Angele had come to know, as others
in like case have ever done, how wretched indeed is
that poor man that hangs on princes’ favours.
She had saved the Queen’s life upon May Day,
and on the evening of that day the Queen had sent
for her, had made such high and tender acknowledgment
of her debt as would seem to justify for her perpetual
honour. And what Elizabeth said she meant; but
in a life set in forests of complications and opposing
interests the political overlapped the personal in
her nature. Thus it was that she had kept the
princes of the world dangling, advancing towards marriage
with them, retreating suddenly, setting off one house
against the other, allying herself to one European
power to-day, with another to-morrow, her own person
and her crown the pawn with which she played.
It was not a beautiful thing in a woman, but it was
what a woman could do; and, denied other powers given
to men as to her father she
resorted to astute but doubtful devices to advance
her diplomacy. Over all was self-infatuation,
the bane of princes, the curse of greatness, the source
of wide injustice. It was not to be expected,
as Leicester had said, that Elizabeth, save for the
whim of the moment, would turn aside to confer benefit
upon Angele or to keep her in mind, unless constrained
to do so for some political reason.
The girl had charmed the Queen, had,
by saving her life, made England her long debtor;
but Leicester had judged rightly in believing that
the Queen might find the debt irksome; that her gratitude
would be corroded by other destructive emotions.
It was true that Angele had saved her life, but Michel
had charmed her eye. He had proved himself a more
gallant fighter than any in her kingdom; and had done
it, as he had said, in her honour. So, as her
admiration for Michel grew, her debt to Angele became
burdensome; and, despite her will, there stole into
her mind the old petulance and smothered anger against
beauty and love and marriage. She could ill bear
that one near her person should not be content to
flourish in the light and warmth of her own favour,
setting aside all other small affections. So
it was that she had sent Angele to her father and
kept De la Foret in the palace. Perplexed, troubled
by new developments, the birth of a son to Mary Queen
of Scots, the demand of her Parliament that she should
marry, the pressure of foreign policy which compelled
her to open up again negotiations for marriage with
the Duke of Anjou all these combined to
detach her from the interest she had suddenly felt
in Angele. But, by instinct, she knew also that
Leicester, through jealousy, had increased the complication;
and, fretful under the long influence he had had upon
her, she steadily lessened intercourse with him.
The duel he fought with Lempriere on May Day came
to her ears through the Duke’s Daughter, and
she seized upon it with sharp petulance. First
she ostentatiously gave housing and care to Lempriere,
and went to visit him; then, having refused Leicester
audience, wrote to him.
“What is this I hear,”
she scrawled upon the paper, “that you have
forced a quarrel with the Lord of Rozel, and have well-ny
ta’en his life! Is swording then your dearest
vice that you must urge it on a harmless gentle man,
and my visitor? Do you think you hold a charter
of freedom for your self-will? Have a care, Leicester,
or, by God! you shall know another sword surer than
your own.”
The rage of Leicester on receiving
this knew no bounds; for though he had received from
Elizabeth stormy letters before, none had had in it
the cold irony of this missive. The cause of it?
Desperation seized him. With a mad disloyalty
he read in every word of Elizabeth’s letter,
Michel de la Foret, refugee. With madder fury
he determined to strike for the immediate ruin of
De la Foret, and Angele with him for had
she not thrice repulsed him as though he had been some
village captain? After the meeting in the maze
he had kept his promise of visiting her “prison.”
By every art, and without avail, he had through patient
days sought to gain an influence over her; for he
saw that if he could but show the Queen that the girl
was open to his advances, accepted his protection,
her ruin would be certain in anger Elizabeth
would take revenge upon both refugees. But however
much he succeeded with Monsieur Aubert, he failed
wholly with Angele. She repulsed him still with
the most certain courtesy, with the greatest outward
composure; but she had to make her fight alone, for
the Queen forbade intercourse with Michel, and she
must have despaired but for the messages sent now and
then by the Duke’s Daughter.
Through M. Aubert, to whom Leicester
was diligently courteous, and whom he sought daily,
discussing piously the question of religion so dear
to the old man’s heart, he strove to foster
in Angele’s mind the suspicion he had ventured
at their meeting in the maze, that the Queen, through
personal interest in Michel, was saving his life to
keep him in her household. So well did he work
on the old man’s feelings that when he offered
his own protection to M. Aubert and Angele, whatever
the issue with De la Foret might be, he was met with
an almost tearful response of gratitude. It was
the moment to convey a deep distrust of De la Foret
to the mind of the old refugee, and it was subtly
done.
Were it not better to leave the Court
where only danger surrounded them, and find safety
on Leicester’s own estate, where no man living
could molest them? Were it not well to leave
Michel de la Foret to his fate, what ever it would
be? Thrice within a week the Queen had sent for
De la Foret what reason was there for that,
unless the Queen had a secret personal interest in
him? Did M. Aubert think it was only a rare touch
of humour which had turned De la Foret into a preacher,
and set his fate upon a sermon to be preached before
the Court? He himself had long held high office,
had been near to her Majesty, and he could speak with
more knowledge than he might use it grieved
him that Mademoiselle Aubert should be placed in so
painful a position.
Sometimes as the two talked Angele
would join them; and then there was a sudden silence,
which made her flush with embarrassment, anxiety or
anger. In vain did she assume a cold composure,
in vain school herself to treat Leicester with a precise
courtesy; in vain her heart protested the goodness
of De la Foret and high uprightness of the Queen; the
persistent suggestions of the dark Earl worked upon
her mind in spite of all. Why had the Queen forbidden
her to meet Michel, or write to him, or to receive
letters from him? Why had the Queen, who had spoken
such gratitude, deserted her? And now even the
Duke’s Daughter wrote to her no more, sent her
no further messages. She felt herself a prisoner,
and that the Queen had forgotten her debt. She
took to wandering to that part of the palace-grounds
where she could see the windows of the tower her lover
inhabited. Her old habit of cheerful talk deserted
her, and she brooded. It was long before she
heard of the duel between the Seigneur and Lord Leicester the
Duke’s Daughter had kept this from her, lest
she should be unduly troubled and when,
in anxiety, she went to the house where Lempriere
had been quartered, he had gone, none could tell her
whither. Buonespoir was now in close confinement,
by secret orders of Leicester, and not allowed to
walk abroad; and thus with no friend save her father,
now so much under the influence of the Earl, she was
bitterly solitary. Bravely she fought the growing
care and suspicion in her heart; but she was being
tried beyond her strength. Her father had urged
her to make personal appeal to the Queen; and at times,
despite her better judgment, she was on the verge of
doing so. Yet what could she say? She could
not go to the Queen of England and cry out, like a
silly milk-maid: “You have taken my lover give
him back to me!” What proof had she that the
Queen wanted her lover? And if she spoke, the
impertinence of the suggestion might send back to the
fierce Medici that same lover, to lose his head.
Leicester, who now was playing the
game as though it were a hazard for states and kingdoms,
read the increasing trouble in her face; and waited
confidently for the moment when in desperation she
would lose her self-control and go to the Queen.
But he did not reckon with the depth
of the girl’s nature and her true sense of life.
Her brain told her that what she was tempted to do
she should not; that her only way was to wait; to
trust that the Queen of England was as much true woman
as Queen, and as much Queen as true woman; and that
the one was held in high equipoise by the other.
Besides, Trinity Day would bring the end of it all,
and that was not far off. She steeled her will
to wait till then, no matter how dark the sky might
be.
As time went on, Leicester became
impatient. He had not been able to induce M.
Aubert to compel Angele to accept a quiet refuge at
Kenilworth; he saw that this plan would not work, and
he deployed his mind upon another. If he could
but get Angele to seek De la Foret in his apartment
in the palace, and then bring the matter to Elizabeth’s
knowledge with sure proof, De la Foret’s doom
would be sealed. At great expense, however; for,
in order to make the scheme effective, Angele should
visit De la Foret at night. This would mean the
ruin of the girl as well. Still that could be
set right; because, once De la Foret was sent to the
Medici the girl’s character could be cleared;
and, if not, so much the surer would she come at last
to his protection. What he had professed in cold
deliberation had become in some sense a fact.
She had roused in him an eager passion. He might
even dare, when De la Foret was gone, to confess his
own action in the matter to the Queen, once she was
again within his influence. She had forgiven him
more than that in the past, when he had made his own
mad devotion to herself excuse for his rashness or
misconduct.
He waited opportunity, he arranged
all details carefully, he secured the passive agents
of his purpose; and when the right day came he acted.
About ten o’clock one night,
a half-hour before the closing of the palace gates,
when no one could go in or go out save by permit of
the Lord Chamberlain, a footman from a surgeon of
the palace came to Angele, bearing a note which read:
“Your friend is very ill,
and asks for you. Come hither alone; and
now, if you would come at all.”
Her father was confined to bed with
some ailment of the hour, and asleep it
were no good to awaken him. Her mind was at once
made up. There was no time to ask permission
of the Queen. She knew the surgeon’s messengers
by sight, this one was in the usual livery, and his
master’s name was duly signed. In haste
she made herself ready, and went forth into the night
with the messenger, her heart beating hard, a pitiful
anxiety shaking her. Her steps were fleet between
the lodge and the palace. They were challenged
nowhere, and the surgeon’s servant, entering
a side door of the palace, led her hastily through
gloomy halls and passages where they met no one, though
once in a dark corridor some one brushed against her.
She wondered why there were no servants to show the
way, why the footman carried no torch or candle; but
haste and urgency seemed due excuse, and she thought
only of Michel, and that she would soon see him-dying,
dead perhaps before she could touch his hand!
At last they emerged into a lighter and larger hallway,
where her guide suddenly paused, and said to Angel,
motioning towards a door: “Enter. He
is there.”
For a moment she stood still, scarce
able to breathe, her heart hurt her so. It seemed
to her as though life itself was arrested. As
the servant, without further words, turned and left
her, she knocked, opened the door without awaiting
a reply, and stepping into semidarkness, said softly:
“Michel! Michel!”