THE DEVIL AT COURT
It was half-past two of the clock
when Cicely, who carried her boy in her arms, accompanied
by Emlyn, Thomas Bolle and Jacob Smith, found herself
in the great courtyard of the Palace of Whitehall.
The place was full of people waiting there upon one
business or another, through whom messengers and armed
men thrust their way continually, crying, “Way!
In the King’s name, way!” So great was
the press, indeed, that for some time even Jacob could
command no attention, till at length he caught sight
of the herald who had visited his house in the morning,
and beckoned to him.
“I was looking for you, Master
Smith, and for the Lady Harflete,” the man said,
bowing to her. “You have an appointment
with his Grace, have you not? but God knows if it
can be kept. The ante-chambers are full of folk
bringing news about the rebellion in the north, and
of great lords and councillors who wait for commands
or money, most of them for money. In short the
King has given order that all appointments are cancelled;
he can see no one to-day. The Lord Cromwell told
me so himself.”
Jacob took a golden angel from his
pouch and began to play with it between his fingers.
I understand, noble herald, he said. Still, do you think that you
could find me a messenger to the Lord Cromwell? If so, this trifle
“I’ll try, Master Smith,”
he answered, stretching out his hand for the piece
of money. “But what is the message?”
“Oh, say that Pink Pearl would
learn from his Lordship where he can lay hands upon
L1000 without interest.”
“A strange message, to which
I will hazard an answer nowhere,”
said the herald, “yet I’ll find some one
to deliver it. Step within this archway and wait
out of the rain. Fear not, I will be back presently.”
They did as he bid them, gladly enough,
for it had begun to drizzle and Cicely was afraid
lest her boy, with whom London did not agree too well,
should take cold. Here, then, they stood amusing
themselves in watching the motley throng that came
and went. Bolle, to whom the scene was strange,
gaped at them with his mouth open; Emlyn took note
of every one with her quick eyes, while old Jacob
Smith whispered tales concerning individuals as they
passed, most of which were little to their credit.
As for Cicely, soon her thoughts were far away. She knew that she was
at a crisis of her fortune; that if things went well with her this day she might
look to be avenged upon her enemies, and to spend the rest of her life in wealth
and honour. But it was not of such matters that she dreamed, whose heart
was set on Christopher, without whom naught availed. Where was he, she
wondered. If Jacobs tale were true, after passing many dangers, but a
little while ago he lived and had his health. Yet in those times death
came quickly, leaping like the lightning from unexpected clouds or even out of a
clear sky, and who could say? Besides, he believed her gone, and that
being so would be careless of himself, or perchance, worst thought of all, would
take some other wife, as was but right and natural. Oh! then indeed
At this moment a sound of altercation
woke her to the world again, and she looked up to
see that Thomas Bolle was bringing trouble on them.
A coarse fat lout with a fiery and a knotted nose,
being somewhat in liquor, had amused himself by making
mock of his country looks and red hair, and asking
whether they used him for a scarecrow in his native
fields.
Thomas bore it for a while, only answering
with another question: whether he, the fat fellow,
hired out his nose to London housewives to light their
fires. The man, feeling that the laugh was against
him, and noticing the child in Cicely’s arms
pointed it out to his friends, inquiring whether they
did not think it was exactly like its dad. Then
Thomas’s rage burnt up, although the jest was
silly and aimless enough.
“You low, London gutter-hound!”
he exclaimed; “I’ll learn you to insult
the Lady Harflete with your ribald japes,” and
stretching out his big fist he seized his enemy’s
purple nose in a grip of iron and began to twist it
till the sot roared with pain. Thereon guards
ran up and would have arrested Bolle for breaking
the peace in the King’s palace. Indeed,
arrested he must have been, notwithstanding all Jacob
Smith could do to save him, had not at that moment
a man appeared at whose coming the crowd that had
gathered, separated, bowing; a man of middle age with
a quick, clever face, who wore rich clothes and a
fur-trimmed velvet cap and gown.
Cicely knew him at once for Cromwell,
the greatest man in England after the King, and marked
him well, knowing that he held her fate and that of
her child in the hollow of his hand. She noted
the thin-lipped mouth, small as a woman’s, the
sharp nose, the little brownish eyes set close together
and surrounded by wrinkled skin that gave them a cunning
look, and noting was afraid. Before her stood
a man who, though at present he seemed to be her friend,
if he chanced to become her enemy, as once he had
been bribed to be her father’s, would show her
no more pity than the spider shows a fly.
Indeed she was right, for many were
the flies that had been snared and sucked in the web
of Cromwell, who, in his full tide of power and pomp,
forgot the fate of his master, Wolsey, in his day a
greater spider still.
“What passes here?” Cromwell
said in a sharp voice. “Men, is this the
place to brawl beneath his Grace’s very windows?
Ah! Master Smith, is it you? Explain.”
“My Lord,” answered Jacob,
bowing, “this is Lady Harflete’s servant
and he is not to blame. That fat knave insulted
her and, being quick-tempered, her man, Bolle, wrang
his nose.”
“I see that he wrang it.
Look, he is wringing it still. Friend Bolle,
leave go, or presently you will have in your hand that
which is of no value to you. Guard, take this
beer-tub and hold his head beneath the pump for five
minutes by the clock to wash him, and if he comes back
again set him in the stocks. Nay, no words, fellow,
you are well served. Master Smith, follow me
with your party.”
Again the crowd parted as they walked
after Cromwell to a side door that was near at hand,
to find themselves alone with him in a small chamber.
Here he stopped and, turning, surveyed them all narrowly,
especially Cicely.
“I suppose, Master Smith,”
he said, pointing to Bolle, who was wiping his hands
clean with the rushes from the floor, “this is
the man that you told me played the devil yonder at
Blossholme. Well, he can play the fool also.
In another minute there would have been a tumult and
you would have lost your chance of seeing his Grace,
for months perhaps, since he has determined to ride
from London to-morrow morning northwards, though it
is true he may change his mind ere then. This
rebellion troubles him much, and were it not for the
loan you promise, when loans are needed, small hope
would you have had of audience. Now come quickly
and be careful that you do not cross the King’s
temper, for it is tetchy to-day. Indeed, had
it not been for the Queen, who is with him and minded
to see this Lady Harflete, that they would have burnt
as a witch, you must have waited till a more convenient
season which may never come. Stay, what is in
that great sack you carry, Bolle?”
“The devil’s livery, may it please your
Lordship.”
“The devil’s livery, many
wear that in London. Still, bring the gear, it
may make his Grace laugh, and if so I’ll give
you a gold piece, who have had enough of oaths and
scoldings, aye,” he added, with a sour grin,
“and of blows too. Now follow me into the
Presence, and speak only when you are spoken to, nor
dare to answer if he rates you.”
They went from the room down a passage
and through another door, where the guards on duty
looked suspiciously at Bolle and his sack, but at a
word from Cromwell let them through into a large room
in which a fire burned upon the hearth. At the
end of this room stood a huge, proud-looking man with
a flat and cruel face, broad as an ox’s skull,
as Thomas Bolle said afterwards, who was dressed in
some rich, sombre stuff and wore a velvet cap upon
his head. He held a parchment in his hand, and
before him on the other side of an oak table sat an
officer of state in a black robe, who wrote upon another
parchment, whereof there were many scattered about
on the table and the floor.
“Knave,” shouted the King,
for they guessed that it was he, “you have cast
up these figures wrong. Oh, that it should be
my lot to be served by none but fools!”
“Pardon, your Grace,”
said the secretary in a trembling voice, “thrice
have I checked them.”
“Would you gainsay me, you lying
lawyer,” bellowed the King again. “I
tell you they must be wrong, since otherwise the sum
is short by L1100 of that which I was promised.
Where are the L1100? You must have stolen them,
thief.”
“I steal, oh, your Grace, I steal!”
“Aye, why not, since your betters
do. Only you are clumsy, you lack skill.
Ask my Lord Cromwell there to give you lessons.
He learned under the best of masters, and is a merchant
by trade to boot. Oh, get you gone and take your
scribblings with you.”
The poor officer hastened to avail
himself of this invitation. Hurriedly collecting
his parchments he bowed himself from the presence of
his irate Sovereign. At the door, about twelve
feet away, however, he turned.
My gracious Liege, he began, the casting of the count is right. Upon
my honour as a Christian soul I can look your Majesty in the face with truth in
my eye
Now on the table there was a massive
inkstand made from the horn of a ram mounted with
silver feet. This Henry seized and hurled with
all his strength. The aim was good, for the heavy
horn struck the wretched scribe upon the nose so that
the ink squirted all over his face, and felled him
to the floor.
“Now there is more in your eye
than truth,” shouted the King. “Be
off, ere the stool follows the inkpot.”
Two ladies who stood by the fire talking together and taking no heed, for to
such rude scenes they seemed to be accustomed, looked up and laughed a little,
then went on talking, while Cromwell smiled and shrugged his shoulders.
Then in the midst of the silence which followed Thomas Bolle, who had been
watching open-mouthed, ejaculated in his great voice
“A bull’s eye! A
noble bull! Myself cannot throw straighter.”
“Silence, fool,” hissed Emlyn.
“Who spoke?” asked the king, looking towards
them sharply.
“Please, my Liege, it was I, Thomas Bolle.”
“Thomas Bolle! Can you sling a stone, Thomas
Bolle, whoever you may be?”
“Aye, Sire, but not better than you, I think.
That was a gallant shot.”
“Thomas Bolle, you are right.
Seeing the hurry and the unhandiness of the missile,
it was excellent. Let the knave stand up again
and I’ll bet you a gold noble to a brass nail
that you’ll not do as well within an inch.
Why, the fellow’s gone! Will you try on
my Lord Cromwell? Nay, this is no time for fooling.
What’s your business, Thomas Bolle, and who
are those women with you?”
Now Cromwell stepped forward, and with cringing gestures began to explain
something to the King in a low voice. Meanwhile, the two ladies became
suddenly interested in Cicely, and one of them, a pale but pretty woman,
splendidly dressed, stepped forward to her, saying
“Are you the Lady Harflete of
whom we have heard, she who was to have been burnt
as a witch? Yes? And is that your child?
Oh! what a beautiful child. A boy, I’ll
swear. Come to me, sweet, and in after years you
can tell that a queen has nursed you,” and she
stretched out her arms.
As good fortune would have it the child was awake, and attracted by the
Queens pleasant voice, or perhaps by the necklace of bright gems that she wore,
he held out his little hands towards her and went quite contentedly to her
breast. Jane Seymour, for it was she, began to fondle him with delight,
then, followed by her lady, ran to the King, saying
“See, Harry, see what a beautiful
boy, and how he loves me. God send us such a
son as this!”
The King glanced at the child, then answered
“Aye, he would do well enow.
Well, it rests with you, Jane. Nurse him, nurse
him, perhaps the sex is catching. I and all England
would see you brought to bed of that sickness, Sweet.
What said you, Cromwell?”
The great minister went on with his explanations, till the King, wearying of
him, called out
“Come here, Master Smith.”
Jacob advanced, bowing, and stood still.
“Now, Master Smith, the Lord
Cromwell tells me that if I sign these papers, you,
on behalf of the Lady Harflete, will loan me L1000
without interest, which as it chances I need.
Where, then, is this L1000? for I will
have no promises, not even from you, who are known
to keep them, Master Smith.”
Jacob thrust his hand beneath his
robe, and from various inner pockets drew out bags
of gold, which he set in a row upon the table.
“Here they are, your Grace,”
he said quietly. “If you should wish for
them they can be weighed and counted.”
“God’s truth! I think
I had better keep them, lest some accident should
happen to you on the way home, Master Smith. You
might fall into the Thames and sink.”
“Your Grace is right, the parchments
will be lighter to carry, even,” he added meaningly,
“with your Highness’s name added.”
“I can’t sign,”
said the King doubtfully, “all the ink is spilt.”
Jacob produced a small ink-horn, which
like most merchants of the day he carried hung to
his girdle, drew out the stopper and with a bow set
it on the table.
“In truth you are a good man
of business, Master Smith, too good for a mere king.
Such readiness makes me pause. Perhaps we had
better meet again at a more leisured season.”
Jacob bowed once more, and stretching
out his hand slowly lifted the first of the bags of
gold as though to replace it in his pocket.
“Cromwell, come hither,”
said the King, whereon Jacob, as though in forgetfulness,
laid the bag back upon the table.
“Repeat the heads of this matter, Cromwell.”
“My Liege, the Lady Harflete
seeks justice on the Spaniard Maldon, Abbot of Blossholme,
who is said to have murdered her father, Sir John
Foterell, and her husband, Sir Christopher Harflete,
though rumour has it that the latter escaped his clutches
and is now in Spain. Item: the said Abbot
has seized the lands which this Dame Cicely should
have inherited from her father, and demands their
restitution.”
“By God’s wounds! justice
she shall have and for nothing if we can give it her,”
answered the King, letting his heavy fist fall upon
the table. “No need to waste time in setting
out her wrongs. Why, ’tis the same Spanish
knave Maldon who stirs up all this hell’s broth
in the north. Well, he shall boil in his own
pot, for against him our score is long. What
more?”
“A declaration, Sire, of the
validity of the marriage between Christopher Harflete
and Cicely Foterell, which without doubt is good and
lawful although the Abbot disputes it for his own ends;
and an indemnity for the deaths of certain men who
fell when the said Abbot attacked and burnt the house
of the said Christopher Harflete.”
“It should have been granted
the more readily if Maldon had fallen also, but let
that pass. What more?”
“The promise, your Grace, of
the lands of the Abbey of Blossholme and of the Priory
of Blossholme in consideration of the loan of L1000
advanced to your Grace by the agent of Cicely Harflete,
Jacob Smith.”
“A large demand, my Lord. Have these lands
been valued?”
“Aye, Sire, by your Commissioner,
who reports it doubtful if with all their tenements
and timber they would fetch L1000 in gold.”
“Our Commissioner? A fig
for his valuing, doubtless he has been bribed.
Still, if we repay the money we can hold the land,
and since this Dame Harflete and her husband have
suffered sorely at the hands of Maldon and his armed
ruffians, why, let it pass also. Now, is that
all? I weary of so much talk.”
“But one thing more, your Grace,”
put in Cromwell hastily, for Henry was already rising
from his chair. “Dame Cicely Harflete, her
servant, Emlyn Stower, and a certain crazed old nun
were condemned of sorcery by a Court Ecclesiastic
whereof the Abbot Maldon was a member, the said Abbot
alleging that they had bewitched him and his goods.”
“Then he was pleader and judge in one?”
That is so, your Grace. Already without the royal warrant they were
bound to the stake for burning, the said Maldon having usurped the prerogative
of the Crown, when your Commissioner, Legh, arrived and loosed them, but not
without fighting, for certain men were killed and wounded. Now they humbly
crave your Majestys royal pardon for their share in this man-slaying, if any,
as also does Thomas Bolle yonder, who seems to have done the slaying
“Well can I believe it,” muttered the
King.
“And a declaration of the invalidity
of their trial and condemning, and of their innocence
of the foul charge laid against them.”
“Innocence!” exclaimed
Henry, growing impatient and fixing on the last point.
“How do we know they were innocent, though it
is true that if Dame Harflete is a witch she is the
prettiest that ever we have heard of or seen.
You ask too much, after your fashion, Cromwell.”
“I crave your Grace’s
patience for one short minute. There is a man
here who can prove that they were innocent; yonder
red-haired Bolle.”
“What? He who praised our
shooting? Well, Bolle, since you are so good a
sportsman, we will listen to you. Prove and be
brief.”
“Now all is finished,”
murmured Emlyn to Cicely, “for assuredly fool
Thomas will land us in the mire.”
“Your Grace,” said Bolle
in his big voice, “I obey in four words I
was the devil.”
“The devil you were, Thomas Bolle. Now,
your meaning?”
“Your Grace, Blossholme was haunted, I haunted
it.”
“How could you do otherwise if you lived there?”
“I’ll show your Grace,”
and without more ado, to the horror of Cicely, Thomas
tumbled from his sack all his hellish garb and set
to work to clothe himself. In a minute, for he
was practised at the game, the hideous mask was on
his head, and with it the horns and skin of the widow’s
billy-goat; the tail and painted hides were tied about
him, and in his hand he waved the eel spear, short-handled
now. Thus arrayed he capered before the astonished
King and Queen, shaking the tail that had a wire in
it and clattering his hoofs upon the floor.
“Oh, good devil! Most excellent
devil!” exclaimed his Majesty, clapping his
hands. “If I had met thee I’d have
run like a hare. Stay, Jane, peep you through
yonder door and tell me who are gathered there.”
The Queen obeyed and, returned, said
“There be a bishop and a priest,
I cannot see which, for it grows dark, with chaplains
and sundry of the lords of Council waiting audience.”
“Good. Then we’ll
try the devil on these devil-tamers. Friend Satan,
go you to that door, slip through it softly and rush
upon them roaring, driving them through this chamber
so that we may see which of them will be bold enough
to try to lay you. Dost understand, Beelzebub?”
Thomas nodded his horns and departed silently as a
cat.
“Now open the door and stand on one side,”
said the King.
Cromwell obeyed, nor had they long
to wait. Presently from the hall beyond there
rose a most fearful clamour. Then through the
door shot the bishop panting, after him came lords,
chaplains, and secretaries, and last of all the priest,
who, being very fat and hampered by his gown, could
not run so fast, although at his back Satan leapt and
bellowed. No heed did they take of the King’s
Majesty or of aught else, whose only thought was flight
as they tore down the chamber to the farther door.
“Oh, noble, noble!” hallooed
the King, who was shaking with laughter. “Give
him your fork, devil, give him your fork,” and
having the royal command Bolle obeyed with zeal.
In thirty seconds it was all over; the rout had come and gone, only Thomas in
his hideous attire stood bowing before the King, who exclaimed
“I thank thee, Thomas Bolle,
thou hast made me laugh as I have not laughed for
years. Little wonder that thy mistress was condemned
for witchcraft. Now,” he added, changing
his tone, “off with that mummery, and, Cromwell,
go, catch one of those fools and tell them the truth
ere tales fly round the palace. Jane, cease from
merriment, there is a time for all things. Come
hither, Lady Harflete, I would speak with you.”
Cicely approached and curtseyed, leaving
her boy in the Queen’s arms, where he had gone
to sleep, for she did not seem minded to part with
him.
“You are asking much of us,”
he said suddenly, searching her with a shrewd glance,
“relying, doubtless, on your wrongs, which are
deep, or your face, which is sweet, or both.
Well, these things move Kings mayhap more than others,
also I knew old Sir John, your father, a loyal man
and a brave, he fought well at Flodden; and young
Harflete, your husband, if he still lives, had a good
name like his forebears. Moreover your enemy,
Maldon, is ours, a treacherous foreign snake such as
England hates, for he would set her beneath the heel
of Spain.
“Now, Dame Harflete, doubtless
when you go hence you will bear away strange stories
of King Harry and his doings. You will say he
plays the fool, pelting his servants with inkpots
when he is wrath, as God knows he has often cause
to be, and scaring his bishops with sham Satans,
as after all why should he not since it is a dull
world? You’ll say, too, that he takes his
teaching from his ministers, and signs what these lay
before him with small search as to the truth or falsity.
Well, that’s the lot of monarchs who have but
one man’s brain and one man’s time; who
needs must trust their slaves until these become their
masters, and there is naught left,” here his
face grew fierce, “save to kill them, and find
more and worse. New servants, new wives,”
and he glanced at Jane, who was not listening, “new
friends, false, false, all three of them, new foes,
and at the last old Death to round it off. Such
has been the lot of kings from David down, and such
I think it shall always be.”
He paused a while, brooding heavily,
then looked up and went on, “I know not why
I should speak thus to a chit like you, except it be,
that young though you are, you also have known trouble
and the feel of a sick heart. Well, well, I have
heard more of you and your affairs than you might
think, and I forget nothing that’s
my gift. Dame Harflete, you are richer than you
have been advised to say, and I repeat you ask much
of me. Justice is your due from your Sovereign,
and you shall have it; but these wide Abbey lands,
this Priory of Blossholme, whose nuns have befriended
you and whom you desire to save, this embracing pardon
for others who had shed blood, this cancelling outside
of the form of law of a sentence passed by a Court
duly constituted, if unjust, all in return for a loan
of a pitiful L1000? You huckster well, Lady Harflete,
one would think that your father had been a chapman,
not rough John Foterell, you who can drive so shrewd
a bargain with your King’s necessities.”
Sire, Sire, broke in Cicely in confusion, I have no more, my lands are
wasted by Abbot Maldon, my husbands hall is burnt by his soldiers, my first
years rents, if ever I should receive them, are promised
“To whom?”
She hesitated.
“To whom?” he thundered. “Answer,
Madam.”
“To your Royal Commissioner, Dr. Legh.”
“Ah! I thought as much,
though when he spoke of you he did not tell it, the
snuffling rogue.”
“The jewels that came to me
from my mother are in pawn for that L1000, and I have
no more.”
“A palpable lie, Dame Harflete,
for if so, how have you paid Cromwell? He did
not bring you here for nothing.”
“Oh, my Liege, my Liege,”
said Cicely, sinking to her knees, “ask not a
helpless woman to betray those who have befriended
her in her most sore and honest need. I said
I have nothing, unless those gems are worth more than
I know.”
“And I believe you, Dame Harflete.
We have plucked you bare between us, have we not?
Still, perchance, you will be no loser in the end.
Now, Master Smith, there, does not work for love alone.”
“Sire,” said Jacob, “that
is true, I copy my masters. I have this lady’s
jewels in pledge, and I hope to make a profit on them.
Still, Sire, there is among them a pink pearl of great
beauty that it might please the Queen to wear.
Here it is,” and he laid it upon the table.
“Oh, what a lovely thing,”
said Jane; “never have I seen its like.”
“Then study it well, Wife, for
you look your last upon it. When we cannot pay
our soldiers to keep our crown upon our head, and preserve
the liberties of England against the Spaniard and the
Pope of Rome, it is no time to give you gems that
I have not bought. Take that gaud and sell it,
Master Smith, for whatever it will fetch among the
Jews, and add the price to the L1000, lessened by
one tenth for your trouble. Now, Dame Harflete,
you have bought the favour of your King, for whoever
else may, I’ll not lie. Ah! here comes Cromwell.
My Lord, you have been long.”
“Your Grace, yonder priest is
in a fit from fright, and thinks himself in hell.
I had to tarry with him till the doctor came.”
“Doubtless he’ll get better
now that you are gone. Poor man, if a sham devil
frights him so, what will he do at last? Now,
Cromwell, I have made examination of this business
and I will sign your papers, all of them. Dame
Harflete here tells me how hard you have worked for
her, all for nothing, Cromwell, and that pleases me,
who at times have wondered how you grew so rich, as
your learner, Wolsey, did before you. He took
bribes, Cromwell!”
My Liege, he answered in a low voice, this case was cruel, it moved my
pity
“As it has ours, leaving us
the richer by L1000 and the price of a pearl.
There, five, are they all signed? Take them, Master
Smith, as the Lady Harflete is your client, and study
them to-night. If aught be wrong or omitted,
you have our royal word that we will set it straight.
This is our command note it, Cromwell that
all things be done quickly as occasion shall arise
to give effect to these precepts, pardons and patents
which you, Cromwell, shall countersign ere they leave
this room. Also, that no further fee, secret
or declared, shall be taken from the Lady Harflete,
whom henceforth, in token of our special favour, we
create and name the Lady of Blossholme, from her husband
or her child, as to any of these matters, and that
Commissioner Legh, on receipt thereof, shall pay into
our treasury any sum or sums that Dame Harflete may
have promised to him. Write it down, my Lord Cromwell,
and see that our words are carried out, lest it be
the worse for you.”
The Vicar-General hastened to obey,
for there was something in the King’s eye that
frightened him. Meanwhile the Queen, after she
had seen the coveted pearl disappear into Jacob’s
pocket, thrust back the child into Cicely’s
arms, and without any word of adieu or reverence to
the King, followed by her lady, departed from the
room, slamming the door behind her.
“Her Grace is cross because
that gem your gem, Lady Harflete was
refused to her,” said Henry, then added in an
angry growl, “’Fore God! does she dare
to play off her tempers upon me, and so soon, when
I am troubled about big matters? Oho! Jane
Seymour is the Queen to-day, and she’d let the
world know it. Well, what makes a queen?
A king’s fancy and a crown of gold, which the
hand that set it on can take off again, head and all,
if it stick too tight. And then where’s
your queen? Pest upon women and the whims that
make us seek their company! Dame Harflete, you’d
not treat your lord so, would you? You have never
been to Court, I think, or I should have known your
eyes again. Well, perhaps it is well for you,
and that’s why you are gentle and loving.”
“If I am gentle, Sire, it is
trouble that has gentled me, who have suffered so
much, and know not even now whether after one week
of marriage I am wife or widow.”
“Widow? Should that be
so, come to me and I will find you another and a nobler
spouse. With your face and possessions it will
not be difficult. Nay, do not weep, for your
sake I trust that this lucky man may live to comfort
you and serve his King. At least he’ll be
no Spaniard’s tool and Pope’s plotter.”
“Well will he serve your Grace
if God gives him the chance, as my murdered father
did.”
“We know it, Lady. Cromwell,
will you never have finished with those writings?
The Council waits us, and so does supper, and a word
or two with her Grace ere bedtime. You, Thomas
Bolle, you are no fool and can hold a sword; tell
me, shall I go up north to fight the rebels, or bide
here and let others do it?”
“Bide here, your Grace,”
answered Thomas promptly. “’Twixt Wash
and Humber is a wild land in winter and arrows fly
about there like ducks at night, none knowing whence
they come. Also your Grace is over-heavy for
a horse on forest roads and moorland, and if aught
should chance, why, they’d laugh in Spain and
Rome, or nearer, and who would rule England with a
girl child on its throne?” and he stared hard
at Cromwell’s back.
“Truth at last, and out of the
lips of a red-haired bumpkin,” muttered the
King, also staring at the unconscious Cromwell, who
was engaged on his writing and either feigned deafness
or did not hear. “Thomas Bolle, I said
that you were no fool, although some may have thought
you so, is there aught you would have in payment for
your counsel save money, for that we have
none?”
“Aye, Sire, freedom from my
oath as a lay-brother of the Abbey of Blossholme,
and leave to marry.”
“To marry whom?”
“Her, Sire,” and he pointed to Emlyn.
“What! The other handsome
witch? See you not that she has a temper?
Nay, woman, be silent, it is written in your face.
Well, take your freedom and her with it, but, Thomas
Bolle, why did you not ask otherwise when the chance
came your way? I thought better of you. Like
the rest of us, you are but a fool after all.
Farewell to you, Fool Thomas, and to you also, my
fair Lady of Blossholme.”