“Right,” said Carey, “here’s my purse with my rings in it, you arrange things with Madam Hetherington and pay her whatever she asks for looking after Daniel, and then you go back to the castle and tell everybody I’m sick in bed…”
“Can’t I even come a little way with you?”
“Oh all right, if you must, you can meet me in the alleyway.”
Carey took Daniel’s pack, winced a little at its weight, then opened the window and climbed out into the little courtyard.
Barnabus went unhappily to negotiate with Madam Hetherington.
Thursday 22nd June, late afternoon
Even Barnabus had to admit, walking through Carlisle, that Carey made an uncommonly convincing peddler. He even flirted with one of the girls selling meat pies and had her shrieking at an incomprehensible Northumbrian joke.
It took some argument to get Carey, afire with impatience to put his head in the noose, to pause for a beer at the Golden Bell. As soon as they entered the common room, a tall figure in fine grey wool, piped with murrey, snapped her fingers at Barnabus and beckoned them over.
“What the…” hissed Carey. “God’s blood, you told her, you sneaking little bastard, I’ll tan your backside for you…”
“Well, Danny,” said Barnabus, deliberately insolent, “I don’t know what good getting in a fight with me would do you, but if that’s what you want, I’m game.”
Carey growled at him. Lady Widdrington had lifted her head haughtily and was beckoning again.
“I think there’s business to be done with the lady, mate,” said Barnabus, “Ain’t you going to find out what it is?”
In fact, Barnabus nearly gave himself a rupture trying not to laugh as he watched his elegant master slouch over to Lady Widdrington, haul off his statute cap and make an ugly-looking bow. In a minute he had his pack off his back and had opened the top and was delving in the depths. She apparently wanted a thimble, and when he pulled out five in a little packet, she examined them carefully and asked if he was mad.
Barnabus loafed over with the beer, so as not to miss the fun.
His face hidden by digging in the pack, Carey was muttering his reasons for sneaking into Netherby to Lady Widdrington who listened with regal calmness.
“I see why you want to do it,” she said, to Barnabus’s shocked disappointment, “but have you thought it through?”
“I think so, ma’am,” said Carey, producing a card wound with stay laces.
“Do you? Well, I don’t. What’s your excuse for going to Netherby? Why are you there at all? To sell Bothwell broidery silks and some pretty ribbons for his hair?”
This nonplussed Carey who had been so charmed at the idea of getting into Netherby, he had not in fact thought it through. Lady Widdrington examined the laces and talked rapidly out of the side of her mouth.
“In the stables are three northern horses, with Fairburn brands on them, and also the Widdrington mark which might not be known here. They are my horses which I am lending to you as cover. You take them into Netherby and offer them to Bothwell and if he’s as anxious for remounts as you say he is, then he’ll be delighted. We’ll work out a way of getting them back later.”
Carey opened his mouth to argue, stopped, thought, then nodded intently.
“Now you’ll have trouble getting out in the morning, because if the raid is due in the next couple of days, I expect Bothwell will simply close up the castle and let no one out for any reason. He may be mad but he isn’t stupid. So if you find it hard to get out, put all of this powder…” She put down a twist of paper next to some lace bobbins, “…into your wine or beer and it’ll give you all the symptoms of a man with the first stages of the plague—fever, headache, sneezing, and if you complain of pains in your neck, groin and armpits that should frighten the life out of them.”
“It isn’t…er…plague…?”
“No, Robin, it’s poison, a very mild one and you’ll feel very ill too, but that will help convince them. They’ll kick you out of Netherby themselves and then you’ll have to do the best you can. If I haven’t heard from you by late afternoon tomorrow, I’ll tell Scrope and we’ll come and get you out.”
“Elizabeth, my dear…”
“One of the hardest things to disguise in a voice is endearment,” interrupted Elizabeth Widdrington frostily. “This is a lunatic scheme, but if your heart is set on it, well…And I most certainly will not pay five pence for stay laces Daniel Swanders may have paid a penny for at the most, what can he be thinking of? I’ll take this thimble though.”
She picked up a small ivory thimble and paid for it, and then watched impassively as Carey thanked her with extravagant obsequity and started shoving his things back in the pack.
“Go carefully with those silk stockings, they fray and they’re your stock in trade, remember. I’ll leave, and Barnabus will go for the horses, while you stay here. Barnabus will walk them up to the gate with me and then he’ll go on round the walls and wait for you at Eden bridge. You follow when you’ve drunk your beer.”
Carey was smiling fondly at her. Many men might have resented her high-handedness, but he was used to managing women. He thought she never looked handsomer than when she was taking charge of something.
“Is there anything else I can do to help?” she asked.
“I wish I could kiss you,” said Carey. That put colour in the lady’s cheeks. It was a good thing the light was so bad, no doubt to assist the diceplayers in the corner. Barnabus would have been over there to investigate if Lady Widdrington hadn’t included him in her plan.
“It would be unseemly,” said Lady Widdrington sternly. “If any cadger…I’d have my steward throw him out.”
“No steward here, my lady,” said Carey with a wicked grin, caught her hand and bent over it with a kiss. “Now you’d better slap me.”
She was a quick-thinking woman, thought Barnabus approvingly, because she didn’t slap him, she boxed his ears as she would any servant who behaved like that. One of the innkeeper’s large sons came looming over with a cudgel in his hand.
“Is he bothering ye, ma’am?” he asked.
“Yes, he is,” said Lady Widdrington coldly, wiping her hand with her napkin, “but I think he’s drunk. You’d better throw him out.”
“Tut, and it’s only the afternoon too,” said the innkeeper’s son primly.
It did Barnabus’s heart good to see his master frogmarched to the door and kicked into the mud outside, where he landed on his face. For good measure, Barnabus picked up the pack, stuffed the rest of the gear inside along with the twist of paper, and slung it after him.
“And stay out,” he ordered sternly. “That’ll learn you better manners wiv her ladyship.”
Knowing Carey, he turned away quickly, but he wasn’t quick enough to avoid the clot of mud that hit his back. Not such a bad shot as all that, he thought, though of course knives were a different matter.
He went back to Lady Widdrington, who was drinking a tot of whisky on the house, to settle her nerves after her nasty experience, with the landlord making excuses and promising that the drunken sot would never be allowed to darken his respectable door again. Lady Widdrington nodded and generously said that she couldn’t possibly hold it against him since the man had no doubt been drinking all day somewhere else and had been the best her servant could find.
Once the landlord had subsided and gone back to his less prestigious but more valuable customers, Barnabus attended on her assiduously, and murmured the story of Carey’s visit to Thomas the Merchant.
“I think he was in too much of a hurry, ma’am,” he said. “I think Thomas hadn’t told us the half of what he knew, but once he heard the name Swanders confirmed, of course sir had to be off.”
“He is like that,” agreed Lady Widdrington, “Straight into the thick of it at top speed. Well, he’s done it before and never a scratch on him, so God must be watching over him.”
“Ma’am,” said Barnabus slowly, “I don’t want to pry
, but… er…why didn’t you stop him?”
“Stop Robin Carey when he’s got the bit between his teeth?” she smiled at him. “Could you?”
“Well no, ma’am, though I tried. But I thought…”
“I wouldn’t back the Queen herself against him, once he’s in that state. In fact she couldn’t stop him running off to fight the Armada though she threatened him with the Tower. So if I can’t prevent him, I can help him to do whatever mad scheme he’s hatched more efficiently.” She let out a little sigh and clasped her hands together. They were not very ladylike hands, being large, square and strong, though they were as white and neat as lemon juice and buffing could make them.
“I see, ma’am,” said Barnabus sympathetically, who did indeed see. “Do you think he’ll manage it?”
She folded her lips consideringly as he refilled her larger goblet with wine, mopped a tiny spill with a cloth. Eventually, Barnabus thought, her long nose and determined chin would begin to curl towards each other as she got old and her teeth fell out.
“I don’t know, Barnabus,” she said at last, her voice firm and quiet. “At worst they might shoot him or hang him, or even torture him if they take it into their heads he might tell them something they want to know. At best they might ransom him, if he can overcome his pride long enough to tell them who he is. I’m sure Scrope will buy him free if he has to.”
Barnabus who remembered the scene at the bawdy house wasn’t so sure, but didn’t feel inclined to say so. He bowed to her and she smiled radiantly at him.
“And of course, he might even succeed. After all, he has unexpectedness on his side. I think he will if God watches over him as He always has so far.”
That was good enough for Barnabus and he smiled back.
“Come along,” said Lady Widdrington. “You’d best get those horses for me. They’re in the end stable, if Young Hutchin got it right, the bay, the dapple mare and the chestnut.”
She walked to the door with her back straight as an arquebusier’s ramrod.
Thursday 22nd June, late afternoon
Young Hutchin had had a very trying day. Somehow he had lost track of the new Deputy in the morning, which had annoyed Richard Lowther very much indeed. In the afternoon, he hung around the stables on the grounds that if Carey was planning to go anywhere, he’d need a mount, and as his own horses were all there, he hadn’t gone yet. Even though the stable master set him to the eternal chore of harness cleaning, it had been well worth it. Elizabeth Widdrington had come sweeping in and ordered him to put halters on two of her own animals and the oldest saddle and bridle in the place on the third.
He followed her obediently out of the castle, wondering what on earth was going on, while she went to the Golden Bell in the little squabble of huts outside the Carlisle citadel gate. When she dismissed him, he followed his instinct and skulked around near the inn doorway, to be rewarded by the sight of Barnabus Cooke and another much taller man going in. Peering through one of the windows, he saw them all talking to each other and then, when the stranger kissed the lady’s hand, he recognised the way of moving rather than the face and realised with shock that he was looking at the Deputy Warden in disguise. Moments later he had to dodge back behind the stable yard gateway, as Carey made his undignified exit.
Filled with relief and the glorious certainty that Lowther would reward him well, he hung about the stable block until Barnabus Cooke came for the horses and then followed him cautiously well back, dodging into doorways and booths every few moments. He had a healthy respect for Barnabus.
However, Barnabus was preoccupied and didn’t seem to notice him. He went round outside the walls with the horses, past the rececourse and up to the Eden bridge, where he tethered them to a stone and sat down to wait.
Young Hutchin hid behind a dry stone wall and waited. In a few minutes a cadger with the long bouncy stride of the Deputy Warden came walking past him, still wiping mud off his face and jerkin. As Carey came close to Barnabus, Young Hutchin trailed him behind the wall, hardly daring to breathe.
“One peep out of you, Barnabus, and you’re a dead man.” warned Carey as he swung his pack from his back and began strapping it onto one of the horses. In tactful silence Barnabus helped him, but at last, as Carey swung up into the saddle he held a stirrup and asked, “Sir, what’ll you do if they torture you?”
Carey looked down at him with his eyebrows up. His face looked very odd without its goatee beard. At least he didn’t have a receding chin like Lord Scrope.
“I see no earthly reason why they should, Barnabus,” he said, “but if they do I expect I’ll tell them who I am and they’ll have a good laugh at my expense.”
“Will Scrope ransom you?”
Carey laughed. “Eventually. Or I’ll escape.”
“Be careful, sir. Do you think you’ll get there in time?”
“Oh Lord, Barnabus, it’s only ten miles. Even you could ride ten miles before sunset if you didn’t fall off too often.”
“Well sir, if you ride like that, with your hand on your hip so prettily and your back so straight, they’ll know you’re fake before you’re close enough for them to see the walnut juice.”
Carey had the grace to look embarrassed, put his hand down and slouched a bit.
“Better?” he asked.
“I suppose. Sir.”
“Well, then, off you go Barnabus, and tell them all I’m sick or something.”
“What should I say to Sergeant Dodd?”
Carey thought for a moment. “I don’t think he’s in it with them, whatever it is, but you could wait until after sunset. Use your judgment, Barnabus.”
“All right, sir.”
“See you tomorrow, God willing.”
“Amen,” said Barnabus fervently as Carey chirruped to the horses he was leading and clopped his way over the flimsy bridge northwards.
Young Hutchin waited for a long while after Barnabus had set off back to Carlisle. He was in a quandary. Should he run across country to Netherby and warn his Uncle Jock what was going on, or should he go back into the castle and tell Richard Lowther as he’d been paid to. In the end he decided to go to Lowther, because if Carey happened to catch him on the way, then nobody would know what the Deputy Warden was up to until it was too late. Also it wasn’t nearly so far to run.
It took him an hour to find out where Richard Lowther had gone and to track him down to the cousin’s house where he was having dinner. He was then sent to the kitchen to wait while another boy was ordered to tell Lowther of the message and in all, the sun had set and the Carlisle gate was shut by the time he made his bow to Lowther and gabbled out the news to him.
Lowther’s bushy eyebrows almost met over his nose.
“He’s going to Netherby dressed as a peddler? Good God, why?”
Young Hutchin shrugged. “He’s mad, but he could…”
“I know what he could do, lad, none better. Ay. You did right coming to me.”
“What are you going to do, sir?”
“None of your business, Young Hutchin. Here’s some drink money for you, and a job well done. Off you go, don’t spend it all at once and if I catch you in the bawdy house again I’ll leather you and send you back to your father.”
Heart glowing at the bright silver in his hand, Young Hutchin ran off, leaving Richard Lowther very thoughtful as he sat down at his cousin’s table again.
Thursday, 22nd June, evening
As Carey rode out of the Cleughfoot Wood and into sight of Netherby tower, with the pretty little stonebuilt farmhouse nearby, he knew perfectly well he was being paced by two men who had spotted him not far from Longtown. As he slowed his horse to an ambling walk, they came in close behind him but didn’t stop him.
In the horse paddock outside Netherby tower was a most remarkable press of horses, with Grahams and Johnstones bringing in bales of hay for their fodder, and feeding them oats and horse nuts besides, which must have cost a fortune at that time of year.
Outside
the paddock was a kicking yelling scrum of men, in their shirts and hose. Carey paused to watch. There was some nasty work going on in centre of that mêlée. Suddenly, from the middle of them a wild figure burst, dribbling the ball in front of him. As the scrum broke apart leaving a couple of fist fights, he wove between two large Grahams bearing down on him, dodged back and faked neatly as a Johnstone poked a foot in front of him. For a moment it seemed he would be caught, but he elbowed the fourth defender out of his way as he pounded on alone to the open goal made by two piles of doublets at the far end of the field.
The man in goal looked horrified, dodged back and forth, fell for a lovely feint and dived in the wrong direction as the Earl of Bothwell kicked the ball straight into goal.
Some of the players cheered; the others looked sulky. Carey dismounted and led his horses forward to the edge of the field and watched as an argument developed over whether it was a fair goal or not.
“Who’s winning?” he asked the massive black-bearded ruffian who was watching with his arms folded and a deep frown on his face.
“The Earl’s men,” said the man.
“Do ye not think it would be better if ye had to have a defender or two between you and the goal when you played the ball.”
“What for?”
“It might make it more interesting, and ye’d have less motive for fouls.”
“More motive for fights after, though,” commented the broad man after some thought, “as if it were nae bad enough now.”
The Earl was shouting at the leader of the opposing team.
“And who’re ye?” demanded the black-bearded man, swinging round to look at him.
“Daniel Swanders, at your service,” said Carey, taking off his cap.
“What’re ye doing here?”
“I heard ye were after horses. Are you the laird?”
“Nay, lad, that’s Wattie Graham there, with the red face shouting at the Earl. I’m Walter Scott of Harden. Ye’re not from this country.”
“No, master, I’m from Berwick.”
“Ay, thought so. The horses yourn?”
“Ay master.”
1 A Famine of Horses Page 17