hated her like poison. I could not understand why I had ever found her beautiful, ever been so fascinated by her. But even with all her scheming I did not think she would persuade Anne. She was panic-stricken at the prospect, too over-awed by what she called her betters. Sure enough, she dropped back in her chair and huddled before the fire again, shaking her head stubbornly.

‘It’s impossible. What could I wear? I’ve only this dress and one or two other rags.’

‘Well,’ the Countess said, ‘you could wear this, for a start.’

Anne turned, staring, the tears in her eyes glittering like the diamonds in the pendant the Countess was removing from her neck.

All the humiliation I ever suffered from Anne when I first came to that house with no boots on my feet was as nothing to seeing her being helped into the coach by Jenkins. Her terror seemed to have vanished in excitement. There seemed to be a familiarity between her and Jenkins, who was back to giving me his old looks of disdain at my crumpled clothes, my blackened hands. Of course! Anne had not been once to the Countess, but several times. Lucy Hay had dropped me for a new favourite.

The whole household turned out to see them off, Mrs Black curtseying and Mr Black lifting his hat like a pair in a puppet show at Bartholomew Fair. Half the porters came out of Smithfield to help the coach back into Cloth Fair. Some of them thought the Countess was the Queen, the way she smiled and raised her hand. Anne waved to me, but I could not, would not, wave back. There was too much in that wave, in the look she gave me, that reminded me of the time when she had called me Monkey in disdain.

‘Some of us go up, and some of us go down,’ Sarah said. ‘But what do we do now for coal?’

It was freezing, and far too late to leave now. After supper I took my pack upstairs and went to bed early, but could not sleep for thinking about Anne. Now, as I tossed and turned, my envy and burning resentment vanished in an agony of concern. I knew her so well. Her panic would come back. They would know who, or at least what she was. I could not stand the thought of Lord Stonehouse’s black, penetrating eyes on her, what he would say. I sprang out of bed, and went out into the cold night.

There was no sound except the watchman’s cry. Not a dog barked. Even in the inns, people seemed huddled over fires. I stopped, my breath hanging frozen in the air as the watchman passed me. He said something but I caught not a word. What was I doing, hurrying across London, on this bleakest night of winter, to care and comfort her, forsaking all others, as the marriage service puts it, if I did not love her beyond anything else? I felt as I had when we had our first kiss. No! When I longed for it. I whooped. Ran. Fell, picked myself up laughing, and in this manner reached Bedford Square.

I could not see her among the glittering array of people caught in the blaze of candlelight, or hidden in deep shadow. I saw Jenkins serving drinks, and the Countess in earnest conversation with Mr Pym, before passing to another group. Perhaps Anne was in the back where I used to be, ignominiously bundled into the kitchens. Or – it would be like her – had fled there.

I took a step to go round the side, where I had so often delivered letters, and saw her. Or, it would be more accurate to say, saw the pendant. For a moment I still did not recognise the woman wearing it. She came out of the shadows with Lord Stonehouse. She was Anne, yet not Anne. Her rosy lips and cheeks stood out in sharp relief from the rest of her pure white skin, set off by the pendant, which sparkled on the swell of her small breasts. She was nodding, tilting her chin earnestly, deferentially at Lord Stonehouse, drawing up the long, smooth line of her neck. At the same time, within the frame of beautifully, tightly curled ringlets of hair her large blue eyes shone brilliantly, coquettishly up at Lord Stonehouse, in a way I had never seen before. She reminded me of somebody, but try as I might, I could not call her to mind.

She did not return that night. Torn with jealousy, I slept little. Having stood there, still and frozen as an icicle, until the first carriages came, I awoke next morning with a thickening cold and a fever. I realised who, gazing up at that window, she had reminded me of. It was not someone I had ever known, but only imagined: my mother.

In my growing fever, the two merged together, until I felt I no longer knew who Anne was, just as I lost my own certainty when I saw my portrait at Highpoint. The pendant at Anne’s breast became the pendant Matthew was picking up from the wet bushes and I thought I must leave, but in this slipping, fading vision I was holding her hand and we were leaving together.


Cream Ice!
’ Mrs Black shrieked.

I lifted my head to hear the murmur of Anne’s voice. I was covered in sweat and my nose was as swollen as a pig’s bladder. From the weak sun filtering through the fresh ice patterns on the window it was past noon. Someone had piled extra blankets and coats on me. I heaved them off and immediately began to shiver. Mrs Black shrieked again.

‘The earl of
who?

I slumped back on the bed and dragged the blanket over my head. A little later Anne came in, calling my name. When I did not move she began piling the coats and blankets over me again. Irritably I shoved them away, telling her in a thick, croaking voice I was too hot.

‘Poor Tom. You sound dreadful.’ I blinked at her. She had been in my dreams so much as she was at the window in Bedford Square that it was bewildering to see her in the thick old dressing gown of her mother’s. She wore it over the dress I had torn, which she had repaired so neatly the stitches were scarcely visible.

‘Here –’ She put down a hot posset.

‘Thank you.’ I buried my head on the pillow.

‘Don’t you want to hear what happened?’

‘I just want to sleep,’ I mumbled, ‘Lady Black.’

She touched my head. ‘You’re jealous.’

I sprang up shouting: ‘I am not jealous! I just want to slee—’ I broke into a fit of coughing. She put a pillow behind my back and I swallowed some of the posset. ‘What did you say to Lord Stonehouse?’

‘How do you know I talked to him?’

‘Because I saw you.’

‘Saw me? How?’

I blew my nose. ‘Through the window. I thought you would be . . . terrified . . . out of your . . .’

‘Oh, Tom, Tom!’ She held me.

I sneezed. ‘I thought . . . up there . . . you were so much above me.’

She pulled away. ‘What do you think
I
have felt since this business began? That’s why Lucy – the Countess – after I had gone that first time gave me lessons.’

‘I see. I see.’

‘I didn’t talk to Lord Stonehouse. He talked to me. He likes that, because he can’t hear very well. Didn’t you realise that?’

I shook my head at how obtuse and self-centred I was not to have picked it up. It explained why he shouted and was so brusque and non-committal about some of the things I said. Lucy Hay used his deafness. She introduced Anne as Lady Black and only when Lord Stonehouse had been talking to her for some time – he said she reminded him of his wife when he first met her – did Lucy reveal who she was, saying he must have misheard, for she had introduced her as her lady-in-waiting, Anne Black.

‘What did he do?’

‘He cut me.’

That she had so soon adopted salon language, and the despair I read in her dropped head and shaking shoulders, made me think my fears she would be cruelly rejected had been realised. I put my arms indignantly, protectively round her – and then slowly withdrew them. She was not crying, but laughing. Her blue eyes, the pupils still enlarged with the belladonna Lucy had evidently dropped in them the previous evening, were sparkling wickedly.

‘Bedford came over –’

‘The Treasurer?’

‘Is he?’

‘Go on.’

She caught the urbane tone of the fifth earl I had often heard in the lobby to perfection. ‘He said if the uneasy truce persisted and I happened to find myself in Hertfordshire . . . Then he was interrupted by Warwick who talked about some jewels, captured from the Spaniards by a privateer,
Resolution
, owned by him and Lord Stonehouse, which would just match my pendant . . .’

Resolution
was the ship Matthew helped to build, the one I had run with the pitch to caulk. I stared at the scar on my leg from the pitch burn, after which Lord Stonehouse had picked me up.

‘He just cut you? Lord Stonehouse?’

‘Yes. But once he saw Bedford and Warwick talking to me . . . he seemed to, well . . . to see me differently.’

‘Differently?’

‘Perhaps he was jealous. I don’t know.’ There was a mischievous glint in her eyes I had never seen before. Now she mimicked Lord Stonehouse’s rough, abrupt tone. ‘“You’re Black’s girl,” he said. He was surprised I could read and was interested in estate management and –’

I gaped at her. ‘You know nothing about estate management.’

‘He does. I listened.’ Her voice faltered. She clasped her hands and stared at me earnestly. ‘Do you think I made a fool of myself?’

I stared at her suspiciously, but she continued to return my gaze modestly, meekly. I was no longer quite sure where I was with her. However rattle-brained Mrs Black might be, she always looked upon Mr Black as the master of the house and was obedient to him, which was as it should be, since a man’s honour was so tightly bound up with his ability to rule his own household. I hated the thought of the hot eyes of those nobles on her, but was avid for the information she had gleaned from them.

‘Did Lord Stonehouse say anything about me?’

She looked at the floor and shook her head unconvincingly.

‘What did he say?’ I said sharply.

‘He said . . .’ she trembled and bit her lip, then abruptly the words spurted out in a burst of laughter ‘. . . you talked too much.’

I continued to stare at her coldly until she choked off the laughter. ‘Are you going to Hertfordshire in the spring?’ I said. ‘Or to look at Warwick’s jewels?’

She burst out laughing again. ‘Oh, Tom, Tom – you are a million times more to me than those rich old men.’

‘Am I?’ I said stupidly. ‘You are a million times more to me than Lord Stonehouse.’

To hell with it. To hell with honour, Lord Stonehouse, the King – if this was the upside-down world, I wanted to be in it.

‘You’ll get my cold,’ I said, as she kissed me. ‘We’ll share it,’ she said.

* * *

I returned to the print shop. My mind was made up. I would like to be, to do, much more than ordinances, but if it had to be ordinances, so be it, so long as Anne and I were together.

I no sooner picked up my composing stick than I saw Nehemiah cringe. A stab of guilt went through me, and I told him, I swore it, that I would never hit him again. He sniffed and backed away uncertainly, sure I was only planning a more subtle form of torture. Mr Black heard me, and took me to one side and told me I would ruin the boy.

‘It is how I see the world now, sir,’ I said.

‘Well, it is a most peculiar way to see it. I never liked beating you, Tom, but it formed your character, did it not?’

I said nothing and he went away sighing something about youth and change and the old solid ways being disrupted by the war, and the sooner it was over, the better.

It was a fine March day and ice in the yard was turning into slush when Nehemiah came running back from Westminster, full of excitement. He apologised for losing his hat – in the past he would never have dared tell me – but he had an important letter for me. Lord Stonehouse’s falcon stared out at me from the seal. I had become resigned to expecting nothing from him, but at the sight of the seal all my old hopes and aspirations rushed back. My fingers shook as I broke the seal. I stared at the short, abrupt sentences, almost sick with disappointment.

It was not from Lord Stonehouse but his secretary, Mr Cole. It said there was a Parliamentary meeting in two days’ time at Westminster and his lordship required me to take notes.

‘It seems an honour to me,’ said Anne, meekly.

‘An honour? Taking notes like a common scrivener?’

‘It is not what you hoped for, certainly.’

‘Not what I hoped for? It is an insult!’

I crumpled up the letter and hurled it into the fire. It bounced out and she fished it from the grate, smoothing it out. She read slowly, but in a thoughtful way, her lips spelling out the difficult words. ‘His manner is, perhaps, a little unfortunate.’

‘A little –’ Several times a week now she went to Lucy and she was picking up phrases, mannerisms. I wondered whether she had picked up anything else. ‘Do you know anything about this?’

‘No. No. Why should I?’ She gave me a look I was beginning to recognise, tentative and submissive but calculating, a look that preceded her suggesting I did the exact opposite of what I was planning. ‘Except . . . I think it might be about Edgehill.’

Edgehill was a running sore. Locals claimed the place was haunted. On New Year’s Day on Kineton meadows, between three and four o’clock on a cold, misty afternoon, strange apparitions had been seen of musketeers and pikemen. The boom of cannons was heard and the shrieks and groans of dying men. Troops of horsemen charged one another, then vanished into the mist. The following day many people witnessed a full-scale battle, which began at midnight, the ghostly apparitions, many of them littered about the meadow, vanishing at sunrise.

So said the pamphlet
A great vvonder in Heaven: shewing the late Apparitions and prodigious noises of War and Battels, seen on Edge-Hill
. The King authenticated the events, sending six observers who witnessed the apparitions, identifying some of them, including Sir Edmund Verney, who had died holding the King’s standard. They were taken by many as a sign of God’s displeasure at the spilling of so much Christian blood. Nehemiah went to a large demonstration of apprentices in Covent Garden calling for peace, and there were riots in the City calling for an end to the war. The prosperous were now finding Parliamentary tax ordinances much worse than the Ship Money the King had imposed on them.

The King was gradually strengthening his position. He held the North, from Newcastle to York; Wales and the Midlands down to Oxford, and Cornwall and Devon. Bristol, still in Parliamentary hands, was being encircled by Prince Rupert. Abroad, the Queen was successfully raising money for Charles.

In the face of this increasing threat from the King, Parliament was split. Denzil Holles, one of the five members whom the King tried to arrest for treason in the House, led a strong faction who wanted peace on almost any terms. Holles had fought long for Parliament, but had been sobered by Prince Rupert slaughtering a third of his regiment at Brentford, just before the stand-off at Turnham Green. He was prepared to barter civil control of Government for freedom of religion. Mr Pym argued this would be a disaster; if Parliament laid down its arms – the King’s first demand before drawing up a treaty – they would lose all the ground gained, and he would be the first to walk to the scaffold.

It was against this gloomy background that I went into a large, draughty committee room near the Painted Chamber in Westminster. Lord Stonehouse greeted me tersely, told me he wanted my note by seven o’clock that evening at Queen Street, and pointed me towards the scrivener’s table. It was a hastily cobbled together
ad hoc
committee of Lords and Commons members, whose real object was to raise yet more money, and whose loosely defined purpose was military requirements in the light of Edgehill – in other words, one of those meetings where the real work is done.

‘Tom! You are one of us now!’

It was Mr Ink, splashed to his collar, embracing me. I felt a pang at being back almost where I had started, but we laughed at old times, when he had pressed into my hand the words that would change the world.

‘I still believe words can light a fire in people’s hearts, Tom,’ he cried fervently.

Dear Mr Ink! I told him sadly words had become ordinances, but then I was tapped on the shoulder by Mr Pym. He fired questions at me about Edgehill, shaking his head as I told him I did not recognise in the accounts given by London pamphlets the battle I had been through.

‘Why haven’t you written your own?’

‘Mr Black works for the Government.’

‘Governments need to listen.’ He tugged at his spade-like beard in that nervous, jerky way of his. ‘Sit here,’ he said abruptly, pointing to a chair next to him.

I told him I was a scrivener, but as he was close to the scrivener’s desk he gestured impatiently that it made no difference, and by the time I made sure my quill was sharp the chairman’s gavel went. It was as I feared. The chairman was fulsome in his praise of Lord Essex’s great victory, although, he added, no victory was so great that lessons could not be learned from it.

In our corner the quills scratched dutifully, mine in tune with the rest. If I had been deaf, I could have written out what Lord Essex said in reply, it was such common currency. In a word, the lesson of Edgehill was money. He needed numbers to defeat the King. He reeled off numbers. Men, horses, cannon, weapons – if a large enough army was assembled, and the King was slowly starved of provisions, that would bring him to the negotiating table. Mr Pym shook his head at the mention of negotiation, but there were resigned nods of approval from Holles and his supporters. Most people round the table, including Lord Stonehouse, showed no reaction, one way or the other.

When Essex had finished, there was the sort of lengthy pause that follows an argument so weighed down with facts and figures it appears irrefutable. There was no argument that more money was needed. It always is. Quills scraped gradually to a stop. People coughed, shifted in their chairs, shuffled papers. Someone caught the chairman’s eye.

‘Mr Cromwell,’ he said.

I had scarcely noticed the MP for Cambridge since I had heard him say in the lobby that if the Grand Remonstrance, which had begun the path to war, had not been passed he would have sailed for New England. In Parliament he had been a stolid, unexceptional supporter of Mr Pym. He was one of those Puritans who had found God after a youth of debauchery. I suspected that the sins he had committed were exaggerated both by himself and others, for he had that tortured look of a man who, glancing a mite too long at a woman’s skirts, prays as vehemently to God to forgive him as if he had raped her. He surprised an acquaintance by giving him money he had won at dice years earlier. The man had forgotten all about it, but Cromwell insisted on him having it, saying it would be a great sin for him to keep it.

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