Authors: The Medieval Murderers
Geoffrey had mentioned to the insolent gatekeeper that he was planning to visit a grieving house. The idea hadn't entered his head until he'd spoken the words. But now he found himself re-passing the lay cemetery on the far side of the priory church. The somnolence of an afternoon in mid-summer extended itself across the scene. The far shore of the river was obscured in the heat haze. There were no boats visible nor was anyone there to observe his progress towards the door of the Morton dwelling. He knocked but did so gently, mindful of the sick man within. The door was unfastened and gave slightly under his hand.
Chaucer peered around the corner. The fire smouldered in the centre, a thread of smoke twining up towards the hole in the roof. The interior was hot and airless. It smelled of the sickroom, and of something else besides. The large bed contained the diminished figure of Simon Morton. Of Mistress Morton and Will there was no sign.
Geoffrey pushed the door further inwards. He called out, but in a muted way. There was no word or movement from the bed. But then Simon was a sick man, a
feverous one. He must be asleep, still. Yet Geoffrey feared the worst. He advanced across the uneven floor of the chamber. As his eyes adjusted to the gloom, he could see Simon Morton lying on his back, outstretched beneath a thin, patched blanket. Whether he looked peaceful and at ease, as the dead are sometimes said to look, Geoffrey would have been unable to say. For the great bolster that he'd noticed earlier was now lying crosswise over Morton's face. That someone had deliberately placed it there and then held it down was shown by the deep indentations on either side. Chaucer wondered how long it would take a man to die under such circumstances. Not long, probably, given Morton's feeble state.
Geoffrey lifted the bolster off Simon Morton's face. It was heavy enough almost to stifle a man by its own weight. Morton's mouth gaped, but otherwise he did look as though he might have died in relative peace. Geoffrey was glad at that. He'd never seen Simon at close quarters, but he would have known him for John's brother by the prominent stripe of his eyebrows. The man had been murdered. There could be no question of suicide here.
Chaucer's first thought was that this deed might have been carried out by Susanna Morton. Easy enough to kill a weakened man, and with the nearest weapon to hand, the great bolster. Somehow this seemed too obvious an explanation, like the self-killing of Adam. Yet, if it had not been Mistress Morton (or her simple son), then it must have been an outsider. And if a stranger had come through the door, he surely ran the risk of being observed by someone from the other dwellings. There was no other way in.
But, Geoffrey suddenly noticed, there was another means of access to the Mortons'. In the back wall was a low entrance, covered by a piece of sacking that
shivered slightly in the afternoon air. He had to stoop to make his way outside. At the back of the house lay a strip of land, planted with a few vegetables wilting in the heat. Each dwelling in the row had a similar patch of ground, no doubt tended by the women while their menfolk were off working.
On Geoffrey's right hovered the bulk of the priory church. As he was gazing at the central tower, the bell rang. He had lost track of the canonical hours. There was no one in sight on the patches of land, which were roughly delineated from their neighbours by rows of sticks or a few rags of washing.
A raised path ran along the back, parallel to the line of dwellings. It would not have been difficult for someone who knew which house they were searching for to gain access from this side, once they'd checked that the coast was clear. The Morton house was easiest to find since it stood alone.
Chaucer was reluctant to enter the dead man's house again. He did not need to gaze on Simon's gaping mouth for a second time. Nor did he want to emerge by the front door like a regular visitor. Instead he walked past the flattened stems of leeks and battered cabbages and turned eastwards on to the path, with the priory at his back. He was gripped by the desire to get away from this place. He regretted that he'd ever come here. For peace and quiet, ha! There had been two â no, three â suspicious deaths in the course of a few hours. An air of gloom and menace seemed to hang over all.
The area beyond the houses was flat and empty, save for a few clumps of trees and the odd, even more ramshackle hut or hovel. The tide was coming in, and the river seemed to be on the verge of spilling over on to the adjoining land. Geoffrey wondered who had taken the decision to site the Cluniac house here all
those hundreds of years before. And why. Because of the remoteness of the spot? For its closeness to the river? Or was it for the great expanse of sky, which might inspire pious thoughts?
He saw two figures walking along the river foreshore. They were hand in hand. A young couple, he thought at first, but as they drew closer he recognized Mistress Morton and Will. The mother was leading the lad. They must have been out fishing, for the boy was carrying a kind of net attached to a pole, which he toted on his shoulder. In her other hand the mother was grasping a bucket, perhaps to hold whatever they'd caught or scavenged on the foreshore. Cockles or winkles perhaps. Tuneless sounds were borne through the air. The boy was singing.
They had not noticed Geoffrey Chaucer and he turned inland off the track, putting the rise of the ground between himself and the mother and son. He felt a pang at the thought of what they'd discover when they returned to the house. He debated for a moment warning them, but the fear of being the bearer of bad news for a second time that day â and the stronger fear that he might be implicated in Simon Morton's death (hadn't he been first on the scene following the murderer?) â held him back.
If he'd had the suspicion that the wife could have disposed of her husband by pressing the bolster over his face, then it was dispelled by what he'd just seen, mother and son returning innocently from a fishing expedition.
No woman could murder her husband and then go for a walk with her son, surely? He had thought Mistress Morton impatient with her Will, but here she was escorting him by the hand and he was singing.
Geoffrey felt guilty even for suspecting her. And with the guilt came anger. He determined he would get to
the bottom of whatever it was that was happening at Bermondsey Priory. He owed that to the woman who'd lost both husband and brother-in-law within the space of a few hours. He hastened back in the direction of the priory. He would squeeze the truth out of the one man he'd talked to who seemed to know more than he'd let on.
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âYou have one last chance to tell me what you know, Osbert. After that, I shall go to the justice.'
Chaucer spoke more in regret than with menace. He'd already hinted at his position at court and implied that he had the power to have Osbert summarily dealt with. He even gestured vaguely towards the other side of the river and dropped a reference to the white-towered castle which stood there, as if he had the authority to whisk Osbert across the water. He hadn't, of course, but how useful those connections with the Savoy Palace could be!
The two men were in a kind of cubbyhole off the outer gatehouse. There was an unglazed slit of a window, which did nothing to dispel the stale, sour air. This was where Osbert lived, as was shown not only by the smell but by the palliasse in one corner and a small chest in the other, doubtless containing a spare shirt and leggings. For a deputy gatekeeper in a religious house must look presentable. Not that Osbert would be entrusted with the task of ushering in important visitors. That would be left to Brother Philip, who'd welcomed Chaucer the previous day. But Osbert would do to receive â or turn away â the flotsam who always wash up at the doors of a great institution like the priory.
Now Chaucer was attempting to put the fear of God or of the law and the royal court into Osbert. It seemed to be working. He'd said nothing about the latest death, that of Simon Morton.
âCome on, man. Your story about Simon Morton wishing to do away with his brother was balderdash, wasn't it? There was no such plot.'
âI said only what I thought.'
âYou said what you'd like to think, maybe. But the truth is that you wanted Mistress Morton for yourself. You claimed you'd seen her and her husband's brother togetherâ'
âOh, I did, sir. See them, see them going at it hammer and tongs.'
âYou told her what you'd witnessed, didn't you? You said she'd seen you. You probably said that if she didn't, ah, do what you wanted, then you'd expose her.'
Osbert's grudging silence showed Geoffrey that he was on the right lines. He pressed home his advantage. âSo what was her reply?'
âShe laughed in my face. That woman has the dirtiest laugh this side of Gravesend, sir. Laughed and said that no one would believe me.'
âSo to get revenge on Mistress Morton or just to cause mischief, you insinuated that her husband had cooked up some plot to hire a killer for his brother. And then for good measure you said she might have done it.'
âInsinuated, sir? I don't understand the word.'
âBut you get my drift. You invented a plot where none existed.'
âThere is a plot, all right. I admit I made up what I said about Simon Morton. Fellow wouldn't hurt a fly. But there are funny goings-on here in the priory.'
âThere are funny goings-on everywhere. You're telling me nothing.'
âAsk Brother Michael.'
âThe cellarer?'
âThat's the one. He knows what's going on. All I know is that a few days ago I was in here and heard
the Morton brothers as they were passing through the gateway. They were arguing. Not about Mistress Morton but about something they'd found during their work. They stopped right outside that window there. I was lying on my bed and I heard it all.'
âWhat had they found?'
âA parchment with writing on. And something else of value. I couldn't tell what from their words. It might have been a brooch or a ring.'
Despite the stuffy air inside Osbert's room Geoffrey felt a chill. A ring? Like the one that still nestled in his pocket?
âWhat would a parchment mean to the masons? They wouldn't be able to read it.'
âNo, sir. But they knew it was important because it had a seal attached and it was old.'
âSo why were they arguing?'
âOver what to do with the items they'd dug up.'
âDug up? You're sure of that?'
âThey had been working in a cellar somewhere. They were having words about whether to keep what they'd found or to hand them over to one of the monks. Perhaps there'd be a reward, one of them said. It was John's voice, I think.'
âHow does Brother Michael come into this?'
âYou'd better ask him.'
âThat's what you were doing in his chamber today, wasn't it? You were going to see what you could get out of him.'
Osbert shrugged. âHe won't talk to me but he'll talk to a gentleman like you. All I know is that I saw Brother Michael talking to John and Simon Morton. Saw them talking in a quiet and private place one evening.'
âQuiet and private.'
âAs the grave. They were in the graveyard.'
Osbert nodded his head in the direction of the ceme
tery that accommodated the lay folk, the one beyond the main gate.
âYou were spying on them.'
âA man may be out and about for an evening stroll and see things. You can't blame his eyes for seeing.'
âWhat did his eyes see?'
âThey saw money change hands between the monk and the masons. A purse was given by him to them. Why, I ask myself? If you want to know more, you must ask Brother Michael.'
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In the event Brother Michael was willing enough to tell Geoffrey why he had been having surreptitious dealings with the Morton brothers. It seemed that the cellarer of the priory had decided that it was less dangerous to reveal things than to attempt further concealment, particularly after Geoffrey told him that Simon Morton had also died. He implied that it was from sickness and not murder. He hinted, too, that he'd heard of dealings between Michael and the dead masons. Hearing of the second death, Brother Michael crossed himself and sat in silence for a moment. But it was only when Chaucer produced the ring, given him by Will, that Michael sighed, leaned back in his chair and nodded. He reached for the ring, which Chaucer held out. It was perhaps not as splendid as any of the ornaments circling his own fingers, but the monk scrutinized it for a long time.
âWhere did you get this?'
âI believe it came from the vault beneath this place.'
âMost likely it did. It is old, like the testament.'
Geoffrey waited. He reckoned that if Brother Michael was going to say more, then he would do so unprompted. The cellarer held the ring between thumb and forefinger and peered through it, as if it were a keyhole.
âMost likely, this, too, belonged to Brother James.'
âBrother James? I have not met him but his name is familiar.'
âNo more have I met him, Master Chaucer, since Brother James has been dead two centuries and more. He was buried down there in the vault all those years ago. I had no idea he was there when I gave orders for the stonework to be made good. The masons discovered some bones when they went to repair the recesses in the wall. There were bones and a skull together with fragments of monkish garb, and evidently this ring, which I have not seen before. The Morton brothers must have kept it back. It doesn't matter now. The remains didn't matter either. They were what you might expect to uncover in any holy site which is old and which has lain undisturbed for centuries. I gave instructions that the bones and cloth fragments were to be resealed in the wall. What mattered was the testament which was found with the bones. From the seal and the signature we knew that it belonged to Brother James.'
âHe died violently?'
âI do not believe so. There were no marks of violence on the skull or other remains. And, in fact, his testament shows that he was expecting to die a natural death very shortly after he wrote it. He was more than seventy years old.'