Some women liked dogs, and Baldwin had no reason to think that Jeanne herself didn’t but there was a great difference between a little lapdog and Uther. There was a brash, confident slobbering enthusiasm about him that was entirely lacking in a gentlewoman’s small pet. Some dogs could subtly work their way into a household without being noticed. One moment there was a space in front of the fire, and the next a small mongrel had filled it. It was that way with old Ben, Baldwin’s farm dog. One day there had been space before the fire, the next the little mutt had inveigled his way in, and it was as if he had always been there.
Uther, on the other hand, was incapable of insinuating himself into a small gap. If there was a small gap, it soon became Uther-sized as he shoved his way through. When Uther was present, it was impossible to miss him. It wasn’t only the fact that a creature weighing over six stones was hard to ignore, nor the smell of three-week-old damp rags that he invariably carried with him wherever he went. No, it lay more in the fact that Uther had about him a variety of canine devotion that was touching to someone who liked dogs, and intensely repulsive to someone who didn’t.
But Baldwin wasn’t going to admit that in front of his servant. “This is nonsense!” he snapped. “Uther is my dog, and he always stays in the hall. How else can he protect the place? You’ll give him the run of the hall again immediately.”
Edgar raised an eyebrow, and opened his mouth as if to argue, but Baldwin held up his hand. “That is my decision. Is that clear?”
“Yes, Sir Baldwin,” Edgar said again with that irritating servility that felt like condescension. “If that is what you wish, I will see to it.”
“Good.”
“But … ”
Baldwin glared. “What?”
“I was thinking, sir, that it might be best if we kept Uther from the hall while you’re eating. He might unsettle Emma—or Lady Jeanne.”
It was a sensible suggestion. Baldwin nodded, absently patted the dog on the head, and began to walk back to his new room. “And now fetch me water and a bowl. I need to wash.”
The meal was not an unqualified success. Edgar remained on his best behavior, which meant he cultivated an air of suave competence, responding to any orders with a distant politeness. His demeanor left Baldwin disgruntled; he would have enjoyed being able to order his man about, to demonstrate he knew how to keep his servant on his toes.
Jeanne could see that Simon and his wife were more interested in her and their host than their food, and that was enough to make her maintain a calm reserve. It was easier than trying to make polite conversation in which every subject was analyzed for a possible second meaning.
Yet she was struck with the knight’s property. The house was a great old cob and thatch longhouse, generously proportioned, but Baldwin had made several improvements, according to Simon and his wife. When they had first visited him here, it had been merely a single-storied hall with a small dairy at the back, a buttery and pantry to one side. Now each end contained upper rooms, areas of privacy from the servants and bondsmen who messed and slept in the hall. That was not all, for the new red sandstone block attached to the rear of the house was Baldwin’s new buttery, where all his brewing equipment was stored. It meant that he now regularly had too much ale for his own people and could sell off his excess. The old buttery was still in use, but like the undercroft was used more as a storeroom than a working area.
“That stew was excellent,” she commented as Edgar placed a fresh bread trencher before her.
“I am glad you enjoyed it,” Baldwin said. “It wasn’t so easy before with the old kitchen.”
“When did you have the new one built?” asked Margaret.
“During the summer. The old one caught fire. I must admit, I’d been thinking about doing something about it for some time already, though. It was too small for my purposes. I used the quarry over at Cadbury for the stone, and now I have a kitchen large enough to feed an earl, should it be necessary!”
“Do you look for advancement, then?” Margaret asked.
“Christ’s Blood, no!” said Baldwin, sincerely shocked. “What benefit would I gain from banneret’s rank or higher? All it would mean would be that I would have to fund more men to no advantage.”
“Come on, Baldwin,” Simon said reasonably. “Largesse is a key attribute for a knight; you should be happy to have more men so you can show your generosity.”
“That may be a good principle for a wealthy duke or prince, but it’s cold comfort to a poor local knight who each year spends all his income feeding the mouths he already has living on his estates.”
“You tell us that you are impecunious, Sir Baldwin? With your new kitchen, solars and brewery?” asked Jeanne teasingly.
“Perhaps not impecunious, but not rich. The brewery is for my workers, for they need the sustenance. My kitchen had to be rebuilt anyway, and it made more sense to have something worthwhile, rather than a cookhouse that was too small for my retinue. But if I was to seek higher rank I would immediately have to find men to flock to my banner in time of war, and they would be extra mouths to feed.”
“Some knights would think that a small price to pay for their elevation,” grunted Emma through a mouthful of stew.
“Some no doubt would,” Baldwin agreed, eyeing her with distaste. “But I consider my first duty to be to protect the poor on my lands, and those who cannot feed themselves. Worldly positions matter little compared with that.”
“I think so too,” said Jeanne, and Baldwin was pleased to see that she gave her maid a look of cold disapproval.
After they had finished their meal, and while Edgar chivvied servants to clear away the mess, Baldwin and his guests moved nearer the fire. While it was not yet deep winter, the nights were cold enough, and the flames offered some defense. The doors had large gaps which let in the drafts, and the tapestries which covered the shuttered but unglazed windows were only partially effective, but for all that, Jeanne felt as comfortable here as if she had spent her childhood in the house. It had a warmth and serenity that was missing in her own.
It was perhaps because she had been orphaned while very young. Her parents had been the victims of a gang of trail bastons, a group of murderous thugs who robbed, murdered and looted wherever they could. Her father had been murdered, and her mother raped and killed. Jeanne herself, although only a child, had been struck with an axe, but the killer had been drunk and had missed his mark.
Jeanne had been saved and taken to Bordeaux, where relations protected her until she met Ralph de Liddinstone and agreed to marry him. But she had found life with him to be a nightmare. He had abused her, beaten her, insulted her before his friends, and finally taken to whipping her. It was a relief when he contracted a fever and died.
It was already well over a year since his death—he died in the summer before she had met Baldwin—and in that time, although the estate had suffered from near-catastrophic disasters, she was happier now than she had been for many years. The only event which had shaken her initial resolve to remain free and uncontracted to any man had been her meeting Sir Baldwin de Furnshill.
Glancing over at him, she felt her face soften at the sight. The knight sat, clearly at his ease, his eyelids drooping with the somnolence induced by a heavy meal, his drink tilting at a dangerous angle in his hand as he tried to fight sleep. Simon had already given up the battle, and was snoring gently, arms folded, head resting against the fireplace, Margaret nodding at his side. They looked comfortable together, and Jeanne felt a quick jealousy. She had never known such companionship with a man, and it seemed unfair that Margaret should have found happiness with the first man she had married.
Baldwin appeared kind, she thought. He had eyes that were keen to smile, rather than scold; his temperament was geared to protecting others rather than taking for himself. The talk about self-advancement they had held over the table had confirmed that, and she could recall conversations with him in Tavistock when he had evinced compassion for the innocent whe
n accused, and for those who were unable to defend themselves. It made her certain that he would make a good husband.
He had asked her to marry him then, but she had temporized. It was not solely because she felt it was too soon after her husband’s death to be seemly, for the Abbot would have married them, and no one would have dared gainsay him; it was more due to her own doubts. After suffering unhappily in one marriage she had no desire to repeat the experience.
And that was her sole remaining source of uncertainty. Was Baldwin pleasant only to her face, and a brute in private? That was how her husband had been: he had been civility and generosity itself while courting her, and it was only when she wed him that she realized his true colors. But there was no denying the fact that she was lonely.
While she contemplated his dozing figure, she heard a soft pattering of paws, which suddenly increased their speed.
Uther had been shut away in the undercroft for the previous two hours while his master ate, not that Uther knew that was the reason. To his simple mind, all that mattered was that he had been away from Baldwin’s side for a long time, and that, he knew, only happened when he had misbehaved. Now he was released, he knew he must make his apologies to his master for whatever he might have done. On entering the hall at a gentle trot, he saw the familiar shape in the chair at the fireside, and launched himself forward.
It was a pleasant dream into which Baldwin had slipped. He was walking once more with Jeanne in the Abbot’s garden at Tavistock, building up to asking her the crucial question, and as he asked, she turned her sweet face to him, and he saw her smiling lips open … and she butted him in the stomach.
“Jeanne!”
He opened his eyes to a mask of horror. Massive brown eyes met his, jowls quivered with saliva which dropped on his chest, and then the jaws opened like the maw of hell, and he saw the tongue flicking forward before he managed to snap his eyes shut.
Only later, long after the disgraced mastiff had been ejected, after the abundant apologies from Edgar, after the pint of strong wine which he had felt entirely justified in drinking to calm his shattered nerves, only then did Baldwin remember the gales of laughter pouring from Jeanne.
But still later, when he was lying in his bed, he recalled with overwhelming horror what he had cried out loud as his dream was shattered by that blasted hound.
In the morning, Simon was annoyed to be woken before daylight. Someone was gently shaking his shoulder, and the bailiff had to stop himself from cursing as he recognized his servant. “Hugh? What is it?”
“Sir Baldwin’s getting ready to go into town, sir. He thought you’d want to join him.”
“He did, did he?”
The disgruntled bailiff dressed himself and went down to the hall. There he found the knight sitting in his chair by the fire, which had only recently been made up and was making more smoke than flame. Wat was on his knees blowing enthusiastically at the feeble embers.
“You’re in a hurry to be off today,” Simon observed suspiciously.
“Sorry, Simon, but I have a murder to solve, and there are many people to speak to.”
The bailiff watched him don a thick coat and cloak. “So it’s got nothing to do with nervousness about seeing Jeanne as soon as she wakes?”
“Nervousness? What have I got to be nervous about?”
“Oh, nothing, nothing. How’s your dog today?”
Baldwin glowered at him scornfully. When Edgar appeared and announced that their horses were ready, the knight walked past the bailiff with an air of absolute disdain. Uncrushed, Simon trailed after him, still fastening his cloak, whistling tunelessly and grinning broadly.
The town, when the three men rode in, was just stirring. Dogs barked, cockerels squawked their welcome to the new day, shutters slammed open, men and women cursed or bellowed, and over it all there was a general hubbub of pots and pans banging as meals were prepared. They rode past shopkeepers dropping their shutters onto trestles and setting goods on display. Some recognized Simon from the time when he had lived here—was it really four years since he had left for Lydford?—and gave him a good-natured nod of the head, or a doubtful frown, depending upon their experience of him. It made him feel good to be alive. He hadn’t realized how much he had missed the town.
“Where to first, Baldwin?”
“Up to see our old friend John of Irelaunde. He’d be the first man to be suspected by the average townsman, and I’d rather have a chance to speak to him before someone tries to dangle him from a rope.”
They were soon at the road that led up the hill to the Irishman’s. On the corner stood Godfrey’s house. Baldwin carried on toward John’s property, but Simon called to him. “There’s someone trying to attract your attention, Baldwin. Is that Putthe?”
Without answering, Baldwin trotted his horse through the gate and up to the front door. “Putthe? You’ve had second thoughts?”
“Me?” Putthe, his bandage even grimier now, looked up as if surprised at the question. “No, sir. When I saw you the other night I was still half-concussed, and fearfully upset, what with the strain of losing my master. I forgot to tell you something.”
Baldwin and the others dismounted and followed the servant into the buttery. Here he had a small copper pot heating over a brazier. The scent from it made Simon salivate. It was the smell of sugared wine, mulled with sweet, aromatic herbs. After the journey, it was the tonic he needed.
Even Baldwin couldn’t refuse a mug, and he sighed with gratitude as he felt his first gulp sear a glowing path down his gullet. “Come on, Putthe. What stunning news do you have for us?”
It was hard, but now Putthe knew he had been wrong at first, and he had to ensure that John was protected. He didn’t need any more trouble, and his mistress could make his life a misery if he didn’t protect the Irishman.
“Master, my memory was weak after I was hit. Otherwise I’d have told you when you were here before.”
“Never mind the excuses, what wonderful clues do you now remember?”
“On the night my master was murdered, I was out here. I didn’t say before, because I didn’t think it mattered, but I had someone with me … ”
“Who?” Simon demanded immediately. “We already know that your lady had allowed all the servants to go to the inn apart from you and her maid. Who was here with you?”
Puuhe lowered his eyes for a moment. “It was Jack, the blacksmith. He was often round here to see to the master’s horses.”
“And you shared your master’s best ale with him?”
“I was asked to, sir. It wasn’t as if there was any problem with it. Jack had been here to see to Mistress Cecily’s mare—it had cast a shoe, and he had to fit it back.”
“What really happened, Putthe?” Baldwin asked, setting his pot on the floor.
“As I told you, sir, I got such a knock on the head that I couldn’t remember everything all at once,” Putthe said reproachfully. “Soon as I recalled it, I wanted to let you know. What happened was this: Jack was here in the late afternoon, and the mare was skittish, didn’t want any part of having the shoe refitted, so Jack got quite hot and thirsty. Mistress Cecily asked me to invite him in here. I wouldn’t normally, he’s a bit rough and ready, if you follow me, but after he’d spent so long here with the mare, I suppose the mistress thought it was only polite to give him an ale when he was done.
“The master came in after a while, and shared a drink. He was in an excellent mood, and went out just as dark was falling. It was his way to go out when Coffyn was away. He didn’t trust Coffyn’s hired men—thought they could rob the house. Master Godfrey was worried they might decide to take some of his tools or steal a pig or something. You never can trust their type!
“What with one thing and another, it had been a hard day for me and for Jack. We had a few quarts together. One man came, asking for the master, but he went when I said he wasn’t here … ”
“Who was that?” asked Baldwin sharply.
“Only one of C
offyn’s men. He said he wanted to pass on some news about Coffyn’s business.”
“Was it normal for Coffyn’s men to come round like that?”
“Not really,” shrugged Putthe, “but they came over sometimes. My master had some interest in helping Matthew Coffyn, and had been for several months.”
“And what happened then?”
“After he’d gone, Jack and I had a little more to drink, and then he left. I put my feet up with another pint or two. I suppose I must have dozed. I don’t know what stirred me. All of a sudden I was wide awake. It took me a minute to get my bearings, as it were. I couldn’t hear anything, not even a mouse, so I just put it down to some noise from the street. You get that sometimes, from carts hitting potholes and suchlike. But then I heard this terrible scream!”
Putthe stopped and turned to Baldwin. He knew that the Keeper was the more important of the two men, and it was the knight whom he must convince. That cry was a sound he’d never forget, not if he lived another thousand years. The pain in it was too great. As soon as he heard it, Putthe had recognized it as his master’s.
“I knew it was the master. I couldn’t miss his voice—but, Sir Baldwin, it was as if he’d concentrated his whole soul in that one bellow. It was awful—the agony of it. God’s Blood! I hope I never hear anything like it again!”
Baldwin eyed him with a cool detachment. There was little doubt in his mind that the servant was honest in his horror at remembering his master’s shout, but that begged the question: had he concealed hearing it before? The knight had known head injuries of many kinds—both at first-hand from practicing warfare, and from watching tournaments where others were buffeted and struck down. It was not uncommon for a man to waken from such a blow having forgotten things, but he was convinced Putthe had intentionally kept this hidden. “And?”
Sighing, Putthe topped up his copper and set it to rest upon the brazier once more. “It was impossible for John to have killed him. I was there too quickly. He didn’t have time to get out before I was there.”
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