The clerk remained behind to finish making a record of Bartholomew’s findings, his pen scratching away in the small circle of light thrown out by the lantern.
‘The townspeople might revolt again if we tell them one of their womenfolk was raped before she was murdered,’ Tulyet said, closing the door and turning to look across the bailey. He made a sound of impatience as one of his men dropped a sword. The soldiers were nervous, and one of the sergeants strutted round them, yelling in a vain attempt to boost their courage. ‘The town will automatically assume that the crime was committed by students, regardless of the truth.’
‘I understand that,’ said Bartholomew. ‘But when her family comes to claim the body they will see for themselves what has happened. You do not need to be a physician to see how she was misused.’
‘We have already considered that,’ replied Tulyet. ‘And so we are not releasing the dead to their families. The University will bury the students; the town will bury die others. In that way, no one will see the bodies, or attempt to instigate another riot to avenge them.’
‘And that woman’s attackers will go unpunished,’ remarked Bartholomew disapprovingly. ‘Perhaps they might commit such a crime again when the fancy takes them. Why not? No one bothered to investigate the first time.’
‘Would you have me risk another riot and nine dead to avenge a rape?’ asked Tulyet coldly.
‘Yes I would,’ Bartholomew returned forcefully. ‘Because if you do not word will get round that any vile crime can be committed, and you will do nothing about it lest it interfere with the King’s peace. Then, Master Tulyet, you will have a riot masking crimes that will make last night’s business seem tame.’
Tulyet turned from him with a gesture of impatience.
‘You scholars think you can mend the world with philosophy,’ he said. ‘I am a practical man, and I want to prevent another riot – whatever the cost.’
‘And if your cost is too high?’ demanded Bartholomew. ‘What then?’
Tulyet tipped his head back, looking up at the darkening sky. Some of the anger went out of him and he grimaced. ‘Perhaps you are right, Matt. But what would you have us do?’
Bartholomew contemplated. ‘Make discreet inquiries. Find out who last saw her alive and with whom.’ He gripped Tulyet’s mailed arm, his expression earnest. ‘You should at least try, Dick. Supposing some of the townspeople saw her raped and murdered and are expecting at least some attempt to catch the culprit? The last thing the town needs is a retaliation killing.’
‘Is that not what last night was about anyway?’ asked Tulyet, leaning against the dark grey stone of the curtain wall, and scrubbing at his fair beard. ‘Scholars seeking to avenge the death of James Kenzie and townsfolk the poor child in the Ditch?’
‘Oswald Stanmore does not think so,’ said Bartholomew. ‘And neither does Brother Michael. Both believe the riot to be part of some other plot.’
Tulyet’s interest quickened. ‘Really? Do they know what?’
Bartholomew shook his head. ‘No. But both arrived at the same conclusion independently of each other: that the riot was a means, not an end in itself.’
Tulyet took his arm and guided him to his office in the round keep that loomed over the bailey. He glanced around before closing the door, ensuring that they could talk without being overheard. ‘I have been thinking along the same lines myself,’ he said, his expression intense. ‘I cannot understand why the town should have chosen last night to riot – I do not see Kenzie’s death or the discovery of the skeleton as particularly compelling motives to fight. It has been scratching at the back of my mind all day.’
Bartholomew rubbed at his temples. ‘When Brother Michael and I found Kenzie murdered, it went through our minds that the students might riot if they believed he had been killed by a townsperson. We went to some trouble to keep our thoughts on the matter to ourselves. But neither of us anticipated that the scale of the rioting would be so great. It was terrifying.’
Tulyet puffed out his cheeks, and gave him a rueful smile. ‘You were terrified! Imagine what it felt like to be the embodiment of secular law – for scholar and townsperson alike to single out for violence and abuse! These are dangerous times, Matt. Since the plague, outlaws have flourished and it is difficult to recruit soldiers to replace the ones we lost. Violent crime is more difficult to control and the high price of bread has driven even usually law-abiding people to criminal acts. But all this does not answer our basic question: what was the real cause of last night’s violence?’
‘Perhaps the way forward is to investigate the crimes that were perpetrated under its cover: for example the rape of that woman, and the burglary at Deschalers’s home,’ suggested Bartholomew.
‘Those among others!’ said Tulyet with resignation. ‘I have had reports of three similar lootings – where only what was easily carried and of the highest value was stolen – and there are the nine deaths to consider.’
‘Do you think one of those nine is at the heart of all this?’ asked Bartholomew.
Tulyet shrugged. ‘I think it unlikely. The only one of any standing or influence was the young friar from Godwinsson.’
Bartholomew told him about the visit he and Michael had paid to Godwinsson Hostel and the possible roles of the student friars, Edred and Werbergh, in Kenzie’s death.
‘Godwinsson,’ mused Tulyet. ‘Now that I find interesting.’
He went to a wall cupboard and poured two goblets of wine, inviting Bartholomew to sit on one of the hard, functional benches that ran along the walls of his office.
Once his guest was settled as comfortably as possible on the uncompromising wood, Tulyet perched on the edge of the table. He swirled the wine around in his goblet, and regarded Bartholomew thoughtfully.
‘We should talk more often,’ he said. ‘Not only are two of the dead from last night students of Godwinsson – a friar and a Frenchman – but this morning, the Principal of Godwinsson told me that his wife is missing.’
‘So, Mistress Lydgate has flown the nest,’ mused Michael, leaning back in his chair and smiling maliciously. ‘Well, I for one cannot blame her, although I would say the same if it were the other way around, and Lydgate had taken to his heels.’
‘A most charitable attitude, Brother,’ said Bartholomew mildly. ‘It is good to see that compassion is not dead and gone in the Benedictine Order.’
Tulyet was sitting on the chest in Bartholomew’s room at Michaelhouse sipping some of the sour wine left from breakfast. Because it was dark, and therefore after the early curfew imposed following the riot, Tulyet had escorted Bartholomew back to Michaelhouse. The streets had been silent and deserted, but Bartholomew had been unnerved to detect a very real atmosphere of unease and anticipation. Doors of houses were not fully closed and voices whispered within.
‘This is an unpleasant brew,’ said Tulyet, looking in distaste at the deep red wine in his goblet. ‘I would have expected better from Michaelhouse.’
‘Then you must go to the Senior Fellow’s chamber,’ said Michael. ‘He is the man with the taste, and the purse, for fine wines, not a poor Benedictine and an impoverished physician. But tell us about Mistress Lydgate. What happened at Godwinsson last night?’
Tulyet shrugged. ‘Master Lydgate was out all night and discovered his wife was missing when he returned this morning.’
‘Why was the Principal of a University hostel abroad on such a night?’ demanded Michael. ‘Why was he not at home, ensuring his students kept out of mischief, and protecting his hostel? And more to the point, why is he bothering you about his missing wife?’
Tulyet shook his head. ‘It just slipped out. He came to the Castle this morning to identify a couple of the people killed last night. He was in quite a temper, and ranted on to me for some time about the audacity of his students to get themselves killed when it was so inconvenient for him. When I asked him what he meant he blustered for a while. Eventually he revealed that his wife had left him.’
&nb
sp; ‘And where did he say he was last night, instead of locking up his wife and students?’ asked Michael.
‘I was told, begrudgingly – for I was assured his whereabouts were none of the Sheriffs concern – that he had been dining at Maud’s Hostel and had remained there when he saw how the streets seethed with violence.’
‘Maud’s?’ asked Bartholomew, pricking up his ears.
‘Two of my students claimed they stayed at Maud’s last night. I can ask them to verify Lydgate’s alibi.’
‘Can you indeed?’ said Tulyet, fixing bright eyes on Bartholomew. ‘Master Lydgate will not be pleased to hear that. It is no secret that the Master of Maud’s – Thomas Bigod – is not kindly disposed to secular law, and would never confirm or deny an alibi to help me. Bigod recently lost title to a wealthy manor in the secular courts, and is said to have missed out on a fortune because of it. He holds me, as the embodiment of secular law in the area, responsible for his misfortune.’
‘He is none too fond of University law, either,’ said Michael gleefully. ‘Guy Heppel arrested him the other night for being drunk and disorderly. Unfortunately, he ended up being our guest for longer than necessary because Heppel lost the keys to the cells.’
Tulyet roared with laughter and clapped his hands. ‘Excellent! I wish I could have seen that! Heppel, for all his physical frailty, knows how to give a man his just deserts. Bigod has been a thorn in my side for months, using every opportunity to thwart the course of law and justice.’
‘And I imagine Lydgate is only too aware of Bigod’s antipathy to you,’ said Bartholomew, ‘which is why Lydgate chose him to provide an alibi.’ He went to the door and told a passing student to fetch Gray and Deynman.
Tulyet stroked his fair beard thoughtfully. ‘All this is most interesting. I told Lydgate to liaise with the University Proctors regarding his dead students’ remains. He became abusive and said he did not want you near them because he was not convinced of your competence. I was rather surprised.’
‘Well, I am not,’ said Michael. ‘Master Lydgate and I have had cause to rub shoulders once or twice recently, and the experience was not a pleasant one for either of us. The man is little more than a trained ape in a scholar’s gown.’
‘What makes you think he is trained?’ asked Bartholomew.
‘I heard he bought his way through his disputations when he was a student here,’ said Tulyet. ‘Is that true?’
‘I would imagine so,’ replied Michael, not in the least surprised by the rumour. ‘I doubt he earned his degree by the application of intellect. Perhaps that is another reason why he did not want the Proctors looking too carefully into his affairs. Anyway, we certainly did not part on the most amicable of terms – he probably overheard us discussing the burning of the tithe barn yesterday, and resents his ancient crime being resurrected after so long.’
‘What title barn fire?’ asked Tulyet curiously. ‘No fires have been reported to me.’
‘It happened a long time ago,’ said Bartholomew, fixing Michael with a reproving look for his indiscretion.
‘Not the one at Trumpington twenty-five years ago?’ persisted Tulyet, not so easily dissuaded. ‘I remember that! It was the talk of the town for weeks! An itinerant musician is said to have started it, but he escaped before he could be brought to justice. My father was Sheriff then. Are you saying that Lydgate was involved? Was it Lydgate who let the culprit go?’
‘No, Matt did that,’ said Michael, laughing. ‘Lydgate’s role in the fire was a little more direct.’
‘It was all a long time ago,’ repeated Bartholomew, reluctant to discuss the matter with the ‘embodiment of secular law’. He began to wish he had never broken his silence in the first place, and certainly would not have done had he known that the investigation into Kenzie’s death would bring him so close to Lydgate and his Godwinsson students.
‘Lydgate was the arsonist!’ exclaimed Tulyet, laughing. ‘Do not worry, Matt. I will keep this matter to myself, tempting though it would be to mention the affair at a meeting of the town council. But even the prospect of Lydgate mortified is not cause enough to risk another riot. If town and gown will fight over some ancient skeleton, they will certainly come to blows if the Sheriff accuses a University principal of arson!’
‘That is true,’ said Michael. ‘But anyway, you can see why Master Lydgate is not exactly enamoured of the Senior Proctor at the moment. I can understand why he would rather keep me at a distance.’
‘I also heard,’ said Tulyet, reluctantly forcing his mind back to the present, ‘that Mistress Lydgate’s chamber was ransacked. A sergeant, who chased a Godwinsson student into the hostel after he was seen looting, told me her room was chaotic.’
‘Really?’ said Michael. ‘I wonder why.’
‘Hasty packing, I should think,’ said Bartholomew. ‘She probably did not know how long she had before her husband returned and gathered everything she could as quickly as possible.’
At that moment, Gray and Deynman knocked and entered, looking at Michael and Tulyet with such expressions of abject guilt that Bartholomew wondered uneasily what misdemeanours they had committed that so plagued their consciences.
‘Who was at Maud’s with you last night?’ he asked.
‘Master Bigod will vouch for us both,’ began Gray hotly. ‘And so will all the other students. I swear to you, we did not leave there, even for the merest instant!’
Bartholomew was amused at Gray’s indignation – the student regularly lied or stretched the truth to get what he wanted, and there was an element of outrage in Gray that he was not believed when he was actually being honest.
‘There is no reason to doubt you,’ he said to mollify him. ‘It is not your doings that concern us now, but someone else’s. Can you remember who was there?’
Deynman relaxed immediately and began to answer, although Gray remained wary: Deynman’s world was one of black and white, while Gray was a natural sceptic.
‘All the Maud’s students were there,’ Deynman began. ‘They all like my brother Jack and wanted to celebrate his birthday.’
Bartholomew did not doubt it, especially since the wealthy Deynmans were known to be generous and would have provided fine and plentiful refreshments for Jack’s birthday party.
‘How many?’ asked Bartholomew.
‘There are eight students including Jack,’ said Deynman, screwing up his face in the unaccustomed labour of serious thought. ‘We were all in the hall. Then there were the masters. There was one who does logic, another who teaches rhetoric, and the Principal, Master Bigod, who takes philosophy for advanced students.’
Bartholomew saw Michael smile at the notion that any of the students of Maud’s were advanced and imagined that Master Bigod probably had a very light teaching load.
‘Were there others?’ asked Bartholomew. ‘From different hostels or colleges?’
‘No,’ said Deynman with certainty. ‘Jack invited me because I am his brother, and I invited Sam. There were no others.’
‘During the time you were there, did anyone else visit? Did any master or student leave to see about the noise from the rioting?’
Deynman shook his head. ‘We all ran to the window when we heard that workshop falling, but Master Bigod ordered the shutters closed and the doors barred immediately.’
He grimaced. ‘I started to object because it was hot in the hall and the open windows provided a cooling breeze. He told me I could leave if I did not like it.’
‘But you told me he insisted you stayed once the riot had started,’ said Bartholomew, looking hard at Gray. Gray shot his friend a weary look, and Deynman, suddenly realising that he had been caught out in an earlier lie, flushed red and became tongue-tied.
‘What were you doing that made leaving so undesirable?’ Bartholomew persisted. He eyed the full purse that dangled from Gray’s belt. ‘Cheating at dice?’
Gray gave Deynman an even harder glare and Bartholomew knew he had hit upon the truth. It was not the
first time Gray had conned money from the unsuspecting with his loaded dice.
‘We are getting away from the point,’ said Tulyet impatiently. ‘Did anyone else visit Maud’s at any point last night, for however brief a time?’
Gray and Deynman looked at each other. Deynman’s brows drew together as he tried to recall, while Gray appeared thoughtful.
‘We were merry by dusk,’ he said, ‘but some time later, there was a knock on the door. I remember because Master Bigod was called out and he missed the end of one of my stories. It was a woman who came. She glanced into the hall, saw us all sitting round the table and withdrew hastily. She spoke for a few moments to Bigod before leaving. I heard the front door open and close again.’
‘What was this woman like?’ asked Tulyet. It was clearly not Lydgate.
‘Small and dumpy with a starched white wimple that made her look unattractive,’ said Gray unchivalrously.
‘About fifty years old? With expensive, but ill-hanging clothes?’ asked Michael, exchanging a glance with Bartholomew.
Gray nodded. ‘Exactly! You must know her. That is all I can tell you, I am sorry. There were no other interruptions to our evening after she had gone. And there were no others in the hall with us. Master Bigod stayed up all night. I think he was afraid his students might disobey his orders and go out if he went to bed.’
Bartholomew dismissed them, and Gray cast a furtive glance at Michael before he left. Michael dutifully studied the ceiling in an unspoken message that the illegal dicing would be overlooked this time. Deynman beamed at him before following Gray out.
‘So,’ said Michael when the door had been closed and the students’ footsteps had faded away. ‘The visitor was Mistress Lydgate, but Thomas Lydgate was not there.’
‘This is all most odd,’ said Tulyet, rubbing at the bridge of his nose with a slender forefinger. ‘Lydgate claims Bigod as an alibi but does not set foot in Maud’s that night. Meanwhile, his wife, who has reached the end of her tether and is running away, does visit Bigod.’
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