When Harry eventually sat up, a linen towel pressed to his pink face, he looked at me with concern.
"You appear troubled, Bruno. Worried Langworth might work out who you are?"
"We will have to be careful. It is a shock to find myself so near a close associate of the Howards. When you said Langworth was dangerous--did you mean violent?"
"Violent? No, he is too clever for that. But a man with money and powerful friends can be dangerous in other ways. Here--" Harry levered himself out of his chair and gestured to me to take his place. "Samuel, fetch some fresh water and see if you can make our guest look halfway respectable."
"Really, there's no need--"
"Don't quibble, Bruno. You have the look of a Spanish pirate at the moment. If you want to gain people's trust in Canterbury, you must tidy yourself up a little."
Samuel favoured me with one of his long, withering looks from under his brows as he set about pouring a fresh bowl of water and wiping the razor. When I was nervously seated with a cloth tied around my throat, Harry pulled up a chair.
"Langworth is not a godly man. Rumours follow him--of mistresses, an illegitimate child, misappropriation of cathedral funds--this is quite apart from his suspected loyalty to the Church of Rome. But there has never been enough evidence to deprive him of his position."
"Uh-huh." I could only look up at the ceiling as Samuel smoothed the soap on to my face with a light touch. I gripped the arms of the chair tightly nonetheless.
"A couple of years ago, one of the minor canons who worked with Langworth in the treasury thought he had discovered fraudulent accounts relating to leases of some of the local manors owned by the cathedral. He went so far as to accuse Langworth of corruption."
"And what happened to him?" I asked, through my teeth, knowing the story would not be good. Out of the corner of my eye, I caught the flash and wink of steel in the sunlight.
"Shortly after he made this accusation, one of the serving boys in the dean's kitchen accused this young canon of having improperly assaulted him. Another stable lad repeated a similar claim. Then the canon was arrested for brawling in the street outside a tavern--he insisted he was set upon by two thugs, but witnesses were found to say he had provoked a fight after losing money at dice. You see?"
I tried to nod, but Samuel's hand clamped tightly under my chin. His grip was surprisingly strong.
"Head still, if you would, sir," he murmured. I felt the kiss of the blade against my throat and flinched violently; an instinctive response, to my shame. I thought I heard Samuel snigger.
"You are skittish, Bruno," Harry observed. "Bad experience with barbers?"
"Bad experience with knives," I muttered, through clenched teeth.
The memory of a blade levelled at my throat back in Oxford still pulsed vividly when I closed my eyes.
"I had no idea philosophy was such a dangerous profession." He smiled. "In short, this young canon was deprived of his position in disgrace and his career in the church ended at a stroke. Since then no one has dared to repeat any such accusation against Langworth. For myself, I would appreciate it if your investigations here gave him a wide berth. I do not want his suspicions aroused against me--any more than they are already."
"Is he capable of murder?" The razor feathered gently across my cheek; there was no denying that Samuel had a deft touch, but still I felt painfully vulnerable, my throat exposed, his left hand gripping my chin, and all my muscles were held taut as wire.
"Sir Edward Kingsley, you mean? No, they were friends. In fact it was Langworth who found the body, and he was visibly distressed by it, as far as I could see. Besides, staving in a man's skull like that? I can't picture it. Too vulgar for a man like Langworth."
"He could have paid someone to do it, like he did with the tavern brawl. Friends can fall out, with violent consequences, if there is enough at stake. And what better way to avert suspicion than by finding the body with a show of grief? Besides, what was he doing alone in the crypt just now with no light? Surely--"
"You are allowing your imagination to run away, if I may say so." Harry heaved himself to his feet again and came to loom over me as I sat. "Perhaps you didn't hear clearly. You leave Langworth to me." He sighed. "I will do what I can to help you while you are here, but I haven't spent the last six years painstakingly watching him for you to compromise my work with rash suspicions. Is that clear?"
I lifted my head to look at him and caught the stern expression in his eyes. I was too dependent on Harry's goodwill and cooperation to make any argument; no one else in Canterbury could vouch for me or smooth my way while I tried to find Edward Kingsley's murderer. I nodded obediently,
before Samuel smothered the lower half of my face with a hot cloth, but I was already intrigued by Langworth's friendship with the murdered man. And what had he meant when he told me not to disturb the dead? Was that a weak joke, or a warning?
Samuel patted my face dry and held up a small looking glass so that I could approve his work. I pushed my hair back from my face, tilted my head from one side to the other, and wondered what Sophia would make of me now. She was right; I did look younger. I thanked Samuel and received only a sarcastic smirk in return.
"Dine with me tomorrow at noon," Harry said, as he saw me to the door. "You can let me know how your enquiries progress. If they are to involve prominent men in the city, it would be best for you to consult me first--I can advise you on sensitive matters and make introductions if necessary. You will be less suspicious if it becomes known in the town that you are my guest." He leaned on his stick and reached out with his right hand to shake mine. "But remember what I said, Bruno. Leave Langworth alone. Whatever ideas you may form about him, forget them. It would do no good and might well do great harm."
I bowed in reply, but said nothing. Behind Harry's shoulder, Samuel's eyes bored into me with silent resentment.
I
PAID MY
landlady at the Cheker fourpence extra to have a copper of hot water brought to my room--over the odds, but I was too tired and uncomfortable to haggle over the price. Once I had washed the grime of three days' travelling from my hair and body and changed my clothes, however, I felt my spirits revive. As the cathedral bells rang out across the city for Evensong, I made my way downstairs to the taproom to take supper by myself and reflect on the few snippets of information I had gathered since our arrival.
John Langworth: I had only to picture the canon treasurer, with his angular face and grave, scrutinising gaze, for a chill to creep along
my neck. I must be careful, I told myself; it would be all too easy for my enmity with Henry Howard to colour my judgement of Langworth, and I had been in danger of making such a mistake before. Was Langworth the reason Walsingham had insisted I use a false name? A known Catholic sympathiser, biding his time in Canterbury; if the French invasion which Henry Howard had been instrumental in plotting had succeeded last year, would Langworth have seized his opportunity, taken control of the cathedral, produced the corpse of Saint Thomas with a conjuror's flourish, and rallied the town in a Catholic rebellion to greet the invading forces? It was not impossible to imagine. But the plot had failed, Howard was in prison, and Langworth had been beaten to the position of Dean of Canterbury; perhaps he was no longer a serious threat. Even so, I could not help wondering if Harry was watching him closely enough. The old man had certainly seemed defensive at my arrival; perhaps that was behind his insistence that I should not stir up any trouble around Langworth. But the latter's friendship with Sir Edward Kingsley had piqued my interest. Was Langworth one of the powerful friends Sophia had mentioned, who had gathered at her late husband's home to whisper behind closed doors?
The thought of her brought another sharp pang of longing; I would miss her presence in the room that night, despite the torments it provoked. After only three days it had come to feel quite natural; the rise and fall of her breathing in the dark, our instinctive modesty as we averted our eyes or covered ourselves, self-consciously trying to avoid the accidental intimacies that come from sharing a small space at night. I imagined her lying under the rafters of the weavers' cottage and wondered if she would also miss me, but I had to close my eyes against the unbidden image of her by the light of a candle, turning the warmth of her smile on young Olivier and his pout.
Declining the entreaties of my landlady to stay and drink with her after my meal (it's not every inn would be so welcoming to foreigners, she assured me, though for herself it was a rare treat to encounter such a well-mannered and handsome gentleman), I gathered a full purse and
my bone-handled knife and set out into the dusty street. The heat of the day was abating as the sun slid down towards the horizon like a melted seal of crimson wax; at the corner of the street a group of children played a game that involved jumping over a crudely made grid scratched into the dirt. They fell silent as I passed and stared up at me with wide, unblinking eyes; one of the smaller ones crept behind an older child and peeped out with an expression very like awe.
"Where will I find the Three Tuns?" I called to the older boy.
He took a step back as I stopped, putting out a protective hand towards the little one clinging behind him. Mute, he pointed to his right.
"Watling Street." His voice came out barely more than a whisper.
"Thank you." I tossed him a penny; it landed in the dust at his feet, where he looked at it suspiciously for a moment before reaching down, never taking his eyes off me.
Their reaction puzzled me; did I look so unusual to them? I followed the direction of the boy's pointing finger, and turned back at the end of the street to find them still staring, rooted to the spot. Children like novelty, I told myself, as I continued around the corner. But I couldn't quite shake the uncomfortable sense that their response had been one of fear. Perhaps, even clean-shaven, I looked like one of the murdering Spanish pirates their mothers warned them about.
From the outside, the Three Tuns gave the impression that it had lost the will to keep up appearances; plaster cracked and peeled from the walls and the thatch of the roof suffered from threadbare patches. But the taproom was crowded, busy with the din of lively chatter, snatches of song, and the occasional shout of protest as one drinker knocked another in the crush; smoke hung thickly under the low beams of the ceiling, mixing with the yeasty scent of beer and warm bread. It was clearly not one of the better inns in the town, to judge by the dress and appearance of its customers, but its roughness held a certain appeal. I guessed it was the sort of place the law would knowingly overlook, where all manner of illicit activities might go on with a blind eye turned. There was an edge to the atmosphere, as if a fight might erupt at any moment.
In the corner farthest from the door, a group of young men were gathered around a long table playing cards. A pile of coins spilled across the board between them, glistening in a puddle of beer. I pushed through the drinkers standing around the serving hatch, fending off the attentions of a couple of bawds on the way, and found a spot where I could stand and observe the game alongside the handful of other onlookers. The six players had evidently been drinking for some time. I scanned their faces, waiting for the right moment.
A skinny young man with wild red hair knocked twice on the table and his fellows laid their cards faceup. A brief pause followed for calculation, then a cry went up from one curly-haired youth, who leaned forwards and scooped up the pile of coins. His friends cursed and thumped their fists on the table in a show of resentment as the red-haired boy gathered the cards, gave them a practised shuffle, and began to deal again. I was not a great connoisseur of cards--Sidney had tried to teach me without much success--but I knew enough to see that they were playing one-and-thirty, a reasonably simple game to follow. When each player had five cards, more coins were thrown into the middle, along with more spirited cursing and threats.
"If you keep on at this rate, Nick, you'll have lost all your father's legacy before you even get your hands on it," remarked the young man with the curly hair, who had won the last hand. The boy opposite him glanced up sharply, frowning. He was unremarkable to look at, with light brown hair and a sparse beard over a solid jaw, thick eyebrows that met in the middle, and a nose that had once been broken. There was an angry cast to his features, as if he held a grievance against anyone who so much as looked at him.
"Don't worry yourself about that, Charlie," he said, slurring his words. "There's plenty there to be going on with."
"It's not in your coffers yet, though," said the red-haired boy, examining his new cards. He seemed the most sober of the lot.
"It will be as soon as they catch that bitch and burn her."
"What if they don't?"
"Jesus Christ!" The boy called Nick slammed his pot down hard on the table; beer sloshed across the cards. "I said I'm sick of talking about it. Are you going to play or sit there all night gossiping like a laundry woman?"