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Authors: Paul Doherty

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BOOK: The Straw Men
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‘Eli, last night did any of you visit him?'

‘No,' they chorused.

‘And nothing strange,' Cranston insisted, ‘nothing untoward occurred?'

‘Nothing, Sir John.' Samuel wiped his mouth on the back of his hand. ‘Eli retired. He left the refectory just as the bells were tolling for Compline.' He shook his head, ‘I do not know, I cannot explain . . .'

Athelstan let them go and called over Rosselyn. The captain of archers sauntered across.

‘Brother?'

‘The fire last night?'

‘From what I know, a simple accident. A candle fell out of a lantern box on to some dry straw. The fire was fierce but soon doused. Why?' Rosselyn indicated with his head. ‘Do you think this was somehow connected?'

‘I don't know.'

‘Anything else, Brother?'

‘No, no thank you.' Athelstan paused and watched him walk away. ‘Pardon my lies, Sir John, but I think it was,' Athelstan whispered, ‘and I'm not too sure how. As for Eli's murder, I wonder. Was he slain because he saw something when hiding under that table? He was the nearest to the rood screen and Hell's mouth.'

‘Possible,' Cranston conceded.

‘And the greater mystery,' Athelstan declared. ‘How was a young man in a locked, secured chamber, its door firmly sealed, the windows,' he pointed, ‘shuttered within and without – how could such a young man be murdered by a crossbow bolt?'

Athelstan repeated the same question sometime later in Thibault's chancery chamber, a comfortable, elegant room draped in heavy ornate tapestries with the richest Turkey cloths across the floor. Oaken furniture gleamed in the light of pink-coloured candles and the glare of flames roaring in the stone hearth. The Master of Secrets, half man, half shadow, Athelstan thought, sat enthroned behind a polished walnut table. He was swathed in a fur-lined cloak. On either side sat Oudernarde and Cornelius. Behind him stood Lascelles with Rosselyn guarding the door. Athelstan repeated the question about Eli's death. Cranston slurped noisily from his goblet of hot posset, drawing a look of distaste from the prim-faced Cornelius. Thibault threw down his quill pen and leaned over the table, his soft face lit by the flaring candles. Despite the opulence, the heavily scented warm air, the crackling fire and the hot posset warming his belly, the Dominican sensed the ice-cold harshness of Thibault's soul.

‘Brother Athelstan, you argue that Barak is not the assassin but a victim?'

‘He may be the assassin, but he was definitely the victim of murder. How and why?' Athelstan shrugged. ‘I have expressed my doubts. I shared the same last night with Sir John. I assure you of this. The passing hours, a good night's sleep and celebrating the Eucharist have not changed my mind. The attack on us this morning confirms my doubts. An assassin still lurks here in the Tower. I suggest Barak did not murder Lettenhove, or,' he bowed imperceptibly at the Fleming, ‘wounded your august father. True, Barak may have been used by the assassin but . . .'

‘Yes, yes,' Thibault interrupted testily, ‘you have aired your doubts but you have no explanation as to the truth behind any of these murders, be it Lettenhove, Barak or Eli?'

‘You are correct, or why I was attacked this morning.'

‘I'm sorry that happened,' Thibault retorted. ‘Rosselyn informed me about it.'

‘Is there anything certain?' Cornelius jibed.

‘You have studied logic, Master Cornelius?'

‘Of course.'

‘Then you know that in this life nothing is certain, except the fact that there are uncertainties.'

‘You play with words,' Oudernarde grated, eyes glittering with anger. ‘My henchman lies murdered, my father sorely wounded.'

‘I am truly sorry for that, Magister.'

‘We expected better of you.' Oudernarde jabbed a finger. ‘My Lord of Gaunt and Master Thibault talk highly of your work, Brother Athelstan, and that of your companion, the Coroner of London . . .'

‘For the time being.' Thibault's threat was almost hissed. Cranston, sitting with his eyes half closed and wishing the pain in his belly would fade, simply opened his wallet and drew out his seals of office. Athelstan grasped his friend's arm. Thibault smiled and spread his hands.

‘I mean,' the Master of Secrets fought to curb his temper, ‘you could be promoted to higher favour.'

Cranston snorted noisily and put the seals away.

Athelstan tapped the table edge. ‘You want certainty, Magister? I will give you certainties. First, a killer haunts the Tower. Who he is, how and why he slays is, for the moment, a mystery. Secondly, the Upright Men have a hand in this. Thirdly, you have a spy among the Upright Men; they certainly have one in your company. Fourthly,' Athelstan brushed aside Thibault's attempt to protest, ‘the two severed heads which suddenly appeared in the chapel of St John disappeared equally swiftly during the attack on your company near Aldgate. Fifthly, Master Oudernarde, you brought those severed heads from Flanders. Sixthly, the attackers took these but their real prize was your hooded prisoner, probably the woman who now lives in splendid but closely guarded isolation in Beauchamp Tower. Seventhly, Barak was not the assassin but was murdered to appear so. Eighthly, Eli's death is a complete mystery. How can a young man, locked and bolted in a most secure chamber, be killed by crossbow bolt loosed to his face, yet no such weapon be found in that chamber?' Athelstan took a deep breath. ‘So, yes, masters, good sirs all of you: certainties, however uncertain they may appear, have been established.' Athelstan picked at the three knots on his waist cord symbolizing his vows of poverty, chastity and obedience. ‘I would like to inspect those severed heads,' he continued, ‘and I would dearly love to meet your mysterious prisoner, or at least be told why she is so mysterious.'

Cranston coughed noisily to hide his grin, clearing his throat as he stared up at the vaulted chamber roof. Thibault picked up his pen, smoothed the quill plume feathers then used it to beckon Lascelles. The henchman leaned over the chair to hear his master's whisper and slipped like some black wraith from the chamber.

‘For the time being,' Thibault almost lisped, ‘our prisoner is not your concern, Brother Athelstan.'

‘Ninthly,' Athelstan almost shouted, ‘Sir John and I need to be busy. We need to reflect, to discuss, possibly even search. Master Thibault, in a word, we need to be gone. I have one favour to ask. My parishioners will have undoubtedly appreciated My Lord of Gaunt's gifts, and they would rejoice if the Straw Men, albeit in mourning for two of their members, could visit Saint Erconwald's. My parishioners would love to see their performance, while it would give me the opportunity to question the troupe further.' Athelstan paused as Lascelles slipped back into the room carrying a leather sack. Athelstan suspected what it contained.

‘The Straw Men can wait but you have our permission to leave.' Thibault smacked his lips. ‘As for the heads . . .' He snatched the sack from Lascelles and placed it on the table. ‘Take them, Brother Athelstan. You have our authority, and that of the King's Coroner in London, to hand them over to Master Robert Burdon, Custos of the Gatehouse of London Bridge and Keeper of the Heads, to add to his collection above the gatehouse.'

‘And their crime?' Cranston demanded, leaning across to pluck up the sack.

‘For the moment that must remain secret, Sir John.' Thibault waggled his fingers. ‘Suffice to know, they were traitors who deserved their fate.'

‘We all deserve our fate; only God's mercy saves us from it.' Athelstan pushed back the narrow chair and rose to his feet. He bowed, and with Cranston carrying the sack, walked to the door.

‘Brother Athelstan?'

‘Yes, Master Thibault?'

‘You say we have a spy in our company. I find that difficult . . .'

‘It always is,' Athelstan retorted. ‘A Judas hides behind his kiss which,' he gestured around, ‘is why I must return to question people here, and that includes you, Master Thibault.' Athelstan nodded at Rosselyn to open the door and they left. Once outside Athelstan winked at Cranston. ‘Let us divert ourselves, Lord Coroner. The royal menagerie? Perhaps we'll visit that, but I must see this great snow bear.'

Cranston needed no further encouragement. He led Athelstan across baileys and courtyards, skirting frozen white gardens, herb plots and snow-covered outbuildings, past their own lodgings and through Hall Tower along Red Gulley to St Thomas' Tower which fronted the wide deep moat. Even before they entered the great cavernous cell on the ground floor, Athelstan smelt the thick, rancid odour of rotting fish and putrid meat, so dense and cloying it made him gag. The bear keeper, who rejoiced in the name of Artorius, a bulbous-eyed, bald-headed fellow, round as a tub, his unshaven face glistening and reddened from the coarse wine he was enjoying, was at first hostile and surly. However, he was only too willing to take Cranston's coin and show them what he called his ‘pride and joy'. He raced up the steps on the side of St Thomas', gave them each a pomander and unlocked the iron-barred door. He beckoned them into the reeking darkness, took a cresset from its holder and began to light a long line of other torches fixed into the wall.

Athelstan could only stare in disbelief. The entire ground floor of St Thomas' was a huge cavern with a pointed vaulted ceiling. Most of it was taken up by a huge cage: the bars, placed very closely together, were driven into the ground and rose to meet similar poles of the finest steel driven horizontally into the far wall. The flaring flames of the sconce torches shimmered in these. Athelstan noticed how there was a gate built into the cage where the vertical bars had been cut to form a square filled by a thick oaken door so as to allow the keeper to put in food or, if he wanted, enter the cage itself. Athelstan stood, transfixed. Despite the coarse but powerful-smelling pomander drenched in lavender and pinewood, the reek was intense. Athelstan coughed and spluttered. He held the pomander close as he walked carefully forward. The ground was greasy under foot. Athelstan slipped and slithered as he made his way down the aisle past the cage. He grasped a pole of the cage and his heart skipped a beat as a great dark shape lurched out of the shadows. He stepped back and stared in disbelief as the light from the cresset torches above him grew stronger. The bear approached the bars on all fours. Abruptly aroused from its sleep, it reared up on its hind legs. Its black-edged snout sniffed the air, huge jaws opened in a roar, massive paws flailed in the air. The friar was taken by the bear's sheer ferocity, but also by its heart-throbbing magnificence.

‘A gift from the King of Norway,' Artorius sang out. The bear was at least three yards high and, despite a few stains from lying in its cage, the animal's hide was a brilliant thick, white fur. Athelstan had seen many a mangy-coated travelling bear much smaller and black furred; usually broken and infirm, fed on ale slops and discarded food, these hobbled along, muzzled and chained like beaten dogs. This was different. The snow bear was certainly chained: a massive leather collar circled its thick neck with a finely wrought, very long silver-like chain secured to one of the cage poles; this allowed the animal considerable freedom of movement.

‘Behold Maximus,' Artorius declared, ‘truly the king of all beasts!' Athelstan could only agree. He had never seen such a splendid creature. Maximus, startled from his sleep, lurched forward and crashed against the poles, his black, red-rimmed eyes with their hard, unblinking stare conveyed his sheer ferocity, his large, massive jaws open to display teeth as long, white and sharp as ivory daggers. Maximus again crashed into the cage poles before lumbering on all fours to a broad, iron-plated door built into the far end of the Tower.

‘The finest steel of Milan,' Artorius declared, tapping one of the bars. ‘A gift from the Sforzas, as is the chain.'

Athelstan stood back, viewing the cage in the strengthening light of all the torches which were now lit. Maximus appeared to dislike the glare and the heat; he stood with his back to them, pushing at that gate with his head.

‘The best steel,' Cranston breathed. ‘It would have to be.'

‘True, Sir John,' Artorius replied. ‘Maximus can take a man's head off, and has, with one bite or sweep of his paw.'

‘Is he so savage?' the coroner asked.

‘On a full stomach Maximus can be as content as a pig; he will even play with you,' Artorius nodded. ‘And I mean that, though even then you have to be very careful, yet he is mild enough. However, once he's hungry or if he smells blood or worse, both, I do not like being in here, finest steel or not.' Athelstan studied the cage again; the snow bear was a marvel and so was this. Cunningly devised, the close-set poles stretched from wall to wall, cordoning off most of this cavernous chamber. Maximus kept pressing his head against the gate in the wall leading on to the wharf.

‘He is hungry and wants to go swimming; he hopes to catch fish. Come, I'll show you.'

Athelstan and Cranston followed. The friar noticed how the aisle was broad enough but he followed the keeper's advice and kept as far away from the bars of the cage as possible.

‘It has been known,' Artorius sang out, ‘for Maximus to suddenly make a lunge. One thing about him which always surprises our visitors, despite his bulk, is that he can be as swift as a greyhound.'

‘Like someone else I know,' Athelstan whispered. He winked as Cranston turned and glared at him. Artorius opened the door at the end of the aisle and led them out on to the broad, snow-swept wharf which ran alongside the moat. Despite being constantly fed by the river, the water here had begun to freeze: sheets of ice bobbed on the surface, the cold was bitter and a thick river mist twisted above the quayside. Artorius walked to the outside entrance to the cage. Maximus was now banging noisily. The keeper pulled back the heavy bolts and lifted the huge bars. Artorius leaned these against the gate and hurriedly withdrew back through the door, beckoning at Cranston and Athelstan to follow. Once inside Artorius lowered the small door hatch so his visitors could have a good view. Athelstan glanced to his left; Maximus was now shoving the gate open. It creaked noisily and the bars on the other side fell away.

BOOK: The Straw Men
8.25Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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