The Salt Tower warder came back soon before dark and threw down a little straw as promised, then put down a blackjack of ale, along with a platter containing bread and half a pound of cheese. ‘You are fortunate to be here rather than the city gaols, for here you will have dinner and supper at the Queen’s expense.’ He was a man of good humour and he bade Shakespeare goodnight, then left, locking and bolting the door.
Shakespeare drank half the ale and retained the rest, then arranged the straw as best he could as a bed. When darkness came it was all-enveloping, like the darkness falling over England. There was no candle, nor any glimmer of moonlight. He had nothing to do but sleep. But sleep refused to come, and so he was left with his thoughts: the grisly fate awaiting Goodfellow Savage and the other conspirators; the fate of poor Kat and Boltfoot. Never had Shakespeare felt so utterly desolate and despairing. He had failed everyone. At last sleep came, but it was fitful and brought no peace.
He was awoken by the drawing of bolts and the rattling of keys. The door was thrown open. Richard Topcliffe stood in the doorway, his cold face and white hair lit by the guttering light of a torch. He had four men behind him, all bearing torches and swords.
‘Get up, Shakespeare. There is something I wish you to witness.’
Shakespeare had to go where he was led, along the lantern-lit passages and well-guarded ginnels of the Tower until at last he came to the Lieutenant’s lodgings. He knew the place. It was pleasantly appointed and his hopes leapt at the prospect that the Lieutenant might be about to release him. But the man wasn’t there and, instead, he was forced through a concealed doorway into a short subterranean passageway.
They stopped. ‘You know where we are now, Shakespeare?’ Topcliffe’s thin lips were moist with unwholesome pleasure and excitement. ‘Directly beneath the White Tower. I am sure you have heard of this chamber.’
The entrance was dark, but as they stepped inside the light of the torches and the addition of light from a cresset of red-hot coals illuminated the immense vaulted chamber. He thought he knew the Tower well enough, for he had been here before to examine prisoners in their cells. But he had never been to these vaults. He knew instantly, however, that this place was the rack room.
As his eyes grew accustomed to the red and black gloom, the sight that greeted him was a scene from the darkest and vilest corners of hell.
The evidence of torture was all around him – instruments of pain were scattered carelessly about. The foulest refinements of torment known to man. Even the Inquisition could boast nothing worse.
To the left stood the rack, its ropes and pulleys vacant and unused. To the right were the manacles, gauntlets of iron that could hold a man suspended from the ceiling for hours on end. Then there were the red-hot irons in the fire that might brand a man, burn his parts into impotence or, when necessary, cauterise wounds. On a table lay a range of fine-honed knives for cutting.
The true obscenity that confronted him was a melding of naked flesh and black iron, in direct line of vision, not ten feet from him. At first he could not comprehend exactly what he was witnessing. A man was on his knees, his body folded like a cat at prayer. Two circular bars of iron enclosed him, meeting above his straining back, holding him down in a most unnatural position, crushing his spine and causing untold pain. How could a man even breathe when pressed so?
Shakespeare gritted his teeth in shock and fury. ‘This is a crime against God and man.’
‘You talk of crimes against God and man. Have you met Mr Ballard, priest and conspirator, otherwise known as Captain Fortescue? I am sure you know him well, Shakespeare. And I am sure you must know what crimes he had planned – the murder of the Queen and the destruction of England at the hands of the Pope and his blood-soaked demons.’
‘You are the devil, Topcliffe. Have you no shame?’
‘Say good day to Ballard. He knows you well enough. He calls you conspirator and assassin. He has heard you say the Queen must die and the Queen of Scotland must take her place. He is very talkative. Indeed, I would have to cut out his tongue to stop his mouth, so eager is he to tell me everything he knows.’
‘What is this wicked engine? I welcome the taking of Ballard as much as you, but I would not treat the lowest of earth’s creatures in this way.’
‘Have you never seen the Scavenger’s Daughter? It is remarkable effective in eliciting information. But not all survive it . . .’
‘You will pay for this, Topcliffe. You know well that torture is the last resort and is not permitted without a warrant from the Privy Council.’
Topcliffe held aloft a paper. ‘I have it here. Read it yourself. It is clear enough. Ballard is to be examined by all means to reveal everything he knows about the Pope’s White Sons and their designs. And he knows a great deal. How much will you tell, Shakespeare? The rack or the Scavenger’s Daughter – which shall we choose?’
Shakespeare took the warrant. You shall by virtue hereof cause the prisoner John Ballard to be taken to the Tower and there be put to the rack, manacles or Skevington’s Irons and such other torture as is used in that place. It was genuine, complete with the signatures of three Privy Councillors, Leicester, Burghley and
Hatton, but not Walsingham. Was Mr Secretary still distancing himself from these events? He dropped the warrant to the ground at Topcliffe’s feet.
Topcliffe picked it up with a light laugh. ‘I expect the warrant for you to be put to the rack shortly. And then the remainder of your friends, when we have discovered them all. Babington and some others are presently cowering in the woods north of Tyburn. There is no way out for the paths are all guarded. The mastiffs will have them soon enough. Others have been taken in the west and messengers have gone forth with names and descriptions into Wales and the north. Your conspiracy is done for and you will all die.’
Shakespeare did not bother to argue. He began to turn away. Topcliffe was well aware that he was a Walsingham man and that he had been working as a spy – but that did not mean he was safe. The worst thing was that every hour he spent imprisoned here was an hour closer to the death of Kat Whetstone for a murder she had not committed.
Topcliffe grasped his shoulder and tried to make him turn back. ‘Feast your eyes on the priest. That is what happens to traitors.’
The stench of fear and ordure was in Shakespeare’s nostrils. It occurred to him that to be constricted into immobility in such agony must be a hundred times worse than the pillory. He did all in his power to avert his gaze; he could no longer bear to look upon the priest. Topcliffe would not have it. He held his dagger point to Shakespeare’s throat and with the other hand pushed his face so that he had to look. Shakespeare closed his eyes. If he died here at the tip of Topcliffe’s blade, so be it.
‘Smell him, Shakespeare. Smell the fear and the shit. You told me once that torture is worthless because men will say anything when examined in such circumstances. But look on this man. Look on him. He refused to talk, but now he will beg to tell me everything he knows: the name of every papist traitor in England. Nobles, gentry and common men – he will give me names by the dozen. Men and women at court and in the shires. He knows them all and he knows the priests’ hideyholes. Now tell me that torture does not work!’
Chapter 42
Boltfoot Cooper limped to the front door of the house in Seething Lane. It was early morning, not long after dawn, and they had just arrived in London, having walked the last leg through a series of villages along the Kent road overnight. He and Maywether had avoided the obvious route via Deptford and the south bank of the river because they both had their own reasons for wishing not to be seen by other mariners. Too many men would be willing to sell them to Cutting Ball for a few pennies.