31 - City of Fiends

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31 - City of Fiends Page 33

by Michael Jecks


  Opening the door, he walked out as if leaving his own front door, turning and closing it gently behind him as he went, and then looked about him for Ulric.

  The boy was a short way down, near the friary on the High Street, and Sir Charles strode over to him.

  ‘Come, we have to get over to the other side of this city again,’ he said gruffly, and then he suddenly saw a woman in the road before him.

  She was dark-haired, wearing a scruffy tunic, her matted hair framing her horrified features.

  Even as she began to scream, Sir Charles ran straight at her: she took the full force of his blow in her face, and hurtled backwards into the road.

  The screaming had stopped. But in its place there were shouts and bellows, and a horn blew.

  ‘I think,’ Sir Charles said as he ran, ‘you will need to hurry yourself, friend Ulric, if you want to live to see tomorrow’s morning.’

  Paffards’ House

  The bottler made his way to his mistress’s room and knocked gently on the door.

  When she called out, he entered.

  She looked terrible, the poor lass. Hardly surprising after the way things had gone just recently, but still, it was very sad to see her like this.

  ‘Mistress, your son has asked if I can go to find a pleader. Your husband has changed his story, and now denies his murders.’

  She look at him pretty sharply at that. ‘What do you mean, changed his story? How so?’

  ‘Apparently Master Gregory spoke to him and it transpired that Master Henry confessed because he thought the felon was your son. Now he’s been told that he’s innocent, he wants to save himself.’

  ‘It was impressive that he had the desire to try to protect Gregory, if only for a short while,’ she said. ‘I didn’t think he had it in him.’

  ‘You don’t want me to find a pleader, do you?’ John asked, and there was a faint tone of surprise in his voice.

  She smiled sadly and walked to him, placing her hand on his cheek. ‘Dear John. You don’t understand me, do you? You think only of the insults and shame he has brought to me.’

  ‘All the time,’ John said gruffly.

  ‘But I still cannot discard him without making an effort to save him. He is my husband, and I owe him the debt of chivalry. After all, I was the daughter of a knight. I understand duty. It is a painful duty, but it is mine. So yes, please, go to the pleader and see how we may have my husband released.’

  ‘Yes, mistress.’

  ‘You never know, John,’ she added. ‘Oftentimes a man can change. He can become reborn – with luck.’

  John nodded, but as he closed the door and left the room, he was thinking that the main way he wanted to see Henry Paffard change was with a knife in his belly.

  He was almost back at the buttery when he realised that he did not have his keys on his belt.

  Combe Street

  William and Philip had been standing there long enough for the shadows to move from almost overhead to point to the east, and William knew that it was at least one hour past midday. The bells were the only way to measure the passage of time generally, but he had always spent time watching the movement of the sun and the play of the shadows, and could tell the hour with great accuracy.

  Shadows. That was what his life had become. No work, no money, and now no home either. He was like one of the shuffling tatterdemalions in the streets, the boys and men without homes and no means of supporting themselves. There was that man he had seen before, the old tramp with his cloth bag containing his belongings gripped to his breast, his ragged beard and his constant look of terror making him fearsome rather than fearful. He was a shadowman, always hiding in the darker corners, rarely daring to show himself in case he was persecuted, or worse.

  William shuddered. Perhaps Philip was right, after all, he thought. Maybe they should just leave Exeter and find themselves new lives elsewhere.

  The door to the Paffards’ house opened, and William felt Philip punch his shoulder to warn him. But it wasn’t Gregory who descended the steps.

  ‘Leave him,’ Philip said.

  ‘He may know something,’ William hissed. ‘Like, where Gregory is!’

  Philip reluctantly agreed, and the two followed John as he crossed Southgate Street and went on up to the Bear Gate of the Cathedral.

  William felt hunger gnawing further into his belly. At the bottom of the gate was a stool where an old woman begged, and she held out her hand hopefully as they passed. It made William imagine how he would look in twenty years’ time, if he would be taking her place there at the gate. The beggars here had to pay good money to be able to keep their posts, he knew. He wondered how much.

  ‘Sir? Sir – John, sir,’ Philip called, and the old bottler turned with an enquiring look in his eye.

  ‘What?’

  ‘Master Gregory, sir. We wanted to speak with him. Is he at home?’

  John looked over their heads towards the house. ‘Aye, he’s there,’ he said at last, ‘but I don’t think he’ll want to see you.’

  ‘But he’s ordered us to be evicted,’ William said.

  Aye. I had heard.’

  ‘It’s not fair!’ William said hotly.

  Philip placed a hand on his forearm. ‘Sir, will he see us if we ask?’

  ‘No. I’m sorry, boys.’

  ‘You know,’ Philip said, ‘that his father stole our inheritance? All we want is something to help us start up again. Is that so wrong?’

  John bared his teeth in a flash of ferocity so sudden that William couldn’t help but take a step back.

  ‘Look, boys, you know and I know that Master Henry took your father’s money, business and house – everything. So let’s not beat about the bush for the deer. Send in the hounds. You want to stay in your place? Gregory won’t let you.’

  ‘His mother said we were a reminder and an embarrassment.’

  John gave a twisted grin. ‘She said that? It’s true: Gregory won’t want you hanging around because you’ll remind other people what his family did to you. You understand? A man has to trade on the value of his own word here. You take away his word, and his business will fail. And right quickly, too. You are the constant reminder to any clients that he cannot be trusted. They will think that Master Gregory doesn’t pay his debts even when under oath to the widow of his friends. So he will try to keep you as far from his door as he can – and if that means he has to pay sailors or roughs to beat you up – or even kill you – he’ll do it.’

  ‘Would he pay us to go?’

  John laughed. ‘He’s a rich man. Rich men don’t get to be rich by giving away money. Paying a man to beat you or kill you is one thing; paying you blackmail to go, that is a bad investment. Henry taught his son well.’

  ‘Then there is nothing we may do,’ Philip said angrily. He rested his hand on his dagger’s hilt.

  ‘Aye, the world is a cruel, sad place,’ John agreed, ‘when a man can rob another and profit by it. But that is the way of the world now. There is nothing a man can own or enjoy that another cannot take from him.’

  He left them then, but didn’t offer them godspeed or good fortune. What was the point? They had lost everything.

  Paffards’ House

  Sir Charles stood in the alley beside Henry Paffard’s house and listened carefully. It was hard to hear anything over his own stertorous breathing, but Sir Charles was never anything if not cautious.

  Ulric he had told to run as fast as he could up to the North Gate, and escape. With his guilty look, he should soon be seen and caught, and since Sir Charles intended to be away from here in short order, when Ulric was caught, his testimony would come too late to help the Watchmen to capture Sir Charles.

  Speed was essential if he was to escape, however.

  The front door had looked most appealing, but should there be any dispute about his right to enter, he would prefer by far that it should happen in a less public location than the front of the house, where passers-by could all too easily be calle
d upon to come and assist the family. So now he stood and waited a moment or two until his heart had stopped pounding quite so alarmingly, and his ears could still detect no sounds, and only then did he set his hand upon the wooden latch of the gate and test it. The lever lifted, and he pushed ever so gently. Sometimes these rich merchants would have dogs to guard their homes, and he had no desire to be mauled.

  There were no hounds present. With relief he opened the gate until a short squeak alerted him to a rusted hinge. He slid through and closed the gate behind him. A small garden area was revealed, with the house on his right. No one was visible there, nor at the outbuildings behind. He gripped the hilt of his dagger and strode towards the rear door, opening it and going inside. There was no need for concealment now. If someone saw him he must silence them as swiftly as he could.

  There was a brewery, then a large kitchen, and he hesitated there, hearing two voices.

  He chose the route of arrogance. Sheathing his knife again, he stepped into the room, looking about him at the mess and smoke as though disgusted.

  ‘Who are you?’ the cook demanded.

  ‘I’m here to see your master,’ he said, ‘but no one is about. Do you know when he will return?’

  ‘You walked in without the master?’

  ‘Your bottler let me in, Cook. Do you know when your master is to be back, I said?’

  ‘No.’

  ‘Very well,’ he said, and passed through to the hall.

  The room was empty, as he had hoped. He saw the chest at the wall, and pulled it away with a single yank on the handle. There was indeed a door set into the wall, sealed with a small padlock. He tugged at the key about his neck, hoping as he did so that there were treasures in here, and not coin. It would be hard to escape with a chest full of heavy coin.

  Still, this was not the time to worry about that. He pulled the key’s thong in two, and took the key to the lock. He thrust it in and turned it, and opened the door. It was dark inside, but went back some distance. He reached in and felt about. There was nothing.

  He sat back on his heels. The chamber was empty. If once there had been money or treasure or gold, it was gone. Probably because Paffard had been an incompetent businessman, he had frittered it away, or perhaps he had lost the money at gambling. For whatever the reason, the money was gone. And Sir Charles was in trouble.

  There came a sound from behind him, and Sir Charles whirled, rising to his feet as he did so and catching sight of a little boy’s startled face. The lad looked like a faun meeting a hunter. They stared at each other for a split moment, and then the boy had turned and was gone, a flash of hosen and green shirt.

  ‘God’s cods!’ Sir Charles swore viciously, and took off in pursuit.

  Southgate Street

  Simon could not help but feel that he would be better off spending time with his daughter and grandson than traipsing about the city from gaol to merchant, to church and thence to God knows where. The murder of the two women was sad, but it mainly served to remind him of the dangers of the city and the risks all took every day.

  His musings were interrupted by a growing clamour from Carfoix.

  ‘What, in Christ’s pain, is that?’ he said.

  ‘I don’t know,’ Baldwin said, ‘but it sounds as though the Hue and Cry has someone.’

  ‘They’re coming down here,’ Sir Richard said. He was standing with his vast legs wide apart, thumbs in his belt. And then he stopped and peered ahead. ‘Can you see who’s being chased?’

  It was impossible to make out what was happening. There was a clot of humanity in the road, and carters and tranters were already shouting furiously at the men to clear the roadway.

  ‘No,’ Baldwin said helplessly, and then he saw a man break away from the crowd to remonstrate with a carter. ‘Hey, you!’ he called to him. ‘Who do you hunt?’

  The man with his long staff paused. ‘The man they’re calling Sir Charles of Lancaster. He was up at the East Gate. Punched a woman, and laid her senseless, and ran on down this way. Been running after him ever since!’

  ‘You’re sure he came down here?’ Sir Richard demanded. ‘We haven’t seen him.’

  ‘He could have taken any of the alleys,’ the man panted.

  ‘Sir Baldwin, you carry on. I am keen to see that this bastard doesn’t lay a finger on another woman,’ Sir Richard bellowed. ‘I’ll go with this man.’

  ‘Very good,’ Baldwin said. ‘Edgar, you go with them and see if you can help capture Sir Charles. You should recognise him as fast as I would.’

  Edgar nodded and was soon off with Sir Richard and the man, who was a bailiff. There was a roar as Sir Richard approached the gaggle of men milling near the Bear Gate entrance, and then some order was restored.

  ‘Come, Simon,’ Baldwin said. ‘Let us go and speak with the priest.’

  Simon nodded, and they continued down the street, but as they came to Combe Street, he spotted Father Laurence. ‘What’s he doing there?’ Simon asked.

  Combe Street

  There was no sense in protracted arguing. Both brothers sensed that this was the end of their road. There was nothing they could do to recoup their losses. They slowly made their way back to the Paffards’ house, as if drawn by a magnet, and there they stood in the roadway.

  Philip could never remember such a confusion of spirit. All his soul was baying for revenge upon Henry Paffard, but the merchant was out of reach in the gaol.

  ‘Where can we sleep tonight?’ he wondered aloud.

  They had no money to pay for board and lodging, and tonight they must leave the streets before the Watch appeared and began to ask difficult questions of them.

  William said nothing, but stared at the alley along which their hovel stood.

  ‘Will, it’s pointless. We cannot go back. It isn’t our home any more.’

  ‘Only a couple of years ago, we were rich, our parents were happy and content, and we had a future. Now Paffard’s stolen it all. Not just our money, Philip, he’s stolen our lives.’

  His brother was right, Philip thought. They had nothing remaining of that happiness. And as to what they could do now, he had no idea.

  Just then, he heard a door open, and looking up, he saw Gregory Paffard in the doorway of his house.

  It was as though the sight spurred him into action. Without conscious thought, Philip began to walk, his body filled with a total, all-consuming purpose. He could not have put it into words but the intention was there.

  Gregory had already run down the steps, and had set off in the direction of Southgate Street, Philip only a matter of paces behind him, when Gregory suddenly stopped with an audible gasp.

  Philip took no notice. He drew his knife in one fluid movement, held it aloft for a moment, then grabbed Gregory’s shoulder, whirling him around.

  There was a shout, an inarticulate cry, and Philip stood looking into Gregory’s frightened expression for a moment, and then his knife swooped down. And as it did, a man came, and thrust Gregory aside.

  He was in the way, and there was nothing Philip could do as he saw Father Laurence’s face appear before him. There was a second in which all time seemed to stop. Philip could see the priest’s face in front of him, the eyes half-closed in anticipation – no fear, no terror, but an acceptance – while his knife appeared to be fixed in space.

  But then it descended, slamming into the priest’s chest with a thud that could be heard in Father Laurence’s voice as a little grunt, and Philip felt his fist tug the blade free again, and stared with horror at what he had done.

  There was a scream, and when Philip looked, he saw Agatha at the door to the house, an expression of horror on her face. But her eyes were on her brother, not the priest.

  Father Laurence smiled at him, a patient, forgiving smile, and then he turned and walked three paces before he stumbled, and then simply collapsed, like a falling tree. He was already dead before any could reach him.

  But Philip had heard him say those words. As he stood wit
h Philip’s knife in his breast, he looked up at Agatha, and murmured, ‘I still love you.’

  Carfoix

  There was a rushing of men all about as they searched alleys and side streets to find Sir Charles. Sir Richard was used to this sort of work, but even he was growing despondent as the sun crept around the sky. There was a moment when he thought he saw a man furtively creeping along, but when Edgar went and questioned the fellow, he was only a hunch-backed peasant on his way home.

  ‘What d’ye think?’ he asked Edgar.

  ‘It would be a miracle to find him now, if he’s still here. He found a place to hide yesterday after he reached the city. He must have an ally here, or someone whom he can trust. Without knowing who that is, we are searching for a single straw amongst many.’

  Sir Richard nodded. Then he said, ‘Hold! If the fellow knows someone here in the city, perhaps it was one of the men who had joined him in his gang?’

  Edgar nodded. He wore a supercilious expression, but Sir Richard didn’t care.

  ‘So, if the fellow was with him in his gang, it was someone who left here a few days ago when Sir Charles first approached this city – someone who disappeared and has recently returned.’

  ‘Yes. That is possible.’

  ‘Aye, better than nothing, as you might say,’ the knight said with satisfaction. He turned and led the way to a watchman.

  They were explaining Sir Richard’s reasoning when a boy hurried up. ‘The gaoler’s dead, sir,’ he said.

  Sir Richard glowered at him. ‘What?’

  ‘Someone has killed the gaoler and the prisoner, sir. They’re both dead in there.’

  ‘That, friend Edgar, is why the man was at the East Gate – it’s near the gaol. Now, Watchman, is there a man of the sort I described – who left the city before the death of the Bishop?’

  ‘There is one young feller. He left the city almost a fortnight ago,’ the man said. He had a healthy three-day growth of beard, and when he scratched his chin, it rasped. ‘We can try him.’

  ‘Where?’

  ‘Down behind Smythen Lane.’

  ‘Take us there.’

  Paffards’ House

 

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