“Hmm, I see what you mean,” said Shakespeare. “ Tis a curious situation, indeed. Our expectations of the situation were unfounded, yet now, we have found them to be true. Most strange. I cannot imagine how I would respond in Middleton’s place. Would I wish to continue with my original plan to find the murderer and get justice, or would I fold under the weight of this new blow and wish to banish everybody from my sight?”
“Well, only Middleton can answer that,” said Smythe. “ Elizabeth, you know him best. What do you think he will do now?”
She shook her head. “Godfrey Middelton, for all his stout and doughy looks, is a strong-minded and most ambitious man. In many respects, Catherine took after him. Their similarity of character was the source of many of their clashes. They were both strong-willed and stubborn. Once she had made up her mind, Catherine would not easily be dissuaded. Her father is no different. He is not the sort of man who would forgive a slight. I cannot imagine that he could forgive the murder of his own daughter.”
“So you believe that he shall stay the course, then, and do everything possible to find the killer?” Smythe said.
“I cannot think he would do otherwise.”
They were approaching the house now. They glanced behind them and saw torches on the path not far away. The others were returning.
“There are still things we need to speak of before you must leave in the morning,” Smythe said to Elizabeth. “The rain has stopped. Will you walk with us awhile in the garden?”
“Of course. I am far from eager to retire. I do not think that I shall sleep at all tonight. And I do not really want to be alone right now.”
They reached the courtyard and turned to go around the house, to the opposite side where the garden was, with the maze, thought Smythe, where it all began for him.
“What of Blanche?” Smythe asked. “What can you tell us about her?”
Elizabeth sniffed with disapproval. “She is as strong-willed as Catherine, in her way. A very different way.” “What sort of way?” asked Shakespeare.
“Well, Blanche wants what she desires, and desires what she wants. And one way or another, she always contrives somehow to get it.”
“Spoiled, in other words,” said Shakespeare. “Her father indulges her?”
“Very much so,” Elizabeth replied. “And she plays upon him like the virginals. She is much more subtle than Catherine. At least, with him.”
“And not with other men?” asked Smythe, remembering his first impression of her.
“Not with any other men, so far as I have seen.”
“You disapprove of her?” said Shakespeare.
“ ‘Tis not for me to approve nor disapprove,” Elizabeth replied. “I simply do not like her.”
“She does not seem to want for suitors,” Smythe said.
“No. She is very beautiful, as I am sure you have remarked,” she added dryly.
“Aye, beautiful… and rather bold, I thought.”
Elizabeth raised her eyebrows. “Oh? I was not aware that you had spoken with her.”
“Only briefly, when she arrived together with the wedding party,” Smythe replied.
“Indeed? And pray tell, what did she say to you?”
“I do not recall precisely. Nothing of substance, I am sure.”
“And yet you do recall that she was bold.”
“Well, doubtless, ‘twas more in the nature of her manner than anything she said.”
“Do tell. And what was her manner towards you?”
Shakespeare chuckled. “You have found, Tuck, both the greatest fault and greatest virtue of all women. They listen.”
“Bestill yourself, you clever quillmaster,” Elizabeth said, sharply. “ ‘Twas not you that I was asking!”
“Mum’s the word, ma’am. I shall take my cue from womankind and be all ears.”
“And I shall box those ears for you if you do not have a care!”
Smythe laughed.
“Laugh all you like,” Elizabeth said, “but when you are done, I shall still be waiting for my answer. I am not distracted.”
“Well… she said…” Smythe shrugged with exasperation. “In all truth, Elizabeth, I cannot recall now what she said, only that what she said seemed very bold. If I had not known better, I might have thought that she had set her cap at me.”
“Blanche has set her cap at men so many times that it has grown quite threadbare,” Elizabeth replied, dryly.
“A woman’s wit is never quite so sharp as when it pricks another woman,” Shakespeare said.
“Provoke me more and you shall find that it can prick a poet, too! Besides, I speak naught but the truth. And there are others, I am sure, who can bear witness to it. Her flaws are plain for all but men to see, who see them not for being blinded by her beauty.”
“And yet ‘twas Catherine who had the worse reputation of the two,” said Smythe.
“Aye, for being a shrew,” Elizabeth replied. “For that is what men call a woman who dares to speak her mind. But if she should speak with other parts of her anatomy, then men will think with other parts of theirs, as well.”
“Which part would that be, pray tell?” Shakespeare asked, in-nocentiy.
“In your case, I have no doubt ‘twould be the smallest.”
Smythe laughed. “ Twould seem she can box a poet’s ears!”
“ ‘Twere not my ears that she defamed,” Shakespeare replied, with a grimace. And then his expression softened. “Why, Elizabeth, you are crying.”
“ Tis for Catherine,” she replied, her voice quavering. “Oh, I do not know how I can stand it! My heart is breaking!”
“There now,” Shakespeare said. “No shame in tears for a departed friend.”
He offered her his handkerchief. Unfortunately, the kindly intention of the gesture was overwhelmed by the sheer filthiness of the grimey handkerchief, which he had earlier used to wipe away some of the mud with which his face was still besmirched. Elizabeth simply stared at the muddy rag for a moment, then started to laugh, despite herself. Smythe and Shakespeare both joined in, and she put her arms around their waists as they staggered together around the house, toward the other side, helpless with laughter.
“Thank you,” Elizabeth said, as the wave of laughter subsided. “Thank you both for being such good friends.”
“Well, in truth, Elizabeth,” Shakespeare replied, “I fear I cannot claim that I was always a good friend to you.”
“How so? And why not?”
“I must admit that upon more than one occasion, I had told Tuck here that you would only bring him trouble.”
“And so I have,” Elizabeth replied.
“Do not say that, Elizabeth,” Smythe protested.
“ Tis naught but the truth, Tuck,” she replied, with a sigh. “From the day we first met at the theatre, I have only brought you trouble. And Will, too. I cannot forget that he was nearly killed on my account.”
“ Tis true that I was very nearly killed,” said Shakespeare, “but ‘twas not on your account, Elizabeth.”
“I know,” she said, “but neither you nor Tuck would ever have found yourselves placed in harm’s way had you not chosen to befriend and aid me. And now it has happened once again. You might have been killed or badly injured in that wreck, and twice now Tuck was nearly killed. And all on my account!”
“Well… when you put it that way, it does seem as if all the fault is yours,” said Shakespeare.
“Will! For God’s sake, she feels badly enough as things stand!”
“I spoke in jest,” Shakespeare replied. “So far as I can see, Elizabeth, if you were at fault in anything, ‘twas in going along with Catherine in this hare-brained scheme, but then you were only trying to help a friend and I cannot fault you in that. I would do no less for Tuck, nor Tuck for me. That misfortune has befallen is in some part, doubtless, due to Fate, but in part due also to the intervention of others. ‘Tis there the true blame lies, and ‘tis there that we must seek to place it.”