We were all silent for some minutes.
‘Sir John Norreys is there,’ I said at last. ‘Can he not keep Parma’s army occupied, so that it cannot be sent to join the forces sailing up from Spain?’
Walsingham shook his head. ‘The Earl of Leicester is to command the land forces here in England to resist the Spanish attack. As soon as I send him this latest information, which I will do today, he will want to summon Norreys back from the Low Countries. He will not confess to it, but he knows he cannot command a military campaign as Norreys can.’
Once again, there was silence. The two men looked at me, then exchanged looks.
‘Kit,’ said Phelippes, ‘I think we must send you.’
I felt as though I had been prodded with a red hot poker. I gaped at him. ‘Me? But I haven’t the skills. I speak no Dutch.’
And I thought of my father’s words. I am but a girl.
‘You conducted yourself very successfully before in Amsterdam,’ Walsingham said.
Phelippes nodded. ‘Your lack of Dutch is no impediment. Most of the Hollanders speak some English. And you have your connection with Ettore Añez, who is eminent in the Amsterdam merchant community, as well as being the nephew of the Queen’s Purveyor of Spices.’
‘But before, I went with Nicholas Berden,’ I said. ‘One of your most senior agents. He understood what you wished us to do. He speaks some Dutch.’
‘We do not normally send out our agents in pairs, Kit,’ Phelippes said. ‘And were you not saying, only the other day, that you wished you could do something more active in the Queen’s cause? Now is your chance.’
Caught in my own trap, I thought. In future, I should watch my tongue.
‘What would I have to do?’ I asked reluctantly.
‘Find out all the things Sir Francis has just mentioned,’ Phelippes said. ‘And above all, discover what has happened to Mark Weber. That is most important, for he will possess the information we need. It may simply be that his reports have gone astray, or it may be that something has happened to him.’
‘He told you he had located Cornelius Parker,’ I said. ‘The last person I know of who crossed Cornelius Parker had his throat cut.’
‘Aye, but he was a man who had lost his legs. He would not have stood much chance against an assassin. Mark is a competent swordsman.’
‘I am not,’ I said flatly. ‘I have never even held a sword. My training has all been directed to saving life, not taking it.’
They looked at each other again.
‘You will need to leave as soon as possible.’ Phelippes said. ‘We cannot tell how many days’ grace we have before the Spanish fleet arrives, that will depend on the weather and the state of the winds. At the moment, they would seem to be holding the fleet back, loading supplies, perhaps. Or practising naval manoeuvres. You will need to bring word to us before Parma can embark his forces. Their plan must be to take the fleet into one of the Spanish controlled ports, or more than one of them, once it reaches the Channel. Then the soldiers will be embarked on these barges the message speaks of, to be escorted across the Channel by the war fleet. They will not attempt to move the army from the Low Countries until they have the protection of the Spanish warships. To move sooner would be suicide, for our ships would pick them off in the barges.’
‘Perhaps Kit needs some weapons training before leaving,’ Walsingham said. ‘I can summon a weapons master from the Tower tomorrow.’
He looked at me critically. I am tall for a girl, but slender, a fact which has made it easier for me to maintain my disguise as a boy, but no one would judge me muscular, with a soldier’s build.
As if he read my thoughts, Walsingham said, ‘Skill and speed are more important in the use of a sword than great strength. That and a good eye for judging your opponent’s next move. As a physician you must spend much of your time judging men’s characters. That will stand you in good stead.’
He turned to Phelippes. ‘Make sure Kit is provided with a sword. Something light and lethal. I will arrange for training tomorrow. Best to go to the Tower, not fetch a master here. You can have one day to learn the basic skills, Kit. You must leave the next day.’
One day to learn to use a sword? It was madness!
‘Should I ride Hector this time?’ I asked, hoping he would agree.
He shook his head. ‘I need you to travel fast. Thomas can prepare permits for you to use post horses. And a ship from Dover will be able to take you right into Amsterdam at this time of year. The crossing should be quick too. Be sure you ask for their fastest pinnace, Thomas.’
With that he left us. I looked at Phelippes and shrugged, spreading out my arms in a helpless gesture.
‘You wanted an active role,’ he said with a grim smile. ‘Now you have it.’
The following day I reported to Seething Lane early and was told to go at once to the Tower and enquire for Master Scannard. I had never been inside those grim walls before, though I knew some Londoners came for entertainment to see the wild beasts kept there, many of them gifts to the Queen from foreign rulers. A guard in the gatehouse directed me to Master Scannard’s quarters, located amongst the many buildings surrounding one of the Tower’s courtyards.
He was a small, wiry man, not the powerful soldier I had expected, but I remembered Sir Francis’s words, that skill and speed were more important in a swordsman than great strength. When I had introduced myself, he merely nodded and without warning threw a sword at me.
I managed to catch it by the hilt, more by luck than anything else.
He nodded. ‘Good.’
From then on it was clear he was a man of few words. All morning he demonstrated moves, then made me repeat them again and again. And when he crossed swords with me, again and again he sent my sword flying. As it drew near midday, I was beginning to hold my own for a little longer, but by the time we stopped briefly for bread and ale, my whole body was drenched in sweat and my right wrist felt as though it was on fire. When I tried to pick up my mug of ale, my hand was shaking so much that the rim of the mug clattered against my teeth.
‘You’ll need strapping on that,’ was all he said.
He bound my wrist tightly, which gave me some ease during our afternoon training, but I knew that when I reached home that night I would need to rub my wrist and my whole arm with a muscle embrocation. By the time he released me in the late afternoon I was more physically exhausted than I had ever been in my life and dreaded the thought that the next morning I must set out at once for the Low Countries again.
Master Stannard handed me a scabbard and sword belt. ‘Master Phelippes has provided these for you, and the sword you have been using today. You are beginning to show some aptitude, but I have little hope for you against a skilled swordsman.’
With that he turned away and marched back to his quarters. It was the longest speech he had made all day. I was not sure whether I should be pleased or mortified by his assessment. Before returning home I called in at Seething Lane for Phelippes’s final instructions.
‘There is little more to say than what we discussed yesterday,’ he said, handing me a bundle of papers for Lord Willoughby. ‘I suggest you stay at the same inn as before. They are known as honest people and Mark Weber stayed there for a time, though he may have moved on. Find out if they know anything. You should also call on Master Añez. See what facts he can give you. Get what honest information about the army that you can from Lord Willoughby, but make your own enquiries – discreetly – amongst the soldiers.’
‘If things have not changed much since I was last there,’ I said, ‘the soldiers will be very angry at not being paid. Do you know whether funds for the army have been sent?’