‘No. I saw the ambush, and I bolted.’
‘So what’s your problem?’
‘If they recognise me, they might demand the money I owed them from that last journey!’
Saul sighed. ‘Al, if you escaped, they won’t remember. They only pinch what they can from a few folks, that’s all. I doubt whether they’ll remember you, all right?’
‘I still don’t like it.’
‘Well, get used to it, lad.’
‘Master Carter. Are you going to Chagford?’
Saul groaned to himself and turning, found himself looking up into a familiar face. ‘Well, well, if it isn’t Wylkyn the miner.’
‘No need to be like that.’
‘You enjoying life up on the moors?’
Wylkyn smiled thinly. He wore good clothes, a heavy cloak of fine wool, a tunic of hardwearing fustian over a fine linen shirt, but all were worn and faded now. Once grand, now all was growing shabby. ‘It’s good enough.’
‘Not as comfortable as your old life though, up at the castle, boiling herbs for Sir Richard, eh?’
‘Perhaps. Is it true you’re going to Chagford?’
‘Yes. We’ll be leaving early tomorrow.’
‘I want to join you.’
‘You? Why?’
‘I have things to sell and provisions to buy. Where else should I go but the Stannary town to get them?’
Saul shrugged. ‘You can come with us, if you have a mind. Why not? The more men the better.’
‘Good, old friend. I’ll be here tomorrow, then, with my ponies.’
‘Aye.’ Saul watched him walk away with an unsettled feeling in his gut. ‘Why does he want to come with us?’
Alan shrugged. ‘Why shouldn’t he?’
‘Are you as thick as a hog? Why do you think? We’re all travelling together to be safe from the men at Gidleigh, but he should be safe enough. He was one of them, wasn’t he?’
Roger Scut marched to the inn with Peter Clifford, the Dean of the Canonical Church, walking solemnly at his side. This early in the morning there were not yet many hawkers thronging the streets, but they must walk cautiously, avoiding the pots of night-soil being flung from upper windows and the excrement which lay in the kennel. While stepping around one, Roger felt his foot squelch and he smelled the odour of dog’s mess almost simultaneously. It made him feel queasy – and still more irritable. It was not helped by the onset of rain. They were only fine drops tapping at his face right now, but yes, Roger was sure they would soon become thicker. The wind was getting up again, too. He was bound to get soaked on the way back after this meeting.
‘I still think we should have brought some of our servants, Dean.’
‘There is no need for force with a man like Sir Baldwin.’
‘He is irrational, argumentative, and all too keen to resort to steel to impose his will.’
‘Your words are intemperate,’ Peter Clifford said, pausing and fixing Roger with a cold eye. ‘What proof do you have that Sir Baldwin has ever drawn a sword to push through an unjust action?’
Roger Scut reddened. ‘It is well known that knights are always prone to arrogance and haughty behaviour! You cannot think that this man is better than the others.’
‘I state it firmly, Brother, and I suggest you moderate your own opinions of him. Sir Baldwin is fair, intelligent and just. It is a shame more knights are not struck from the same mould.’
‘If you are wrong…’
‘I said no,’ Dean Peter said affably. A tall, grey-haired and wan-featured man in his later fifties, his back was bowed from sitting and reading by candlelight, and his thin, ascetic face gave him something of the look of an invalid, but his mind was perfectly clear and he was no man to be bent to another’s will without reason. ‘I know Sir Baldwin well. There is no need to try to scare him to a just solution. If there is merit in your proposition, he will see it, with or without guards.’
Roger Scut pursed his lips as they continued on their way. If anything were to go wrong, he would see to it that this refusal became widely known. The only way to deal with an arrogant bastard like this miscreant knight was with the threat of violence. Everyone knew that law officers were routinely corrupt, it was merely a matter of degree. Every so often Sheriffs would be cast out from their lucrative positions, Coroners would be told to go and Keepers would be changed. It was easy enough to see why. Each of them could influence decisions on a man’s guilt or innocence. It was a matter of supreme importance to a noble that he should see any of his men released from custody with their innocence determined. All his retinue must be protected. Otherwise the actions of a small number of hotheads might reflect badly upon their masters. Better that they should be released and their crimes denied.
Not that it was only a case of saving face. Sometimes professional assassins must be reprieved from a court so that their lords might point them in the direction of another enemy whose passing would be little missed by the world.
‘Men like this Keeper should be reminded occasionally that they do not control us in the Bishop’s See,’ he said, tilting his head back and staring down his nose at merchants and traders.
‘Men like this Keeper need no reminding,’ Dean Peter said with a chilliness in his manner.
‘I am glad you believe so,’ Roger Scut said equivocally.
They had reached the inn, and Roger Scut dived inside like a man gathering a last breath before jumping into a pool to grasp a shining bauble before it could be snapped up by a fish. Dean Peter sighed, tutted to himself, and then shrugged good-naturedly and followed. He was in time to see Roger Scut interpose himself between Sir Baldwin and the kneeling Mark, his arms held out dramatically as though he were pinned to a cross.
‘Sir Baldwin, I insist that you release this prisoner into the custody of Dean Peter and myself.’
Baldwin gazed at Roger Scut with ill-concealed distaste. ‘I fear I can do no such thing.’
‘Dean Peter and I demand that you release him to us.’
Dean Peter met Baldwin’s sharp glance with a mild smile, but said nothing.
Sir Baldwin turned his attention back to Roger Scut, but now his face, without changing expression, seemed to Roger to have taken on a deeply malevolent appearance, and the clerk took an involuntary step backwards, bumping into Mark.
‘Roger, I shall do my duty as seems fit to me. I shall not be bent by you like a straw in the wind, but will obey the instructions of my Lord the King, and of the law.’
‘Dean Peter, please persuade the Keeper that we should be permitted to take this fellow back to Exeter. I doubt very much that the Bishop will be content to hear that his will and authority has been flouted by a… a knight.’
Baldwin’s features became glacial as Dean Peter cleared his throat. Roger Scut looked about to retreat still further, but then Baldwin was surprised to see the pompous little arse stiffen his shoulders, raising his head and returning Baldwin’s look with determination.
‘You don’t scare me, Sir Knight. I am a man of God.’
‘Roger, please,’ Dean Peter remonstrated with a hint of annoyance. ‘Sir Baldwin, my friend here has a point, if he perhaps lacks a little of the wit to explain it fully and politely.’
‘He does!’ Baldwin growled. ‘I won’t listen to his whining about this any further. Godwen, I told you to find a horse, I believe?’
As Godwen hurried from the room, Dean Peter took a deep breath. ‘Sir Baldwin, you know that this man must surely be returned to the Bishop’s court as soon as it is shown that he is a man of God? What use is served by taking him all the way back to Dartmoor, deciding he is a priest, and then making the same journey back here again? It is foolish, surely.’
‘You know that the law says I have to see him taken back,’ Baldwin said. ‘I can do nothing else.’
‘If I am taken back they will kill me!’ Mark said. ‘Please, Dean, protect me! I cannot go back there. The father will kill me. Who would believe my story when they have my lover’s body?’
&
nbsp; ‘What is your story?’ Baldwin pressed. He was standing now, and bellowed for the host to come and serve wine.
‘I was there with her…’ Mark shot a glance at the Dean. ‘Father, please do not judge me. I have never done anything before which could cause me so much shame. Never before have I failed in my vows. It was that horrible place. All I ever wanted was to serve God in Exeter, maybe to travel, but I was sent to Gidleigh instead.’
‘You were being tested,’ Dean Peter agreed, adding pointedly, ‘and you failed.’
Mark winced as though Dean Peter had slapped him. He held his hands to his face, and the Dean saw how dreadfully scratched and scraped they were. ‘I know, I know it too well. I grew to desire the women, and even hearing their voices was enough to inflame my passions. I started building a wall just to occupy myself, exhausting myself to keep my thoughts pure, but it failed. I begged and pleaded with God to release me from my lusts, but He didn’t answer me. And then I met her.’
‘Who?’ Dean Peter asked.
‘Mary, daughter of the miller. She showed me kindness and calmed my fears, and when she also soothed my loneliness, I got her with child, God help me!’
‘She is dead,’ Baldwin stated flatly. ‘And you bolted.’
‘I spoke with her that day. She had told me a while before about our child, but I didn’t believe her. It was impossible, I thought, but she swore that her monthly days had stopped. Then I saw that she was growing large, and I knew she had told me the truth. On the day she died, I spoke with her, and we parted in anger. Later, I walked back that way, and found her lying dead. Dead! Someone had struck her down and killed her, and our child with her. I didn’t know what to do!’
‘You mean you didn’t strike her?’ Baldwin asked, thankfully accepting a cup of wine. ‘You should have called the vill to arms, raised the Hue and Cry.’ He sipped and grimaced. ‘This tastes of the midden! Bring a cup of the other barrel.’
‘I knew I should be accused and die.’
Dean Peter nodded. ‘Because you might be thought guilty of murdering her to stop news of the child.’
‘It is not unheard of,’ Baldwin agreed, musing. ‘Often a priest will try to punch his woman to kill the new life just growing. And sometimes the woman will die as well.’ He frowned at Mark. ‘Is that what you did?’
‘I swear I am innocent of intending her death.’
‘Did you hit her to make her miscarry?’
‘Yes – no! I don’t know! All I remember is, she struck me, and I struck her back, and then I left her.’
‘You knocked her down? You struck her on the belly and she fell?’ Baldwin said keenly.
Mark couldn’t answer. He had fallen to his knees, hands back at his face as he knelt, weeping, shaking his head. ‘I hit her, but not in the belly – and I didn’t kill her. I couldn’t! I loved her.’
‘Many men who love have killed their wives,’ Baldwin observed unsympathetically. ‘Did you see her fall after you struck her?’
‘No, no, she just turned away from me, and I was angry, bitter… I don’t know… I just walked away to cool down, and think. I had to pray for help and forgiveness. But she didn’t come past me and when I returned along that way to talk to her again, I found… I found…’
‘Her lying dead,’ Baldwin said flatly.
‘Blood on her legs, and she was so still,’ Mark said in a small voice, shivering at the memory.
‘You spoke with her,’ the Dean murmured. ‘What of?’
Mark bowed his head. ‘I desired her to take a potion I had acquired. It promised to end the pregnancy.’
‘You said you spoke to her and left her angrily,’ Baldwin said as the Dean’s face set like granite on hearing Mark’s crime. ‘Was that because she refused to take the potion?’
‘I loved her, I didn’t want to hurt her, only the baby!’
‘A potion like that will often kill the mother as well as the child,’ Baldwin said coldly.
‘If you take me back there, I shall be slaughtered! Please don’t take me back!’
‘You should have thought of that before you tried to make your woman miscarry!’
‘Come, Sir Baldwin,’ Dean Peter said after a moment. ‘Won’t you please let us take him to Exeter? Look at him! He is in danger, he says. I would be reluctant to see him strung up by angry villagers. No matter how foul, nor what, his crimes. Surely he may be quite right to fear for his life?’
‘No. You know I cannot set him free.’
‘Then I shall ride with him to this outlandish place,’ Roger Scut said. He gave Baldwin a look which expressed only distaste. ‘If the good knight won’t protect this poor priest, I shall do it myself and see that no harm comes to him. I will shield him with my own body.’
Baldwin eyed him wonderingly. ‘Why? What do you seek?’ he wondered aloud.
‘I seek nothing for myself, only to serve the best interests of this unfortunate.’
‘I thank you, friend,’ Mark said. He was weeping, and he humbly held his hands up towards Roger Scut in gratitude.
Baldwin grunted. He had intended to be home last night. Into his mind flashed a picture of his wife sitting at his great fire, the light gleaming in her red-gold hair, shining on her tip-tilted nose, sparkling in her green eyes. It was a most appealing scene, the more so because in it there was no place for Roger Scut.
‘Won’t anyone believe me?’ Mark wailed. ‘I didn’t mean to kill her. I loved her. I couldn’t have done that to her!’
‘Done what?’ Baldwin demanded harshly, brought back from his mild daydream with a jolt.
‘Killed her… killed our baby!’ Mark cried despairingly. He bent forward and burst into sobs of despair, exhaustion and self-loathing.
Baldwin watched him cynically. He had witnessed all too many felons who wept and moaned when their guilt was established. Often they would then declare their misery over a momentary lapse, a flaring of anger that resulted in a death. It was usually shame and sorrow for being discovered, in his experience.
And yet there was something about this lad. Mark was like a youngster caught filching a penny for food because he was starving. He watched the fellow, in two minds, then looked at Dean Peter. The older man appeared as doubtful as Baldwin himself.
‘Oh, in God’s own name,’ he exclaimed, ‘damn it all! Peter, could you send a messenger to ride straight to Simon Puttock? Ask him if he could come and help me with this matter. He works for the Abbot of Tavistock, after all. It’s more his duty than mine to save this wretch from the people of his vill.’
‘You mean, you will hand this fellow over to Simon?’ Peter Clifford asked hopefully.
‘I mean I shall go with this fellow and protect him.’
‘I am so glad. I thank you,’ the Dean smiled. And then, ‘When all is done, you must come and speak to me, though. I will need to arrange a penance for your swearing.’
Chapter Eleven
Huward stood, drained his cup, and walked to his door when he heard the footsteps in his yard. He stood silently in the doorway, his thumbs hitched in his belt, watching in silence as Piers approached the house.
‘Morning, Huward.’
‘Reeve.’
Piers was shattered. He’d hardly slept at all. His son had snored after a night of drinking at Mother Cann’s ale-house, but that wasn’t the reason why Piers had thrown his blankets away and dressed in the middle of the night, walking out and sitting on a log near his door, staring up at the clean, bright white stars in the moonless sky. No, it was the peasant’s accusation.
Sir Ralph was a hard bastard. No one who knew him even remotely could doubt that, and Piers could easily imagine that he might have killed the girl. Yes, and raped her too. It was perfectly easy to believe, as it was that he might have ridden away with a smile on his face. Sir Ralph was a killer, when all was said and done. He was used to getting his own way. If a girl thwarted his desires, he was capable of hitting her hard and then breaking her neck.
The worst of it was
, if Sir Ralph was guilty, there was nothing that Piers could do. He was the Reeve to Sir Ralph’s court, and the one man who couldn’t be tried in a court was the man who owned it. Piers knew that, and he knew that Sir Ralph would have to be tried in another court, a court that was higher than Sir Ralph’s own. Perhaps the Sheriff’s – except it was too late. Elias had kept his mouth shut, so the Coroner had taken his money and fled. Just as they always did. So the murder was recorded as having been committed by Mark. The fact that he had bolted was proof enough; it made his guilt apparent and the jury had been happy to declare him responsible.
So an innocent, perhaps, would be forced to pay for the crime committed by Sir Ralph. Piers wasn’t happy with that. It made his gorge rise to think that a rich, greedy brute like that knight could benefit by seeing another convicted.
The sky had been no assistance to Piers’s grim assessment. He had stared up for inspiration, but all he got was a slight stiffness and a sore arse. It didn’t stop him looking up again now, though. He peered at the clouded skies for an age, trying to think how to broach the subject with Huward. It wasn’t easy to know how to begin, but when the wind began stirring about him and the first drops of rain pattered gently on his back and into the puddles in the roadway, he made an attempt. ‘Huward, I’ve just come from the castle. Was called there to look at the chapel.’
Huward shrugged without interest.
‘Someone set the place afire, you see,’ Piers went on. ‘It happened last night, after taking your girl to the church, we reckon. One of the servants at the castle thinks she heard something after dark, but she didn’t bother to tell anyone at the time. Probably thought it was the wind in the trees. Couldn’t see from there, of course. So by this morning, there’s nothing left but the stones.’
Huward scratched at his ear and scowled at the ground, impervious to the rain that had begun to fall around them. ‘Probably that monk left a fire untended when he ran, and it flared.’
‘Yes. Maybe it did,’ Piers said distantly. ‘If it didn’t, I’d have to think it was someone here in the vill who did it. That would be terrible.’
The Mad Monk of Gidleigh Page 14