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Authors: The Medieval Murderers

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Cole looked sadly at the knight. ‘I wish I knew what led you to this.’

Boleton opened his mouth to protest his innocence again, but then closed it. He regarded Cole sullenly. ‘Is it not obvious? I am more suited to high office than you in every way – I am a better administrator, I am infinitely more intelligent and I have ambition.
I
should have been constable, but the king gave the post to you, just because you are good with a sword.’

‘You did not have to come with me,’ said Cole reasonably. ‘You could have—’

‘I thought I could be content here, with a life of indolent leisure,’ spat Boleton. ‘But I was wrong. I am bored, and the more I think about it, the more it is apparent that the king made a mistake. You are a brainless fool who lets his wife make all the decisions.’

‘Symon, no!’ cried Gwenllian, when Cole took a firmer grip on his weapon and stepped forward. He did not care about the affront to himself, but no one insulted his wife. ‘Do not kill him in anger. Disarm him. Let the law be his judge.’

For a moment she thought he was going to refuse, and although he was the better swordsman of the two, his old wound was clearly paining him that night. He might lose.

‘Gwen is right,’ Cole said eventually. ‘We should not fight each other. Yield to me.’

Boleton also hesitated, but then did as he was told, dropping sword and dagger on the floor. Cole sheathed his own blade and indicated that Boleton was to precede him out of the house. It was too easy, and every one of Gwenllian’s senses clamoured that treachery was in the air. It was not long in coming.

With a sudden roar, Boleton spun around, stabbing wildly with a knife he had concealed in his sleeve. Cole managed to duck away, but the manoeuvre unbalanced him and he fell. Boleton’s face was an impassive mask as he moved in for the kill.

But he had reckoned without Gwenllian. She darted towards the table, grabbed a pot and brought it down on Boleton’s head. He crashed to his knees. Cole was quick to take advantage, and by the time Boleton’s wits had cleared there was a knife at his throat. Cole regarded his friend in silence for a moment, then stood back and nodded towards the open door.

‘Go, brother,’ he said softly. ‘Ride to the coast, take a ship and do not return.’

‘No!’ cried Gwenllian. ‘He will—’

‘I hate this house,’ interrupted Cole, looking around unhappily. ‘I almost died here after Hywel stabbed me, and now my dearest friend tries to complete the business. It has an evil aura.’

Gwenllian gazed at him. ‘How long have you known Hywel was your attacker?’

‘I have always known – I saw him. But it seemed unkind to tell you when you had just lost your brother.’

‘Dear Symon.’ Gwenllian felt tears scald her eyes. ‘You kept your silence to protect me?’

Cole shuddered as he surveyed Kyng’s parlour a second time. ‘There has been enough death and deceit in this house, and I do not want more of it.’ He gestured to the door, but he did not look at Boleton. ‘Go, and never come back.’

Without a word Boleton slunk away into the night.

III

In the weeks that followed, Gwenllian was acutely uneasy, sure it was only a matter of time before Boleton came to wreak vengeance on his erstwhile friend. But then a cousin brought her some news. He spoke rapidly in Welsh, too fast for Cole’s meagre grasp of the language.

‘The sly knight tried to make the surviving forest folk attack the town, to create a diversion while he killed your husband, but they turned against him. Shall I tell you where they buried his body?’

Gwenllian glanced at Symon. ‘No. I think it is better to believe he escaped. My husband has endured enough treachery, and he does not need to hear more of it.’

Cole had placed a guard on the place where Hywel had hidden Arthur’s bones while Gwenllian made some enquiries about Abbey Dore. Within a month word began to trickle back that the Welsh sexton was indeed a man who could be trusted, so she resolved to follow her nephew’s plan and take them there. A Norman abbey in Herefordshire would not have been her first choice of hiding places, but Lord Rhys’s warring sons meant that southern Wales was currently an unstable, uncertain place. It was certainly time for Arthur to be moved – and to enlist the help of the men Meurig had appointed as Guardians.

The moment she made her decision, she and Cole went to Merlin’s oak. It was a beautiful autumn evening, with the scent of the harvest in the air and the sun bathing the land in a warm, golden light.

‘It was clever of Hywel to put the bones back in Meurig’s original hiding place – the cradle of roots – after Daniel began to suspect they were in the priory,’ Cole remarked. ‘But why was there a pit on the
other
side of the tree too – the one Daniel was kneeling by when he was murdered?’

‘It was a decoy hole. Hywel dug it because he was afraid Daniel might guess where he had moved them. And he was right to be cautious, because Daniel
was
poking around it when he died – the mud on his knees attested to that.’

‘Meurig should not have told you his secret when he knew Hywel was listening,’ said Cole resentfully. ‘He should have known better.’

It was a curious thing to say. ‘What do you mean?’

‘Dewi – Hywel’s brother – was shot by would-be robbers on the way from Glastonbury. Or so Meurig told everyone. But I saw Dewi’s body, and it was no arrow that killed him. He was stabbed.’

Gwenllian’s mind reeled. ‘Stabbed?’

Cole nodded. ‘I knew Hywel was the culprit from some incautious remark he made. But Meurig said it would upset you if I arrested one nephew for murdering another. It was a clever ploy – he knew exactly how to stay my hand.’

Gwenllian stared at him. ‘You knew this terrible secret but did not think to share it with me?’

‘Meurig asked me not to. It was a nasty business – Hywel killed Dewi because Dewi was Meurig’s favourite. Meurig was deeply ashamed. He did not want you, or anyone else, to know.’

Gwenllian shook her head slowly. She had wondered why Hywel had stabbed Cole in order to prevent her from claiming the bones – why not attack her, who was smaller and posed less of a threat? The answer was obvious now – he wanted revenge on the man who knew his dark secret. It explained why he had spent his dying breath trying to implicate Symon in a murder too.

‘But Meurig should not have told you about the bones when he knew Hywel was listening,’ Cole was saying. ‘It might have put you in terrible danger.’

‘Oh, Symon!’ said Gwenllian, exasperated. ‘I might have worked out what had happened to the bones years ago, if I had known all this! Do you really think I warrant such cosseting?’

Cole considered the question carefully, then nodded, smiling as he did so. ‘There is nothing I would not do to protect you. And Meurig felt the same way.’

There was nothing to say to such a remark, and they walked in silence for a while. Gwenllian found herself thinking about the people who had been touched by the events of the summer. No one missed Hywel’s drink-fuelled bitterness or Boleton’s acid tongue, but the castle clerks grieved for John, and the town’s merchants had been sorry when Kyng and Spilmon were banished from the realm.

Meanwhile, Gilbert had recovered from his fall and, in exchange for his freedom, told Cole where Boleton kept the proceeds of his crimes. It had all been returned to its grateful owners.

And people mourned Daniel as a good man. Gwenllian had completed what John had started, and had been appalled by the extent of Daniel’s dishonesty. But Cole, ever loyal, even to friends who did not deserve it, had persuaded her that nothing could be gained by exposing the monk’s penchant for the castle’s money. So Daniel’s reputation as a fine, generous, upright man remained unsullied.

‘We searched for one villain in all this, but it transpired there were many,’ she said ruefully. ‘Daniel stole from us and his priory, Hywel was a blackmailer, Kyng and Spilmon plotted murder, John and Gilbert joined forces with criminals, and Boleton—’

‘Boleton was the worst of them all,’ finished Cole flatly. ‘You were right about him all along. I should have listened to you more.’

‘If you had listened to me less, he might not have turned against you – it was the fact that I help you with your work that annoyed him.’

‘But then my men would have mutinied instead,’ he said with a rueful grin. ‘They know who organizes their regular pay, decent meals and clean bedding. No, Gwen. Listening to you is a very good idea.’

When they arrived at Merlin’s oak, Cole unbuckled his sword and dagger, placing them on a wide, shelf-like branch to keep them out of the way. Then he touched the spade to the soil and began to dig. The soil yielded easily, as if the tree knew it was time to give up its treasure.

‘We never did learn who killed Daniel,’ said Gwenllian, settling down to watch him. The leaves whispered in the breeze, creating dappled patterns of sun and shade on the grass below. Then there was a rather harder gust, and Cole gave a yelp. The branch had swayed, causing the dagger to drop and strike his shoulder.

‘It was a good thing it was not the sword that fell,’ he grumbled, rubbing it. ‘Or you might be finishing this on your own.’

‘Daniel!’ exclaimed Gwenllian, as all became clear. ‘He stole the priory’s cross and Hywel found it next to his corpse. I understand now! No one killed him – it was an accident!’

She hurried to the other side of the tree and saw a similar shelf-like branch over Hywel’s decoy pit, although it was much higher. Cole climbed up to see scuffs on the bark, where something had rested.

‘He must have set his stolen property here,’ he said, ‘while he dug for the bones—’

‘Lest someone walked by and caught him with it . . .’

‘But it fell on him as he was patting the last of the turf back into place. It was a heavy thing, and you told me it caught a vulnerable point on his skull.’ Cole shivered suddenly and lowered his voice. ‘But it was not an accident, Gwen – the tree killed him.’

‘Perhaps,’ said Gwenllian, walking around the mighty trunk to their own hole. She could already see the top of the plain, dark-wooded chest that contained the bones, and it would not be long before they had it out. ‘But I do not think it means
us
harm – it is willing to let Arthur go this time.’

‘I hope you are right,’ said Cole, glancing uneasily at the branches above. ‘The sooner he is in Herefordshire, the better. I hope he will be safe there.’

‘He will be,’ said Gwenllian softly, thinking of the sexton in Abbey Dore and of the group of silent, sober men who were even now waiting in the forest – the Guardians were ready to do their duty. One was Meurig’s middle son, Young Meurig, who had always been her favourite nephew. From now on, Arthur’s bones would be watched over by them and by their descendants.

She rested her hand on her belly, smiling as she felt the kick of life within. And by her own sons, of course. After ten years she had all but given up hope of a child, but suddenly she was pregnant. She could not help but wonder whether she owed the miracle to Arthur, or perhaps Merlin, who wanted
her
heirs to guard Wales’s most precious treasure. She knew it was a son that grew inside her, and she also knew what he was going to be named – Meurig, after the brave, noble man who had set Arthur’s bones on the road to their rightful destiny.

Historical note

Norman-held Carmarthen was attacked by Rhys, Prince of Deheubarth, in 1196, when he sacked the town and burned the castle. The constable at the time was Symon Cole. Lord Rhys died the following year, and his sons turned on each other, giving the Sheriff of Hereford (William de Briouze) ample time to rebuild the fortress in stone. Rhys is thought to have sired at least eighteen children, although tracing them is difficult due to his penchant for giving them the same names (he had at least three Maredudds and two Gwenllians). As was the custom of the day, his daughters were married off to politically important allies.

An entry in the Cartulary of St John, Carmarthen, dated between 1194 and 1198, refers to a deed in which de Briouze donated the church of Ebernant to Carmarthen’s priory. Ebernant had belonged to Lord Rhys, and the gift was to compensate the priory for his attack. The writ’s witnesses include Renald de Boleton, knight, John the clerk, Gilbert, Robert Spilmon, William Kyng and Daniel Adam the chaplain. King Street and Spilman Street are still extant in the town.

There was a famous tree in Carmarthen called Merlin’s oak, but it was probably planted in the seventeenth century, perhaps to mark the Restoration. But local legend maintains it was put there by Merlin, who is said to have been born in the town. The last remnants of the oak were removed from the end of Priory Street in 1978.

 
ACT TWO
The Welsh Marches, December 1282

The tavern-keeper filled a pottery mug with a pint of ale and reached up to place it almost fearfully on the centre of the blackened tree trunk that arched across the
simnai fawr
, the great fireplace that was built into the thickness of the wall.

‘On a night like this, the devil needs his brew!’ he muttered, crossing himself as paradoxically he pandered to an ancient superstition meant to placate Satan in such foul weather as this.

‘No need, Eifion!’ growled one of the dozen men hunched around the fire on benches. ‘The devil is safe up in Anglesey tonight – the bastard who calls himself King of England!’

The snarl of agreement from the throats of the company was tinged with despair, as it competed with the howl of an icy wind that rattled the shutters and flickered the flames of the few candles and rushlights.

‘Almost two hundred bloody years we’ve fought those swine – and now it’s all over,’ groaned one old fellow, his voice ending in a sob.

A much younger man, in his late thirties, with black hair and deep-set dark eyes, slammed his ale-jar down on a rough table.

‘No, it doesn’t have to be over, damn you! Prince Dafydd is still fighting on up in the north. It’s up to folk like us to give him all the help we can.’

Another man, with a face scarred by old cow-pox, shook his head. This was Dewi, who worked in a fulling mill just up the road. ‘You mean he’s
cut off
in the north, Owain! And most of our army was massacred at Builth, after Llewelyn was ambushed. What’s the point of carrying on?’

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