'So who are the coterie who wrote Shakespeare's plays for him?' asked Gresham.
Bacon and Andrewes exchanged glances.
'Do you really want to know?' said Bacon. 'You may find yourself hurt by the knowledge, mentally as well as physically.'
With a sinking feeling in his stomach, Gresham felt he could guess what was coming. 'Tell me,' he said. ‘I need the truth.'
'Well,' said Bacon, 'myself and Andrewes here, obviously. The King. The Earls of Oxford, Rutland and Derby, in differing measures — and remember that sometimes two or even three of us worked on the same idea. Marlowe. And the Dowager Countess of Pembroke, who, by the way, is ruffling the most feathers by insisting that her authorship of two plays — As You Like It and Twelfth Night — is acknowledged.'
'Her son, the present Pembroke, knows the actors. Correction. He's besotted by them. He knows the truth and he hates his mother. He's keeping her silent by threatening to take all her money away from her. He tells Shakespeare it's to help him, but it isn't. It's because he can't bear the thought of his mother being seen as good at anything,' said Andrewes, with feeling. Pembrokeiana, as she was known, had made a favourite of Andrewes, a situation from which few men emerged alive. 'And there is one more,' said Bacon.
Gresham knew what was coming. He had felt it in his bones. 'Sir Walter Raleigh,' he said flatly. 'Yes,' said Bacon.
His saviour and his hero. The man Gresham had named his eldest son after. The man he had visited, supported and sustained all these years past while he was imprisoned in that very same Tower Gresham had so recently left. The man who had seen fit to keep this a secret from his younger friend. The man who had chosen to do so despite knowing that Gresham's life was at risk from the moment he became entangled in the thorns and briars of these damned plays and their authorship.
As they road back to The House, their escort all around them, Mannion was clearly troubled. He spat down on to the roadside and turned his head to Gresham.
'He didn't give you your freedom, those goblets or a baronetcy for nothing. He's going to want results. And sooner rather than later.'
'I know,' said Gresham. 'I work it out as seven separate issues.'
'Well', said Mannion, 'I can see most of them. First, decide what to do with those letters. I agree with Her Ladyship.' He used the word without irony. 'Pretend you've found them. Get rid of them, and tell the King. Or, better, give them back to him. Then, second, sort out whether Prince popped 'is clogs from God or from that bastard Overbury. Third, give Marlowe his third and final departure from this earth.'
'Four, five and six are just as easy,' said Gresham. 'Find Shakespeare, neutralise Overbury and locate these manuscripts.'
'Fair enough,' said Mannion. 'What's number seven?'
'See Raleigh, and ask why he never told me this conspiracy with Shakespeare was going on.'
'I can help you on the first six,' said Mannion. 'I can't help you with the seventh.'
No, thought Gresham, no one else can do that. The anger started to rise within him.
'And you've left out Poke,' said Mannion. 'Not like you to let someone get away with it, especially when they've had you locked up for weeks.'
'Oh,' said Gresham, a sudden, fierce grin on his face, 'I've got plans for Sir Edward.'
19
21 st November, 1612 Dr Simon Forman's House, Lambeth, London
'If you poison us, do we not die?'
It was a lovely house that Dr Simon Forman had rented in Lambeth, close to the river and with an orchard so luxuriant as to be able to supply a shop. On this cold, crisp morning the frost hung on every branch and twig and the breath steamed out of men's mouths. The orchard was a white hanging garden, a fantasy world of stillness and frozen beauty. Gresham would miss Simon Forman, self-proclaimed doctor, astrologer and dealer in secrets. For most of his life he had been courted by rich and poor alike for his medical skills, while being hounded near to death by the Establishment who considered him both a quack and an evil magician. Gresham had never made use of Forman's skills as an astrologer. On countless occasions he had needed his services as a doctor, and adviser on poisons.
Poor old Forman had died in September, taken by a fit while rowing alone across the Thames. According to his widow, Anne, Forman had predicted his own death a week beforehand. Well, if it pleased her to believe it, it did no harm, Gresham thought.
The days after Forman's death had seen a flurry of coaches and
Serving-men queuing at the widow's door, asking for papers and any letters their distinguished mistresses had sent to Forman. The rush had now subsided, and today's visitor was a quiet, bearded, thoughtful figure. Dr Napier was from Buckinghamshire and had been a close friend and an apprentice of Forman's for years. He was at the Lambeth house now to collect his inheritance — all of Forman's medical books and manuscripts and the details of his famous cures. It had taken Dr Napier a week already to see what he wished to remove back to Linford and what he felt could be destroyed. He was not a man accustomed to moving quickly. He was a man whose medical judgement Gresham trusted implicitly and, knowing that the heir to his old friend was in the Lambeth house, he had asked to meet him.
'Congratulations, my lord, on your recent honour,' Napier said ponderously, but genuinely enough. The King's proclamation had been almost instant, unusually so for such an indolent man. The formalities would wait.
‘I think it more a payment in advance than payment for services rendered, Dr Napier,' replied Gresham with a grin, 'and in order to earn my fine title I need a medical opinion.'
'You may have it, such as my skills are,' replied Napier, privately flattered and not enough of a deceiver to hide it nearly as well as he thought.
‘I will not dance around the edge, Dr Napier,' said Gresham.' Enough secrets had passed before Napier's eyes, and not one of them leaked, for Gresham to be sure in him. ‘I need to know if Prince Henry's death was from natural causes, or from poison.'
Napier's face blanched a little, but he maintained professional composure, ‘I know only what the gossip says about His Highness's illness.'
‘I have detailed the course of the illness here in this paper,' said Gresham, handing the document over to Napier, in summary, it is this. The Prince first became ill in the spring. Low spirits, weight loss and what he called a giddiness and a lumpishness in his forehead. He tried to drive out the illness by hard exercise and a spartan diet, to no effect. Increasing tiredness, headache, and by autumn severe bouts of fever and diarrhoea. His stool light yellow, like pea soup. Bleeding from the nose. He collapsed. Eyes couldn't endure light, lips started to turn black, complained of incredible dryness in his mouth. Convulsions, fits, serious pain. The rest you know.'
Napier made a noise that sounded something like 'Hmmph!' and sat down to read the papers, which included all the treatments given to the Prince. 'Idiots!' he exclaimed a short while later. 'Complete idiots!'
'Why so?' enquired Gresham. 'It's said they asked every leading doctor in the land for advice.'
'It's a great pity that the only one who could have helped them died in September,' responded Napier gruffly. 'The idiots shaved his head and put the warm bodies of pigeons to it, as if that ever did anything except give a poor servant a good dinner of pigeon pie shortly afterwards. Oh, and look here at this…' Napier flicked the paper he was reading with disgust. 'A unicorn's horn with stag bone and pearl…'
'Sounds impressive to me,' said Gresham.
'Sounds impressive is correct,' snapped Napier, 'but that's all it is. The unicorn is a mythical beast. Even if it weren't — and it is! — the chance of grinding up some chalk and selling it at a king's ransom to the King's idiot doctors is a business proposition very few of London's apothecaries could resist. Pah! Unicorn horn? You might as well prescribe the devil's pizzle!'