Read The Lady Agnes Mystery, Volume 1 Online
Authors: Andrea Japp
N
icolas Florin studied the Comte Artus d'Authon, seated on the other side of his tiny desk, with an air of bored politeness.
âI regret, Seigneur, that since you are not a direct relative of Madame de Souarcy I cannot allow you to visit her. I assure you that it pains me not to be able to indulge you in this matter, but I am obliged to follow strict rules.'
Florin waited to see the effect of this barely concealed snub. Artus remained calm, contriving not to betray his simmering rage to the inquisitor. The evil rat was revelling in his power.
âI understand that Madame de Souarcy's cross-examination has already begun.'
âYes.'
âDo you suppose the trial will go on for long?'
âI fear it will, Seigneur Comte. But do not ask me any further details. The inquisitorial procedure, as you know, is shrouded in the utmost secrecy. We are most keen to preserve the honour and dignity of those brought before us until formal proof of their guilt has been established.'
âOh, I do not doubt for an instant that Madame de Souarcy's honour and dignity are of the utmost concern to you,' retorted Artus d'Authon.
Florin clasped his hands on his black robe and waited to see what the powerful lord would do next. Would he attempt to bribe him as he had during their first meeting? Would he threaten him or beg him? And he, Florin, which would he prefer? A combination of all three, of course.
But instead of this, Artus's fleshy lips parted in a strange smile, a smile that bared his teeth. Suddenly he stood up, much to the surprise of Florin, who automatically followed suit.
âSince, as I anticipated, my request has been in vain, I would not want to waste any more of your time. I therefore bid you goodbye.'
After the Comte had left, Florin sat brooding. What had in fact occurred? Why had the arrogant fool not begged him? Had he not received a stinging insult? He certainly felt the blood rush to his cheeks as if he had just been slapped. Who did that Comte think he was! So, he wanted to see his female, did he? Well, he should come back in a few days' time. Since she had failed to confess under cross-examination her torture would begin the very next day.
Seized by a murderous rage, he sent his desk flying. Stacks of files and notes lay scattered about the office. He shrieked:
âAgnan, come here this instant!'
The young clerk rushed in and gazed incredulously at the disarray. Florin growled ominously:
âDon't just stand there, you fool, pick it up!'
It was almost none when Francesco de Leone, who was standing in a porch, saw Nicolas Florin leave the Inquisition headquarters. The Dominican responded to the polite greetings of a few passers-by with an unassuming smile then turned into Rue de l'Arche. Leone pulled his cowl over his face and straightened the short, waisted peasant's tunic he was wearing underneath the thick leather apron of a smith. He fell in behind the inquisitor, maintaining a few yards' distance between them. A grubby-looking boy passed him by, then slowed down all of a sudden and sauntered along with his arms behind his back, gazing up at the
surrounding buildings. Leone wondered for a moment whether he wasn't up to some mischief.
The knight had no real plan â as he had assured Hermine after her performance as the wealthy Marguerite Galée, eager to send her father-in-law to a better world. He was not sure whether he was hoping to discover compromising evidence that would force Florin to back down or waiting for a situation to arise that would require killing him. Leone was aware that he was allowing himself to be guided by the other man's actions, which might or might not lead to his death. This was not a hypocritical attempt to evade responsibility. Leone had been responsible for many deaths, but had never chosen his victims. Florin, however undeserving, would enjoy what he had been unable to offer the others: a private judgement of God. If he were not meant to die, he would be spared. This was what the Hospitaller sincerely believed.
The inquisitor lengthened his stride, as though he were in a hurry to get somewhere. Perhaps, also, now that they were further away from the Inquisition headquarters he was no longer worried lest somebody question his haste. Curiously enough, the little beggar boy had also quickened his pace and was keeping the same distance between himself and Florin. Leone's soldierly instinct alerted him.
Florin turned right and walked up towards Rue des Petites-Poteries. All of a sudden, he slipped into Rue du Croc. Leone hurried after him but by the time he reached the cobbler's shop on the corner, Florin had vanished and he found himself face to face with the little rascal who was looking equally bemused. Just as the boy was about to run off, Leone leapt forward and grabbed him by the tunic.
âWho are you following?'
âWho, me? Nobody, I swear!'
The knight took hold of the boy's ear and, leaning over, whispered:
âYou were following the Dominican, weren't you? I'm a man of little patience so don't lie to me. Who sent you?'
The boy panicked. He certainly didn't look very friendly, this smith. He tried unsuccessfully to wriggle free from his grasp.
âLet go of me!' the boy protested, trembling with fear.
Putting on a threatening voice, Leone said:
âIf you tell me the truth, I'll give you three silver coins and let you go. However, if you continue lying to me, I'll give you a good thrashing and throw you in the River Sarthe.'
The little urchin's eyes filled with tears at the thought, but he replied astutely:
âAnd why should I believe a smith when he says he has three silver coins? I've already got one from my client and he promised me another when I tell him what he wants to know, but he looks like a real lord.'
Without letting go of the boy's ear, Leone reached into his purse with his other hand and took out three coins.
âAll right,' the child muttered. âBut let go of my ear. You're hurting me, you brute.'
âIf you attempt to run off â¦'
The child interrupted him, shrugging his shoulders:
âWhy would I choose a dip in the Sarthe when I can earn proper money?'
Leone stifled a grin and released his ear, but remained ready to pounce at the boy's slightest movement.
âWho paid you to spy?' Leone asked him again.
âHe offered me two silver coins to follow the Dominican.'
âDo you know his name?'
âNo.'
âWhat did he look like?'
âVery tall. A big man, bigger than you. And dark, with dark eyes, too. He wears his hair shoulder-length and dresses in fine clothes and carries a sword. A powerful man by the looks of him. I'd say he's a baron, possibly even a count.'
âWhat age?'
âA lot older than you.'
âWhat exactly did he ask you to do?'
âTo follow the inquisitor without being seen and find out where he lives.'
What was Artus d'Authon doing mixed up in this affair, for Leone was almost certain it was he? His aunt Ãleusie de Beaufort had alluded briefly to Agnès de Souarcy's meeting with her overlord just before the young woman's arrest.
âWhere are you supposed to meet him?'
âAt a tavern called La Jument-Rouge, it's â¦'
âI know where it is.'
Leone handed the boy the coins, which quickly disappeared under his tunic.
âI advise you not to go back and warn your client in order to try to get the other silver coin or I'll â¦'
âI know ⦠you'll throw me in the Sarthe!'
The boy turned on his heel and vanished before Leone had decided what to do next.
Was Artus d'Authon a friend or foe? Now was not the time to worry about that.
Which of the buildings had Nicolas Florin slipped into? Leone did not believe that he had discovered he was being followed. He could do nothing but wait, crouched in the shadow of a nearby wall. Sooner or later the man would have to come out again.
A good half-hour went by, during which the knight managed to empty his mind of the endless calculations, theories, questions. Not thinking is a strenuous and exhausting exercise for a man of thought. Accepting nothingness, inviting it, becoming the void, is to allow oneself to experience infinity. Time then passes in a random way. The little barefoot girl who lifts her thick cotton dress, tied with a piece of string at the waist, and squats in the gutter to empty her bladder as she stares at you fills the whole universe. How much time passed before she stood up and ran off? A little ball of hemp blown across the cobblestones comes to a stop then rolls on for a few feet
+
before stopping again then rolling again, until it reaches a wall where somebody's foot treads on it and carries it who knows where; for a few split seconds that ball becomes the most important thing in the world.
Francesco de Leone almost didn't recognise the beautiful Nicolas. He cut a dashing figure. He was without question one of the finest-looking creatures Leone had ever seen. His willowy body was perfectly suited to lay clothes. Indeed, it appeared Florin was well acquainted with the latest town fashions. He had swapped the black habit and long white cape of the Dominicans for a silk shirt, on top of which he wore a short tunic that set off his dark-purple leggings and breeches. Elegant Parisians referred to these as
hauts-de-chausses
and
bas-de-chausses
. Over his tunic he wore a bodice lavishly embroidered with gold thread, and a jacket of fine dark-green wool gathered at the waist by a belt covered in gold work and with slits in the sleeves to allow a glimpse of the bodice. The whole was topped off by a greatcoat, open at the front and sides, that would have been the envy of the finest lords, and a hood of a softer green than the jacket, which concealed his tonsure, and whose pointed end he wore hanging down in the style of the young dandies at court.
Francesco de Leone recalled the clothes they were given when they joined the Hospitaller order. Besides bed and table linen they received two shirts, two pairs of leggings, two pairs of breeches, a bodice, a fur-trimmed jacket and two coats, one with a fur lining for winter, as well as a cape and a belted tunic coat. Only when the clothes or linen became threadbare did they take them to the administrator, who would duly replace them. In exchange they handed over their fortune to the order, and in Francesco's case this had been a substantial one inherited from his mother. And yet he had no doubt that the bequest would have pleased the remarkable woman who had given birth to him. As for him, leaving behind his worldly goods had been such an immense relief that he had spent the whole night following this final rite of passage wide awake and in a state of bliss. Clearly the inquisitor did not share his fondness for self-denial.
Claire. As he grew older so the memory of his mother seemed to grow clearer. Her elder sister, Ãleusie de Beaufort, resembled her, though she was less pretty, less vivacious. Small things â a made-up poem, a beautiful flower, a child's words, the unusual colour of a ribbon â would elicit his mother's ready laugh. And yet that pale and lofty brow concealed such intelligence and wisdom, some of which Leone liked to believe he had inherited. Added to this was her intuition, which Leone had not been endowed with. He saw in this the price he had to pay for his physical strength and masculinity. She had âsensed' the twisting currents sweeping along all their lives long before they became apparent. As a small boy Leone had been convinced that this mysterious gift came from the angels. Had she also sensed her own slaughter and that of her daughter at Saint-Jean-d'Acre? No. It was unthinkable, for if she had had such a premonition, she would have escaped in time with her child.
There was so much he did not know about that beautiful, noble woman who had held him in her arms and called him âher brave knight of the white cross' when he was only five or six years old. Had she already known that he would one day join the Hospitaller order? How was that possible? Had they not simply been loving words from a mother to her son?
Lost in such sweet, painful memories, Leone realised just in time that he was stalking his prey too closely, and running the risk of the other man turning round and seeing him. Florin must not be able to recognise him later on. He slowed his pace.
Did the inquisitor rent a bachelor's apartment in this well-to-do, discreet part of town where he could transform himself at his leisure and perhaps even keep the company of ladies?
He had lined his purse well with the blood of others.
Nicolas Florin was hurrying now. He entered one of the neighbourhoods where the passers-by leave as dusk sets in and the peaceable atmosphere dissolves as another type of creature comes to life. The modest corbelled dwellings appeared in places to form arches above the alleyways. The front of each building was occupied by stalls or workshops. Leone began to notice women whose appearance betrayed their calling*, as required by the Church and civic authorities. Their gaudy, low-cut dresses and the absence of the type of jewellery and belts worn by burghers' wives or noblewomen, which they were prohibited from wearing, marked them out as purveyors of the flesh. Leone deduced that there was a bordel nearby, as in the big cities.
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A strumpet, scarcely older than fourteen, approached Florin. He sized her up from head to toe as he would a horse. The knight flattened himself in a doorway and observed the transaction taking place a few yards away, hardly daring to imagine what the poor girl would be put through in exchange for a few paltry
coins, for he was certain that Florin's sexual preferences would also entail violence and torture. They finally moved away, disappearing into a hemp-and-linen draper's stall that must have fronted a house of ill repute.
A good half-hour passed before the inquisitor re-emerged alone, wearing a look of sly satisfaction, and Leone wondered whether the poor girl was still able to stand. The pimps who supplied the wine and candles never interfered with their customers' antics, however abusive, so long as they got their money.