Read The Devil's Domain Online
Authors: Paul Doherty
Tags: #Mystery, #Fiction - Historical, #England/Great Britain, #14th Century
‘Well I never! Well I never!’
The coroner dropped some coins into the little man’s hand.
‘They want you to bless them, Brother.’
Athelstan lifted his hand in benediction. He could hardly believe this, it was just like a scene from some dream. But, as soon as he began the benediction, they all went down on one knee, heads bowed.
‘Give them a special blessing!’ Sir John urged.
‘I give you the blessing of St Francis,’ Athelstan intoned, keeping his face solemn. ‘It can only be given once a month and you are to receive it.’
They now went down on both knees. Athelstan felt a pang of compassion at the way they folded their little hands before them.
‘May the Christ Jesus show His face to you,’ he said. ‘May He smile at you. May He keep you safe all the days of your life.’ He sketched the sign of the cross in the air.
Sir John caught his wrist.
‘They also want an invitation,’ he said hoarsely.
‘Where to?’ Athelstan asked.
‘To St Erconwald’s.’
Athelstan’s heart sank but he kept his face creased in a smile.
‘They are moving house,’ Sir John continued. ‘They say they are unsafe here.’
‘Oh, don’t tell me, Sir John, they have chosen Southwark?’
Apparently, yes. They know one of your parishioners, Ranulf the rat-catcher. They have heard about his Guild.’
Athelstan knew what was coming next and his heart sank even further.
‘They like you, Athelstan. You see, they have formed their own Guild.’
‘And they want to make St Erconwald’s their church?’
‘Don’t refuse. They are very valuable, Brother, to me.’
‘You will be most welcome,’ Athelstan said.
Sir Galahad spoke again, fast. Athelstan knew a little of this patois: he recognised the words ‘house’ and ‘rat-catcher’.
‘Apparently,’ Sir John translated, ‘Brother Ranulf has used these in attics and cellars as well as tunnels to discover where the rats have their nests. He has found them a house not far from St Erconwald’s, on the corner of Cat Stall Alley.’
Athelstan smiled. ‘Oh, God help us, Sir John,’ he whispered as the scrimperers, chattering with excitement, disappeared up an alleyway. ‘St Erconwald’s is going to become . . .’
‘Are you going to say the refuge of all that is strange and wonderful?’
‘Precisely, Sir John, more like Noah’s Ark. Filled with all types of God’s creatures.’ He pushed back his cowl. ‘But what did the scrimperers want with you?’
‘Oh, they were telling me the gossip of the area: that little affray we saw in Cheapside this morning? Evidently agents of the Great Community of the Realm are now swarming in the city; their only difficulty is they have no arms.’
‘They seemed well equipped this morning.’
‘Oh, a few arrows, yes. I tell you, Brother. If the storm bursts, this city will see savage fighting. The Tower and the other fortresses along the Thames will be fortified. Many of the merchants like Thomas Parr will turn their houses into castles. The peasants may march on the city with their hoes and rakes, mattocks and old long bows but they’ll need more serious weapons.’
‘Couldn’t they transport them into the city beforehand?’
‘Every cart coming into the city is inspected by the market bailiffs and beadles, not to mention Gaunt’s legion of spies. The scrimperers also informed us,’ Sir John continued, walking slowly on, ‘that an unknown priest has been seen in the area.’
‘Is that strange?’
‘Priests do not come here. Whitefriars is dangerous even for those who live in it. Their leader, Sir Galahad,’ he went on, standing outside an old tavern and looking up at the fly-blown windows, ‘said he was in an alleyway about ten days ago. He was jostled, the man sketched a blessing and whispered his apologies in what Galahad recognised as Latin.’
‘What are you looking at, Sir John?’
‘I used to visit this ale-house when I was a lad. It was called the Mulberry Tree. Oh, it’s seen better days.’ He opened the door.
‘Sir John, if you need refreshment . . .’
‘No, Brother, just your company!’
They walked into the evil-smelling taproom, a dank, musty place. The windows were boarded and shuttered, a few oil lamps were lit, filling the room with a greasy smell. In their flickering light the customers who sat on overturned casks looked even more like shapes and shadows from a nightmare.
‘Good day everyone!’ Sir John bellowed. ‘And God bless you!’
Athelstan narrowed his eyes. He could make out the wine tuns on the counter, the small glow of the oven, a few beer barrels.
‘Piss off, Jack!’
‘Now that’s no way to talk to an old friend is it? Who’s that? My goodness, it’s one-eyed Isaiah! There are warrants out for you, my lad. An unsolved burglary in the Poultry?’
‘I am as innocent as an angel,’ the voice croaked back.
‘What do you want, Cranston?’
A figure came out of the shadows. Athelstan first thought it was a man but, in the light of one of the oil lamps, he realised that, despite the leather jacket, leggings and boots, it was a woman. Her stained cambric shirt, slightly too small, emphasised her swelling breasts and thick, fat neck. The face was grotesque: the nose split, a long red ugly gash from top to tip while dagger marks criss-crossed her face. A large pearl dangled on a silver chain from one ear lobe.
‘Now, now, Jack, you haven’t come to arrest old Isaiah, have you?’
He took one step back and bowed mockingly.
‘No, Mistress Vulpina, I have not. I wish a few words with you.’
‘Then you’d best come.’
She led them into a far corner of the taproom and up some narrow, rickety stairs. The chamber above was a stark contrast to the evil drinking den below. The windows on one side boasted coloured glass. The walls were painted white and hung with coloured cloths.
The floor was red-tiled, scrubbed clean, and the furniture looked as if it had been bought from a guild carpenter in Cheapside. Flowers grew in small containers and sachets, filled with perfume, were fixed to the wooden beams along the ceiling. Vulpina led them across to a far corner where chairs were neatly arranged round a polished, oval table. A silver salt cellar stood in the centre, shaped in the form of a castle. She offered them wine but Sir John, surprisingly, refused. Vulpina laughed throatily. In the full light Athelstan could see how, in former days, she must have been a beautiful woman. Her eyes were dark brown, large and lustrous even though they shifted restlessly from one place to another. She was unable to meet their gaze but moved about, touching the salt cellar, staring out of the window or pretending to listen to sounds from the taproom below.
‘You haven’t come for one-eyed Isaiah.’ She peered at Athelstan. ‘You are the Dominican?’ Her lips curled in a sneer. I have few priests among my customers.’
‘For ale and beer?’ Athelstan asked.
The sneer on Vulpina’s face faded.
‘What do you sell?’ Athelstan persisted.
Vulpina tugged nervously at a tuft of her cropped dark hair.
‘Everything.’
‘Including poisons?’ Cranston asked.
Vulpina sat back in her chair, hands cradled in her lap, and batted her eyelids.
‘Oh, Sir John,’ she cooed.
‘Don’t play “Hotpot Meg” with me! There’s not a herb that grows, not a potion which can be distilled, unknown to you.’ He gazed up at the ceiling. I wonder where you keep them, eh?’
Cranston got up and walked round the chamber. He stopped to inspect the wooden panelling placed against the far wall.
‘A veritable warren!’ he exclaimed. ‘Eh, Vulpina? When I was a lad, the Mulberry Tree was known for its secret passageways and hideouts. People could come and go in the dead of night and not be noticed. I don’t think it’s changed. Who has visited you recently, Vulpina?’
‘If I told you, Sir John, you’d only blush. Come and sit down. You have no warrant or licence to enter here.’
‘I could get one.’ He came back and lowered himself into the chair. ‘Now that would be a good day’s work, eh, Vulpina? Me and a dozen burly lads from the city. I wonder what we’d find here?’ He pulled across the silver salt cellar. ‘I am sure this once graced a house in Cheapside.’
Vulpina snatched it back.
‘What do you want, Cranston?’
‘I want you to tell me about poisons.’
‘Do you wish to buy one?’
‘Yes.’ Athelstan spoke up. ‘I want you to sell me a poison.’ He paused. ‘Which I can take but will do no harm. However, if I poured it into Sir John’s ale he would be dead within an hour.’
‘Impossible!’ she snorted.
‘You are sure?’
‘Brother, there’s nothing grown under the sun, of a noxious nature, which won’t harm everyone who takes it.’ She shrugged. ‘To be sure, some will affect you more than others: just like ale or wine will render one man sotted before another.’
‘And you know of no such poison?’ Athelstan persisted.
‘If I did, Brother, I would be very interested. Why do you ask?’
‘Hawkmere Manor,’ Sir John said.
The coroner had hit the mark; Vulpina tried to school her features but a shift to her eyes, a flicker of her tongue betrayed her.
‘I’ve heard its name, an old, gloomy place.’
‘It houses French prisoners,’ Sir John explained. ‘One of them was poisoned.’
‘Ah!’ Vulpina smiled, clicking her tongue noisily. ‘So you put the blame on old Vulpina? Sir John, I tell you the truth. I sell potions and philtres to lovelorn ladies, to men who may wish to get rid of a rival. I do not ask them who they are or where they come from. I am an apothecary.’
‘You are a killer! A red-handed assassin!’ He got to his feet and leaned over the table. ‘One day, when I have time and the necessary warrants, I’ll come back here.’ He went to the door. ‘We are going to leave this lovely place.’ He waited until Athelstan joined him. ‘And I don’t want to be followed. No fracas or sudden affray in the streets below. You’ve been no help, Vulpina, and I’ll remember that!’
‘Sir John!’
He walked back into the room.
‘You are here on Gaunt’s orders, aren’t you? You’re his messenger boy.’
‘I’m no one’s boy!’
Vulpina sneered, her head going back. She studied Sir John under half-closed lids. Athelstan repressed a shiver. He did not like this place: the more he stayed, the more certain he became that he was in the presence of real malevolence, that this woman was steeped in evil. He was used to the rapscallions and rogues of Southwark, people like Pig’s Arse and Godbless who stole and thieved because they had to. Vulpina, however, enjoyed the evil she distilled, revelling in the chaos and the sorrow it caused.
‘I’m waiting, Hotpot!’
‘You are Gaunt’s man.’ She clicked her tongue again and lifted her hand. Athelstan noticed that she wore a skin-tight leather gauntlet on her right hand. ‘I can give you a list of customers, Cranston!’ she hissed. ‘They’d include the so called mighty and good who would have little time for your nose-poking and querulous questions and that includes my Lord of Gaunt! Or rather his lovesick knight. What’s his name? Maltravers? I understand he’s the laughing-stock of the city. He’s taken a couple of French ships so he thinks he can slip between the sheets with Lady Angelica Parr, does he?’
‘What are you saying?’ Sir John took a step threateningly forward.
Vulpina lifted a whistle which hung on a silver cord round her neck.
‘Come on, Fat Jack!’ she taunted. ‘One blast from this and we’ll see how you and your priestly friend can cope with my legion of rats from below!’
He drew sword and dagger. Vulpina’s face lost some of its arrogance.
‘Go on!’ he said. ‘Let’s go at it, Vulpina. Heaven or hell, but you will be dead.’
The Queen of Poisons took a deep breath and let it out noisily.
‘Fine, fine, Sir John. I want you out of here and I don’t want your enmity.’ She let the whistle fall. ‘Gaunt’s man has been here.’
‘Maltravers?’
‘The same.’
‘What did he want?’
‘A love philtre.’
‘For what?’
‘I didn’t ask him. He also bought some poison. I asked him why. It was nothing exceptional, some henbane, a little belladonna.’
‘And did he give the reason for that?’
‘He said it was rats. In his own chamber. He asked for it as an afterthought.’ Vulpina smiled. ‘But I saw your quick-eyed Dominican friend, when you mentioned Hawkmere Manor. I’ve had visitors from there. Limbright for one, Sir Walter constantly comes here, takes a little digitalis he does, and a few other potions, St John’s wort for a start.’
Athelstan studied this woman and wondered how many secrets she held.
‘Oh, and the list goes on. The good physician Aspinall? He, too, is in my book.’ She realised what she had said and quickly tapped the side of her head. ‘My ledger is between my ears, Sir John. And, Sir John, that’s all I can tell you.’ Vulpina waggled her fingers in mock farewell.
‘Thank God we are out of there!’ Athelstan breathed as they walked back up the main alleyway out of Whitefriars. ‘Sir John, what a tangle of weeds we’ve got here.’
‘It’s a tangle all right.’ The coroner stopped and scratched his head. ‘We really should visit the Lady Angelica, but Brother . . .’
‘No need to apologise. My legs are tired and my belly’s empty. I want to go back and talk to Bonaventura.’
‘Not to mention Judas the goat!’
‘Thaddeus,’ Athelstan corrected him. ‘It’s Thaddeus now, Sir John. But, what about this?’
‘We frightened Vulpina. And so she threw us morsels. Don’t forget, my good friar: Lady Maude visits an apothecary up Cheapside and buys poisons for the rats in our cellars, but that doesn’t make her a murderess.’
‘Yes, but she doesn’t hide it, Sir John. Limbright, Maltravers and Aspinall have questions to answer.’
Sir John chewed on the corner of his lip then abruptly turned and stared down the alleyway.
‘What’s the matter, Sir John?’
‘Vulpina’s a murdering bitch, Athelstan, but she’s no fool.’ The coroner scratched his whiskers. ‘Earlier, when we stopped to talk to the scrimperers, I had the feeling of being followed. Now I am certain of it. A shadow down the lane moved a little too slowly.’
He took a step forward but Athelstan caught at his arm.