âWha-what did you put in that ale?' I asked sleepily. I remember that I wasn't at all perturbed by the realization.
âLettuce juice,' Bertha answered, her voice coming from a long way off. âYou needs the rest. Don' worry. I ain't goin' t' rob you. You'm a friend. You comes from the same part o' the world as what I do . . .'
Her voice grew fainter, dwindling to a mere thread of sound before it ceased altogether. I sank deeper into the velvety darkness . . .
I was standing in the great solar in Baynard's Castle between Sir Pomfret and Lady Fitzalan. There seemed to be no one else present except the Dowager Duchess of York, facing us and tapping on the floor with her silver-handled cane.
âWhere are the rest of you?' she was demanding of Sir Pomfret. âI was told that all your brothers would be present.' Sir Pomfret made no reply and the duchess tapped even harder, adding an impatient foot to the beat. âWell, man? Speak up! Ah!' This exclamation followed the opening of the solar door as Godfrey and Lewis appeared. âHere at least are two more.' The twins bowed and went to stand behind their brother, jostling me out of the way as they did so, while the duchess continued glaring at us all. Her voice rose to a screech. âBut some are still missing. Where are the others? Where are Henry and Warren and Raisley and George?'
âNo, no!' protested Bevis and Blaise, getting up from the window embrasure where they had been sitting (although I felt sure that they hadn't been there earlier). âYour Grace means Thomas and Peter and Maurice and Cornelius. Young Gideon can't be with us because he's disappeared.'
Duchess Cicely had turned towards them as they spoke, but now she swung slowly back to point an accusing finger at me.
âHaven't you found him yet, Master Chapman?' she demanded. âThe king told you to do so and before his coronation. The king, my son . . . The king, my son . . . The king, my son . . .'
I noticed the expression of horror caused by her words on all the other faces, mouths opening and shutting as though they were trying to protest. They reminded me of the fish that used to be netted from the abbot's carp pond at Glastonbury and how ridiculous the poor creatures looked once they were landed. I started to laugh, loudly, stupidly, and found myself shouting, âYou fools! You fools! You never thought Edward was going to be king, did you? Did you? Did you . . .?'
The cry died on my lips and I sat up with a start, aching in every joint and limb. Opposite me, seated beside the fire on a rickety three-legged stool and watching me fixedly, was Bertha Mendip. We were alone â there was no sign of the young girl â and early morning sunlight was streaming in through the open doorway of the hut.
âWhat . . . What day is it?' I mumbled, struggling to get my bearings.
âFriday,' she said. âFreya's day â the mother o' the gods. You'm slept all night through, but not easy. You'm bin tossin' and turnin' and mutterin' in yer sleep somethin' terrible, so you 'ave.'
Friday. Today, Lord Hastings would be beheaded on Tower Green, quietly and without fuss. Indeed, so little attention would be drawn to the proceedings that, in after years, many people would continue, mistakenly, to assert that that he had been executed out of hand the preceding week.
âYer boots aren't quite dry yet,' Bertha said, âbut the rest of yer gear's ready.' And she indicated my hose, shirt and tunic lying beside me. âThere's a hat, too,' she added, âwhat I fished out the water. Gawd! You in a gen'leman's hat! Velvet!' She rocked to and fro, convulsed by a paroxysm of laughter.
I couldn't have taken umbrage even had I wished to. It had been no vain boast when she said that she knew her business: all the garments had been restored, if not quite to their former glory, then to a condition that would deceive most eyes.
âYou're a marvel, Bertha,' I breathed, picking them up and examining them one by one.
The next moment, I was hurriedly pulling the blanket I was wrapped in up around my shoulders as I realized that by sitting up I had rendered myself half-naked.
My companion gave another of her cackling laughs. âNo need fer modesty, lad. I seen better nor you in me time. Still, if you'd rather get dressed on yer own, I'll get meself to the Rattlebones and get you summat to eat and drink. Big fellow like you needs 'is victuals.'
âWait!' I said. âBertha, I can't pay you. I've no money.'
She grinned. âOh, yes you 'ave.' She picked up my belt with the money purse still firmly attached to it and shook it in my face. âWhoever 'it you on the 'ead weren't after robbin' you. This 'ere was still strapped round yer waist when I pulled you out the water.'
I breathed a sigh of relief, opening the purse to check the contents. All my money seemed to be there and I handed a couple of coins to Bertha. For her part, she continued to regard me curiously.
âWho did 'it you over the 'ead,' she asked, âand whereabouts were you? From what you said yesterday, seemed like you reck'ned you'd been pushed down that drain what empties the Wallbrook inta the river. What you got yerself mixed up in, lad? You've nearly got yerself killed, you knows that, don't you? If it 'adn't bin fer me, you'd likely be fish meat by now.'
I nodded humbly. âI know that, Bertha, and I'm grateful, believe me. Is it really Friday? I must have been asleep for hours and hours and hours. If I remember rightly, I hadn't long had my dinner when . . . when . . .'
âYou 'ave bin asleep fer hours and hours and hours,' my companion acknowledged, âbut that were the lettuce juice. I got some from 'pothec'ry when I went fer the ale. Sleep's the only cure fer a shock like you'd 'ad. But it weren't easy sleep, like I told you. An' afore you woke up jus' now, you was in a right sweat. Callin' out a lot o' men's names, you were. An' summat about a sun an' a king.' She eyed me sternly. âYou goin' t' tell me what 'appened or not?' She sat down again on her stool. â'Cause I ain't goin' fer yer breakfast until you do.'
I could see she was in earnest and I owed her my life. So I arranged the blanket more modestly about me, to the great irritation of the fleas settled within its folds, and proceeded to tell her as much as I knew (but making no mention of my lord of Gloucester or his intentions regarding the crown). Bertha heard me out without comment and when I had finished, she got to her feet once more.
âI'm off t' Rattlebones now,' she said, ât' get yer breakfast.' She hesitated as though she would add something, then, obviously deciding against it, left the hut without further remark.
During her absence, I got dressed, although it cost me a greater effort than I had anticipated. I felt as weak as a kitten. I was getting too old, I decided, for these sort of adventures.
I wandered across to the doorway and looked out at the busy scene as Southwark stirred into early morning life. A part of London and yet outside the city's jurisdiction, it was a place of contrasts; a warren of noisome alleyways, an absolute haven for criminals, cheek by jowl with the splendid houses of various abbots and bishops. St Thomas's Hospital and the church of St Mary Overy were two of its more imposing buildings. The Tabard and the Walnut Tree were respectable enough taverns, but others, like the Rattlebones, were of a more dubious nature, patronized by thieves and whores and others not anxious to be noticed by officers of the law. Overhead, the sky was a clear, cloudless blue. It was going to be another warm day.
After a while, I went back inside. The heat of the fire and the stench of the drying clothes suddenly turned my stomach, and I began to retch. My own clothes, too, seemed to have a smell about them previously unnoticed, and they felt stiff and uncomfortable. I wondered irritably where Bertha was and what was keeping her. She seemed to have been gone an unconscionable time, and I was longing to be off. My head ached, and I was no nearer finding out what had become of Gideon Fitzalan, or why he had been taken, than I had been a week ago.
I knew that my dream had been telling me something, but what it was I had no notion. God was speaking to me, but I was too stupid to understand. I remembered what Bertha had said, that I was shouting out names â the names, obviously, of the Fitzalan tribe. I could recall the events and circumstances of the dream quite clearly. It was interpreting them that presented a problem.
The nausea was beginning to pass, but my legs still felt too fragile to support me, so I pulled Bertha's abandoned stool well clear of the fire and sat down near the door, trying to marshal my thoughts. I had been in the chamber below St Etheldreda's crypt when I had been assaulted. Someone had either followed me with such stealth that I had been unaware of pursuit, or else somebody had already been down there and had concealed him â or herself before I had time to descend the steps. Of the two, I favoured the latter theory.
I also recalled that, just before I was struck, I had thought there was something different about my surroundings; that there was something there I had not noticed on my previous visit. I closed my eyes tightly, trying to picture the scene, but try as I might, I could recollect nothing, only the blow to the back of my head which had sent me plunging into oblivion.
So what had happened next? Someone â more than one person? â had dragged me across the floor and bundled me bodily into the drain which connected with the Wallbrook culvert. Judging by the bruises with which my body was covered, it had been a tight squeeze, although wide enough to prevent me from becoming stuck, and I must have been helped on my way by a good shove from above. (I concluded that the drain itself was fairly short in length and had been made to stop the underground chamber from being flooded when the Thames was in spate.) But I was a big man and a heavy weight. It must surely have taken more than one person to shift me.
Bertha entered the hut, nearly falling over the stool in the process, carrying a covered dish in one hand and a jug of ale in the other. The first smelled deliciously of hot bacon collops and the other made me realize that I had a raging thirst which, until that moment, I had been too preoccupied to notice.
When she had finished cursing me for getting in the way, Bertha handed me the dish and placed the jug on the floor where I could reach it, along with the beaker she had brought yesterday from the Rattlebones. This she wiped out with a handful of straw picked up from the floor. I decided to drink from the jug.
âGettin' nice all of a sudden, ain't we?' she jeered, throwing more sticks on the fire and pulling one of the racks of drying clothes nearer to the blaze. Then she sat down on the floor, arms locked around her knees. I offered her the stool, but she shook her head. âYou finish yer breakfast. But you'll 'ave t' give it up in a minute. I've invited someone in t' see you.'
âWhat do you mean? Who?'
She shook her head. âJus' eat and don' ask so many questions.'
With this I had to be content as she plainly intended to say nothing further. The sunlight coming through the open doorway had strengthened and it was now full daylight, while the sounds from without had steadily increased. The denizens of Angel Wharf were up and busy. I thought again of Lord Hastings in the Tower watching the dawn of his last day on earth and wondered what it must feel like to know the hour of one's death; to hear the birds and feel the warmth of the sun on one's face and accept that in a while it would all be gone. I thought, too, of Earl Rivers, young Sir Richard Grey and old Sir Thomas Vaughan as yet, probably, unaware of their fate, but soon to learn that they also must die. Twelve short weeks ago, when King Edward had breathed his last, how could they possibly have known how soon they would be following him into the grave?
âCheer up,' Bertha said. âYou've got a face as dismal as a week o' Fridays. Which reminds me, I s'pose, bein' Freya's day I oughta brought you fish, but you don' look to me like one what takes fastin' very serious.'
âNot when my wife isn't here to keep me up to it,' I admitted, which made her give yet another cackle of laughter.
âLike that is it? Well, I can't say you looks too bad on married life. I reck'n you'm one o' the lucky ones.'
A shadow fell across the door, blocking out the sunlight. Bertha got to her feet and went to welcome her visitor.
âCome in, me dear an' this gert lump 'ere'll give you the stool t' sit on.' I lumbered awkwardly to my feet, trying to prevent my head from hitting the hut's roof and provoking my hostess to even further mirth. âI told you 'e were a big un.' (Her chosen calling had never dimmed her sense of humour.) She turned to me. âThis,' she said, âis Audrey Owlgrave.'
I found myself facing a small, sharp-featured woman of indeterminate age â she could have been anywhere between thirty and fifty â but who, I suspected, appeared older than she probably was. Her weather-beaten skin was seamed with lines and her lips were the thinnest I have ever seen, almost non-existent. She was poorly dressed â I could see at least two darns in the skirt of her homespun gown â but everything about her was clean and neat and, astonishingly for Angel Wharf, sweet-smelling. Her eyes were a very dark brown and dominated her little pinched face.
âMistress Owlgrave.' I made her a bow and indicated the stool. âPlease, sit down.'
She thanked me, and the most surprising thing of all about her was her voice. She spoke with a quiet, ladylike accent that would have done credit to the Duchess of York herself.
âMistress Mendip has been telling me of your adventure,' she said. âI trust you are feeling better?'
âA little,' I acknowledged.
She smiled gently. âI understand that when you were so cruelly assaulted, you were in St Etheldreda's Church in Dowgate?'