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A Prisoner in Malta

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by Phillip DePoy




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  Then let some holy trance convey my thoughts

  Up to the palace of the imperial heaven

  —“Lament for Zenocrate,”

  CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE

  PROLOGUE

  1583, LONDON

  IN THE PRIVATE CHAMBERS OF LORD WALSINGHAM, PRINCIPAL SECRETARY TO QUEEN ELIZABETH, AND HER SPYMASTER

  “Get Marlowe.” Walsingham stood behind a small wooden table. His heavy burgundy coat made him larger than he was; the meticulously trimmed beard betrayed a ruthless attention to detail. “Get him and bring him to me. Today.”

  “Today? It’s too soon.” The man in red stood in a darkened corner. Even in Walsingham’s private rooms, he was cautious. “He’s not ready.”

  “I know,” Walsingham agreed impatiently, “but it’s time, nevertheless. This plot to murder our Queen is verified: her life is in peril. And I don’t have all the facts I need to prevent it!”

  Walsingham’s gloved fist pounded the table.

  “And I’m telling you that Marlowe’s not your man!” The man in red took a step out of the shadows. “Not yet. I won’t do it.”

  “Listen,” Walsingham hissed, eyes narrow, “it’s not too late for Her Majesty to retract her generous offer of making you her chief physician. And never too late to expose your family in Portugal.”

  The man in red reached for his dagger. It was an instinctive reaction that he instantly halted. He had never once met with Walsingham without wanting to kill him, but he knew that the spymaster’s death would mean the end of his wife and children.

  Walsingham saw those thoughts play across the man’s face and ignored them.

  “I wouldn’t send Marlowe out without testing him first,” Walsingham said, his voice calmer. “I want him to be ready as much as you do.”

  “I know,” the man conceded. “You’re right. What did you have in mind? To make him ready, I mean.”

  “Before we send him up against the vermin Throckmorton, and God knows what other conspirators,” Walsingham explained, an uncharacteristic fear edging his voice, “I would set him a task that will be as instructive as it is vital to our cause. It will prove his mettle. But it must be done quickly. I have it on perfect authority that the Throckmorton plot is weeks from fruition. Our Queen is in dire peril.”

  “Sir, a task is never instructive. Only a teacher.”

  Walsingham smiled. “Which is why you will be with him. You may observe, firsthand, his readiness for the road ahead.”

  The man in red sighed. “I see.” There was no use trying to stay ahead of Walsingham. He always won because he thought of everything.

  “You must leave for Cambridge now,” Walsingham concluded. “It’s nearly dawn. You could be there by midmorning. You’ll be taking one of Her Majesty’s coaches.”

  The man in red didn’t move. “And what is your task?”

  “The coachman has a packet for you, it contains details. Don’t reveal them to Marlowe, yet, but the core of it is this: one of our most valued agents has information vital to destroying the plot—information that must be given to me in person. You must take Marlowe and fetch the agent.”

  “Why can’t this agent come to you?”

  “Because this agent is a prisoner on the island of Malta,” Walsingham answered tensely, “guarded by the Order of Saint John.”

  “Guarded by the Knights of Malta?” The man in red took a deep breath. “That won’t test Marlowe. It will kill him.”

  Walsingham shook his head. “He can’t die. Neither can you. This prisoner is too important. Without the three of you, our nation—I do not exaggerate when I say that our nation may be lost.”

  The man in red lifted his chin suddenly, realizing a feint within this scheme. “The Island of Malta is filled with Jews.”

  “Which is the other reason you were chosen.” Walsingham rapped three times, hard, on his desk.

  The door to the chamber opened.

  “Hurry, Doctor,” Walsingham said, looking down again.

  The man in red stared at the top of Walsingham’s head for a moment, and then turned, silently leaving the room.

  The door closed.

  And as it did, the wall tapestry behind Walsingham rustled, and the person who had been hiding there stepped into the flickering candlelight.

  ONE

  1583, CAMBRIDGE

  Christopher Marlowe stared at the newly mown lawn, and the tower of St. Benet’s Church reaching sweetly toward God in morning’s light. In the old graveyard, roses were blooming, even though March was cold. The tower was the oldest building in Cambridge, and Marlowe did his best to appreciate the ethos of grandeur and nobility. But the beauty of the day overtook him, and all his thoughts were light. He was nineteen, standing in Cambridge, about to go to class. He could scarcely believe his good fortune. A boot-maker’s son was a rarity at any college.

  Everywhere students rushed; professors glided in stately manner. The grass, greener than a linnet’s wing, collected sunlight against the advent of late frost: “nature’s rarest alchemy, the golden bell of heaven’s fire.”

  All in black, Marlowe was nearly invisible in the shade, though his smile was brighter than sunlight. He wore his hair deliberately shorter than the fashion; it was a great source of aggravation for his tutors. Most of that ire was obviated by the fact that Marlowe’s mind was the best in his class. His bright demeanor had endeared him to most of his fellow students as well; his eyes existed only to beguile.

  Suddenly those eyes were distracted by the flair of a familiar crimson cloak.

  “Doctor,” Marlowe called out, stepping into the light to greet his old friend.

  But just at that moment a voice behind him shouted, “Whoreson!” It was followed by the sound of running footsteps.

  Marlowe spun around, and there was Walter Pygott, dagger in hand, face red with ignorant rage. Marlowe had been expecting this encounter for weeks. Pygott had battered or threatened nearly everyone else in the new class at Cambridge, and was widely regarded as a grotesque waste of skin. Worst of all, he behaved with impunity because his father had donated money to restore a window in St. Benet’s Church. This had been done not by a doting parent, but by a man who sought to rid himself of his son’s revolting company.

  Unable to achieve any other sort of notoriety, Pygott quickly turned to picking fights and insulting his fellows. Easily seventeen stone, the bully used his weight more than his wits in every skirmish. He was a ridiculous figure in his ill-fitting green tunic and bright red codpiece, hair slicked down with butter.

  “Christopher Marlowe,” Pygott sneered, “I’ve been looking for you, you contemptuous base-born callet!”

  “Callet?” Marlowe turned only slightly toward the cur.

  Pygott planted his feet. “You heard me.”

  Marlowe smiled.

  “The Scots use the word callet to mean a prostitute,” Marlowe explained. “I
will tell you plainly: that is not true of me. I never accept money for my favors—though I often deserve it. If, on the other hand, you meant the original French definition—that I am a frivolous person—I will assure you that I am among the more serious persons you will ever meet. Keep your dagger pointed at me and find that out. Or you could ask my friend, the man in the red cape just to your right. Am I correct in saying that I am a serious person, Dr. Lopez?”

  “Hello, Chris.” Lopez shoved back his cape and smiled.

  Lopez had come from the street beyond the library. Black hair, dressed in red, he did not look old enough to be a royal physician, though he was nearly twice Chris’s age.

  “Dr. Lopez?” Pygott jeered, recognizing the famous name. “The Portuguese Jew bastard what made poisons for Robert Dudley?”

  “You’ve read a pamphlet on the subject,” Marlowe said disdainfully. “Surprising. Wouldn’t have taken you for a reader.”

  “That pamphlet?” Lopez added. “Pure libel, I assure you. I was entirely exonerated of any wrongdoing.”

  Without warning Pygott jumped, crashing into Marlowe with the dull force of a falling boulder. It took Marlowe by surprise, and both men tumbled to the ground. Rolling, Marlowe kicked, but Pygott came out on top, and put his dagger in Marlowe’s face.

  The point of Pygott’s blade was so close that it nicked Marlowe’s eyelid when he blinked. Still, Marlowe was smiling.

  “What have you got to smile about, cobbler-son? I’m about to stick this knife in your eye!”

  Marlowe flicked his own dagger and Pygott flinched, feeling a sharp pain under his codpiece.

  “That’s why I’m smiling,” Marlowe explained amiably.

  The full measure of his predicament settled slowly over Pygott’s face as he realized exactly where Marlowe’s blade was resting. Pygott tried very hard not to move.

  “I could live quite cheerfully with an eye patch,” Marlowe went on, still smiling. “It would make me dashing. But what’s your life going to be without this?”

  To emphasize his point, Marlowe pressed his blade slightly forward and drew a single drop of blood from the larger man’s flesh.

  Pygott tossed his dagger away instantly, eyes wide, lower lip trembling. His pale green tunic began to show signs of sweat.

  “Now apologize,” Marlowe insisted.

  Pygott swallowed and began in a weak vapor of a voice, “I am heartily sorry, Mr. Marlowe, for calling you a contemptuous base-born callet and a—”

  “Not to me, you idiot,” Marlowe said. “Get off me and apologize to my friend before I lose all my patience.”

  Pygott lumbered to one side, careful not to lose his balance and fall onto Marlowe’s knife. He managed to stumble to a standing posture.

  Marlowe leapt up. His blade stood out in the slant of late-afternoon sunlight. Pygott stared at it and began his speech.

  “I—I am heartily sorry, Dr. Lopez,” he stammered, “for calling you a Jew bastard, and for insulting your island and the entire Portuguese race.”

  Marlowe looked at Lopez.

  “There’s a Cambridge education for you,” he said, shaking his head, “an equal ignorance of everything. You’ll go far, Pygott. You’re headed for Parliament; anyone can see that.”

  “Parliament?” Pygott gaped, not moving.

  “Codpieces are going out of fashion, by the way,” Marlowe continued. “They’re ridiculous.”

  “Let him go, Marlowe,” Dr. Lopez said softly.

  “The college is pretty this time of day,” Marlowe said absently. “Especially when the weather’s soft like this.”

  Pygott stayed, uncertain what to do. His lip began to tremble more violently, and blood was beginning to spot the unfashionable bit of haberdashery.

  “Please, young man,” Dr. Lopez encouraged Pygott, “take your leave.”

  “Yes,” Marlowe concurred. “Be gone. But avoid the church. There is no sin but ignorance and you, I fear, will surely burn there.”

  Without a word, Pygott wandered off, slightly dazed, in the direction of the church.

  “That wasn’t necessary,” Lopez chided.

  “He insulted you,” Marlowe disagreed, “and he jumped on me. It was quite necessary.”

  “You draw too much attention to yourself,” Lopez went on. “That dagger you wear, its filigreed hilt is too elaborate.”

  “It was a gift from my father,” Marlowe protested, “and it serves a purpose.”

  “It attracts too many eyes! You’ve only been at Cambridge since January and everyone on the campus knows your name.”

  “I do it on purpose,” Marlowe said, grinning. “It’s my theatrical nature.”

  “The last thing a man in this world wants to be is unusual,” Lopez said. “And you, my friend, are unique.”

  “I’m late for my last session,” Marlowe said. “Will you walk with me?”

  Lopez pulled his red cloak around his neck. His long black hair seemed to be cut from midnight, out of place in the daytime.

  “You give your thoughts too much tongue,” Lopez began as they walked in the direction of Old Court. “You give every man your voice when you should lend your ear.”

  “You came here to tell me that I talk too much?” Marlowe threw his arm around Lopez.

  “You’ve drawn too much attention to yourself,” Lopez said in a very confidential voice. “The way you dress, for example.”

  “What’s wrong with the way I dress?” Marlowe asked, not quite aware of his old friend’s strange behavior.

  “All black. It’s too somber for a young man,” Lopez insisted.

  “This from a man in a flame-red cape.” Marlowe shook his head.

  “You lend your money too freely,” Lopez went on, “and you quarrel entirely too much.”

  “But I always win,” Marlowe answered impatiently. “And I’m always good-natured about it. Rodrigo, what are you doing here?”

  Marlowe stopped walking. They were nearly to the Parker Library. All of the students were gone; classes had started. The relative silence made it easier to hear noise from the street, beyond the church, where some minor commotion arose.

  “You haven’t yet become your true self,” Lopez explained. “A man’s only genuine occupation in this life is to discover who and what he truly is, and then do his best to become that. Most never manage it.”

  “This is quite a lot of advice,” he said, “from a Portuguese Jew who’s pretending to be a Protestant in England.”

  “Chris,” Lopez said quietly. “I am to become Her Majesty’s physician-in-chief.”

  Marlowe took Lopez by both arms.

  “What? At last! My God!” Marlowe’s voice boomed. “That’s why you’ve come to Cambridge, I understand now: to tell me this wonderful news.”

  “Please lower your voice,” Lopez said. “That is not the reason for my visit.”

  “Look, honestly,” Marlowe suggested, ignoring the older man’s comment, “just wait here until my session in poetics is concluded, and then you and I will go to the best pub in Cambridge.”

  “No, I’m sorry.” Lopez looked around as if to make certain no one was looking at them. “You’re not going to your class.”

  Marlowe blinked. “What?”

  “You’re coming with me to London. Now.”

  Lopez flicked his cloak and a coach appeared out of nowhere at the other end of the yard, headed toward them slowly. It was an ornate closed cab with a spring suspension, four wheels, and two muscled horses. It had been the source of the commotion out in the street. Marlowe recognized it as a very new Boonen construction—the kind built exclusively for the Queen.

  Marlowe eyed the conveyance with suspicion.

  “I’m not getting into that thing,” he said.

  “You have to,” Lopez said simply.

  “I might ride a horse to London,” Marlowe ventured.

  “Get in the carriage, please.” Lopez held out his hand politely.

  “That thing? No. It’ll rattle my brains
out.”

  “But it will keep us from being seen as we travel,” Lopez whispered. “And, I insist. You are riding at the request of the Privy Council, and we are expected before midnight.”

  “The Privy Council.” Marlowe’s mood sobered. “Well. I’ve had the strangest notion that something odd was going to happen. Just as I concluded it was my encounter with Pygott, here comes a very expensive coach.”

  The coach pulled up beside them. Lopez opened the door. Marlowe peered inside.

  “Do I really have to?” he asked.

  But he knew the answer. The Privy Council had summoned. Not a living soul in England could deny such an order.

  “Go on,” Lopez insisted.

  As soon as they were inside, the driver took off. Lopez closed the shutters. Light leaked in through the spy holes, but the cab was still very dark. The seats were covered in black leather, worn and softened. The wooden doors were scratched a bit, as was the floor. This was not a ceremonial vehicle, it was a workhorse.

  “We’re headed west,” Marlowe said cautiously. “London is south.”

  “We’re bound for the River Cam,” Lopez explained. “We’ll turn there and follow the water awhile.”

  Marlowe grasped the idea immediately. “If we’re being followed, we’ll see it when we turn south at the river.”

  “Exactly.”

  “I don’t suppose you’ll tell me why I’ve been summoned?”

  “No.”

  They rode in silence for a distance.

  * * *

  In Cambridge, Walter Pygott was peeing on roses in the graveyard near the great tower of St. Benet’s when he heard a noise behind him. Thinking it was one of the priests come to scold him, he tied his codpiece loosely and spun around.

  “I wasn’t doing anything,” he began.

  But he froze; fell silent when he saw the knife so close to his heart.

  “You’re a bastard idiot,” the whispered voice told him, “with pudding for a dick and maggots in your brain.”

  “I—I—do I know you?” Pygott stammered. “I expect you’re one of the little weasels I put to the ground here lately, thinking to get revenge while I’m indisposed. Look. Let’s have an understanding. The rules of this place is: I’m on top.”

 

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