Read No Law in the Land: (Knights Templar 27) Online

Authors: Michael Jecks

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No Law in the Land: (Knights Templar 27) (8 page)

BOOK: No Law in the Land: (Knights Templar 27)
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He grunted and clambered to his feet. ‘I told you what the coroner said, woman. If we can only find the men who were responsible,
perhaps we can visit some sort of justice on them.’

‘Oh, aye. And while you’re doing that, what about me and Ant?’ she asked.

Her back was to him, but he could hear the softness of a sob in her voice as she spoke. She was tearing up leaves for the
pottage, and now he saw that she was treating them with more violence than usual. ‘Agnes, woman, stop that for a moment,’
he said, pulling on a shirt and walking to her. He slipped his arms about her waist, resting his head on her shoulder.

‘It’s all right for you, Bill Lark. You go off and search for these murderers, and you have a purpose in life, don’t you?
But what of me? I am expected to wait here until you come home, but what if you don’t? You can wander about the place, and
if you are hurt I have to nurse you. If you die, you rest – but what of us? We will be wasted. Me, a widow, Ant an orphan.
Would you see us destitute?’

‘Woman, woman, woman, calm yourself,’ he said soothingly as she sobbed, open mouthed but quiet. ‘Be easy. Look, I will not
be getting
myself into any trouble. I shall be as careful as I may be, I swear. But I want to know who it was killed those people. I
cannot have travellers slaughtered as they come past here, can I? Even the coroner wants to find these men. I’ve never heard
of a coroner so keen to do his job.’

She could not laugh with him. There had never been a murder like this before in their little parish. ‘You are only to be bailiff
until Michaelmas, Bill. Don’t go getting yourself killed between now and then just to find justice for people you never even
met!’

‘I won’t. Now, is there any bread? I want something to eat. I have to walk to Hoppon’s.’

‘Why won’t you listen to me? You are to wander about the place trying to find these men, but if you do, what then? If you
get them all, do you think they’ll see you walking up to them and greet you politely? Bill, you’re likely to be killed!’

‘I will be safe, don’t worry.’

‘Are you really so stubborn and stupid that you believe that?’ she had demanded, her eyes streaming.

It was an angry Bill Lark who left later. She had made him feel inadequate, as though he didn’t care about her and Ant, and
that wasn’t true. He adored them both. However, he had responsibilities to the vill as well. And nineteen people had been
killed here. He wasn’t happy to let that rest. If there was a possibility that he could help track them down, he should. In
a strange way, he felt that the coroner’s dedication to the truth had sparked his own.

The distance to Hoppon’s little holding was short enough. Bill walked there chewing his bread with a dry mouth.

His wife was right in one thing: for most crimes there was no need to find the actual guilty party. The most important thing
was that justice was seen to be exercised. In a little hamlet like this one, it was easy to find someone. Bill had heard at
the court at Oakhampton that a full third of all the men accused of crimes were strangers to the area. Some reckoned that
this was mere proof of the fact that strangers were unreliable, dangerous folk, and it was better that all foreigners should
be watched carefully. Others, like Bill, thought that it was more proof of the fact that when there was a harvest or the need
of a sturdy fellow to help with the ploughing, only a fool would seek to determine that the man best suited to the job was
sadly the one who must hang for
the felony he committed a while ago. If a good worker got drunk and accidentally killed a fellow in hot blood, it was better
that he remained for the good of the community than that he was arrested and slain. Better to find some other likely fellow
who was not so valuable to the hundred.

There was logic to this process. Logic and hard-headed rational thinking. It was the common sense of a small community that
still remembered the years of famine. Yet there was still a part of Bill’s soul that rebelled at the idea.

However, in this matter, he had a calm heart and a cool head. The men who waylaid that group of travellers were not from his
vill. Of that he was quite sure. There were not the people there who were capable of killing so many, and not enough who would
have been prepared to see children slaughtered. No, this was no local gang.

‘Hoppon! God give you a good day.’

‘God speed, Bailiff.’

‘The weather seems to have warmed a little.’

‘Aye. Could you drink a pot of ale?’

‘A cider would warm the heart more, I think.’

‘Ah! I have some just inside.’

Bill sat on a log near the door. Hoppon was lame. His leg was very badly crippled, but that did not affect his strength. He
tended to drag trunks whole to his door. Here he would slash the branches away, taking them indoors immediately, while the
trunks were left under the eaves to dry. Bill had seen seven here in a heap before now. When they were a full year old, they
would be inspected and roughly shaped, if they were needed for building, or hauled inside, where they would be set on the
fire, gradually being pushed into it as they burned.

Hoppon’s dog Tab came to Bill’s side and thrust his nose into his hand, lifting his head to make Bill’s hand fall down the
dog’s sleek skull and stroke him. ‘You’re no fool, eh, Tab?’

‘So, Bailiff,’ Hoppon said as he returned, a jug in his hand, cups balanced on top. He set down his crutch, hopped nearer
and sat back with a grunt. ‘What do you need?’

‘You know that, Hoppon. We still need to find the men who did it.’

‘Ach, what good will it do us? They won’t be punished, not if I’m
a judge. They’ll not suffer, but we will. We’ll have to pay for their crimes again, paying for the court to listen to the
case.’

‘Hoppon, you’re all alone up here, aren’t you?’ Bill said, looking about him as though for the first time.

‘You know I am.’

‘And I’m on the edge of the vill too. Even men who live with their families in the middle of Jacobstowe, they still have only
a few homesteads about them, eh?’

‘Aye. What of it?’

‘These men were happy enough to kill all those men and women. And the children, Hoppon.’ Bill’s eye lighted on Tab at his
side. The dog’s eyes showed their whites as he gazed up at the bailiff. ‘They even killed a bitch and her whelp. Do you think
you or I or any other could stand against such a force? No. So should we accept that, and wait until they come here and kill
you and me, maybe my little Ant, rape my Agnes, and knock Tab on the head? You think we ought to do that?’

Hoppon growled deep in his throat, but his eyes wouldn’t meet Bill’s. ‘You know that’d be wrong. I couldn’t let that happen.’

‘If we don’t stand up to these bastards, we may as well throw them all our families and belongings, Hoppon.’

Hoppon passed him a cider cup, and drank deeply from his own, still not meeting Bill’s gaze. ‘You think I’m a coward?’

‘No. You had your leg harmed in that fire, Hoppon. I know that well, just as do all the others here. Your courage isn’t doubted
by me, old friend.’

‘What do you want me to do? I didn’t see them. Nor did anyone.’ Hoppon was truculent, but Bill was unsure why. Unless he felt
guilt at not admitting to knowing something. That was something Bill felt he had to press.

‘Hoppon, I’ve been all the way to Oakhampton, asking all whether they heard anything that night. No one did, so they say.
These men didn’t go north past Jacobstowe itself. I’ve been west from the road too, but there’s no sign of people going that
way. The only place they could have gone is here. Right by you.’

‘You say I heard them?’

‘You are a good fellow. I know you as well as I know any man in this vill. And I know you have a dog there.’

‘What of him?’

‘He has the ears of a bat, Hoppon. He would hear a mouse fart in the woods.’

Hoppon grinned a little at that. ‘He is a good guard.’

‘How many were there, Hoppon? Which way did they go?’

Now Hoppon met Bill’s gaze at last. He glowered at him. ‘What’s the point, Bill? If we find out who they were, the most likely
thing is, you and me’ll be found hanging by our heels from the tallest oak in Abbeyford. That what you want? What of Agnes
then?’

‘And if we don’t, they’ll think they can kill, rob or rape any one of the folk about here. Do you want to live in fear all
your life, Hoppon?’

‘I’ve never lived in fear, Bill. Never will.’ And then he shook his head. ‘Ach, what’s the point? You’re determined to see
yourself killed, are you? Well, it was Tab. He woke up and woke me too. Heard something. I didn’t. Thought it was a ghost
at first. Then I heard the horse neigh. It came up from Abbeyford, then east up behind my place.’

‘How many?’

‘I’d reckon on fifteen or so. No more. But I heard them, true enough. There were weapons rattling all the way.’

‘And you know who led them?’

Hoppon nodded, but then he turned away. ‘But you’ll not hear the devil’s name from me.’

Chapter Six

Barnstaple, north coast of Devon

Roger had made good time in his march northwards.

In part he reckoned it was due to the grim realities of life on the road. The sight of the dead travellers had been a great
shock to him, and urged him on to greater efforts in order to reach his destination. The idea of being caught himself out
in the open was enough to lend greater urgency to his pace. There were too many who were willing to prey on men who passed
by, and Roger had no wish to be another victim.

The sights and sounds of the sea were like a triacleur’s potion to him. They invigorated him. The cries of the gulls, the
steady slap and wash of the waves, the odour of fish and seaweed, all hit him like a woman’s touch. They soothed and eased,
they caressed his very soul. Here, he thought, he could gain some sort of work to keep his body and spirit healthful.

But when he reached the town, it was soon clear that all his efforts were in vain. He had gone to the docks as soon as he
arrived, keeping hold of his meagre reserves with great care; if he could find a berth on a ship, he could save the money.
Any ship’s master would feed his sailors, and Roger would be able to hoard his cash.

It was not going to happen, though. He could understand that now, as he walked along the narrow streets of the port, jealously
eyeing the shop-boards. They all had an enticing array of goods for sale, and in the end he was forced to succumb to the urgent
demands of his belly. He bought an egg, and pierced both ends before sucking it dry. After that he felt an increased hunger,
though, rather than a diminution. He had to buy a small loaf of bread and a little cheese, which he ate sitting on the harbour
wall, staring out to sea. All the ships that arrived he watched avidly, and as soon as a ship was docked, he wandered over
to speak with the master. But each time he was eyed with suspicion,
and there would be a shaking of the head and sidelong glances until he left.

He knew what it was, of course. The sailors up here might well go as far as Chatham or London, by sailing about the bottom
of the land and up the Thames, but although they would travel far and wide, they were all wary of a man whose accent they
couldn’t recognise. Oh, a man from Ilfracombe, or one who’d been brought up by the sea at Bude, even, would be all right,
but Roger’s accent was from the south of the shire, and there was no one up here who would trust him. He was foreign, and
no shipmaster liked a foreigner on his ship. Foreigners were alien, and might bring bad luck to a voyage.

It was possible, he considered, that he might be able to get a post on another ship – perhaps a little fishing boat, or one
of the small ferries that plied their trade across the mouth of the river – but that was not what he wanted. He wished for
the escape that the broad, wide seas offered a man. Escape from the memories of war and disaster.

By the end of the second day, he was half ready to give up. His resources were reducing too quickly in this expensive town,
and if he kept on spending at this rate, he would soon have nothing. And then he’d have to resort to some other means of finding
money. Although how was a different matter. If he wanted to sail, he wondered whether he should find a larger port, a place
like Bristol, perhaps, where there was a real city and sailors travelling all around the country. Except there was no telling
whether he would be any more popular there than he had been here. He could go to London. There, so he had heard, the people
were used to men from all over. They had Dutchmen, Germans, French, even some Galicians and Savoyards. So long as he didn’t
end up on a Genoese slave galley, he should be able to find a position there. But London was hundreds of miles away.

He began to wonder whether he would be best off returning to Plymouth. Or maybe Dartmouth?

Third Sunday following the Feast of the Archangel Michael
*

Sampford Chapple

It had taken him more than a little while to find the tracks.

The idea that the men would have ridden past Hoppon’s house so close showed that either they were foolish, or they were supremely
confident in their power and safety. They had passed within a matter of yards of the house. It would have been a miracle if
Hoppon’s dog
hadn’t
started barking in defence.

Bill Lark bent as he followed the trail. It was his own fault, and he blamed himself entirely. The trail must have been fine
on the first days after the murders, and if he had been a little more diligent, he would have found it. There were plenty
of men, after all, and a few carts, and their tracks were clear enough now he was here. What had happened seemed to be that
they had ridden over a large swathe of brambles, and even where the carts had rolled, the brambles had sprung back up again
by the time he had gone to seek the trail. He’d simply ridden past without seeing the signs. Many would. Many had. But he
was angry with himself. He shouldn’t have done so. He prided himself on his abilities as a tracker and hunter, and now he
had failed so utterly on the first occasion when it mattered. And to lose the trail of so many men …

It was as he was remonstrating with himself that he saw another group of tracks. Here there were only one or two pairs of
boot prints and a solitary little cart, he reckoned. He could not be certain after so long. Yet although the marks joined
up with the main mess, coming straight from the travellers’ camp, they crossed over the main group of prints and continued
up towards the ancient track in the middle of the woods. That was interesting. That old path was known only by the most local
fellows. Rough now, overgrown, it was used as a private route by those who had a desire for stealth or secrecy.

No matter to him, though. The people who had gone up there were nothing to do with the raiders. Otherwise their paths would
converge rather than merely cross. Whoever they were, their route took them along the lane past Shilstone, then over to Swanstone,
and past it towards Sampford Courtenay.

He set off again. The trail here was easy to follow. There was more mud, and even where the grass had sprung up again, he
could see the imprints of hoofs and wheels. The way took him down into the valley, and then up the other side, heading almost
towards North Tawton, but then south-east to skirt around the town, and instead he found himself continuing eastwards on the
old lane towards Bow.

Here the way was more difficult. The lane was much more busy than the little byways he had followed up until now, and if it
weren’t for a chance meeting with an old peasant who lived right beside the road, he would have found the trail dead.

‘Master, God speed,’ he said when he saw the peasant at his garden.

‘God give you a good day,’ the old man said affably, his grizzled beard covering his face so effectively that Bill wasn’t
sure whether he smiled or not. He said his name was John Pasmere.

‘What is this place called, friend?’

‘Well, this is Itton Moor. Where do you want to go? No one comes here by choice!’

‘Maybe you can aid me. I am not lost, but I’m trying to follow the marks of some men who passed by here some nights ago,’
Bill said, and introduced himself.

‘Aye? You want the men who rode past a week ago, eh?’ Any apparent affability had fled. ‘Why so, master?’

‘I have good reasons, friend. Why?’

‘They came from near Bow. They often do.’

‘Who are they?’

The old man took his time to peer up the way Bill had come, then studied the landscape all about them before spitting into
the roadway. ‘Sir Robert of Traci, that’s who it is. Him and his men. Friend, you be warned. There’s no good will come of
seeking them. No good to you, leastways.’

Jacobstowe

Agnes set the baby down again and sighed as she put her hands on her hips and rubbed. This year was proving to be more challenging
than any other, and all because her husband had been made bailiff. It was infuriating.

She had always wanted him to get on, of course, and when he had
won the post she’d been delighted – for him and for the family. It meant recognition, and with that there might be some potential
for advancement in the future. He deserved it. They all did.

Agnes Lark was not the same as other peasants in the area. She had been born out of wedlock, and her mother flatly refused
to say who her father was, even when questioned in court. That must have been a daunting experience, with the lord and his
steward asking questions, and a clerk making sarcastic comments in the background all the while as he noted down the details
of her incontinence, but her mother would not divulge her secret, no matter what was said or threatened. So in the end
her
father was fined the leyrwite for the birth of Agnes outside of marriage.

It was a shameful affair, of course. But the intransigence of her mother had given Agnes the greatest gift: freedom. Whereas
her mother and all the rest of her family were villeins, no one could prove that Agnes was the daughter of a serf, and so
the law had to assume that she was the daughter of a free man. The law was clear that if there was any doubt, a child must
be assumed to be free, for there could be no greater injustice than to force a child born to a free man to a life of servility.
And Agnes was thus freed.

Bill Lark had been a man she saw occasionally. When he asked her to marry him the first time, it had shocked her, and she
had refused him curtly, but then he had renewed his suit, and as he asked her so often, it became easier for her to start
to think of him as a potential partner. And gradually her feelings for him began to slide into affection.

They had been married now for almost three years. The Ant was the first proof of their love, and she was sure that there would
be more before long. Hopefully they would be able to increase their lands and start to buy in more livestock. That was her
hope, because there was money to be made from the rich pastures about here. Bill wasn’t convinced yet, but Agnes was sure
that she’d be able to persuade him, given time.

Where was he, though? He had left early in the morning, saying he was going to try to follow the trail of the killers, and
she had no idea whether he would be home again today, or whether he was going to be missing for a day or more. It was maddening,
especially since there was all the clearing to do in the little vegetable plot and the
preparation of the soil for the next sowing, as well as looking after their baby.

Anthony hiccuped and she quickly picked him up, wiping his mouth and setting him over her shoulder while patting his back.
He was still after a few moments, and she could set him down again in the little crib Bill had made. She pulled the scraps
of material up over him, cooing softly at him and gentling him until he was asleep again.

Outside, the light was fading already. It was obvious enough that her husband was not going to return for some little while.
He would avoid travelling at night, same as any would. She would have to close everything up and just hope and pray that all
was well with him. She sighed, rubbed at her flanks one last time, and went outside to begin her nightly chores, putting the
door against the chicken’s box, seeing to the pigs in the pen, and making sure all was locked up before returning to her own
door, where she stood a moment staring out at the sun as it finally sank down behind the trees on the hills north and west.

She prayed that her man would be safe.

Barnstaple

It was no good. He had done his best. Now Roger couldn’t even remember the faces of all the men whom he had stopped and asked
for work. One, he recalled, had had an empty eye socket and a beard that was entirely white, apart from a darker stain at
the edges of his mouth. The sight was odd enough to make Roger stare at first, until he saw the old sailor pick up a rope
and begin to work on it, pausing only to thrust it into his mouth. The tar was the cause of the staining, he realised.

That was the only face he remembered now, as he stood on the harbour wall staring longingly out to sea. There was a slight
inshore breeze, which was throwing some spray into his face, and when he closed his eyes, he could sense it like icy darts
flung at his cheeks. The way the fresh wind tore at his clothing and tugged his hair made him feel alive again, as though
his feet were about to shift with the roll of the decking that should have been there.

But there was no decking. There was no ship. All the mariners he had spoken with had refused him with as much alacrity as
a master
rejecting the pleas of an abjurer. He was foreign, unwanted, distrusted. There was nothing else for him to do.

He threw one last glance out to sea, to the grey roiling waters with the white tops, and shivered as though someone had walked
over his grave. There was an odd sensation in his belly and bowels; it felt as though God had sent him a warning that he would
find no peace if he turned away and sought his fortune elsewhere.

‘What else would you have me do?’ he muttered. ‘Starve to death up here?’

With a firm rejection of the northern seas, he set his shoulders and began the long march southwards. Plymouth had been no
good to him, but perhaps he would be luckier in Dartmouth. He would try it.

Fourth Thursday after the Feast of the Archangel Michael
*

Exeter, Devon

They arrived at the gate in a flurry of noise and excitement as night was falling.

At first Simon and Sir Richard had been happy enough to keep at the gentle trot that had been enough to bring them over the
broad plains east of the city. Wolf, too, looked as though he would appreciate a more sedate promenade, ideally with opportunities
to investigate the various holes that dotted the hedges and walls about here, but Baldwin would have none of it.

‘We’ve made excellent time to get here so quickly,’ he declared, and lashed the flanks of his mount, making the beast rear.
‘Come, fellows! Let us hasten to my home and rest there!’

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