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Babington stayed in bed. He had no wish to talk with Ballard. No one called him Captain Fortescue any more. What was the point when all the Pope’s White Sons knew him as a priest, not a soldier? As for talking with him, there had been too much of that already. Endless talking!

There was yet another sound: the clattering of arms and the shouting of men. Babington froze with horror, then slid beneath the bedclothes like a child hiding from its nurse, knowing that he would be found. So this was it; this was how it happened. The pursuivants had come for him. He tried to lie still and silent, his head hidden, but his heart pounded like a hunted stag’s and he knew it must give him away.

There was bellowing, a shout from Ballard, then the stamping of feet, moving away from the house.

He waited beneath the bedclothes for two minutes, five minutes, all the time expecting the sound of breaking furniture and stoved-in panelling. That was how these pursuivants worked. They broke apart property as well as lives in their hunt for priests and forbidden books.

The door opened and he could not suppress a groan.

‘Ballard is taken!’ It was Robin Poley.

Babington pushed back the bedding and looked at his friend with wide, questioning eyes.

‘Pursuivants?’

‘Sent by warrant of the Lord High Admiral. They have taken Ballard at the point of a sword.’

‘And they are gone, you say?’

‘Gone.’

‘What about you? Why did they not take you, Robin?’

‘I hid behind the privy and watched them. There were six of them. I could do nothing to help him.’

‘We are no longer safe.’

Poley smiled. ‘That is not so. This was not Mr Secretary’s work. I am sure he still means to deal honourably with you and afford you your pass into foreign lands. The pursuivants called Father Ballard priest. I think he was taken for that alone, not for his part in your enterprise, Anthony. We are both still safe.’

‘Thanks be to God,’ Babington said, but without conviction.

‘I will go to Richmond this day and crave an audience with Mr Secretary. It may be he still desires you to go to France. It may be that I can persuade him to have Father Ballard set free.’

Babington sprang from the bed with the energy of a newborn lamb, as though the languor of the past moments had been sloughed off like a good night’s sleep. ‘Enough of talk. Enough of Walsingham and his false promises. They are attacking us, Robin, and so we have but one course of action left to us. We must attack them back.’

He strapped on his sword belt, embraced his friend and kissed him. He knew what he had to do. It was all clear now. There was no time to lose. ‘Go, then, Robin,’ he said. ‘Go to court. See what can be done for Father Ballard, though I fear the worst for him.’

‘Farewell, Anthony.’

Babington gave Poley one last kiss and set off walking down the path, then broke into a run with his boy Job trailing in his wake. First he must find Chidiock Tichbourne and Tom Salisbury. They, surely, were the truest of friends and the most dependable of men. They must set off for Chartley without delay to find some way of securing Mary’s freedom.

Chidiock was not at his lodgings, so he tried Mane’s barber shop where they often met. Mane shook his head. ‘I heard he was kicked by a horse and was carried to St Bartholomew’s for a splint. He would have done better to come here, for I can set a bone as well as any man.’

Babington groaned with frustration and set off at a loping run westwards. He was about to go into Bart’s when he spotted Tichbourne sitting against a wall of the hospital, smoking a pipe. His left leg was stretched out before him

‘Chidiock, what has happened to you?’

‘Maggot of a horse kicked my shin.’

‘Is it broken?’

‘No, but I can scarce hobble, let alone walk.’

‘Can you ride?’

‘No distance.’

‘Chidiock, this is bad. I had wanted you to ride for Chartley with Tom Salisbury. We must act now or be for ever damned. Father Ballard has been taken. He will talk under torture – and then they will come for us all. We must either fight or flee.’

Tichbourne drew a lungful of smoke from his pipe, then blew it out. ‘Well, I can do neither. I am just trying to drag myself home, yard by yard.’

Babington stared at his friend in disbelief. Then he knelt down at his side and tried to push his hands under his arms. ‘I will carry you.’

‘Leave me. I will only serve to slow you down.’

‘I cannot leave a friend.’

‘Go, Anthony. With God’s grace, I will be well in time. Lame but limping, perhaps.’

Babington nodded. Yes, Chidiock was right.

‘Have you been to Hern’s Rents this morning, Anthony?’

‘No.’

‘Then do not go there. It is watched. Before my injury, I was on my way to you when I saw two men in the shadows and walked on.’

So nowhere was safe. They knew of Poley’s house, for they had taken Ballard there. Babington clasped Tichbourne’s beloved face in his hands and kissed his forehead. They had been on so many journeys and adventures together, across France and England. And now it was all going to end in horror. ‘Dominus vobiscum, dearest Chidiock.’

‘God go with you, too, Anthony.’

Babington’s aunt, Lady Darcy, pushed her maidservant out of the way and tugged her nephew into the hall of her sumptuous house. ‘Come in, dear Anthony, come in.’

He kissed her peremptorily, then gazed about the dark panelled room with hunted eyes. With his hand he waved the maidservant away and she scurried from the room.

‘What is it?’ his aunt demanded when they were alone.

‘We are discovered. I no longer know what to do. Perhaps if I were to stay here . . .’

‘You sound most agitated. Calm yourself. Tell me all that has happened.’

He sighed, then slumped onto a settle by the window. ‘Yes, I will tell you.’

His aunt listened in silence. She was a woman of fifty years with greying hair and the sharp, defiant air of certain women of the gentry and nobility who looked with undisguised scorn on any who thought to embrace England’s new faith. ‘You must steel yourself, Anthony,’ she said at last.

‘But what should I do?’

‘You must do what you have planned all along. You must play your part in deposing this usurper queen and her devilish acolytes and pseudo-bishops – and you must raise Queen Mary

to her proper place.’

‘But-’

‘Only then will you restore this family to its heights among the greatest in the land. Did your great-grandfather not attend on Henry the Eighth at the Field of the Cloth of Gold? He had Darcy courage. Now you must show your mettle.’

‘But, Aunt, you know what became of him. Lopped at Tower Hill.’

‘In defence of his faith. So must you defend the faith, though it cost you your life. Do not shirk.’

Babington was no longer listening. He had known all along what she would say. Great-grandfather had been executed for his part in the Pilgrimage of Grace – the northern rebellion against King Henry’s assault on the Roman religion – and so the same was expected of him. It was the Darcy way. And, through his mother, Babington was a Darcy by another name.

‘I know not who to trust.’

‘Trust in God. Trust in your great-grandfather.’

Old Lord Darcy, whose head was planted on a pike at the southern end of London Bridge. He might have been a saint for all the talk of him since the day Babington was born. The first words he remembered from the age of three or four were his mother’s refrain: You are a Darcy, Anthony. You must not allow Greatgrandfather’s death to have been in vain.