Elizabeth Marie Pope - The Perilous Gard.txt

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The Perilous Gard
by
Elizabeth Marie Pope


THE PERILOUS GARD

ELIZABETH MARIE POPE

Houghton Mifflin Company Boston

ISBN 0-395-18512-2

COPYRIGHT © 1974 BY ELIZABETH MARIE POPE


CONTENTS


I The True Sister 1

II The Elvenwood 16

III The Young Man at the Window 26

IV The Holy Well 42

V The Redheaded Woman 67

VI The Leper's Hut 86

VII The Evidence Room 105

VIII The Lady in the Green 126

IX The People of the Hill 145

X "Neither Sun nor Moon" 169

XI The Cold Iron 196

XII All Hallows' Eve 218

XIII The Changeling 248


For the family at Fenwick





I

The True Sister



"She won't be angry with me," said Alicia. "Why should
she, Kate? Every word I wrote her was true. This is the most
horrible place in the world. You know it is."

Kate did not answer. She was standing by the window, with
her back to the room, staring out at the overgrown gardens and
the dripping trees of the great park. Hatfield in the rain might
not be the most horrible place in the world, but it was certainly
the dreariest royal palace in all England -- perhaps that was one
reason why Queen Mary had chosen it for her sister Elizabeth's
house -- and it had been raining steadily for almost two weeks.
The summer of 1558 had been a late one, miserably cold and
wet; unless the weather cleared soon, they were sure to have
floods or another bad harvest. It was nearly August, yet even
with the windows shut, the room would have been much the
better for a fire on the hearth.

Needless to say, there was no fire. The Queen's jealous hatred
of her sister was continually breaking out in curious little acts
of petty spitefulness, and one of them was to keep the household
short of fuel. The sea coal at Hatfield always seemed to
be smoky, the kindling wood green; sometimes there was barely
enough to supply the Princess's own apartments, let alone the
dormitory allotted to her maids of honor. There were never
enough blankets to go around comfortably either, and they were


2	The Perilous Gard


thin too. Katherine and Alicia Sutton, who were the youngest
of the maids and had been at Hatfield for the shortest time, had
the thinnest of all. Alicia, perched on the foot of their bed,
poked at the coverlet with an accusing finger.


"It's wrong!" she said. "Wicked!"

Kate swung about to face her.

"You never wrote the Queen that?" she demanded.

"Don't plunge at me, Kate!" begged Alicia. "I can't think if
you plunge at me. And do try not to lurch with your shoulders!
You know what Mother said."

Kate drew back a little, stiffening. She was a tall girl, all
arms and legs, and her awkward shoulders were the despair of
Lady Sutton at home in London. Her father and his father before
him had both married beautiful women, but Alicia was the only
child who had taken after her mother. Kate, most unfortunately,
looked like her father and still more like her grandfather, Sir
Giles, who had founded the fortunes of the family back in the
days of old King Henry the Eighth. Sir Giles had started life
as a common merchant seaman (the malicious rumor that he
had been a pirate was almost universally discredited), and though
in the end he had grown rich and died knighted, it was not for
his grace or good looks. Even King Henry once remarked, in an
exasperated moment, that he could never have told Giles Sutton's
face from a stone wall if the stone wall had not been so much
the handsomer of the two.

"And she's the image of him!" poor Lady Sutton was accustomed
to complain bitterly. "His very image! That walk, if a
walk you could call it! And the way those eyes of his went
through you, exactly like a knife!"

"And his brains too," said Kate's father dryly.

"Brains!" snapped Lady Sutton. "Tilly vally, Sir Thomas!
She's not a boy! What does a woman want with brains? I'm


The True Sister	3


sure I never had a brain in my head, and no more does Alicia!"


"Alicia doesn't need a brain," said Sir Thomas, more dryly
still. "Not with her eyes."

Alicia's eyes were enormous, as golden as honey, and innocently
trustful as a baby's. When she looked up at Kate,
standing by the window, they suddenly melted, and a faint
sparkle of tears appeared on the lashes, like jewels on a fringe.

"You could say you wrote the letter yourself," she suggested
hopefully. "That's what you'd do if you were a true sister."

Kate broke in on this romance without ceremony.

"Did you sign my name to it?" she asked.

Alicia's eyes widened. "Sign your name?" she said, in a
rather puzzled voice. "How could I sign your name to the
letter when you didn't even know I was sending it?"

"Did you copy my writing?"

"I've told you before, Kate," said Alicia, "and I tell you again,
that I will not learn that foolish newfangled Roman handwriting
Father taught you, and let that be an end of it."

"Then it wouldn't do much good to say I sent the letter,
would it?"

"Oh." Alicia blinked. "Wouldn't it?"

"No."

"But if you said you --"

"No. We'll have to find some other way that I can be a true
sister to you."

Alicia flushed and began to wriggle one foot in its soft
embroidered shoe. "Very well: sneer at me," she said. "Don't
be a true sister. I was only trying to help the Lady Elizabeth.
The Queen can't know how bad it is here. All I did was write
and tell her."

"What did you tell her?"

"It was only setting her straight. All I wrote was that the


4	The Perilous Gard


Princess was an excellent lady, and loyal, and noble, and everyone
loved her, much better than the Queen, and it's wrong to
keep her shut up in this horrible place where she can't even
put her nose outside the park gates, and there isn't any company
except old Master Roger to read her Latin, and no fresh fish in
Lent except carp from the pond, and no warming pans for the
beds not even in January when it snowed for three days, and --"


"Never mind the rest," Kate sat down limply on the window
seat. "You ought to be in a book, Alicia. That's where you ought
to be, in a romance. Riding on a white horse, with a good
brave knight to take care of you. Whatever do you suppose the
Queen will think? She'll never forgive you."

"I'm not afraid of the Queen."

Kate thought of the Queen sitting in her high-backed chair
on the day she and Alicia had been taken to court to be presented
to her before they went down to Hatfield. The Queen's hands,
never still for a moment. The tight lips. The hot, sick, unhappy
eyes darting from one to the other and back again.
"Well, I'm afraid of her," she said.

"Yes, but she liked me," Alicia insisted. "Don't you remember,
Kate? She said I had a sweet face and reminded her of my
mother."

"She wasn't angry with you then."

"Oh, she isn't going to be angry with me now, not for only
one little short letter."

"Alicia --" Kate stopped, helplessly at a loss. She did not know
how to explain. Nobody had ever really been angry with
Alicia, whatever she did: the whole world had been her apple
tart since the day she was born.

"Think of what happened to Catt Ashley," she persisted.

"Who cares about her? The Queen isn't going to be angry
with me," Alicia repeated comfortingly. "It was only a little


The True Sister	5


letter. Why, the whole of it was hardly three pages long." She
slipped to her feet, stretching like a kitten, and began to tidy
her hair.


"The Queen may not read it," said Kate. "She must get
hundreds of letters. And she's ill again. Or it may have gone
astray on the road."

"Oh, no, it couldn't have," said Alicia proudly. "I put it in
the royal courier's packet with the one from the Princess."

Kate, giving up, merely nodded and turned again to look
out of the window. Two sparrows were trying to shelter from
the rainy wind in the ivy that grew on the palace wall, and she
felt a little sick as she watched the storm tear one of them out
of its hold and blow it fluttering away from the leaves. The
Queen was capable of anything when she was in one of her
furies, particularly a fury with her sister or anyone belonging
to her sister's household. Catt Ashley was the Lady Elizabeth's
favorite attendant, her old governess, but she had been sent to
prison in the Tower of London all the same only for being
found with some ballads and pamphlets attacking the Queen's
policies; and Blanche Parry had said that she was very lucky not
to be there still.

Blanche Parry herself opened the door at that moment and
came frowning into the room. She too had been with the household
ever since the Lady Elizabeth was a child, and was now
the Keeper of the Princess's Jewels, not that there were many
jewels for her to keep, and the "Mother" in charge of the maids
of honor, not that there were many maids either.

"I've been looking for you," she said. "Why weren't you
down in the hall, where you belong? Stop preening yourself,
Alicia! Don't sit there like a stone image, Kate! Her Highness
wants you."

Kate heard what seemed to be her own voice asking a question.


6	The Perilous Gard


"No, I don't know what it's about. She was working with
Master Roger when the rider came from London. It's put her
in a wicked temper, that's all I can tell you," said Blanche
Parry, shepherding them before her down the stairs. "More
trouble with That Woman, I suppose. If some people were
locked up as lunatics instead of sitting on thrones . . . Come
along now, don't keep her waiting, remember your curtsies
both of you, try not to trip over your skirts again, Kate, I never
saw such a clumsy girl. This way. They'rein the little
parlor."


The little parlor was a small gloomy room -- all the rooms
at Hatfield were gloomy -- with na...
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