Old Edwin limped up to console him with his ale jug and to lighten his mood. John complimented Nesta on the improvement of the brew.
‘I learned this recipe from my mother in Gwent,’ she replied. ‘But the good grain that Gwyn found for me is the main reason for the fine taste.’
John rasped at the dark bristles on his face – it was time for his weekly shave, but Nesta’s mention of Gwyn reminded him that he should pay another visit to his family down near the coast.
‘Gwyn was always a favourite of theirs, with his amiable nature and his easy wit,’ he said. ‘I promised them that I would bring him with me next time. Perhaps after the next Sabbath, we’ll take a ride down there.’
The days went by and his offer for the lease was accepted, so John needed to seek out workmen to begin renovating the neglected old dwelling. One of the regulars at the Bush was a master mason and another a carpenter, so he had long talks with them about what could be done to improve the place. Several times Matilda was weaned away from her cousin’s house to visit St Martin’s Lane with him, as the new baby was delivered at last and the fever of expectation replaced by the sober reality of endless feeding and washing soiled swaddling clothes.
He found her less scornful and abrasive as the novelty of a new house possessed her and they disagreed less than usual. Matilda wanted the earth floor covered with flagstones, a feature of the best houses – and he had his way with the chimneyed fireplace, mainly because it could be incorporated in the building of a solar for Matilda. The mason sketched out a rough plan with a piece of chalk on a slab of slate, showing how the panels of cob and the inner bracing beams could be removed from the back wall up to the level of the eaves and replaced with mortared stone.
‘It will take us a couple of months, Sir John,’ advised the artisan. ‘We will have to order and cart the stone from the quarries at Beer, as well as having the timber cut for the solar and the roof gable.’
Much of this was beyond John’s comprehension, but he trusted the man to get on with the job, though the proposed cost made him wince a little. It was a fortnight before he could carry out his promise to go down to Stoke-in-Teignhead with Gwyn and September had arrived before they set out one morning.
As John knew it was pointless hoping to see Hilda with her husband at home, they avoided Dawlish and took the inland route through Kennford, Haldon Forest and Chudleigh to cross the river at King’s Teignton and ride down the western bank to his family’s manor.
Haldon Forest was an area of particularly dense woodland, a few miles in extent, near the south-eastern edge of Dartmoor. As they rode the narrow road through it, both men kept sharp eyes and ears open for unwelcome company, as this stretch of road was notorious for armed robbers, both predatory outlaws and the more organized gangs of trail bastons. Though John kept a hand near his broadsword and Gwyn fondled the shaft of the ball mace that hung from his saddlebow, they traversed the mile of road without seeing anything move, other than a fox slinking into the undergrowth.
They had the usual warm welcome at Stoke and after eating their fill, sat in the hall of the manor house to hear John’s latest news of buying a house.
‘You’re settling down at last, John,’ beamed his sprightly mother. ‘A pity it has to be with that surly woman Matilda, but perhaps she will mellow with time.’
Enyd made no pretence at liking her son’s wife and secretly wished that he could have married Hilda of Holcombe. Her husband, shortly before he was killed, had given Hilda’s father his freedom from serfdom, which also made Hilda a free woman. But at that time, the social gap between them would still have been too wide – though now that she had married a wealthy shipmaster who owned three vessels, she would easily be eligible, had she been available.
The talk turned to the increasing dangers on the highways of England, sparked by Gwyn’s mention of their wariness coming through Haldon Forest.
‘That place and many others are becoming dangerous,’ complained John’s brother. ‘A week ago, they robbed and half-killed a corn merchant riding from Brixham to Exeter. His servant was also badly beaten and they still fear for his life.’
John told them of the body of the king’s courier that he had found on his way back from his last visit to Stoke. ‘God knows where he was put into the river, we can find no trace of him on his journey back from Cornwall.’
No one at Stoke had any memory of such a man in that area and John remained convinced that Roger Smale was killed upstream of where he was found.
He and Gwyn were persuaded to stay two nights and spent much of the next day inspecting the manor, of which William de Wolfe was inordinately proud. He was an excellent estate manager and his steward, bailiff and reeve were sensible, reliable men. They made the manor a profitable and happy place, unlike many where the manor lord was a harsh and often cruel tyrant. Orderly fields, plump sheep and barns now being filled with an early harvest ensured that the community would not go hungry over the coming winter.
‘We have a good surplus of oats and barley, which I am selling on, so your share of the profits will be even better this year, John,’ confided William. ‘By the sound of what you are doing to this house of yours, you’ll need it!’
They left early next morning and took the same route home.
When they reached Haldon Forest, they were even more alert than on the outward journey, after William’s account of the recent attacks on travellers. All seemed quiet and when they were almost within sight of more open scrubland beyond the trees, they relaxed a little. A moment later, Gwyn’s big mare whinnied and jerked, her acute hearing picking up the whine of an arrow in flight. Almost simultaneously, the missile thwacked into the thick leather of Gwyn’s saddle pommel, missing his leg by inches. With a roar of anger, he instantly swung the mare’s head around and galloped off the track into the undergrowth, where he estimated the shot had come from. As he went, he grabbed the shaft of his mace from the saddlebow and plunged under the trees, where he almost ran down the archer, who was just about to loose another arrow at him. Swinging the heavy spiked ball on the end of its chain, he smashed the bow from the man’s hands and following through, the mace ball caught the ruffian across the temple, pulping the skin and bones.
Simultaneously, John de Wolfe had been attacked by two men who rushed from the bushes, one wielding a rusty sword, the other a short spear. The three bandits had picked the wrong pair to attack, as the seasoned Crusaders, each with twenty years’ experience of fighting behind them, reacted with almost automatic precision.
Bran, virtually without orders, reared up and his front hoofs came down on top of the man with a spear. With a force of almost half a ton, the assailant was flattened into the hard-packed earth of the track. At the same time, John’s long sword had slithered out of its scabbard and as the big destrier came back down, it whistled through the air and almost completely severed the other outlaw’s arm at the elbow.
With a scream of pain and terror, he fell to the ground and watched his life’s blood pumping out into the dust of the high road. The two horsemen, wary of further attacks, closed together side-by-side in the middle of the track and scanned both sides of the road for further assailants.
‘There seem to be no more, Gwyn,’ called John after a moment. ‘But keep your eyes open while I see if these bastards are going to live.’ He slid from his saddle and, with his sword half raised, warily approached the two he had routed. The one that Bran had crushed was obviously dead, his neck bent back at an impossible angle.
The other lay in a spreading pool of blood, which had run into the ruts of the dried mud in the road. He was already barely conscious, his face having a deathly pallor, but he had enough wits left to spit weakly at de Wolfe as he bent over him.
‘You are dying, man!’ snapped John. ‘Are there more of you here?’ But the fellow’s eyes rolled up and he fell back, still just alive, but totally unresponsive.
‘Is your man able to speak?’ he called to Gwyn, who was looking down from his st
eed at the bowman he had struck.
‘No, and he’s not going to live long, Sir John. His brains are leaking from his ear!’
The forest was silent, apart from the twitter of uncaring birds and the distant howl of one of the few surviving wolves.
‘These three must have been trying their luck alone,’ observed John. He wiped the blood from his sword in the long grass and slid it back into its sheath. ‘They don’t seem to be part of a bigger gang.’
Gwyn dismounted and they looked at the three unsuccessful robbers, who were now either dead or on the point of expiring. Though they had just slain three men, they had no false sense of sorrow or guilt. These fellows had tried to murder them in an ambush solely for the contents of their purses; it was a matter of ‘kill or be killed’ and they felt no remorse for the outcome of their vigorous defence.
‘These seem to be low-class villains,’ grunted John. ‘Tattered clothes and home-made weapons, so they are presumably outlaws trying their luck on passers-by.’
Gwyn stood with his huge hands on his hips, staring at the scattered corpses. ‘What the hell are we going to do with them?’ he asked.
De Wolfe shrugged. ‘Drag them off the highway and leave them to rot. With no sheriff to report to, no one cares what happens to them. The local manor might bury them if they can be bothered, but I expect the local animals will see them off come darkness.’
As they pulled two off the track on to the weedy verge, Gwyn complained about the state of the country under Prince John. ‘We’re descending into barbarism, I reckon! I keep hearing that these attacks are now so common that many folk will only use the roads in company with at least a dozen others.’
When they got back to Exeter and made the same point to Ralph Morin, he not only agreed, but pointed out that even large groups of travellers had been attacked by bands of marauding outlaws. ‘You were lucky only to have a trio of lousy fighters against you,’ he said. ‘Even tough Crusaders like you would have a hard time if you were jumped on by Willem the Fleming or Harald de Marisco. They can each muster a score or more men, so it’s said. Even a squad of my men-at-arms would have their work cut out to defeat an ambush by them.’
They were sitting in the Bush, as Ralph had come down to see what changes had been made at the inn since John returned home.
‘Is there nothing that can be done to clear these vermin out of the forest?’ asked Nesta, who was sitting with them. ‘It’s got worse these past few years.’
The big constable shrugged. ‘There are a lot more vagrant soldiers about now, since the Irish wars cooled down and the Crusade is over. Knights without land and mercenaries without masters abound in the countryside. The forest is often the only place they have to lurk and highway robbery their only occupation.’
‘In some places, large gangs have actually sacked small towns, so I’ve heard,’ contributed Gwyn.
‘Not having a sheriff with any guts is another cause,’ grated John. ‘Six counties being bled dry by that useless prince, but no effort made to enforce law and order. The bailiffs and sergeants of the Hundreds are in the pocket of the manor lords and are only concerned with piddling local disputes.’
Gwyn scratched his tangled hair to annihilate a few wild beasts lurking there. ‘Sir Ralph, why not lend us a few of your garrison men to hunt down some of these bastards?’ he suggested. ‘Sergeant Gabriel would relish the chance of giving his idle soldiers some real fighting. Most of the youngsters I’ve seen lounging about Rougement can never have seen a weapon wielded in anger.’
The castellan’s bushy eyebrows came together as he considered this. ‘You mean a sort of posse?’ he asked. ‘But as we said before, you need a sheriff’s warrant to do that.’
Gwyn shook his head. ‘I meant more like the Templars, who were founded to protect pilgrims travelling to the holy places in Palestine. In fact, many of our travellers here must be pilgrims going to Canterbury or St David’s – or even to take ship to Santiago de Compostella.’
Morin looked at de Wolfe. ‘What do you feel about that, John?’
‘It’s a novel idea, certainly. The Chief Justiciar has commissioned me to root around for evidence that the Count of Mortain is still planning a revolt, so maybe we could make the excuse that these bands of armed robbers might also be offering themselves as mercenaries for him.’
Ralph took a huge swallow of ale before answering. ‘I don’t think we need an excuse to give it a trial, John. The King’s Peace is being broken on the king’s highways. I’m now the only royal representative in Devon, so I reckon I’m entitled to do what I think necessary to keep order.’
They fell to deciding on how to organize their vigilante operations, already keen to clear certain areas of the ‘forest’, a term which was not confined to dense woodland, but any wild land not under cultivation. Nesta became uneasy about John’s obvious eagerness to take part in anything that involved the use of sword and mace.
‘Don’t go getting yourself maimed or killed, Sir John!’ she admonished sternly. ‘God and all his saints saw fit to preserve you for three years when you were on their business in the Holy Land, but you can’t expect their benevolence to extend to chasing armed robbers!’
FIFTEEN
September slid into October and the days shortened, but the transformation of John’s new house in St Martin’s Lane was still going on. It was near completion, however, and he took advantage of Matilda’s absence for a week to take Nesta to look at what had been done. His wife had been invited to her brother’s manor in Tiverton for a family gathering to celebrate his fiftieth birthday – and pointedly, de Wolfe was not included in the guest list, much to his relief.
The front of the house was quite unchanged, apart from new limewash on the panels of cob. Nesta wondered what had taken so long and cost so much, until John took her inside. As they entered the hall, she gave a gasp of wonder at the farther wall, which had been completely replaced by new stonework. A large fireplace occupied the centre, with an arched stone mantle over a deep recess, in which was placed a large iron basket to hold the logs. Above the arch, a conical stone funnel stood proud of the wall, tapering to a narrow flue that vanished through the roof, to take all the smoke away from the hall. A wide stone hearth had a raised rim to prevent burning wood from falling out on to the floor.
High up at one side of the chimney, was a narrow opening, like a small arrow-slit from a castle wall.
‘What’s that for?’ Nesta asked.
‘It goes through into the solar, which as you’ll see, is built on the outside of the wall,’ answered John. ‘It’s for Matilda to spy on me, when I’m trying to seduce young women down here!’
Nesta giggled and gave him a look that he could only describe as roguish.
He hastily changed the subject. ‘What do you think of the floor? She only let me have my fireplace if she could have flagstones!’
The old earth had been covered by massive slabs of a slatey stone, shipped from Cornwall. On them sat a long oak table, with a bench on each side and a heavy chair at either end. In front of the hearth, were a pair of ‘monk’s settles’, wooden chairs hooded up the sides over the top, to keep out draughts. The solitary glassless window facing the lane was firmly shuttered and the other walls carried sombre tapestries depicting biblical scenes, which Nesta guessed were Matilda’s choice, as John would have preferred pictures of battle.
‘Come around to the yard,’ he commanded and when they came out of the side passage, she saw that a room had been built on massive legs, so that it projected under a gable from the top half of the house. A flight of stairs led up to its door and at ground level, another small room had been inserted between the supports.
‘That box is for her lady’s maid!’ he explained, scornfully. ‘She insists on having some poor wench to help with her gowns and frizzle her hair!’
‘Has she found one yet?’
‘No, nor do we have a cookmaid, which is a damned sight more important. She’ll have to live in the kitchen
shed there, but at least I’ve had it made a bit larger and more comfortable than the old one.’
Nesta declined to go up and look inside the solar, as this would be where John slept with his wife and somehow, she preferred not to see such an intimate place. They left the house in a rather subdued mood, each wondering what the other was thinking, but Nesta’s cheerful spirit soon revived and by the time they got back to the Bush, she was offering to look out for a reliable cookmaid for the new house.
That evening turned into something of a celebration, as Gwyn came down with Agnes to check on Molly’s progress as a cook. The master mason and carpenter came in later with their senior journeymen, to announce that they would be clearing up and removing their tools from St Martin’s Lane that week, so John decided to invite them all to eat at his expense to mark the end of their labours and the rebirth of the Bush’s fortunes.
After they had all eaten and approved Molly’s fresh salmon and roast pork, followed by frumenty,5 the best ale in Exeter flowed freely and an impromptu party developed. Old Edwin revealed a hidden talent in playing merry country tunes on the three-holed pipe and Gwyn, with a gallon of ale and cider inside him, used his deep bass voice to bellow the words of many songs picked up over campfires across Europe.
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