Hugh Corbett 11 - The Demon Archer

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Hugh Corbett 11 - The Demon Archer Page 9

by Paul Doherty


  ‘Yes, I was going to ask about that.’ Corbett looked over his shoulder at the door. Lady Madeleine was sure to arrive soon and he didn’t want to get this young, very naive novice into trouble. ‘I know little about St Hawisia.’

  ‘Oh, then let me tell you. I’ve learned everything.’

  Sister Fidelis took them out of the sanctuary and around to the side chapel. Corbett stared appreciatively at the long oaken tomb.

  ‘How old is that?’

  ‘Lady Johanna says at least two hundred years. The oak was brought specially from the West Country.’

  Corbett looked round the side chapel. On the marble altar built into the far wall stood a statue of what must be St Hawisia, a young woman, hair falling down to her shoulders, dressed in royal robes of purple and white. In her outstretched hands lay a sword. On the walls huge frescoes depicted scenes from the saint’s life in a gorgeous array of colours. These showed a young woman in flight, pursued by knights armed with clubs, swords and maces. Another scene showed a wood where the young saint knelt beside a pool, a lily in her hands.

  ‘Who was St Hawisia?’ Corbett tapped the glass case at the head of the coffin into which Ranulf was peering.

  ‘It’s hair!’ his manservant exclaimed. ‘Look, Sir Hugh, beautiful golden tresses!’

  Corbett removed the purple, gold-edged cloth covering half of the glass and saw the locks coiled in a circle, lustrous and golden as full-grown wheat.

  ‘What is this?’ he asked.

  ‘It’s the relic,’ Sister Fidelis explained. ‘It’s St Hawisia’s hair.’

  Corbett stared at the fresco behind him. He noticed the date, painted in silver gilt at the bottom of the picture: A.D. 667.

  ‘St Hawisia lived centuries ago!’ he exclaimed. ‘Almost seven hundred years ago but this hair . . .!’

  ‘That’s because it’s a miracle,’ Sister Fidelis said. ‘You see, sir, Hawisia was a Saxon princess. Her father was king of these parts.’ She closed her eyes as if memorising a lesson. ‘Now her father wanted her to marry a powerful thane.’ She opened her eyes. ‘What’s a thane?’

  ‘A nobleman,’ Corbett replied.

  ‘Hawisia said that she was dedicated to God and would not marry this prince. Her father became very angry. Hawisia was beautiful. She was particularly famous for her golden hair. Now.’ Fidelis pointed to the fresco. ‘Hawisia fled her father’s palace but he pursued her with soldiers. Hawisia fled into a wood and reached the well, this very place. She cut off her golden hair and laid it beside a pool as an offering to God. Well.’ The young novice closed her eyes. ‘Ah, yes, that’s right. When her father reached her, he was so angry at what she had done, he drew his dagger and drove it deep into her heart.’ Sister Fidelis mimicked the action of a soldier striking; Corbett pressed on Ranulf’s toe as a warning not to laugh. ‘When his rage cooled, yes, that’s right.’ She opened her eyes. ‘He deeply regretted what he had done. He converted to Christianity, gave his daughter honourable burial and founded a house of prayer which later became St Hawisia’s priory.’

  ‘And this is her tomb?’

  ‘Yes, St Hawisia lies beneath the flagstones. This tomb was built by Lady Madeleine’s ancestor. The Fitzalans have always had a great devotion to her.’

  ‘But surely this isn’t Princess Hawisia’s hair?’ Ranulf exclaimed.

  ‘Yes it is,’ Sister Fidelis insisted defensively. ‘You see, that’s why Hawisia’s father converted. The hair remained as it had on the day his daughter died: over the centuries it has never rotted or decayed. If you put your hand on the glass case and say a prayer to St Hawisia, she always answers.’

  Corbett studied the golden tresses. The hair was undoubtedly genuine yet it looked as fresh and lustrous as if it had been shorn off the previous day.

  In his travels he’d seen many a relic. Enough nails from the True Cross to use in the building of a shop. At least three heads of St John the Baptist, five legs of St Sebastian, feathers from Archangel Gabriel’s wing and, on one famous occasion, even the stone Jesus was supposed to have stood on before He ascended into Heaven. Similar relics were found throughout Europe: holy blood which liquefied, statues which wept tears. They ranged from the sublime to the ridiculous, even including a sweat cloth which St Joseph supposedly used in his workshop.

  Corbett tapped the glass case: the work of a craftsman, it was cleverly riveted to the top of the tomb. Was there a logical explanation for this relic? Had it been sealed so as to protect it from the putrefying air? It was undoubtedly a phenomenon. No wonder St Hawisia’s attracted so many pilgrims.

  ‘It’s all very beautiful.’

  ‘Oh, Lord Henry recently refurbished it.’

  ‘When?’

  ‘About three months ago. The shrine was sealed and closed for a while so the walls and ceilings could be painted.’

  ‘Has this reliquary ever been opened?’

  ‘No, it hasn’t.’

  Corbett suddenly felt he was being watched and turned to see that two nuns stood at the entrance to the side chapel. The foremost was tall, severe-looking, dressed in a snowy-white habit. A gold medal hung from a filigree chain around her neck. Behind her the other nun was similarly dressed, though smaller, more anxious. If looks could kill, the young novice would have dropped dead on the spot.

  ‘Lady Madeleine Fitzalan?’ Corbett asked, coming forward.

  Lady Madeleine didn’t even shift her gaze from the petrified novice.

  ‘What are you doing here, Sister Fidelis?’

  ‘I was practising the Salve Regina.’

  ‘And she sang beautifully,’ Corbett declared. ‘Even though her knuckles were very sore.’

  ‘She’s a clumsy girl,’ Lady Madeleine replied, her eyes shifting to Corbett.

  ‘But when I return,’ Corbett went on, ‘the bruises will have healed, will they not?’

  Lady Madeleine snapped her fingers.

  ‘Go to the novice house, Sister Fidelis!’ She surveyed Corbett from head to toe. ‘I am Lady Madeleine Fitzalan. This is Sister Agnes, my sub-prioress.’

  The other nun forced a smile.

  ‘And I am Sir Hugh Corbett, Keeper of the King’s Secret Seal, his special emissary to these parts. I carry his warrant and authority. This is Ranulf-atte-Newgate, my manservant, senior clerk in the Chancery of the Green Wax.’

  ‘You have no authority on church lands!’

  ‘I can get it.’

  Lady Madeleine’s thin face broke into a smile.

  ‘Could you really, Sir Hugh?’ She brushed by him, walked towards the shrine and gave Ranulf the same critical look. ‘You have a bold stare, man!’

  ‘I was examining your habit, my lady, its snowy whiteness. Is that a symbol of holiness or just humility?’

  Corbett closed his eyes at the hiss of indrawn breath.

  ‘Lady Madeleine.’ He came and stood beside her. ‘Your half-brother has been murdered.’

  ‘God assoil him!’

  ‘And a young woman’s corpse was left outside the postern of your priory. I understand she, too, had been murdered, by an arrow to the neck.’

  ‘Who told you that?’

  ‘His Majesty the King. Not to mention the gossips at the Devil-in-the-Woods tavern.’

  ‘It’s well named.’ Lady Madeleine’s icy gaze never faltered. ‘But, yes, the poor woman’s corpse was found and we gave it Christian burial.’

  ‘Why?’

  ‘It’s one of the Corporal Acts of Mercy.’

  ‘Did you know the woman?’

  ‘No, I did not!’

  ‘Had she ever visited this priory or shrine?’

  ‘No, she did not and you can ask that question of any of the community.’

  ‘And where is she buried?’

  ‘In our graveyard.’

  Corbett produced his warrant bearing the royal seal.

  ‘Then, my lady, by the authority invested in me, I wish the corpse exhumed so I can examine it.’

  ‘You cannot do that.’


  Corbett walked away. ‘Ranulf, find a mattock, hoe and spade. Use your authority to find out where this poor corpse lies buried. My lady prioress, I will explain my actions to the King and to the Archbishop, and you can then account for your refusal to co-operate with me.’

  ‘Sir Hugh.’

  He turned. Lady Madeleine’s face had softened.

  ‘I did not mean to quarrel. First, let me answer your questions. The case containing the relic is never opened. Secondly, I will answer your questions in my parlour. Thirdly, since I am prioress here, I will have the body exhumed!’

  Chapter 6

  One of the priory lay brothers dug the edge of his spade under the coffin lid, pushed it up and hastily walked away. The casket itself was nothing more than a long narrow chest tightly nailed down. Corbett told Ranulf to stand aside and, putting a cloth soaked in wine, vinegar and herbs to his mouth and nose, drew his dagger and walked closer. The lay brothers had hastily withdrawn. Lady Madeleine and the community did not wish to be present. Ranulf stood some distance away under the spreading branches of a gnarled yew tree. Corbett pushed the lid away. Despite the wine-soaked cloth, the stench was offensive; the corpse beneath its gauze veil was now in mortal decay. Yet, at the same time, Corbett felt a deep sadness. The body, dressed in a simple white gown, looked young, pathetic and forlorn. He pulled back the makeshift coif and noticed the close-cropped hair. He rubbed a few strands between his fingers. For some reason he felt certain the hair was dyed. The wound in the throat was a repellent blue-black.

  ‘God have mercy on you!’ Corbett whispered. ‘But it’s true, there’s no beauty in death.’

  Suddenly he was back in Oxford, that wild-eyed assassin running towards him, crossbow coming up, its quarrel speeding towards him. Corbett pushed the thought away.

  ‘Remember man, that thou art dust and into dust thou shalt return.’

  ‘Sic transit gloria mundi . . .’

  Corbett glanced round. A man stood, cowled and hooded. He seemed a Franciscan by his brown habit. In addition he wore simple sandals on his feet, and carried a thick ash cane clutched in his hand. Ranulf was walking towards them.

  ‘Tell your manservant, Sir Hugh, that I am no threat.’

  A vein-streaked hand pushed back the cowl. Corbett saw a black, bushy moustache and beard, a balding head, a harsh face but one with merry eyes crinkled in amusement. Corbett found the stench of putrefaction from the coffin unbearable. He got to his feet.

  ‘I am Brother Cosmas, parish priest of St Oswald’s-in-the-Trees. Lady Madeleine told me who you were.’ The Franciscan’s smile widened, revealing yellow, jagged teeth. ‘Well, not her precisely, but the blessed Sister Veronica who, in a former life, must have been a town herald.’

  Corbett grinned. He had always liked Franciscans: their devotion to the poor, their rough and ready ways and their blunt, straightforward speech.

  ‘I come here for provisions,’ the friar continued. ‘Anything I can beg and Lady Madeleine loves acting the lady of the manor. In Paradise I am sure she will be given a position of rank, organising the angels!’ He nodded at the corpse. ‘The smell’s terrible.’

  Corbett pulled down the bandage round his nose and mouth and nodded in agreement.

  ‘You seem unperturbed, Brother.’

  ‘What’s the body but a bag of blood?’ the Franciscan replied. ‘The soul it housed has gone.’ His eyes softened. ‘Poor bairn. And, to answer your question bluntly, Sir Hugh, I have been a soldier, a barber surgeon in the King’s wars. I’ve seen more corpses than I’d like to count. We humans love killing, don’t we?’ He crouched down beside the coffin, muttered words from the Requiem and sketched a cross in the air. ‘An arrow wound.’ He pointed to the throat. ‘A good marksman.’

  ‘You know about archery, Brother?’

  ‘I was a master bowman in the King’s armies. Always aim for the neck I was told. The head, the chest, the belly, they are protected. But there’s no cure for a piece of steel in the windpipe. She must have died instantly. Do you want any help, King’s clerk?’

  Corbett pulled the bandage back up. He felt slightly nauseous and wished to be away from this paltry grave and its grisly cadaver. Assisted by the Franciscan, he turned the body over. From under the yew tree he heard Ranulf cough and curse as the smell wafted across but he grimly pressed on. He pulled the rope up to examine the back and front of the corpse.

  No marks except a brand on the shoulder, in the form of a lily. The mark was old and peeled. The corpse was placed back and the gauze veil pulled down. Corbett had to walk away to take the air while the Franciscan, grasping a piece of stone, hammered the lid back on.

  Corbett reached the yew tree, took off the cloth and watched a bird skim over the herbal plots. A thrush, he wondered? He tried to concentrate on something pleasant. Ranulf went to speak but Corbett just shook his head. The Franciscan finished and strode across.

  ‘It won’t be left there, will it?’

  ‘No, the lay brothers will put it back.’

  Corbett squinted up at him. ‘Do you know anything of her death, Brother?’

  The Franciscan shook his head. ‘Nothing! I don’t even recognise her and I know most faces in these parts. A strange death,’ he continued. ‘Rumour has it that her body was buried but then dug up and left at the priory gates.’ He studied Corbett carefully. ‘I saw you once, you know? Years ago on the Welsh march. They said you were a moody bugger but the King’s trusted clerk.’

  Ranulf stifled a laugh.

  ‘And this must be your manservant? The one who has got devil’s eyes and hair to match. Two of the King’s bully-boys, eh?’

  ‘I’m a royal clerk,’ Corbett replied. ‘And I am still a moody bugger. However, I dispense the King’s justice and that remains the same, constant.’

  ‘Does it now? Does it now? In which case I must introduce you to one of my parishioners: Robert Verlian, chief verderer to Lord Henry Fitzalan, now deceased. He’s taken sanctuary in my church. It was either that or Sir William would have strung him up from the nearest tree.’

  ‘Is he innocent?’ Corbett asked.

  ‘He says he is.’

  ‘And what do you think, Brother? I mean, you’ve set yourself up as a judge of other people.’

  The Franciscan laughed and clapped Corbett on the back.

  ‘Well said, royal clerk.’ He beat his breast. ‘Mea culpa, mea culpa, I have sinned. If you are the royal judge in these parts, Verlian has some chance. Yes, he says he’s innocent and, yes, I think he is. Will you come and visit him?’

  ‘I’ll do better than that,’ Corbett replied. ‘I carry the royal warrant of Oyer and Terminer. I have the right to set up a court and hear any cases.’

  ‘And so you want to use my church?’

  ‘Yes, it would save a lot of time. And I will name you as a royal witness. I’d prefer St Oswald’s than anywhere else. Now. I’ll wash my hands and face and see if Lady Madeleine will have words with me.’

  ‘In which case I’ll say goodbye.’ The Franciscan clasped Corbett’s hand. ‘You are for my lady’s parlour and I’m for the kitchen to beg some scraps.’

  ‘Oh, Brother!’

  Cosmas turned.

  ‘You went to Beauclerc hunting lodge the night before Lord Henry was killed?’

  ‘Yes, just for a short while. I warned him against his harsh enforcement of the forest laws.’

  ‘And on the morning he was killed?’

  ‘I was praying, clerk, as I always do!’ And the Franciscan walked away.

  A short while later Corbett, his hands and face scrubbed clean, a half-cup of red wine settling his stomach, was ushered across the cobbled yard and into the comfortable parlour of the prioress’s house. The room was wood-panelled, carved in the linen fashion. This stretched three quarters of the way up the wall; above it the plaster was a washed pink. Small pictures in ornate gold frames were placed along the walls above the panelling. Each contained scenes from the life of the Virgin Mary. Carpe
ts of pure wool were laid across the scrubbed paving stones. Coffers, cupboards, chairs and benches were arranged round the room. The prioress’s desk stood before the main bay window which looked out over her own private garden. Lady Madeleine was seated behind it, dictating to another sister who sat at a high desk to her right. When Corbett and Ranulf came in, Lady Madeleine dismissed the sister; she did not rise to greet them but waved Corbett to a rather high stool on the other side of the desk. Ranulf she ignored.

  ‘You’ve seen what you had to?’ she asked.

  Corbett ignored the stool but stood, arms folded, looking down at her while Ranulf leaned against the door and whistled softly under his breath. He intended to annoy and it had the desired effect. Lady Madeleine, looking daggers at him, pushed back her chair so she was forced to look up at Corbett.

  ‘You have questions for me, master clerk?’

  ‘No, my lady, the King has questions for you. Your brother’s death?’

  ‘He was killed while hunting,’ Lady Madeleine replied tartly. ‘He loved blood, did Henry. Blood and destruction! Showing off, as he always did, to his French visitors.’

  ‘You are not the grieving sister?’

  ‘Half-sister, master clerk!’

  ‘But still not grieving?’

  ‘Grief is a private thing. Lord Henry lived in his world and I in mine.’

  ‘And you have no knowledge of his death?’

  ‘I beg your pardon?’

  Corbett stared coolly back. ‘Why should someone want your brother dead?’

  Lady Madeleine threw her head back and laughed.

  ‘Master clerk, you have seen our church, yes? I could fill the nave with people who wanted him dead. His cruelty, his lechery. Oh, I grieve for him, for the boy he once was as well as his immortal soul.’

  ‘You were informed of his death immediately?’

  ‘I was here in my own chamber when Sir William sent a messenger.’ Her face softened. ‘I am sorry, Sir Hugh.’ She gripped the edge of the desk. ‘Look.’ She pointed to a chair in the far corner. ‘Would you like to sit? Some wine?’

 

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