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Authors: Kate Sedley

BOOK: Wheel of Fate
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By this time, the three elder girls from Morgan's first marriage, Clemency, Sybilla and Charity, were grown up, all in their early to late twenties, all still unmarried, all still living at home, Oswald was twelve and their half-brother and -sister younger again. As the women appeared to be inclined to the single state, it seemed natural that they should decide to bring up the younger members of the family without calling upon any outside help; an arrangement that suited everybody and which still, apparently, pertained to the present day, even though Oswald was now a man of forty and the half-siblings in their thirties.
‘Doesn't anyone in the family believe in marriage?' I had asked at this juncture.
Margaret had smiled. ‘They were always, to my way of thinking, a very odd family. A very close-knit unit, who all put great store by being a Godslove and were slightly contemptuous of anyone who wasn't. It's difficult to explain to someone who's never experienced the ties of a large kinship. But even so, big families normally admit outsiders. They have to. But the Godsloves were different, Unhealthily so.' Margaret had pulled a face. ‘I only visited them a couple of times, with Father, when they lived at Keynsham, but the atmosphere struck me as . . . as almost incestuous.'
When Oswald Godslove was fourteen, or thereabouts, he had suddenly taken it into his head that he wanted to study for the law, and although there were lawyers enough in Bristol willing to employ and train a clerk, his three sisters had decided that nothing else would do, but he must go to London, to the Inns of Court, off the Strand. And the rest of the family would, of course, go with him. Money, if not exactly short, was not plentiful, either, but they had what their father had left them and what they could make on the sale of the Keynsham house. Sacrifices would have to be made, but in such a worthy cause, no one was complaining. Somehow, they had scraped together sufficient money to enable them to buy the place in which they now lived, a decaying mansion just outside the Bishop's Gate, but big enough to accommodate them all, and there they had remained ever since, even though Oswald was now a successful lawyer and growing richer by the day. (As most lawyers, at least in my experience, do.)
When Margaret had finally finished telling me this complicated tale – or what she had managed to turn into a complicated tale, but was really quite straightforward once I had sorted the wheat from the chaff – I asked, ‘But how does Adela fit into the story?'
Margaret considered this as she loaded her spindle with wool.
‘I'm not perfectly sure,' she admitted at last. ‘She could only have been about six years old when the Godsloves left Keynsham and went to London. But she had visited them once or twice, maybe oftener. I know for certain that she went once because she came with Father and me. But I feel sure that her mother, who was also Morgan's cousin, must have taken her on visits. Katharina – God rest her soul! – was a very nosy woman and was never happier than when she was prying into other folk's business. So I should guess that Adela might have become friends with Celia, the daughter of the second marriage, who was, it's true, maybe three or four years older than herself. But then Adela always seemed more mature than her actual age. Perhaps the two girls started writing to one another, and have continued to do so throughout their lives. Stupidly, I've never asked Adela who her correspondent is, which of the numerous Godsloves, but now I think about it seriously, Celia would seem the most likely person.' She continued spinning for a moment or two in silence, then suddenly laughed. ‘I recollect my poor father going to see them once on his own. He came back absolutely appalled. I can remember him exclaiming, “Eight children! Eight of them! You can imagine the noise! All of them talking and shouting together!” I think it made him thankful that he only had the one.'
‘And you've never written to them since they settled in London?'
Margaret shook her head. ‘They meant nothing to me. And I must confess that I was astonished when Adela mentioned, a year or so back, that she was still in touch with them.'
‘And I was completely unaware of the fact.'
‘Ah, well,' Margaret muttered significantly, so I got hastily to my feet, in order to ward off yet another lecture about my shortcomings as a husband, and offered to pack Elizabeth's clothes in the sack along with mine.
‘It will save you the trouble later,' I murmured ingratiatingly.
But I got no thanks, only a cynical smile that told me, more plainly than any words could have done, that she had my measure. So I took myself off to the Green Lattis, where I spent the rest of the day, or as much of it as I could bear until the sole topic of conversation – the death of the king, with its ceaseless, fruitless speculation as to what might happen next – drove me back to Redcliffe and an early bed (the pile of brushwood by Margaret's hearth) where I slept soundly until morning.
The sun was just showing its face above the city rooftops when an excited Elizabeth, a drowsy Hercules and I – full of porridge and with Margaret's parting admonitions still ringing in our ears – presented ourselves outside Jack Nym's cottage in the neighbouring street. But early as we were, Jack was up and about before us, busy tucking an extra layer of sacking over the bales of red cloth that filled the body of the cart. Elizabeth and I mounted the box beside the driver's seat, with Hercules curled up on my daughter's lap, where, for the moment, he seemed content to settle down.
‘But watch out,' I warned her, ‘for other dogs, sheep and, above all, his pet hatred, geese. If you don't hold on to him tightly, he'll be off the cart, chasing them and barking like a fiend.'
‘Yes, and I'll be having summat to say about that,' Jack said crossly as he climbed up beside us, plainly not in the best of tempers and obviously regretting that he had agreed to let us travel with him.
He had just given his horse the office to start when he had to pull the animal up short as Goody Nym – as slatternly a woman as you could hope to find in a month of Sundays – erupted from the cottage and handed him an evil-smelling parcel wrapped in wilting, brown-edged dock leaves and tied around with a bit of twine so filthy it might just have been fished out of the central drain. (As indeed it was more than likely it had.)
‘You forgot yer dinner,' she said, tossing the parcel into her husband's lap. And without acknowledging either Elizabeth or me, she bounced back indoors, shutting the door with unnecessary force behind her.
Jack handed me the parcel. I sniffed it cautiously and then recoiled. ‘Hell's teeth, Jack! What's in it?'
He shook his head vigorously. ‘Dunno. An' I don't want to know, either. Don't waste your time opening it. Just throw it overboard and leave it to poison some poor stray or other.' He turned his head to look me fully in the face for the first time since our arrival. ‘I take it you've got money in your purse, chapman?'
‘I . . . I've had quite a successful trip these past few weeks,' I admitted cagily.
‘Right, then,' he said, flicking the reins. ‘No need for us to stint ourselves on the journey. There's plenty o' decent inns and taverns along the London road.' He grinned, his good humour suddenly restored. ‘We can sample 'em all.'
Fortunately for me, he was only joking. Well, half-joking. We did indeed stay at a couple of small alehouses during our journey in order that Elizabeth might have a good night's rest. But, the April weather having suddenly turned warm in the way that it does at that time of year, more often than not we all bedded down in the cart, the bales of red cloth with their protective covering of sacking proving a comfortable enough mattress. Elizabeth, of course, thought this much more fun than a conventional bed, even though our slumbers were frequently broken by Hercules's barking as he took exception to the cries of the nocturnal creatures all around us, and by his constant excursions into the surrounding countryside to relieve himself.
‘Damn dog,' Jack grumbled, but without rancour.
The fact was, as we soon discovered, that even had we wished to pass each night in some hostelry or another, we should have been hard put to it to find enough empty beds to accommodate us. There were so many people on the move that most inns seemed to be full. Not only were the roads clogged with the customary itinerant friars, pedlars, farmers driving livestock, or smallholders carrying vegetables, to market in the nearest town, lawyers riding to the spring assizes, west country pilgrims on their way to Canterbury, but also with parties of minstrels and mummers leaving their winter quarters for the summer round of manor house and castle. And over and above all these, we met far more royal messengers than usual, either heading back to London after delivering their news, or outward bound for those distant parts of the kingdom that might not yet have received word of the late King Edward's death.
With so much traffic, our progress was necessarily slow, and it was not until the following Wednesday, a week and a day after leaving Bristol, that we finally reached the capital.
We had spent the previous Monday night at Reading Abbey, in the common dormitory, where we had taken shelter from a nasty storm that had sprung up unexpectedly. This Benedictine monastery was a foundation of King Henry I and famous for the number and variety of its holy relics: two pieces of the True Cross, a bone of St Edmund the Martyr's arm, St James's hand, St Philip's stole, another bone belonging to St Mary Magdalene and a host of smaller items such as laces, girdles, combs, hairpins and a sandal that was dubiously attributed to St Matthew. (It sometimes seemed to me that the saints had been extremely casual with their personal belongings.)
The storm had abated somewhat by the time we had eaten our supper of soup and black bread in the lay refectory and then bedded down in the dormitory on two of the straw palliasses that were laid side by side along three of the four walls. The place was packed with other travellers as well as ourselves and Elizabeth was forced to share my mattress. She was so weary that she had nodded off over her supper, but nevertheless, she was restless, tossing and turning in her sleep and upsetting Hercules, who had curled up at my feet. In addition to this, the groaning, moaning and farting of thirty or so other souls, not to mention the smell, kept me awake for some considerable time, and when I finally did drop into an uneasy slumber, it was to dream that I was back in Margaret Walker's cottage while she tried to explain to me the ramifications of the Godslove family.
‘“Eight children”,' she was saying. ‘That's what my father said, “Eight children! Thank the good lord I've only got one!”'
‘How could there be eight children?' I was objecting. ‘Four by the first wife and two by the second. That's six.'
‘There were two stepbrothers,' was the answer. ‘Alicia's sons. Her first husband's children. That makes eight . . .'
It was at this point that I awoke with a start, staring into the blackness of the dormitory, the words ‘that makes eight' still ringing in my head.
Elizabeth was lying on her back, one arm flung across my chest. As I have already intimated, she was a robust child – and has grown into an even more well-built woman – and her arm was heavy, restricting my breathing. Hercules, too, was like a dead weight on my feet, but I felt certain that my discomfort was not what had awakened me. For a moment or two, nothing was to be heard except the cacophony created by my fellow sleepers, but then, over and above this, I was able to make out the noise of raised voices and the jingle of horses' harnesses. Someone – and someone of importance by the sound of it – had arrived at the abbey. Curious to discover who would be travelling so late at night, I gently rolled Elizabeth on to her side, eased my legs from beneath the rough woollen blanket that covered them, pulled on my boots and stood up, all as quietly as possible so as not to disturb my neighbours.
‘Stay there!' I whispered to Hercules as I tiptoed towards the door at the far end of the dormitory.
Of course he came too, snuffling with delight at the prospect of a midnight excursion. There was nothing to be gained by arguing with him.
I made my way to the abbey's west gatehouse, with its adjoining chapel, where I judged most of the noise was coming from. And, indeed, I was not mistaken, the courtyard being overpoweringly full of horses and riders, the former breathing gustily through distended nostrils, their flanks heaving and sweating. Torches flared as monks ran from the abbey, calling to the grooms to rouse themselves and come at once to tend my lord bishop's cavalcade. Light flickered on the azure and silver threads of the saltire cross of St Andrew, emblazoned on saddles and cloaks, and I realized with a jolt of surprise that I recognized the central figure of the party as Robert Stillington, Bishop of Bath and Wells. My lord was not dressed so magnificently as usual, the splendid silks and velvets that he normally wore being replaced by the coarse black frieze of mourning. Members of his entourage, too, were all similarly attired.
The abbot appeared, looking flustered, his eyes blinking owl-like in the sudden blaze of light, the creases of sleep still wrinkling his cheeks.
‘Your Grace! My lord bishop!' he exclaimed, hurrying to where Stillington was just dismounting, assisted by John Gunthorpe, his dean.
Stillington nodded, saying jovially, ‘My lord Abbot, I trust you can offer me a bed for the night?' Having received the abbot's (probably mendacious) assurance that his own couch would be given up to the distinguished guest with the utmost pleasure, the bishop asked abruptly, ‘What is your latest information from London? Has my lord Gloucester arrived there yet?'
‘No, nor will he for some days, or so I understand.' The abbot dodged out of the path of the scurrying grooms as they led away their charges towards the stables. ‘I sent one of the lay brothers to Windsor last week to discover what he could and he returned only this afternoon. But come in, my lord. You'll be in need of refreshment.'

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