Air of Treason, An: A Sir Robert Carey Mystery (Sir Robert Carey Mysteries) (35 page)

BOOK: Air of Treason, An: A Sir Robert Carey Mystery (Sir Robert Carey Mysteries)
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They walked their horses together up a street with a roof over it that was high enough so they didn’t need to dismount. They were tactfully escorted by Hunsdon’s liverymen, to Trinity College whatever that was, tucked away on the other side of a wide street that must be taking the place of a moat for opposite was the patched and pierced old northern wall of the city. Oxford was an interesting place, full of huge archways and pictures made of canvas and behind them were good sturdy houses and a number of places that looked like monasteries with high walls and gatehouses like mansions. Quite defensible, for a wonder. However, now that he’d seen London, Dodd wasn’t easily impressed.

As they went past the gate into the courtyard, Carey spoke quietly to the porter and Dodd heard the sound of the gate they had come through being locked and barred. Jeronimo looked up at him. “Do not arrest me when the men can see,” he said quietly. “Wait, settle them. I give you and Don Roberto my parole that I will not try escape until I have seen the Queen.”

The business was done quickly. The other men were shown into the college hall to eat a late breakfast from the remains left by Hunsdon’s servants. Jeronimo waited as four large liverymen appeared and surrounded him.

He deftly unbuckled his swordbelt one-handed and handed it to Dodd who took it grimly.

“I surrender to you,
Señor
Dodd,” he said. “I ask only that I may speak to the Queen.”

“With all due respect, Don Jeronimo,” Carey said, “I don’t think she will agree.”

“She will, Señor,” said Jeronimo, reaching with his only hand into his doublet pocket and taking out something quite small, wrapped in old linen. Carey took it and opened it. Dodd could just glimpse it was a richly embroidered woman’s kid glove, badly stained with brown and with one of the fingers cut off. He could also see the breath stop in Carey’s throat as he took it.

Carey’s eyes were a bright cold blue as he stared straight at Jeronimo for a long silent minute.

Jeronimo inclined his head. “If you give her that, Señor, she will see me. If you do not…” He shrugged elaborately. “I will die soon in any case and then she will never…know something she has wanted to know for many years.” He smiled gently, his dark hawk of a face as arrogant as Carey’s. “In the end, it will not matter, all will be as God decides.”

Carey tucked the little package into his own doublet pocket, holding the Spaniard’s gaze for another minute, something unseen in the air between them. Then Carey turned and issued a blizzard of orders.

Kat had woken up while all of this was going on and watched with frank fascination, her pointed chin on her arms on the side of the cart.

“So that’s why he helped you, was it?” she asked without surprise. “I did wonder.”

Jeronimo went quietly and Dodd made introductions to Carey who smiled and said nothing about yet another waif added to his father’s household. The goats were inspected and approved of by the Steward, although the young billy kid was likely to meet his inevitable fate soon.

And the inevitable time came when Dodd had to get down from his horse again. He sternly refused a litter but took a dismounting block and tried not to wince. He still couldn’t put his boots on and so he followed a servant to one of the downstairs rooms usually lived in by scholars. When Carey offered him a shoulder, he took it and soon found himself seated on the side of a comfortable half-tester bed, next to a small fire in the hearth, his feet soaking in cool salted water with dried comfrey and allheal in it, which stung like the devil, and drinking a large jack of excellent ale. The chamber gave onto a small parlour that had another chamber leading off it where there was a pile of packs and Carey’s Court suit hanging up on the wall. Dodd started to explain to him what had been going on but when he started yawning every other word and losing track, Carey called in the barber surgeon who had been sent to bandage Dodd’s feet.

“The story can wait. I’ll be riding out with my father immediately,” he said, “Get some sleep, Henry and…by God, I’m pleased to see your miserable face again!”

Carey clapped Dodd on the back and went through the parlour to clatter down the stairs. The barber surgeon peeled off the clouts, cleared out a lot of thorns and a sharp stone splinter while Dodd drank more ale and wished the man in hell, then put clean linen socks on him and bowed himself out.

Dodd found a decent linen shirt waiting for him on the bed and was pleased to put it on rather than the filthy hemp shirt and woollen breeches although no doubt the lice would be sorry. He was too tired to be hungry, ignored the platter of pork pie, bread and cheese and finished the contents of the jug of ale. He fell into bed, asleep almost before his head hit the pillow.

His last thought was a question as to what the hell was it Carey had been up to while Dodd had been busy, which had made him look distinctly pale and unhealthy, coupled with a forlorn hope that he might let Dodd sleep for a couple of days at least.

Wednesday 20th September 1592,
late afternoon

Sunset was coming through the small glass window as Dodd woke because someone had just come into his room.

Yes, it was Carey. Dodd knew he hadn’t slept nearly long enough, but he didn’t see the point of complaining about it. Carey’s face was unreadable, closed down into the affable, slightly stupid-looking mask he wore when he played primero for high stakes.

“Ay,” sighed Dodd, “what now?”

“Sergeant, I hate to have to tell you this but we absolutely must visit the stews.”

“Eh?”

It turned out to be one of the strangest experiences of Dodd’s life and it was only a pity he was too tired and hungry to enjoy it properly. He had to get dressed again in a respectable suit of wool that Carey said was borrowed from the Under-steward and apologised for it being well out of fashion as it had been handed on from Carey’s father. Dodd didn’t care, at least it wasn’t as tight and uncomfortable as Carey’s previous loan, now being worn by Captain Leigh in jail.

Dodd had leather slippers to put on and low pattens to save them from the disgraceful cobbles and he wobbled painfully across Broad Street and down a tiny alley with the sign of a magpie hanging on an alehouse at the corner. Did none of the scholars here know that horse muck was good for gardens and making gunpowder?

They went into a little house that smelled of woodsmoke and was full of sly-eyed women with very low-cut bodices, but Carey swept straight past them, for a wonder.

The next thing was shocking. They were in a room full of shelves with a tiled floor and Carey proceeded to strip off all his clothes as if he were about to go for a swim, even his shirt. An ancient attendant folded his doublet and hose and handed him a linen cloth which he wrapped around his hips like someone in an old religious picture. Then he put on a new pair of wooden pattens from a row by the wall. Firmly ramming down his multiple suspicions and wondering if he was in fact delirious and hallucinating, Dodd did the same and clopped after Carey along floors that got hotter and hotter until they were in a small room with a brazier in it. Several other men were sitting about on wooden benches—old men, mainly, with grey beards, wrinkled stomachs and twiglike arms, a few spotty youths like peeled willow wands and with a tendency to peer.

The heat from the brazier was fierce and Dodd could feel the sweat popping out all over him.

“We never got round to doing this in London, which is a pity as they’re much better there,” Carey said conversationally, as if it was the most natural thing in the world to take off his linen cloth, fold it and sit on the edge of the bench on it. He stretched his legs negligently in front of him, peering at one of the white scars. “This will do.”

“Ehm…whit the…why…?”

Carey didn’t meet his eyes. “Sovereign for bruises and damage generally, helps sweat out poisons and so on and so forth.”

Dodd had never heard of a medical treatment that required you to get this hot though he had heard of some alchemists curing the French pox with mercury and sweating.

“Och,” he said, as Carey had done so he didn’t burn his arse on the planks and tried not to fight the heat as the sweat started dripping off him in rivers. You had to admit it was sort of relaxing.

“We’re lucky it’s the men’s day today,” Carey said. “Otherwise we’d have had to pollute the Isis.”

The older men and youths left a little later and Carey opened his eyes and smiled lazily at Dodd who was dozing where he sat.

“Now then,” he said, “what have you been up to, Sergeant, apart from recruiting a sorry pack of my lord Essex’s deserters for the Carlisle castle guard?”

“Ay,” Dodd said, sticking his jaw out, “but they are nae related to onybody, are they? And they can shape up or die.”

Carey laughed. Dodd told him the story. Carey was a good audience, exclaiming with anger at Dodd being ambushed, laughing at his description of Kat.

“That’s the child in the cart?”

“Ay. How is she?”

“Still asleep as far as I know, with the wife of the Trinity College cook looking after her. Last I heard she was insisting she had to stay with you.”

Dodd carried on with his tale until he brought it to the death of Harry Hunks and his own decision to leave the ill-starred monastery.

“If ye ask him, d’ye think the Earl of Essex will pay his men at last?”

Carey’s expression became unhappy and he looked away.

“Ay, well, their stupid captain’s plan was tae get into the procession in their stupid tangerine and white rags and ask him in public why he betrayed them?”

“I gathered something of the sort from the unfortunate Captain Leigh. It would not have been allowed, believe me.”

Dodd said nothing although he suspected that with the number of alleyways and passages in Oxford town and some men who weren’t too fussy about what they did, it might be easier than Carey thought.

“I dinna think they expected more than tae humiliate him and perhaps get the Queen to pay them instead.”

Carey made a non-committal grunt.

Dodd sat up, despite the puddle of sweat on the floor under him and the way he was starting to get dizzy with the heat.

“Sir,” he said sternly, “they should be paid. They ainly went wi’ the Earl because they believed him. The maist of them are not fighting men, or they werenae, they was younger sons of farmers that wanted adventure and found that fighting wisnae as he painted it. And the maist o’ them died and not one o’ them was paid aught but promises.”

“There are plenty of others like them,” Carey pointed out with typical aristocratic callousness.

“Ay, sir,” said Dodd, clenching his jaw with outrage. “And the more shame to the lairds for it. None o’ the Grahams or the Armstrongs or the Kerrs would do the like. Take a man that wis happy at the plough and make a soldier of him and then leave him to die or rot or starve.”

“How’s it different on the Borders?”

This showed a Courtier’s bloody ignorance, in Dodd’s opinion.

“I’ve niver bin aught but a fighter,” he told at Carey. “Raised tae it. Ay, ma mother sent me to learn ma letters wi’ the Reverend Gilpin but I could back a horse and shoot a bow long before. I killed ma first man when I wis nine, in the Rising of the Northern Earls…”

“So did I,” said Carey, softly enough that Dodd nearly didn’t hear it.

“Ay?” he said, surprised and a little impressed. “Well, if I was to take some foolish notion in ma heid and gang oot tae the Low Countries or France or the like and sell my sword, it wouldnae be sae great a change for me, I wouldnae be made different, ye ken.” He couldn’t quite catch the words to pack his anger in, the way it grated on him how the young men who had turned sturdy beggars and robbers had been betrayed, even though they’d beaten him up in the quiet Oxfordshire forest. How he knew they would mostly find it hard—bordering impossible—to return to their villages, even if they got their back pay. “There’s a difference, and it’s…Och. Ye’d ken if ye kenned.”

Carey stood up and mopped himself with the cloth, then tied it round his hips again. “Yes,” he said quietly, “It’s like hunting dogs. Once you’ve hunted with a dog, he never can really go back to being nothing but a lapdog. There’s always something of the wolf in him afterwards.”

It was a good way of putting it. “Ay,” said Dodd, standing up himself and wincing, some of his deeper cuts were bleeding into the wooden sandals. “Like a sheepdog if it goes wrong. Once it’s tasted sheep, ye must hunt wi’ it or kill it, ye canna herd sheep wi’ it again. So that’s what’s been done to the lads, they dinna ken themselves but I doubt if more than one or two of them can go back tae being day labourers or herdsmen or farmers.”

“No,” said Carey.

“Will ye pay ’em?”

“I can’t give them their backpay. If they want to come north, they might be useful and then I’ll find a way to pay them.”

Dodd knew that was the best he was going to get and he knew he trusted the Courtier more than the high and mighty Earl of Essex.

They went through to the next room which was even hotter and full of clouds of steam from idiots like Carey sprinkling water on the white hot coals in the brazier. Dodd couldn’t stand it for more than a few minutes, scraping himself with a blunt bronze blade. He did Carey’s back and Carey did his which felt odd but also pleasant, like somebody scratching your back for you after you’d been wearing a jack for a couple of days. Which thought took him on to thinking of his wife and then he had to put his towel back around his hips and think of other things before he embarrassed himself.

“We might have time for a girl,” Carey said, deadpan.

“I wis thinking o’ me wife,” Dodd said with dignity. It was the truth too so Carey’s cynical laugh was very annoying. Then they were out in the dusky garden and going into a kind of tent lit by candles. Odd. There was a glint of green water—it covered a big square pond like a fish tank.

And then the next thing was that the bloody Courtier had pushed Dodd into the fish pond with an almighty shove. The cold water made him gasp and he dog-paddled to the surface again filled with vengeance just in time to get a faceful of spray as Carey jumped in next to him. He coughed and spluttered and trod water as Carey splashed past on his back. The wooden pattens were somewhere at the bottom.

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