The House of Crows (24 page)

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Authors: Paul Doherty

Tags: #Fiction - Historical, #Mystery, #14th Century, #England/Great Britain

BOOK: The House of Crows
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Sexto
: What was missing amongst Harnett’s possessions? And, now he reflected on it, from the belongings of the other knights?

Septimo
: Who had followed Bouchon and then Harnett? Pursuing them so easily, trapping and killing them?

Octavo
: What had these knights done which was so terrible?

And why didn’t they just flee Westminster and go back to Shropshire?

Nono
: What role did the regent play in all these deaths?

How could he have influence over knights who, in the Commons, so bitterly opposed his demands?

‘Wake up, monk!’

Athelstan opened his eyes. Cranston was grinning at him. Athelstan blinked.

‘Sir John, I was not sleeping, just thinking.’

‘As I was!’ the coroner answered portentously. He stared across at the thinning crowds. ‘Anything in particular, my learned friar?’

Athelstan heard the faint cries of a boatman shouting for custom.

‘Well, Sir John, we know Sir Francis went to Southwark, but did any boatman take Sir Oliver Bouchon?’

Cranston took a swig from his miraculous wineskin and shook his head.

‘My bailiffs have already made such inquiries,’ he declared.

‘So far as they can discover, no boatman took any member of the Commons either up- or downriver that evening.’

Athelstan rose to his feet and stretched. ‘Is it possible, Sir John, that Bouchon didn’t leave Westminster? That he was knocked unconscious here and thrown into the Thames?’

Sir John pulled a face. ‘I hadn’t thought of that, Friar.’ He stared across the abbey gardens, narrowing his eyes against the dying sun. ‘If this corpse had been thrown in, let’s say near Dowgate, not far from London Bridge, from what I know of the Thames the body would have been taken out into mid-stream.’ Cranston stretched his legs. ‘However, at Westminster the tide loses some of its force: Bouchon’s corpse would be taken rather sluggishly, which is why it was trapped in the reeds at Tothill. Where does that leave us?’ He shrugged and sighed. ‘Today is Thursday, let’s be honest, Friar, we have made little progress this week.’ He dabbed the sweat around the collar of his shirt. ‘On Saturday the young king comes down to talk to his Commons; a few days later parliament is dissolved and Sir Edmund and his party will probably ride post-haste back to Shrewsbury.’ Cranston stared up at the gables and gargoyles along the abbey walls. ‘I wish I was home,’ he murmured. ‘A man should spend his nights sleeping with his wife. Ah well, Athelstan, one final call.’

They trudged round the abbey. Now and again some official tried to stop them to demand their business, but at Cranston’s growl the official would hastily back away. At last they entered a small courtyard and made their way across to a low-storeyed building. The coroner hammered at the door. An old, bleary-eyed monk, eyes screwed up against the light, ushered them into a low but very long chamber, full of manuscripts resting on shelves or spilling out of coffers and caskets. The old monk, his hand all a-tremble, stared up into Cranston’s face, his eyes growing sharper.

‘I know you!’

‘Of course, you do, Brother Aelfric!’ Cranston embraced the old monk, planting a juicy kiss on each of his dry, seamed cheeks.

‘Why bless me, it’s Jack Cranston! Good Lord, man, what are you doing here? And who is this?’

‘Master Aelfric, Brother Athelstan, who, for his sins, is a Dominican and, for his love of drink and beautiful women, parish priest of St Erconwald’s in Southwark.’

Aelfric peered at Athelstan. ‘Don’t worry, Brother,’ he murmured. ‘I know Jack Cranston’s humour. I was one of his masters in the abbey school. If I had a pound for every time I switched his buttocks, I’d be richer than the Cardinal Archbishop of Spolero. Jack, do you remember the time you stole the ox from the crib?’

‘Yes, yes.’ Cranston put an arm round the old man’s shoulders. ‘But we are not here to reminisce, Master Aelfric. I have a task for your keen wits and sharp eyes.’

‘Not so keen as they once were,’ the old monk mumbled, ushering Cranston and Athelstan to stools next to his own high-backed chair.

Cranston stared round the chamber. ‘Master Aelfric, this is the king’s muniment room?’

‘That’s right, Jack. All the king’s records are kept here.’

‘What about Shropshire?’

‘What about it, Jack?’

‘Well, what records do you have from that county?’

The monk pulled a face and scratched his chin.

‘Well, we have the sheriff’s returns at Michaelmas, Christmas, Hilary and Midsummer. We have petitions to the king’s council, bailiff’s accounts.’

‘What else?’

‘Oh, yes, cases heard before the king’s Justices in Eyre, gaol deliver, oyer and terminer.’

‘Yes, yes.’ Cranston held a hand up. ‘Brother, you have heard about the murders at Westminster?’

Aelfric’s eyes moved, for a few seconds Athelstan caught the cunning, shrewd nature of this old archivist.

‘Who hasn’t, Sir John?’ be replied quietly.

‘And do the names mean anything to you?’ Cranston added.

‘Sir Oliver Bouchon, Sir Henry Swynford, Sir Francis Harnett?’

The old monk shook his head. ‘Until the brothers whispered their names in the refectory,’ he answered, ‘their names meant nothing to me.’

‘You are lying!’ The words were out of Athelstan’s mouth before he could stop them.

Cranston turned in surprise. Old Aelfric’s mouth opened and shut.

‘You are lying,’ Athelstan repeated, getting to his feet. ‘I shall tell you what happened, Aelfric: no less a person than the Lord Regent has been here and asked you the same questions we have. He took certain records and examined them carefully. If he returned them, he told you to keep your mouth shut, should anyone else come here making similar inquiries.’

Aelfric blinked.

‘Why do you lie?’ Athelstan continued. ‘Why do people like you, a priest and Ii monk, enter into complicity with those in power just because they tell you to? You called my colleague Jack; you hail him as a friend, you know what we are searching for. Indeed, you must have expected us.’

Aelfric half rose, then sat down again. ‘You’d best leave,’ he declared. ‘Sir John, I do not like you, your companion even less.’

Cranston stretched out a hand towards his old teacher, but Aelfric didn’t turn. Athelstan tugged at the coroner’s cloak.

‘Come on, Sir John. We are wasting our time.’

Cranston followed him out of the chamber; they were halfway across the courtyard when he stopped and grasped Athelstan’s arm.

‘You shouldn’t have said that, Brother.’

‘Why?’

Cranston flinched at the anger in Athelstan’ s eyes. The friar shook his arm free. ‘Why, my lord Coroner, shouldn’t I say that? Three men have been found slain and the regent sits all innocent and a-feared. Now, I can accept that. The psalmist says, “Put not your trust in princes”. He also said, “All men are Liars”, but I didn’t think that applied to friends and brother priests. A short while ago, Sir John, I sat under an oak tree and watched the power and the corruption seep like slime round this great abbey.’ Athelstan glanced away. ‘I just thought that an old monk would tell the truth.’ He tapped Cranston’s arm. ‘You know he’s lying, Sir John. Gaunt has been down here, that’s how he could blackmail those knights, the representatives of the Commons. God knows what they have done,’ he added fiercely, ‘but the regent found out and Master Aelfric helped him!’

Cranston, surprised by the little friar’s vehemence, walked on, then stopped. ‘Come on, Brother,’ he called. ‘Don’t be angry with old Jack!’

Athelstan joined him and they made their way out of the abbey grounds and back to the Gargoyle tavern.

The taproom was full of boatmen and fishermen: Athelstan glimpsed Sir Edmund Malmesbury and his company in the far corner, but whispered to Sir John to keep well away from them. Banyard came sweeping out of the kitchen, his sweaty face wreathed in smiles. He greeted Sir John and took them out into a small garden. Cranston, happy at the thought of veal in black pepper sauce and a deep bowl of claret, was his old self. Athelstan found it difficult to match his companion’s humour, so they ate in silence until Athelstan apologised for his surliness.

‘I’d best go back to my own chamber,’ he concluded. ‘Sir John, I shall see you in the morning.’

The friar went into the tavern and made his way up to his own chamber. He still felt restless and, for a while, lay on his narrow cot-bed. He tried to pray but, strangely enough, the only words he could summon up were those sombre sentences of the sequence from the Mass of the Dead, ‘O day of wrath, O day of mourning. See fulfilled the prophet’s warning!’

CHAPTER 12

Athelstan rose early the next morning and decided to say an early Mass in one of the chantry chapels of Westminster Abbey. He went down to the taproom. Scullions and maids were cleaning the fireplace. Cooks were firing the ovens in the kitchen and filling the air with the sweet smell of freshly baked bread.

‘Good morning, Father!’ Banyard, looking as fresh as a daisy, came up the stairs of the cellar, a small tun of wine on his shoulder.

‘Good morning, mine host,’ Athelstan replied. ‘Is it too early to break fast?’

‘It’s never too early, Father.’

Banyard showed him to a table and personally served him small, freshly baked loaves, strips of salted pork and, at the friar’s request, a stoup of watered ale. Athelstan ate slowly, conscious of the landlord hovering around him.

‘Will you be glad when the Parliament is ended?’ Athelstan asked. ‘I mean, it will diminish your profits.’

The landlord pulled a face as he straightened some stools. He wiped his hands on a cloth and sat down opposite Athelstan, leaning his elbows on the table.

‘It’s as broad as it’s long, Father. Once the representatives go, the lawyers and judges return.’

‘And this tavern is always used by members of the Commons?’ Athelstan asked.

Banyard spread his hands. ‘This is the third Parliament in four years, Father. Yes, our rooms are always taken by visitors from the shire.’

‘Including Sir Edmund and his party?’

Banyard smiled. ‘Well, it’s not always the same group but, yes, Sir Edmund stayed here last time.’

‘And nothing untoward happened?’

‘Well, not exactly, Father, but, in the Michaelmas Parliament of 1379…’

‘Last year?’

‘Yes, Father, last year there was an altercation between Sir Edmund and my Lord Regent’s bully boys.’ Banyard raised a hand. ‘Oh, no blood was spilt or daggers drawn. It occurred just as Sir Edmund was about to leave London for Shrewsbury. Whether by chance or accident, he met two of Gaunt’s retainers in the courtyard.’ Banyard finished wiping his hands and put the cloth under his apron. ‘Nothing happened, but the air rang with threat and counter-threat.’

‘About what?’

‘Oh, the usual thing, Father. The regent’s demands and the Commons’ response.’ He paused and looked over Athelstan’s shoulder, his brown, sardonic face creased into a grin. ‘And, speaking of the devil, it’s best if I go about my business.’

Banyard scraped the stool back and returned to the kitchen as Sir Edmund Malmesbury swept into the taproom. He stopped opposite Athelstan.

‘May I join you, Father?’

‘Sir Edmund, be my guest.’

The knight sat down; Sir Edmund had apparently taken great care with his toilette, but Athelstan noticed his face was pallid, his eyes red-rimmed with dark circles beneath.

‘You did not sleep well, did you, Sir Edmund?’ Athelstan pushed his platter away.

The knight crossed himself and picked up a small loaf from the plate.

‘These are worrying times, Father. The harvest has failed, the French attacks –’

Athelstan leaned across the table. ‘Sir Edmund,’ he interrupted, ‘I do not insult you. Perhaps you can return the compliment. Your lack of sleep is not due to any French attack or the failure of any harvest. Three of your companions are murdered,’ he continued, ‘and yet you stay here, risking yourself and others?’

Malmesbury glanced nervously round. ‘If I could tell you, Father, I would.’

‘Then why not?’

Malmesbury stared at the piece of bread in his hand. ‘It’s too late,’ he whispered. ‘We are too far gone.’

‘In what, Sir Edmund? For God’s sweet sake!’

Sir Edmund lifted his head; a bitter, twisted smile on his face.

‘I know you, Athelstan,’ he murmured. ‘You and your brother were archers, squires in Lord Fitzalan’s retinue in France. At the village of Crotoy. Remember!’

Athelstan’s heart skipped a beat. He glanced away. He recalled Lord Fitzalan’s tent; he and Stephen were on guard inside when Fitzalan entertained certain knights. Yes, Malmesbury had been there.

‘All things change!’ Malmesbury muttered. ‘Your brother?’

‘Killed!’ Athelstan replied, lifting his head. ‘He was killed in an ambush.’

‘So you became a friar: an act of reparation, so I’m told.’

‘No.’ Athelstan smiled bleakly. ‘I became a priest because God wanted that. As, now, He wants the truth!’

‘This morning,’ Malmesbury replied, raising his voice and deliberately changing the subject, ‘is important. We have finished the ordinary business and we’ll have the final speeches about the taxes the Crown wishes to levy.’

‘You mean the regent?’

‘Yes, I mean the regent,’ Malmesbury declared just as loudly.

Athelstan stared over his shoulder. Goldingham stood in the doorway, staring at them. Athelstan experienced the same depression and sense of hopelessness that he had the previous evening: these knights would tell him nothing.

‘I must be going, Sir Edmund.’

Athelstan drained his tankard and left the tavern: he crossed the yard and went down a narrow alleyway to the riverside. He stood there for over an hour, watching the flow of the Thames, trying to calm his own mind and soul, as well as to observe the statutory fast before he began Mass. He walked slowly on to the abbey, its gardens and yards still silent. He entered the main door into the nave and went up the north aisle, where he found Father Benedict finishing Mass in a chantry chapel.

‘Of course, Brother,’ he replied when Athelstan made his request, ‘by all means say Mass.’

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