Legacy: The Acclaimed Novel of Elizabeth, England's Most Passionate Queen -- and the Three Men Who Loved Her

Legacy: The Acclaimed Novel of Elizabeth, England's Most Passionate Queen -- and the Three Men Who Loved Her by Susan Kay Page B

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Authors: Susan Kay
Tags: nonfiction, History
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Admiral’s, and an uncomfortable premonition of impending
    disaster had begun to weigh heavily on the governess’s mind.
    That premonition eventually saw her standing alone in the Admiral’s
    private study, patting nervously at her coif while her small anxious eyes
    roved over the maps strewn across his desk, over anything in fact which
    would postpone the necessity of looking into his handsome face.
    “My lord—” There was an absurd wobble to her voice, but suddenly
    the panelled room seemed remarkably small and the Lord Admiral uncom-
    fortably near. Kat was a little afraid of provoking that magnificent rage of
    his at such close quarters. “My lord—forgive me if I speak out of turn—”
    He looked up and gave her a wry smile.
    “Get on with it, woman—I haven’t got all day, you know.”
    “My lord—I don’t mean to question your intentions and, of course,
    it’s not my place to give you advice—”
    “Perfectly true,” he remarked sardonically, “but I sense you intend to
    give it anyway. Speak out, woman, for God’s sake—I’m not going to slit
    your throat.”
    “I have to warn you that there’s a great deal of talk—damaging and
    slanderous talk—concerning the Lady Elizabeth and—and you, my lord.”
    She took a gulping breath. “My lord—to come alone, bare-legged, to a
    maid’s chamber—tickling, slapping—and kissing —I beseech you to have
    a thought for her good name and leave off these morning visits.”
    65
    Susan Kay
    He exploded out of his chair with his favourite oath and Kat took a
    hasty step backwards.
    “By God’s precious soul, madam, I’ll not be told how to conduct
    myself in my own house by a gossiping busybody of a servant. I’ll lay
    the whole matter before the Protector first. God knows, we’ve had our
    differences over matters of state but he wouldn’t stand by and see me
    slandered like this.”
    “But, my lord—” wailed Kat.
    “Out!” he roared. “Get out before I forget you’re a lady!”
    Kat went to the Queen and voiced her fears, but Katherine laughed
    uneasily and merely promised to chaperone her husband’s early-morning
    visits to Elizabeth’s bedroom. Had she not been pregnant, she might have
    reacted more strongly, but the growing child had made her lethargic and
    complacent. She would handle this in her own way; she would not be
    stampeded into acting harshly by malicious gossip. And it would be all
    right in the end. Many a middle-aged man had a passing fancy for a
    teenage girl— But it’s me he loves, I know it’s me. I mustn’t let this get out
    of proportion.
    And there were other worries to distract her; increasingly strained
    relations with the Protector for one. Goaded by his wife, Somerset was
    refusing to hand over the jewels that the old King had left to her—why,
    he had even confiscated her wedding ring. Tom had been furious; there
    had been another bitter quarrel. And now Tom was talking of redressing
    his wrongs, with the little King’s help, in Parliament, making the present
    session “the blackest that ever was in England.”
    He had remarked, in public, on the ease with which a man might steal
    the King from beneath his brother’s nose.
    “You must not say these things,” begged Katherine, wild with anxiety.
    “Don’t you see how it could be misunderstood?”
    “Don’t fret, my sweet. Ned can’t see beyond the end of his nose—he
    never could!”
    No, thought Katherine fearfully. But his wife can!
    t t t
    “A chance remark,” said the Duke of Somerset uneasily, “is hardly
    evidence, my dear.”
    The Duchess glared at him. “It’s a chance remark, is it, when someone
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    Legacy
    speaks of abducting a king? In my day we called it treason! How much
    longer are you going to sit on your reforming backside waiting for that
    rogue to bring you down?”
    “I have absolutely no evidence—”
    “Then find some, you pompous fool. God knows there’s rumour
    enough to hang him ten times over.”
    The

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