“Quite right. Let’s see if Clifford will loan me a dressing room or similar.”
The Earl of Cumberland was busy, said Mr. Simmonds stolidly, but had given orders that Sir Robert should have anything he wanted-except the delightful Signora, since, as his friend, the Earl wanted to make sure he did nothing rash to upset his headlong pursuit of romantical ruin.
Ha ha, George, very funny, thought Carey, oddly relieved. Simmonds showed him to a shed that was being used as a tiring room as it was dry and reasonably well-lit with a stone-flagged floor and bars on the window-no doubt a dry-goods store since it didn’t even smell of salt fish or cheese.
He and Hughie carefully unwrapped the pearl-encrusted velvet doublet and hose from the hessian protecting it and hung it all up on a bracket on the wall. With Hughie’s help he tried on the doublet and knew at once from the way Hughie went about it that the man had indeed worked for a tailor. No, the costly doublet was far too tight on the shoulders-he might even split a seam if he danced a volta and needed to lift the woman. Before they had finished deciding what to do about letting it out, a boy knocked and squeaked, “Message for Sir Robert.”
“Eh? Who from?”
“I’m not to say, sir, I’m just to take you there.”
“Should I…er…shift my shirt to meet this person?” Carey asked hopefully, but the child shook his head vigorously.
“No, sir, just come straight along…she’s in a hurry, she said.”
Perhaps it was the Signora wanting to cheapen over his commission for putting the Bonnettis in touch with the Earl of Essex? Perhaps she was bored with Cumberland? Perhaps she had fond memories of their dalliance in Dumfries? He certainly did.
“Just take the padding out of the armholes and wings,” Carey told Hughie cheerfully. “It’ll do the job and look fine. You know how to do it, don’t you?”
“Ay, sir,” said Hughie, ducking his head, “Ah’ll come in fra the lining and reseam after though.”
Carey shifted the doublet up and down again, tight across the back too and flatteringly looser around the waist. Carlisle and the incessant riding and training was improving his figure even more than war in France had, but it was annoying that all the improvements were in places difficult to alter. No doubt about it, ten years of Court life had softened him badly despite jousting and tennis and swordplay. Now he was back in form again. That was pleasing and might please the Queen, too.
Carey smiled complacently at the half mirror nailed on the wall. He hadn’t tried on his cannions and would have to hope they were all right; altering them would be even more complicated. He would have to use his riding boots as well or find and borrow some dancing slippers-it didn’t really matter so much on progress, but still…Mind, his hose were in a poor state, having been darned several times by Barnabus. So boots were the better choice.
“You’re sure I shouldn’t change?” Carey asked, glaring at the boy severely. Whose child was he, anyway? Carey thought back fondly to his days as a page at the young Queen’s Court, with his father, just before the Revolt of the Northern Earls.
“No, sir,” said the boy, luckily bright enough to understand what he was worrying about. “Oh no, sir, it isn’t Her Majesty, I’d make sure and tell you if it was and check for musk-scented boots too.”
“So I should hope,” said Carey, disappointed. He unbuttoned the heavy pearl-embroidered doublet and Hughie helped it from his shoulders, unlaced the sleeves, and turned it inside out before hanging it up.
Still buttoning up his old hunting doublet, Carey followed the page boy out of the cottage, along the rutted lane and down another lane to a small tithe barn. There he came upon another scene of chaos because clearly the place had been commandeered by all the mummers and musicians of the Court. On the ground floor, already eaten bare by the Court, bad-tempered choristers of the chapel in their livery coats were practising polyphony very poorly. In another corner, by some feed bins, were acrobats and tumblers, practising a complicated sequence of somersaults and jumps to build a pyramid. The master of the tumblers, a slightly built handsome Moor in a black brocade doublet and hose, was supervising with iron patience. The pyramid wobbled and collapsed.
“Try again,” he said, “this time Master Skeggs as second rank base, and Will the Tun as first rank.”
The page boy was climbing a ladder in front of them that led to a half-loft still full of hay that made your nose twitch. When Carey followed him, he took a narrow path through the sweetly smelling piles of fodder to a nook at the back which had been laid over with rugs. There none other than Mistress Thomasina de Paris was sitting neatly with her knees folded under her in her white damask and gold tissue gown, with her costume trunks behind her.
Carey flourished a bow to her. “Mistress,” he said, “I have to say I was hoping to meet another Queen, but I would like to ask your advice on…”
She skewered him with a look. “Tom,” she said to the page boy, “go sit at the top of the ladder and…no, in fact, pull it up and sit next to it. Understand?”
“Yes, missus,” said the boy and forged a path back through the hay, looking determined.
Carey shut his mouth and looked quizzically at the Queen’s Fool. She gestured for him to sit down and he decided against trying to sit on a rug as the points of his doublet were too tight to his hose to allow it. He perched on one of the boxes.
They sat in silence for a moment.
Just as Carey was about to open proceedings by asking conventionally after the Queen her mistress’ good health, Thomasina took a sealed letter from the rug beside her and handed it to him without a word. She was looking immensely disapproving.
Carey held it in his fingers, looked at it. That was the Queen’s personal seal, the small one. The one she never gave to anyone else.
Fingers a little unsteady, he opened it. The letter was in fact a warrant from the Queen, stating that Sir Robert Carey was her trusty and well-beloved cousin and acting in her behalf and requiring any who read it to assist him in any way he asked.
It wasn’t the warrant for his deputyship; it was very much better than that. But it didn’t say anything about what his office was nor why exactly he might need assistance.
Heart pounding, Carey refolded the letter carefully and put it in his inside doublet pocket.
“I have been asked to ask you…” began Thomasina judiciously.
“Mistress Thomasina, I know how Her Majesty’s mind works insofar as any mere man can. Bear with me, please. If you are speaking on behalf of anyone other than our dread sovereign Queen Elizabeth, would you please say so now?”
Thomasina nodded her head once and then folded her lips. Carey counted twenty of his heartbeats because they were going faster than normal. “Thank you, mistress. You were saying?”
“I have been asked to ask you to investigate a…a death that happened some thirty-two years ago.”
What? Carey didn’t say that. He tried to think whose death, then asked, “Before or after I was born?”
“Do you know the month?”
“The Queen was godmother at my baptism, I know that, but it was a little late for some reason. My mother always said I was a summer baby and bound to be lucky.”
“In which case the death happened after your birth. It was on the 8th September in the year of Our Lord 1560.”
There was something about the date, but he wasn’t sure what. Something important to be sure, family stories from when he was very little, family gossip, something about his Aunt Katherine’s gown being ruined on the hunting field. Something that had caused arguments between his father and mother. Carey closed his eyes for a moment. He had been such a little boy, still in skirts, riding experienced barrel-shaped ponies, youngest of a string of seven boys and two girls that lived. Only Philadelphia was younger than him, and he was hardly ever noticed except by his wet nurse, which suited both him and Philly very well indeed. What was it?