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Authors: Michael Jecks

The Traitor of St. Giles (31 page)

BOOK: The Traitor of St. Giles
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‘Why go through the priest?’ pressed Baldwin.

‘Father Abraham is fond of winning rewards here as well as in Heaven.’

Baldwin nodded and motioned for him to continue.

‘The Father agreed to ensure that Dyne was released to go and seek exile. It was all Andrew and I wanted. We were there when he was freed, with a few men from alehouses, but the Coroner stopped us killing him there and then. He said we’d have to leave him alone, the hypocrite! All he meant was, we’d have to wait until he was outside the town.’

‘And as soon as he’d gone, you rode off after him,’ Simon continued.

‘Yes. We gave him a while, then cantered down the road to Exeter. And there he was. We almost killed him on the spot. It would’ve been so easy, just a knife and that was that, but a group of fools were on the road and could see us. I pulled Andrew off him, and forced him to keep on going. We went down some way, keeping an eye on the travellers wending their way to the Fair. As soon as there was a good gap, we cantered on a way. It was late, and I think most people had decided to halt at the last inn, so we had a clear field.

‘We rode back but Dyne had left the road. We came up to Sir Gilbert and his man, but we’d agreed the night before that we shouldn’t admit to knowing each other. So I simply said we were hunting a felon, and while I spoke William pointed to where he’d just seen a face. It was all we needed.’

‘It could have been anyone,’ pointed out Simon. Baldwin was silent.

‘Yes, it could,’ agreed Nicholas. ‘But we were sure it was him, and we were right. We rode straight for the point William had indicated, and then on. After a while we came to a glade, and there we separated. Andrew blundered off right, I kept on straight ahead.

‘It was hard to gauge how long it was since Dyne saw us, so I couldn’t tell how far he might have run. And with the gathering dusk it became hard to see. I knew we’d missed him when we came to a road. We turned back into the woods and that was where we met my sister.

‘She screamed at the sight of us. Probably thought we were outlaws! I calmed her and she agreed to go home. Meanwhile we turned back into the woods. The horses didn’t like it, I can tell you. Neither did I, for riding like that, when you have little idea what might be underfoot, is damned dangerous, and a knight should always look to his mount. Branches threatened to knock us from our saddles.’

‘I know,’ said Simon ruefully. Baldwin didn’t laugh but peered all the more intently at Nicholas.

‘Some short way in, there was a loud crashing, and I saw Sir Gilbert riding towards me. He told me that if this was a genuine felon it was his duty to aid us. Well, I thanked him and he rode off to my left, widening our area still further.’

Baldwin was still peering intently at him. ‘How long did it take you to find the fellow?’

‘I couldn’t say. Andrew found him. He told me he rode back some way without luck but when the moon came out, he lurched into a clearing and there before him was Dyne. Andrew spurred round to cut him off, and shouted for me, but I didn’t hear at first, what with the sound of twigs breaking and so on. So Andrew blocked his escape and bellowed for me.’

‘What did you find when you got there?’

‘The boy was on the ground and Andrew was kicking him.’

‘Poor devil,’ Baldwin muttered.

‘It wasn’t your niece he raped and strangled,’ Nicholas said hotly. ‘I picked him up by the shoulders and held him kneeling. Andrew took up his sword. I think the boy realised what was happening, because he gave an awful, shrill scream as Andrew swung, and . . . well, that was that.’

‘There is one thing that I am convinced of, then,’ Baldwin said.

‘That he was far from the road when we saw him? I tell you this, he was breaking the law and his oath long before we saw him.’

‘Not that,’ Baldwin said irritably, resting a hand on his belly. ‘I meant Sir Gilbert must already have hidden his money somewhere if he was prepared to leave his camp in William’s hands.’

Chapter Twenty-Three
 

At her house Cecily Sherman walked sedately into her hall. Inside were several men with their wives, all gripping pots of wine and talking. Cecily smiled at faces she recognised and inclined her head to others when they made her welcome. It was easy for her to be friendly with several of the men here, for two of them had been her lovers and one in particular she had earmarked for when Harlewin lost his lustre.

Only one man appeared to be unimpressed with her entrance. John, her husband, stood with his back to the fire and glowered as she walked in. She approached him with her head a little downcast and halted before him, curtseying. ‘My Lord.’

‘I was expecting you earlier,’ he grated. ‘After you couldn’t join us last night, I thought you would sleep so well that you would be able to be punctual this morning.’

She met his gaze innocently. ‘But my Lord, didn’t you receive my message? I sent to let you know that I would be delayed because I had stopped at the church.’

‘You “went to church?” ’ he mimicked cruelly. ‘What time was this, my dear?’

‘Before dawn, Husband,’ she said, permitting a faint tone of hurt to creep into her voice.

‘Truly! What a religious wife I have, to be sure. I had no idea.’

‘I was so unwell last night that I prayed to be cured, and it worked: I slept. When I woke this morning I went straight to church to celebrate Mass and give confession in gratitude, Husband,’ she said, her voice registering still more pain.

He smiled, but without humour. ‘Oh, well perhaps I shall go and thank the priest myself later. And I can get myself shriven at the same time, can’t I?’

‘You can thank him now, good my Lord,’ she said.

‘How? Do you expect me to leave all our guests to gallivant about the town? He might well not be there.’

‘He isn’t, Husband. He walked back with me,’ she smiled and stood back to introduce Father Abraham.

It was a shame, Jeanne felt, that her husband was once more investigating crimes when she wanted him with her to help select goods for the house.

Jeanne was no shrew but she would have liked to have had her husband’s company a little while in this new town, especially since he knew that they needed new linen and cushions. Not that he would have been able to help much, she considered as she led Edgar and Petronilla through the narrow alleys between stalls. Edgar was more interested in clothing and fashion and he had an infinitely better eye for detail than Baldwin.

She adored her husband but she would never have described him as fashion conscious. That was a modern fad: men with particoloured hose, or velvet jackets with expensive linings, cut carefully to show a man’s figure. They spent more time primping and preening than womenfolk, Jeanne sometimes thought. It must be a reflection of the time and the King’s own habits.

Every so often she glanced around, and twice she thought she caught a slightly odd expression in Edgar’s eyes. It was when he had been looking to his right, as though watching Petronilla – but he wouldn’t, surely . . . Jeanne scolded herself for trying to see love, admiration, lust, whatever, wherever she looked. It was all too easy to imagine that others were feeling the same urges as she, her love for Baldwin was so strong. It almost made her want to cry out for sheer pleasure.

She took a right turn down an alley she had missed the day before. Here she saw a gorgeous scarlet, a bolt of bright red cloth that shimmered in the sunlight from fine metallic threads woven into the material. ‘Oh, look!’ she gasped, and glanced at Petronilla.

The girl’s face was a picture. Petronilla was not so adept an actor as Edgar, and her features, turned towards him, radiated affection of the most obvious and intense kind.

‘Oh-oh,’ Jeanne breathed. ‘That will delight Baldwin; just what he needed to round off the perfect trip to Tiverton. A servant who’s about to break his engagement vow, and a woman about to take his manservant to her bed.’

Toker waited at the street corner. There was only the one entrance to the tavern and he had three men with him – Owen he had left in the castle; the Welshman didn’t fill him with confidence when it came to fighting, he was too much Sir Peregrine’s man. All the escapes were blocked: that was the good thing about having a small company of men to command. They could ambush even the most determined of victims.

Picking his nose, he wiped the solid residue on the house’s wall behind him and snorted, then hawked and spat. Before long, if Sir Peregrine was right, they would be at war again. Then towns like this had better be wary! If he could, he’d love to break in and have a look around a place like Sherman’s or Carter’s. Both had nooks and crannies filled with rich stuff, silver and pewter plates, gold-chased cups, no doubt, and lots of spoons. When he had been in the service of Lady Maud, he had seen her spoons. She had more than twenty; he had often dreamed about owning such wonderful pieces of craftsmanship himself.

It was war that gave opportunities for a man to get rich. Only in war could a man prove his valour. And once he’d done so, he might be allowed his own
chevauchée
– a licence to ride out over nearby territory to see what could be won: gold, silver, wine, women – whatever. That was the life! Better by far than standing idle in a shit-stricken dump like this and hoping to remove some knight who’d become a threat.

France, that would be a good place to go. Tough, of course, because the French had the biggest and best army in Christendom, the most numerous knights, the heaviest cavalry, but in a land so wide a man with a small company could get lost and, with a little ingenuity, could become very rich very quickly. There was so much money out there, it would be a miracle if a fellow with his head screwed on right couldn’t take a bit for himself.

To get rich in war, a man needed a good war-leader, and Toker was satisfied that Sir Peregrine was potentially just that: shrewd, cunning, and well-connected. Under him, Toker was sure he could take a fortune.

It was still a cause for regret that he had failed to get his hands on Sir Gilbert’s little chest in London. No doubt it had contained enough for him to have been able to afford a tavern of his own and retire. William had told them Sir Gilbert had had it when they camped, but when the knight was bumped off, the money had gone. Toker knew that William would have told them where it was if he had known. He’d have been
glad
to tell them by the time they’d finished with him, especially when Perkin kicked him in the bollocks. The memory made Toker smile: how William’s eyes had popped! Yes, if he’d known where the money was, he’d have told them, all right. Once he’d stopped puking.

And now this other knight was causing trouble and needed to be disposed of. Toker was happy to oblige. As far as he was concerned if Sir Baldwin de Furnshill was annoying folks, he had to be removed. If he was arrested for his part in this, Toker knew he could rely on his friends for aid. In Tiverton’s courts two men held all the power: Lord Hugh and the Coroner. The Coroner answered to Lord Hugh and the man who told everyone what Lord Hugh thought was his reliable, trustworthy gatekeeper, Sir Peregrine.

No, if Toker or any of his lads were caught and accused of murder, they’d be set free at the Court of Gaol Delivery before they could even get put into prison.

Toker leaned back against the wall and contemplated the road once more. This was dull. He daren’t go into the tavern to seek Sir Baldwin, for that would be too obvious, but it was boring out here, especially knowing that Sir Baldwin and his mate were sitting at a table and enjoying a quart of ale or something. Just what he could do with, Toker thought.

His eyes narrowed as someone appeared in the doorway. It was Nicholas Lovccok, and Toker relaxed slightly, but then he saw the two men behind and he stiffened with anticipation.

Wat had been glad to avoid walking about the Fair. It was beneath him, staring at all those stupid lengths of cloth, having to listen to all the ‘Oohs’ and ‘Aahs’ that Lady Jeanne and Petronilla, whom he generally credited with far better brains than most other girls, would gasp when confronted with arrays of coloured and gaudy strips of materials. Women’s business! Far better to be here in the castle learning how a man-at-arms could serve his lord.

Not that Wat had managed to learn much so far. His first essay into the skills of service had led to him trying to bring a cup of wine to a guest: he had gone to the buttery before the steward, who had cuffed him about the head when he tried to pour wine, telling Wat to leave off the Lord Hugh’s stocks, and took the filled pot from him to carry to the hall. Wat had tried to explain he was helping, but his expostulations had led to his almost tripping the steward, and he earned a second clip around the ear for his efforts.

Then he had gone to watch two men-at-arms practising with swords and daggers, and in his attempts to follow what they were doing, had convinced them that he was apeing their efforts. Both stopped their bout to hurl stones at him. One caught him on the rump, the other on his forehead, and now a trickle of blood ran down his face.

He scuffed the dirt, wondering moodily how a boy was supposed to learn the skills of arms or courtesy if no one was prepared to help teach them. He was out near the gateway, watching while guests of Lord Hugh wandered in and out. Some had their own boys with them, several already wearing long daggers or swords, and most of them younger than he. That was his trouble, he knew. He had been born to a cattleman, so he was expected to follow in his father’s footsteps and become a cattleman in his turn.

When Sir Baldwin had asked him to help in the house, his father had been enthusiastic. ‘Look, boy, it’ll keep you indoors more, not out in the freezing cold in winter, or smothered with flies in summer. You can learn lording properly, always having a filled belly and a pot of wine never far from your hand.’

It was attractive the way he had put it, but Wat could see from the boys here how he had been wrong. Wat could never learn fighting. He was a country peasant, no more. To be a gentleman in a great house you had to have been born to it, so that your parents could send you away to learn your business at an early age, ideally about eight or younger. He would have been sent away to a friend of his father’s, or maybe to his master, and trained in fighting.

BOOK: The Traitor of St. Giles
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