She it was that made certain their governor-her father-would move heaven and earth to secure supply ships and return. No, if it is indeed Eleanor Dare who has been sighted here in London, then she has somehow found her way across the ocean alone. Mr. Segar, please,
The artist rose from his bench. He was a man of middling height and breadth with a tight mouth and lips like a woman’s, half-hidden behind a wide mustache that closely resembled a cat’s whiskers. He wore a long painter’s smock from neck to heel to protect his valuable court attire from paint splashes. He took a deep breath. “I have little to add to the story as told by my lord of Essex, save to say that the tale emanates from a maid in my own household, Agnes Hardy, who swears to me, hand on Bible, that she saw Eleanor Dare in London no more than a week since…”
“People can make mistakes,” Shakespeare suggested.
“Of course. And that is what we must find out,” Essex said. “Now, Mr. Segar, tell Mr. Shakespeare where your housemaid saw this woman.”
“She was outside the theatre in Southwark, dressed as a strumpet touting for business. It was certainly in the area where the whores gather. Agnes told me she was so taken aback to see Eleanor, knowing her of old and knowing her to be lost in the New World, that for a moment she merely stood there open-mouthed in astonishment. By the time she had gathered her wits to approach her, the woman had joined arms with a man and they had gone, vanished into the theatre crowd. That was the last she saw of her.”
“What time of day was this?” Shakespeare asked.
“Mid-afternoon, I believe. You would do best to ask her such details yourself.”
It was the sort of question Shakespeare would have asked in his days as an intelligencer, to determine how much daylight there was and how clearly this Agnes Hardy might have seen this woman she took to be Eleanor Dare. But what had any of this to do with him now? McGunn read his thoughts.
“So, Mr. Shakespeare, why have we brought you here? That’s what you want to know.”
“Well, of course any man would be curious about this strange tale-but it really has nothing to do with me.”
Essex clapped his hands. “But you are
Shakespeare set his face very determinedly. “Oh, no…”
“Oh, yes, Mr. Shakespeare. A thousand times yes. And you will be paid well for your troubles. I am sure that a handsome sum of gold would help your school, would it not?”
Indeed, who did not need gold in these straitened times? “But
Essex looked at Shakespeare as if he had lost his wit. He sighed with great exaggeration and turned to McGunn. “You talk to him, Mr. McGunn. Answer all Mr. Shakespeare’s questions. Knock sense into him. I have other matters to attend to. Come, Mr. Segar.”
Without another word, he strode with proud yet ungainly gait toward the entrance door, Segar following in his wake. And then they were gone.
Chapter 4
I T SEEMED TO SHAKESPEARE THAT HE HAD BEEN ASSAILED by a whirlwind. He looked at McGunn and saw something unpleasant in his eyes.
“Well, there we have it, Shakespeare,” McGunn said with weary resignation. “God has spoken and so we mere mortals must obey.”
Shakespeare held up the palm of his hand. “I really don’t think you and my lord of Essex quite understand-”
“Oh, we understand, all right. We understand, too, that you are in sore need of funds-funds which we can provide in exchange for a small service that may take you no more than a few days. An old colleague of yours informs me that you are the perfect man for the task.”
“An old colleague?”
“You will meet him soon enough.”
Again Shakespeare demurred. “Mr. McGunn, I still feel as if there is something I am missing here.”
“Well, let me say just two words to you: Walter Ralegh. Now do you understand my lord of Essex’s interest in the matter?”
Shakespeare knew, of course, that the Roanoke colony had been Ralegh’s child. That it was he who had won patents from the Queen granting him permission to sponsor the colony and had raised the necessary gold for ships, crews, supplies, and settlers to make it work. It had been a critical investment for the great courtier, for he had persuaded the Queen that the colony-and his plan to found a great town in Virginia grandly called the City of Ralegh-would bring untold riches to
“The point is, Shakespeare…” McGunn said slowly, as if spelling out the obvious to a small boy. “The point is that my lord of Essex and Sir Walter Ralegh are not easy companions. In truth-and I do not care if you repeat this- they would happily plunge red-hot pokers up each other’s arses if in so doing they could cause the other pain and further their own influence at court. For you must know that they see each other as chief rival for the Queen’s favor.”
“But that does not explain why it is so important to find this Eleanor Dare.”
McGunn ran a leathery hand over his sweat-dripping bare forehead. He pulled at his gold hoop earring, all the while staring at Shakespeare with an expression on his fleshy, canine face that hovered somewhere between condescension and intimidation. “Because Ralegh is already in bad odor,” he said quietly. “He has impregnated and married the Queen’s lady-in-waiting Bess Throckmorton, and Elizabeth is in a towering rage. She has had them arrested and held under close arrest. Ralegh is on the ground; he will not raise himself up with poetry
Shakespeare acknowledged the logic. Ralegh’s fate depended on Roanoke. With the colony not proven dead, he had hope still. With the colony gone, he had none. This was court politics. No one cared about the missing men, women, and children. This was about power and position. Shakespeare understood it all now, and saw too that there was danger here, extreme danger.
To get caught up in an affair such as this between two of the most powerful men in the land was like finding yourself trapped in a burning attic; do you die by burning or by jumping? This was a deadly game between Essex and Ralegh. Leave them to it. “I am sorry, Mr. McGunn,” he said. “This task you ask of me is out of the question. Please apologize to my lord of Essex on my behalf, but I cannot possibly accept his kind offer.”
There was no longer any ambiguity in McGunn’s face. His lips curled back and his yellow teeth moved against each other so that Shakespeare could hear an unholy grinding noise, as if they would crack like glass against each other. “Did I mention the twenty sovereigns?” McGunn said as if it were the last offer before a knife under the rib cage.
“Twenty sovereigns, two hundred sovereigns. I cannot be swayed, Mr. McGunn. The task is not for me.”
McGunn’s hand flashed out like a serpent’s jaws and clasped Shakespeare by the throat. With just the one hand, he lifted him clear off the floor. Shakespeare’s hands went to his throat to try to dislodge the enormous hand that was choking him, but without effect. McGunn’s hand was rigid and of immense, unmovable strength. He looked up into his eyes and mouthed words that Shakespeare could not hear as blood rushed to his brain. Of a sudden, McGunn dropped him and he fell in a heap to the wooden floorboards. Shakespeare gasped for breath; his hands rubbed his throat. He knew now what a hanged man felt in the moments before death took him.