The Historical Nights' Entertainment by Rafael Sabatini (mini ebook reader .TXT) 📕
My narrative in "The Night of Hate" is admittedly a purely theoretical account of the crime. But it is closely based upon all the known facts of incidence and of character; and if there is nothing in the surviving records that will absolutely support it, neither is there anything that can absolutely refute it.
In "The Night of Masquerade" I am guilty of quite arbitrarily discovering a reason to explain the mystery of Baron Bjelke's sudden change from the devoted friend and servant of Gustavus III of Sweden into his most bitter enemy. That speculation is quite indefensible, although affording a possible explanation of that mystery. In the case of "The Night of Kirk o' Field," on the other hand, I do not think any apology is necessary for my reconstruction of the precise manner in which Darnley met his death. The event has long been looked upon as one of the mysteries of history - the mystery lying in the fact that whilst the house at Kirk o' Field was destroyed by an e
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of the King was the admission, not merely of complicity, but that
the thing was done by his express will and command, that the
responsibility was his own, and that he would hold the doers
scatheless from all consequences.
Mary could scarcely have hoped to be able to confront her worthless
husband with so complete a proof of his duplicity and baseness.
She sent for him, confounded him with the sight of that appalling
bond, made an end to the amity which for her own ends she had
pretended, and drove him out of her presence with a fury before
which he dared not linger.
You see him, then, crushed under his load of mortification,
realizing at last how he had been duped on every hand, first by the
lords for their own purpose, and then by the Queen for hers. Her
contempt of him was now so manifest that it spread to all who served
him - for she made it plain that who showed him friendship earned
her deep displeasure - so that he was forced to withdraw from a
Court where his life was become impossible. For a while he wandered
up and down a land where every door was shut in his face, where
every man of whatsoever party, traitor or true, despised him alike.
In the end, he took himself off to his father, Lennox, and at
Glasgow he sought what amusement he could with his dogs and his
hawks, and such odd vulgar rustic love-affairs as came his way.
It was in allowing him thus to go his ways, in leaving her vengeance
- indeed, her justice - but half accomplished, that lay the
greatest of the Queen’s mistakes. Better for her had she taken
with Darnley the direct way that was her right. Better for her,
if acting strongly then, she had banished or hanged him for his
part in the treason that had inspired the murder of Rizzio.
Unfortunately, a factor that served to quicken her abhorrence of
him served also to set a curb of caution upon the satisfaction
of it.
This factor that came so inopportunely into her life was her regard
for the arrogant, unscrupulous Earl of Bothwell. Her hand was
stayed by fear that men should say that for Bothwell’s sake she had
rid herself of a husband become troublesome. That Bothwell had
been her friend in the hour when she had needed friends, and knew
not whom she might trust; that by his masterfulness he seemed a
man upon whom a woman might lean with confidence, may account for
the beginnings of the extraordinary influence he came so swiftly
to exercise over her, and the passion he awakened in her to such a
degree that she was unable to dissemble it.
Her regard for him, the more flagrant by contrast with her contempt
for Darnley, is betrayed in the will she made before her confinement
in the following June. Whilst to Darnley she bequeathed nothing but
the red-enamelled diamond ring with which he had married her - “It
was with this that I was married,” she wrote almost contemptuously.
“I leave it to the King who gave it me” - she appointed Bothwell to
the tutelage of her child in the event of her not surviving it, and
to the government of the realm.
The King came to visit her during her convalescence, and was scowled
upon by Murray and Argyll, who were at Holyrood, and most of all by
Bothwell, whose arrogance by now was such that he was become the
best-hated man in Scotland. The Queen received him very coldly,
whilst using Bothwell more than cordially in his very presence, so
that he departed again in a deeper humiliation than before.
Then before the end of July there was her sudden visit to Bothwell
at Alloa, which gave rise to so much scandal. Hearing of it,
Darnley followed in a vain attempt to assert his rights as king and
husband, only to be flouted and dismissed with the conviction that
his life was no longer safe in Scotland, and that he had best cross
the Border. Yet, to his undoing, detained perhaps by the overweening
pride that is usually part of a fool’s equipment, he did not act
upon that wise resolve. He returned instead to his hawking and his
hunting, and was seldom seen at Court thereafter.
Even when in the following October, Mary lay at the point of death
at Jedburgh, Darnley came but to stay a day, and left her again
without any assurance that she would recover. But then the facts
of her illness, and how it had been contracted, were not such as to
encourage kindness in him, even had he been inclined to kindness.
Bothwell had taken three wounds in a Border affray some weeks
before, and Mary, hearing of this and that he lay in grievous case
at Hermitage, had ridden thither in her fond solicitude - a distance
of thirty miles - and back again in the same day, thus contracting
a chill which had brought her to the very gates of death.
Darnley had not only heard of this, but he had found Bothwell at
Jedburgh, whither he had been borne in a litter, when in his turn
he had heard of how it was with Mary; and Bothwell had treated him
with more than the contempt which all men now showed him, but which
from none could wound him so deeply as from this man whom rumour
accounted Mary’s lover.
Matters between husband and wife were thus come to a pass in which
they could not continue, as all men saw, and as she herself
confessed at Craigrnillar, whither she repaired, still weak in body,
towards the end of November.
Over a great fire that blazed in a vast chamber of the castle she
sat sick at heart and shivering, for all that her wasted body was
swathed in a long cloak of deepest purple reversed with ermine. Her
face was thin and of a transparent pallor, her eyes great pools of
wistfulness amid the shadows which her illness had set about them.
“I do wish I could be dead!” she sighed.
Bothwell’s eyes narrowed. He was leaning on the back of her tall
chair, a long, virile figure with a hawk-nosed, bearded face that
was sternly handsome. He thrust back the crisp dark hair that
clustered about his brow, and fetched a sigh.
“It was never my own death I wished when a man stood in my road to
aught I craved,” he said, lowering his voice, for Maitland of
Lethington - now restored to his secretaryship - was writing at a
table across the room, and my Lord of Argyll was leaning over him.
She looked up at him suddenly, her eyes startled.
“What devil’s counsel do you whisper?” she asked him. And when he
would have answered, she raised a hand. “No,” she said. “Not that
way.”
“There is another,” said Bothwell coolly. He moved, came round,
and stood squarely upon the hearth, his back to the fire,
confronting her, nor did he further trouble to lower his voice.
“We have considered it already.”
“What have you considered?”
Her voice was strained; fear and excitement blended in her face.
“How the shackles that fetter you might be broken. Be not alarmed.
It was the virtuous Murray himself propounded it to Argyll and
Lethington - for the good of Scotland and yourself.” A sneer
flitted across his tanned face. “Let them speak for themselves.”
He raised his voice and called to them across the room.
They came at once, and the four made an odd group as they stood
there in the firelit gloom of that November day - the lovely young
Queen, so frail and wistful in her high-backed chair; the stalwart,
arrogant Bothwell, magnificent in a doublet of peach-coloured velvet
that tapered to a golden girdle; Argyll, portly and sober in a rich
suit of black; and Maitland of Lethington, lean and crafty of face,
in a long furred gown that flapped about his bony shanks.
It was to Lethington that Bothwell addressed himself.
“Her Grace is in a mood to hear how the Gordian knot of her marriage
might be unravelled,” said he, grimly ironic.
Lethington raised his eyebrows, licked his thin lips, and rubbed his
bony hands one in the other.
“Unravelled?” he echoed with wondering stress. “Unravelled? Ha!”
His dark eyes flashed round at them. “Better adopt Alexander’s plan,
and cut it. ‘Twill be more complete, and - and final.”
“No, no!” she cried. “I will not have you shed his blood.”
“He himself was none so tender where another was concerned,”
Bothwell reminded her - as if the memory of Rizzio were dear to him.
“What he may have done does not weigh upon my conscience,” was her
answer.
“He might,” put in Argyll, “be convicted of treason for having
consented to Your Grace’s retention in ward at Holyrood after
Rizzio’s murder.”
She considered an instant, then shook her head.
“It is too late. It should have been done long since. Now men
will say that it is but a pretext to be rid of him.” She looked up
at Bothwell, who remained standing immediately before her, between
her and the fire. “You said that my Lord of Murray had discussed
this matter. Was it in such terms as these?”
Bothwell laughed silently at the thought of the sly Murray rendering
himself a party to anything so direct and desperate. It was
Lethington who answered her.
“My Lord Murray was for a divorce. That would set Your Grace free,
and it might be obtained, he said, by tearing up the Pope’s bull of
dispensation that permitted the marriage. Yet, madame, although
Lord Murray would himself go no further, I have no cause to doubt
that were other means concerted, he would be content to look through
his fingers.”
Her mind, however, did not seem to follow his speech beyond the
matter of the divorce. A faint flush of eagerness stirred in her
pale cheeks.
“Ah, yes!” she cried. “I, too, have thought of that - of this
divorce. And God knows I do not want for grounds. And it could be
obtained, you say, by tearing up this papal bull?”
“The marriage could be proclaimed void thereafter,” Argyll explained.
She looked past Bothwell into the fire, and took her chin in her
hand.
“Yes,” she said slowly, musingly, and again, “yes. That were a
way. That is the way.” And then suddenly she looked up, and they
saw doubt and dread in her eyes. “But in that case - what of my
son?”
“Aye!” said Lethington grimly. He shrugged his narrow shoulders,
parted his hands, and brought them together again. “That’s the
obstacle, as we perceived. It would imperil his succession.”
“It would make a bastard of him, you mean?” she cried, demanding
the full expansion of their thoughts.
“Indeed it would do no less,” the secretary assented.
“So that,” said Bothwell, softly, “we come back to Alexander’s
method. What the fingers may not unravel, the knife can sever.”
She shivered, and drew her furred cloak the more closely about her.
Lethington leaned forward. He spoke in kindly, soothing accents.
“Let us guide this matter among us, madame,” he murmured, “and we’ll
find means to rid Your Grace of this young fool, without hurt to
your honour or prejudice to your son. And the Earl of Murray will
look the other way, provided you pardon Morton and his friends for
the killing they did in Darnley’s service.”
She looked from one to the other of them, scanning each face
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