“And you did, Mistress Mary?” he asked.

Mary bowed, with her lips set tight to check their trembling.

“I will tell you,” she said, “if our host permits”; and she glanced at him.

“Then come this way,” he said, and they rose from table.

They went back again to the withdrawing-room; a little cedar-fire had been kindled under the wide chimney; and the room was full of dancing shadows. The great plaster-pendants, the roses, the crowns, and the portcullises on the ceiling seemed to waver in the firelight, for Mr. Buxton at a sign from Mary blew out the four tapers that were burning in the sconces. They all sat down in the chairs that were set round the fire, Mary in a tall porter’s chair with flaps that threw a shadow on her face when she leaned back; and she took a fan in her hand to keep the fire, or her friends’ eyes, from her face should she need it.

She first told them very briefly of the last months of Mary’s life, of the web that was spun round her by Walsingham’s tactics, and her own friends’ efforts, until it was difficult for her to stir hand or foot without treason, real or pretended, being set in motion somewhere. Then she described how at Christmas ’86 Elizabeth had sent her—Mary Corbet—as a Catholic, up to the Queen of the Scots at Fotheringay, on a private mission to attempt to win the prisoner’s confidence, and to persuade her to confess to having been privy to Babington’s conspiracy; and how the Scottish Queen had utterly denied it, even in the most intimate conversations. Sentence had been already passed, but the warrant had not been signed; and it never would have been signed, said Mistress Corbet, if Mary had owned to the crime of which she was accused.

“Ah! how they insulted her!” cried Mary Corbet indignantly. “She showed me one day the room where her throne had stood. Now the cloth of state had been torn down by Sir Amyas Paulet’s men, and he himself dared to sit with his hat on his head in the sovereign’s presence! The insolence of the hound! But the Queen showed me how she had hung a crucifix where her royal arms used to hang. ‘J’appelle,’ she said to me, ‘de la reine au roi des rois.’”

Mistress Corbet went on to tell of the arrival of Walsingham’s brother-in-law, Mr. Beale, with the death-warrant on that February Sunday evening.

“I saw his foxy face look sideways up at the windows as he got off his horse in the courtyard; and I knew that our foes had triumphed. Then the other bloodhounds began to arrive; my lord of Kent on the Monday and Shrewsbury on the Tuesday. Then they came in to us after dinner; and they told her Grace it was to be for next day. I was behind her chair and saw her hand on the boss of the arm, and it did not stir nor clench; she said it could not be. She could not believe it of Elizabeth.

“When she did at last believe it, there was no wild weeping or crying for mercy; but she set her affairs in order, queenly, and yet sedately too. She first thought of her soul, and desired that M. de Preau might come to her and hear her confession; but they would not permit it. They offered her Dr. Fletcher instead, ‘a godly man,’ as my lord of Kent called him. ‘Je ne m’en doute pas,’ she said, smiling. But it was hard not to have a priest.