‘She will hate me. She has always hated me. She has refused me safe passage to Scotland.’

‘Doubtless your charming ways will stand you in good stead with her as they did with me. You know how your pretty ways have endeared you to me. I have no doubt that Elizabeth of England will learn to love you as I have.’

Catherine wanted to laugh aloud. She was well aware of the red-headed Queen’s feelings towards this girl, this Queen whose existence was a threat to her hold on the throne of England. How would Elizabeth have reacted had she found the girl spying on her? Mary would not have got off so lightly as she had with Catherine. She would have had her head off by now.

‘Be of good cheer,’ soothed Catherine. ‘You will grow to love your little kingdom. You will be able to think of us, and we shall think of you.’

‘Madame, the little King Charles loves me. If I go, he will be broken-hearted.’

‘Nonsense. He is only a child.’

‘He is old for his years. He used to say that if his brother Francis had not had the good fortune to marry me, he would have asked to be allowed to do so.’

‘He is a precocious boy, that one. Thinking of marrying at his age!’

‘It was his love for me.’

‘You will no doubt find many to love you … in Scotland. And any alliance, as you will see, between you and King Charles is out of the question. You have been the wife of his brother. It would be … immoral. You remember what happened when a King of England married his brother’s widow. Ask Queen Elizabeth to remind you. She will remember.’

Mary cried out: ‘Will you not have pity on me? I beg of you … I implore you … do not send me away.’

Catherine began to walk up and down the apartment. She let herself think back over the past. She saw this girl as a child at her Latin lesson; she remembered the curl of the haughty lips, the whispered words: ‘Daughter of Merchants’. She remembered the girl who had quickly learned how wise it was, how diplomatic, to seek the favour of Diane de Poitiers and to treat with indifference the real Queen of France. She remembered also the anguish she had suffered because of her husband’s love affair with the Lady Fleming, who had been this girl’s governess. But for the coming of the little Scot she would not have had to endure that.

But away with revenge! What did it matter? It was just something to enjoy like the melons of which she was so fond, or a chine of beef which made her mouth water at the very thought of it, or a goblet of rare wine. Revenge was an ephemeral pleasure. The real reason why Mary must go was because, if she stayed and was married to Charles, those arrogant uncles of hers would be in power again, and that situation – against which Catherine had fought with all the means at her disposal, even unto speeding her son along that road to death – that intolerable situation would be re-created.

Mary was indeed a little fool to expect such favours.

‘There, my child. Calm yourself. You will be Queen of Scotland, Queen of your native land. I hear the scenery is charming, and that Monsieur John Knox awaits you. I am sure you will have a very lively time. As for your cousin of England, I am sure you have as little to fear from her as from me. Now bathe your eyes. I will send you a lotion to brighten them.’ Catherine turned to the door. ‘Rest then, and enjoy your last days in France.’


* * *

And so, a sorrowing girl rode north to Calais. To her it seemed that the procession was like a funeral cortège. She wept bitterly and continually, and the last she saw of the land she loved was through eyes swollen with grief.

She had had one short interview with the distracted King, who had wept with her and begged her to stay and be his wife in spite of his mother, for he loved her. But even as he had talked she had seen the madness in his eyes, and she knew that she could no more hope for help from him than from Queen Catherine.

She had said farewell to her powerful uncles after begging them to let her stay.

‘I will live simply,’ she had cried. ‘I will be merely the dowager Queen of France. I have my dowry of Poitou and Touraine. I will live in France as a simple lady. I will give up everything … only do not send me to that wild country. Let me stay here … in my home.’

But the uncles had conferred with one another. They were not yet fully cognizant with what had happened at court. There were too many intrigues being conducted. The Queen Mother had seemed like a harmless snake coiled up in sleep, and now she had raised her head and shown her fangs, and those fangs, they knew, were poisonous. They assured Mary that if they could arrange a marriage for her, this should be done, for she could be sure they had her welfare at heart. Let her look upon this as a visit to Scotland, for it was right that she should occasionally visit the country of which she was Queen. Very soon, they doubted not, she would be returning to France for as brilliant a marriage as her first one.

‘King Charles would marry me now,’ she said.

‘He is too young yet. Later … we may arrange it. Trust us, niece.’

‘Make it soon, I beg of you. Make it soon.’

They assured her that they would. They kissed her fondly, and then she was forced to set out with that miserable cortège.

Although it was April, the weather was bleak, for spring came late that year.

‘The whole countryside mourns with me,’ said Mary Queen of Scots. ‘Oh, Holy Mother of God, how I dread this voyage! I dread it more than death.’

And as they went aboard the ship which was to carry her across the grey, heaving sea, away from the land where she had known such joy, to the land where she was to know great sorrow, she remembered not the last hours of her husband, the tender smiles of the poet Ronsard, the adoration of young King Charles, but the cold, snake-like stare of the woman who could have spared her this agony of exile. She knew now that the woman to whom she had been so indifferent in the past was not the colourless creature she had imagined her to be. She knew now what people meant when they called her Madame le Serpent.

She looked back for as long as she could at the receding shores of France; and as the cold spray touched her cheek she tried to imagine the unknown future which seemed to her already darkened by the shadow of the grim John Knox and the red-headed Queen of England who might even prevent her reaching Scotland.

She was frightened and miserable; she felt that her heart had been broken at the order of a woman whom she had never known until now.


* * *

It was not to be expected that the Guises would allow matters to go on as they had since the death of King Francis. They realised that affairs had come to this pass because they, like the rest of those around her, had not been allowed to see how strong was the Queen Mother.

In unexpectedly using the Bourbons – playing them off against the Guises – she had caught them at a disadvantage, but obviously this must be changed, and it was decided that the first blow should be one which struck at Catherine’s affections. The whole court knew how she doted on Prince Henry; he was to her, it was said, ‘like her right eye’. Well, her son Henry should be taken from her, and she should not have him back until she realised who were the real masters of France.

The Duke’s plan was simple, and to put it into effect he called in his own son Henry to help him. More than anyone on Earth the Duke loved this eldest son of his, and all his feelings for the boy were deeply reciprocated. Duke Francis saw in Henry of Guise, at present the Prince of Joinville, all that he himself must have been at his age. Their similarity, not only in appearance but in character, was remarkable, even for father and son. Young Henry of Guise would willingly have died at his father’s command, and Duke Francis would as eagerly have given his life for his son. Therefore the Duke knew that it was quite safe to tell young Henry of the plot to kidnap the royal Henry.

‘We shall do him no harm. It is just to teach his mother a lesson.’ But Henry of Guise would not have cared if they had done Prince Henry any harm. He had no real feeling for the boy, whom he despised as weak, effeminate and everything that he and his father were not.

‘Tell no one of this … not even Margot.’

‘As if I would!’ cried Henry of Guise; and his father laughed, for it was a joke shared between them that women were well enough for the hours of pleasure, but must not be allowed to interfere with the real business of the day. The most endearing thing about his father, as far as Henry of Guise was concerned, was this assumption that he was already a man.

‘As if you would!’ echoed the Duke, putting an arm about the boy. ‘Now listen. You will be playing with Prince Henry. You must see to that, and that the two of you are alone. I and the Duke of Nemours will approach and ask him to come away with us for a little jaunt. The Duke of Nemours will make the suggestion while I am talking of this jaunt to you … and it will be as though I do not care whether he comes or not. But you will care, my son. You will talk to him of Lorraine and what good fun it would be if he would come with us.’

‘I will do it, Father. When shall we go?’

‘At night.’

‘But the Prince’s apartments are guarded.’

‘Never worry your head about that. We’ll get him through the window, and a coach will be waiting.’

Henry of Guise laughed with delight. He stood up very straight and tried to assume the bearing of his father; he greatly regretted that he had not a scar of battle beneath his eye. Sometimes he wondered whether he would make such a scar so that men would say, ‘Is that Le Balafré Père or Le Balafré Fils?’