Read The Mark of a Murderer Online
Authors: Susanna Gregory
Tags: #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Historical, #Literature & Fiction, #Contemporary Fiction
‘What happened to this corpse in Merton Hall?’ asked Dodenho, overriding Paxtone’s distaste for the subject and determined
to have some gossip.
‘He died from a wound in his wrist,’ replied Michael obligingly. ‘The blood vessels had been severed, and you know how quickly
a man can die from such wounds, if the bleeding is not stanched.’
‘Then the rumours that he was stabbed are wrong?’
asked Norton. ‘That will teach me to listen to scholars. They are a worthless rabble for garnering accurate information.’
He gnawed on a piece of cheese, and seemed oblivious of his colleagues’ astonished – and offended – expressions.
‘Chesterfelde
was
stabbed in the back,’ acknowledged Michael. ‘But the fatal injury was to his arm. It was odd, because he died elsewhere,
and his body must have been dumped among his companions as they slept.’
‘Chesterfelde,’ mused Norton, pondering the victim’s name. He turned to Dodenho. ‘You know a Chesterfelde, do you not? I recall
you entertaining him in your room last term. You got drunk together, and he was sick on the communal stairs.’
‘It was probably a different Chesterfelde,’ said Dodenho shiftily.
Michael narrowed his eyes. ‘Bailiff Boltone told me the murdered Chesterfelde had visited Cambridge on several previous occasions.’
‘Names mean nothing,’ said Wormynghalle lightly, seeing Dodenho’s face grow dark with resentment. ‘Look at me, with the same
name as a tanner. There may be more than one Chesterfelde from Oxford who regularly travels to Cambridge.’
‘This fellow was burly, with dark hair,’ offered Norton obligingly. ‘In his early twenties.’
‘That is him,’ said Michael, looking hard at Dodenho.
‘Well, perhaps I did meet him,’ admitted Dodenho reluctantly. ‘But I do not
know
him.’
‘Nonsense,’ said Norton. ‘You sniggered and whispered in your room like a pair of virgins.’
Dodenho saw he was cornered, and that continued denials would be futile. He sighed. ‘He was a sociable sort of fellow who
liked to drink – it was the wine that made him giggle – but he was not a friend. Simply an acquaintance.’
‘Then why did you deny knowing him?’ demanded Michael.
‘Because I wanted to avoid being interrogated,’ snapped Dodenho, finally giving vent to his anger. ‘I know how you work –
quizzing people who have even the most remote associations with the deceased – and I did not want you adding
me
to your list of suspects.’
‘Do you know who killed this poor man?’ asked Powys of Michael, breaking into the uncomfortable silence that followed. Paxtone
pointedly set down the little silver knife he used for cutting his food, and declined to eat as long as the discussion was
about corpses and murder.
‘Not yet,’ replied Michael.
‘Were these Merton men deep sleepers?’ asked Wormynghalle curiously. ‘You say they dozed through the dumping of a body in
their chamber.’
‘We suspect a soporific was used on them,’ said Bartholomew.
‘That would make sense,’ said Paxtone, intrigued, despite his antipathy to the subject. ‘I read about a similar incident that
took place in Padua: a murder carried out in the presence of insensible “witnesses”. I recall that poppy juice was used.’
‘These men
are
from Oxford,’ said Michael, taking an egg with one hand and more meat with the other, ‘so they may well have access to sinister
texts from foreign places, telling them how to render men senseless while they murder their colleagues. What a feast! And
what makes it so especially fine is that there is not a vegetable to be seen. Only meat will help me solve the mystery surrounding
this particular victim’s death, because it is complex and nothing is what it seems.’
‘I have a theory,’ said Dodenho, who had recovered from his embarrassment at being caught out in a lie, and was back to his
confident self.
‘You do?’ asked Michael, cheeks bulging with pork. ‘Let us hear it, then.’
‘Well, it is a
reductio ad absurdum
, really.’ Dodenho cleared his throat and adopted an expression he imagined was scholarly. ‘Consider this proposition: what
I am now saying is false.’
‘The “liar paradox”,’ said Bartholomew, wondering what the man was getting at. ‘Expounded by Bradwardine in his
Insolubilia
. What does it have to do with Chesterfelde?’
‘Nothing,’ replied Dodenho impatiently. ‘I never said it did – I just said I have a theory. It relates to the paradox I have
just mentioned, and it is
my
idea, not this Bradwardine’s. I could grow to dislike you, Bartholomew, always telling a man his ideas belong to someone
else.’
‘I thought you meant you had an idea relating to Chesterfelde, too,’ said Norton accusingly. ‘But all you did was change the
subject to something that revolves around you.’
Dodenho shrugged. ‘I can think of worse things to discuss.’
Eventually, Powys stood and said the final grace, dismissing the Fellows to their teaching. Paxtone walked with Bartholomew
to the gate, with Michael trailing behind, his large face glistening with grease. Reluctantly, Bartholomew declined Paxtone’s
offer of a visit to the clyster pipes, knowing duty called him to the Tulyet household and Dickon.
‘Good luck with the Devil’s brat,’ said Paxtone. ‘And with your murder. I hope you solve it quickly, so it does not plunge
us into a series of riots, like those at Oxford.’
‘So do I,’ agreed Michael. ‘Especially with the Archbishop’s Visitation looming.’
As it transpired, Paxtone’s recommendation to dally before visiting Dickon was a good one, and, by the time
Bartholomew and Michael arrived, the boy had recovered from his initial shock and was back to normal. The injury comprised
a small bruise surrounding a minute perforation, and needed no more than a dab of salve. The operation was over in a moment,
and Bartholomew and Dickon were relieved to discover it was painless for both of them. This was not always the case, because
Dickon employed fists, teeth, feet and nails to fight off the physician’s ministrations, often resulting in Bartholomew being
just as badly mauled as his small patient.
Tulyet then invited Bartholomew and Michael to his office and, wanting to hear more about the town’s preparations for the
Visitation, Michael accepted. The Sheriff led the scholars into the ground-floor chamber he used for working, and barred the
door so Dickon could not follow. He was amused when a tousled head appeared at the window a few moments later: Dickon had
discovered an alternative entrance. While Tulyet crowed his delight at the child’s resourcefulness, Bartholomew and Michael
braced themselves for an invasion. They were not to be disappointed.
‘Bang!’ yelled Dickon, leaning through the window with a small bow in his chubby hands. There was an arrow nocked into it,
and the missile was pointed at Michael.
Although Dickon hated Bartholomew tending the results of his various mishaps – and anything went when treatment was in progress
– he did not mind the physician at other times, and was perfectly happy to sit on his knee and insert grubby fingers into
his medical bag in search of something dangerous. But Michael was a different matter. Dickon did not like Michael, and the
feeling was wholly reciprocated. Michael was not averse to doling out the occasional slap while Dickon’s doting parents were
not looking, and was unmoved by the boy’s shrieks of outrage when he did not get his own way. In essence, Dickon knew
that in Michael he had met his match, although that did not prevent him from trying to score points over the monk whenever
he could. That morning it looked as if he might do it with a potentially lethal weapon.
‘God’s blood, Dick!’ exclaimed Bartholomew, leaping up to interpose himself between boy and target. ‘I thought you said you
would not let him have that again after he shot himself in the foot.’
‘That was a freak accident,’ objected Tulyet. ‘The drawstring was too tight, and made the arrows fly with too much power.
But we have loosened it again, and now it is quite safe.’
‘I do not feel safe,’ snapped Michael, cowering behind Bartholomew. ‘Tell him to put it down.’
‘Dickon!’ said Tulyet sharply. ‘Do you remember what I said? You can only have the bow if you do not point it at anyone. If
you aim it at Brother Michael, I will take it away and burn it.’
Dickon’s small face lost its expression of savage delight and became sombre as he considered his options. He studied his father
hard, as if assessing how seriously to take the threat, then moved to one side so he could see the tempting target that quailed
behind the physician. Then he looked back at Tulyet. His fingers tightened on the weapon and Bartholomew saw that the little
arrow had a nasty point on it, and while Dickon was probably too small to shoot it with sufficient power to kill, he could
certainly cause some painful damage. He moved again to block Dickon’s line of vision, and wondered what the Sheriff was thinking
of, to give the lad such a dangerous plaything.
‘Come and watch me,’ ordered Dickon imperiously, lowering the bow when he saw he would not have a clear shot at Michael anyway.
‘By the river.’
‘We are busy,’ replied Michael shortly. ‘Go away.’
‘Come!’ insisted Dickon firmly. ‘Now.’
‘Go and see your mother, Dickon,’ suggested Tulyet, wheedling. ‘She may have a cake.’
‘Now,’ repeated Dickon, and the bow came up again. ‘I shoot.’
‘We shall have no peace unless we oblige,’ said Tulyet resignedly. ‘He only wants us to watch him in the butts at the bottom
of the garden for a moment.’
‘You should not give in to him, Dick,’ grumbled Michael heaving himself out of his seat and preparing to hike to the end of
the Tulyets’ long toft. ‘It will make him worse than he already is.’
‘What do you mean?’ asked Tulyet indignantly. ‘He is a little more boisterous than some lads his age, but only because he
is unusually intelligent. Besides, what do you know about being a parent? You are a monk.’
‘I know more than you can possibly imagine,’ replied Michael, aloofly enigmatic and leaving Bartholomew and Tulyet wondering
exactly what he meant.
‘But a bow, Dick,’ said Bartholomew. ‘It is not wise. He may harm himself again or, worse, decide to shoot a person or an
animal. He could do real harm.’
‘He must to learn how to handle weapons,’ insisted Tulyet. ‘It will be part of his knightly training, and the younger he is,
the faster he will become accomplished in their use. He will be Sheriff one day, and I want him properly prepared, or the
first armed outlaw he meets will make an end of him.’
‘I must have myself promoted to Chancellor before you relinquish your post,’ muttered Michael, as they followed the boy to
the end of the vegetable plots, where a sturdy wall had been erected to keep the child away from the river. ‘Dickon will not
work as smoothly with me as you do.’
Tulyet draped an arm around his shoulders. ‘Give the lad a chance, Brother. He will be a splendid man in time
– taller than his father and with the sweet temperament of his mother.’
‘He will be tall,’ agreed Michael.
‘Watch,’ commanded Dickon, aiming his arrow at a circular target made of straw. Bartholomew was perturbed when the boy sent
the missile thudding neatly into its centre, and even more so when he saw how hard Dickon had to pull to extricate it. His
father may have loosened the bowstring, but it was still taut enough to drive the arrow home with considerable force. Tulyet
grinned in proud delight.
‘You can see Merton Hall from here,’ said Michael, peering over the top of the wall and refusing to admire anything Dickon
did.
‘Our properties are divided only by the Bin Brook,’ said Tulyet, applauding as Dickon repeated the exercise, which indicated
that the first shot had been skill, not chance. ‘We are neighbours, although my house fronts on to Bridge Street and Merton
Hall is accessed from Merton Lane.’
‘I do not suppose
you
saw anything odd the night Chesterfelde was murdered, did you?’ asked Michael hopefully.
Tulyet shook his head. ‘Eudo is a noisy fellow, and his loud voice occasionally disturbs us while we sit in our orchard of
an evening, but we
usually
hear nothing from the others who are currently staying there – those scholars and the merchants.’
Bartholomew and Michael exchanged a bemused glance that Tulyet should dare to complain about Eudo when he had sired such a
raucous brat. ‘Usually?’ asked Michael. ‘There are exceptions?’
Tulyet nodded. ‘They were quite noisy on Saturday night, as a matter of fact. They were not arguing or fighting, just speaking
loudly and laughing a lot.’
‘Laughing?’ asked Michael. ‘Laughing about what?’
‘Chesterfelde was guffawing, and encouraging the others to enjoy themselves,’ elaborated Tulyet. ‘I met him once or twice
on his previous visits to our town, and he was always smiling.’
‘Bailiff Boltone said the same,’ said Bartholomew. ‘So did Norton. He seems to have been a cheerful sort of man.’
Michael rubbed his chin. ‘I wonder whether Dodenho’s initial denial that he knew Chesterfelde is significant. His excuse for
the lie may be valid – that he does not want a passing friendship to implicate him in a murder enquiry – but now I find myself
wary of what he told us. Still, Chesterfelde sounds as though he was a likeable sort of fellow.’
‘Yes,’ agreed Tulyet. ‘Generally speaking.’
‘What do you mean?’ asked Michael.
Tulyet folded his arms, watching his son shoot off the head of a flower. ‘He had a hot temper, and I recall Dodenho telling
me that it took very little to set it off. But, like many quick-to-anger men, his fury faded fast, and I do not think it was
a serious flaw in his character. I am glad this is not my investigation, Brother. It takes a particular kind of skill to explore
scholars and their cunning ways, and it is not one I shall ever possess. I am just grateful that my boy will never attend
a University.’
‘Yes,’ said Michael wholeheartedly. ‘So am I.’
It was noon by the time Bartholomew and Michael reached Merton Hall. Michael rapped sharply on the door and it was answered,
as previously, by Boltone. There was ink on the bailiff’s fingers, and his eyes were red and raw, as if he had been straining
them. Bartholomew supposed he had been working on his accounts so that Duraunt could assess whether he had been cheating.