The Malice of Unnatural Death: (17 page)

Read The Malice of Unnatural Death: Online

Authors: Michael Jecks

Tags: #Mystery, #Contemporary Fiction, #blt, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Contemporary, #_MARKED, #Historical, #Literature & Fiction

BOOK: The Malice of Unnatural Death:
6.84Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

‘I am going to ride on to make sure that we have a store of firewood before all the light fades. In God’s name, I only pray I have time to gather enough.’

‘Then go, in God’s name!’

Exeter City

Master
Richard de Langatre should have been grateful to meet these two men, perhaps, but just at the moment he was feeling more than
a little disgruntled. It was humiliating to be grabbed by this beadle and his shabby little watchmen! What did they think
they were doing? Was any poor professional to be man-handled like this without excuse?

‘We shall go to the Suttonsysyn near the guildhall,’ Baldwin decided. It was easier to ensure the cooperation of the coroner
if mention was made of an alehouse of some sort, he knew.

‘That would be a good one,’ the coroner said approvingly, perking up considerably.

The beadle Elias if anything looked even more harassed. ‘I can’t allow that, master …’

Coroner Richard beamed down at him, but there was a steely glitter in his eyes. ‘I think you should remember to call us “sir”. Or perhaps “Keeper” and “Coroner”? Either way, my fellow, you will remember what your station is, and what ours is. Sir Baldwin
here has just made an excellent suggestion. We will follow it.’

‘But I was ordered to deliver this man to the gaol.’

‘By whom?’ Baldwin enquired.

‘The sheriff. He ordered us himself. He said we had to come here, take this man, bring him up to the castle’s gaol, and keep
the body of the dead boy at the house until the coroner could be called.’

‘Right, and now the coroner is arrived,’ Sir Richard boomed. ‘So do you go about your duties, and leave me to mine, eh?’

‘But I am to …’

Baldwin stopped him. ‘You have delivered your charge
into my custody. Now return to the house and take care of the poor fellow’s body. I shall see to this man.’

With a nervous reluctance, the beadle finally agreed. He made one last effort to have a watchman or two remain with the knights,
but Sir Richard was so scornful in his response to the idea that two armed knights could not subdue such a feeble-looking
piece of human flotsam that the man soon gave up and submitted to their commands.

‘At last,’ Baldwin said. Coroner Richard was already signalling impatiently to the wench serving at the bar, and Baldwin sat
on a barrel which served as a stool, and studied the creature before him. ‘Now, what manner of man are you, I wonder?’

Robinet had seen them walk into the tavern, and now he saw the beadle and his men leave the place and begin to make their
way back down to Stepecote Street and the house where the dead servant lay. Making a quick decision, he followed them.

Outside the house there was one remaining watchman, a youth of maybe twenty, who stood nervously eyeing the crowd. Newt could
hear him clearly as he called to the beadle, and even when the beadle was at his side, a hand on his arm, trying to calm him,
the lad’s voice remained high and loud enough for Newt to hear every word.

‘They’ve been trying to get past me! There’s some want to stone the place and others will have it burned to the ground… they were going to beat me to get me out of the way, if I didn’t do what they wanted. That one there, look! He’s got a stone! Make him put it down!’

Newt smiled to himself at the sound of the lad’s voice. There was enough anxiety in it to make a whining puppy
sound bold. He was not sure what was best for him to do. At first he had an inclination to go to the beadle and ask him what
was happening, but the sound of a foreign voice in the area might make one or two men wonder where he came from and what he
was doing in Exeter. That was the easiest way to have himself taken and questioned he could think of. And he couldn’t afford
that in case people had seen him with James. Perhaps seen them argue – or fight.

No, walking up to a nervous law officer was not a good idea for him just now. Better that he should leave well alone …
and yet he wanted to learn if there was anything about the man who lived here that could suggest he could have been guilty
of the murder of James.

His problem was solved when he saw the beadle jerk his thumb at the youth. Nothing loath, the fellow gripped his staff firmly
and eyed the crowd with the truculence of a rabbit before squaring his shoulders and setting off up the hill towards Robinet.

Newt turned and began to walk slowly up the hill, bent over as he went, his frame the very picture of decrepitude and weariness. When he heard the swift-pacing approach, he groaned and let himself sink slowly to his knee in the street.

‘Are you all right, father?’

‘Ach, fellow, it’s my old feet. They give me gip on occasion. Today I’ve been walking from the coast, and my old bones are
weary,’ Newt lied, smiling bravely.

‘You want some help?’

‘Your arm as far as the flat way on top of this hill would be kind. My name is Jan, by the way.’

‘I am Ivo Trempole.’

‘It is kind of you, but I am sure you’ll be busy. You don’t really have time to help an old fool like me. You were down
there at that house, weren’t you? Are you with the watch?’

The lad grunted. ‘Not that I want it. I was voted to be the constable here, but it wasn’t my choice. I don’t like having to
stand in front of a crowd of angry people for no reason. That lot were ready to throw rocks at me, you know? Why’d I want
to do that, stand as a target for all the hotheads in the city?’

‘It must be hard. Is the man who lives there rich and important, then? Is that why the city has to guard him?’

‘No, he’s not all that important, no. He’s a
necromancer
,’ the fellow said, his voice dropping. ‘His servant is dead, and they say it was the master who was angry with his man, and
killed him in a rage, if you can believe that! Imagine!’

Clearly Ivo’s imagination was doing enough work for both of them, or so Newt felt. ‘Terrible. So he stabbed the lad and bolted?’

‘No, he didn’t stab him. He used a thin wire or something, and strangled him. Almost cut through his throat.’

‘But the master has run away, I suppose? A fellow known for using magic would hardly be popular, would he?’

Ivo shook his head. ‘He didn’t run, the fool. His servant was there, still warm. It was obvious as the sun in the sky that
he’d done it. No one else would go and kill a fellow for no reason, would they? No, it was him.’

They had almost reached the top of the hill now, and Newt began to chat about other matters as though the murder was of little
importance to him, and soon after, when they reached Bolehille, he took his leave of the watchman and hobbled slowly along Cooks’ Row towards the High Street. When he turned, once, to wave, Ivo had already disappeared. Still, to be safe, Newt continued
hobbling and
walking slowly until he reached the Carfoix, and only then did he start to walk in a more easeful manner.

There was not much to be gathered there, he reckoned. But he had learned one useful point: the lad had been throttled with
a thin ligature of some sort. Perhaps the same weapon as the one used on James; perhaps the same man was guilty of both murders.

Yet so far as Newt knew, there was no one in the world who had any reason to dislike James apart from he himself. James had
been a mild man, a calm lad with hardly a bad word to say about anyone. The idea that someone could have taken such a dislike
to him seemed incredible. Yet, of course, he had managed to make Newt’s life a misery. If it hadn’t been for those unwary
words of his, Newt would have kept his post, not been thrown in gaol, not suffered for months. And perhaps still be employed
even now.

He looked up and saw how the sun was fading fast. All the shops were closed already, and there was a bustle about the city
as people prepared for night. He must find a refuge.

Yes, instead of being happily employed, here he was. A corrodian from a far-off priory, all but friendless. Fortunately he
still had one friend. Or did have until last night. He must go and make his peace with the man.

North-East Dartmoor

Simon’s feet were out of the stirrups as soon as he reached the first of the trees. There was a low wall, but it had tumbled
down long ago, and his horse trotted cautiously over the remaining rubble before stopping to crop the grass. Simon quickly
took off the saddle and harness, and slipped a halter on him, tying it to a sapling nearby. The last thing he needed now was
to lose the beast.

As
soon as that was done, he started to search for timber. The snow wasn’t falling in earnest yet, and he had some little while
to gather firewood. In his breast, between his shirt and his tunic, was a thick handful of tinder which he’d found earlier
on their way: old, dry grasses and some fine, thin silver birch bark he had pulled from a tree on the way out of Tavistock. These were wrapped in a fold of cloth with his flint, and he prayed that they would be dry and warm enough after being protected
all day.

There was time to worry about that later. First he had to find firewood. There were several fallen boughs, but each, when
he touched it, felt sodden. They were too old and had been rotting and soaking up moisture for over a year. However, he soon
came across a tree that appeared to have been recently struck by lightning. It was tall, a good thirty to forty feet, and
he was cautious at first, in case a branch might fall on his head, but when he got closer and gave it a good push to test
its strength, he heard the cracking. Grinning to himself, he pushed it, rocking it carefully, until at last it gave a creaking
complaint, and toppled, crashing and crackling as it smashed through the other trees nearby, until it was down. All about
it were the branches which had been snapped off, and now he started to hurry about, collecting them quickly.

Hearing Rob and Busse, he snapped at them both to help, and continued stacking thicker branches which seemed to have some
strength in them. The rest he tossed into a pile nearby. Then he began to lay the longer, straighter stems against the main
tree trunk lying on the ground.

‘What are you doing?’ Rob demanded, watching him as children often watch the antics of their parents.

‘If you want to survive this night, Rob, find every small,
dry twig you can. The best are those which have been dried on the tree and not on the ground. Those will be too damp. Just
fetch as much as you possibly can. When you’ve built up a good pile, we’ll start a fire with them.’

Rob shrugged and set off half-heartedly. Meanwhile Busse was watching Simon with an appreciative eye. ‘And what of me, Bailiff?’

‘Brother, if you could just help me to fix these boughs to the tree here, that would be a great help.’

‘You are building a low shelter?’

Simon nodded. He had stayed out in the open before, usually with a large tree trunk to make a wall, and then built up a lean-to
wall and roof with boughs to create a low but cosy hovel. However, it would not do for all three of them. Instead, he would
have to form a shelter that used the trunk as a side wall, but which also had two walls with a roof.

He found a large branch with a fork in it, and smiled. After hunting about, he found three more, and began building. First
he gauged the wind, and moved to the leeward side of the trunk. Here he thrust the two shorter sticks into the soft soil,
the forks uppermost. He found a sapling of more than six and a half feet, and took his knife to it, placing his knife’s blade
against it and using a branch to hammer at it, ringing the bough, and then cutting a notch at the very bottom. Soon he could
hear it crack as he pulled it, and then it came down. He set this in the forks, and braced them with the last pair of forked
branches.

Running to his saddle-bags, he pulled one open. He always carried some hempen cord for emergencies, and this was just such
an emergency. Soon the whole was lashed together, and he could start to set thick branches from the trunk to his supported
beam. These he tied with simple
loops, and used all the spare branches he could find to make a side wall and block the bottom. Now there was a basic shelter.

‘Very good, if a little leaky,’ the monk observed.

Simon said nothing. He was searching in the gathering darkness for Rob and growing fearful for the lad’s safety.

‘Don’t worry, Bailiff,’ Busse said. ‘He’s bright enough.’

‘He has little sense of direction. He has never been on the moors before,’ Simon said through gritted teeth. Bellowing Rob’s
name, he was relieved to see a figure jerk upright only a few tens of yards away. ‘Hurry up!’

‘You see?’ Busse said.

‘Yes. Now, I need you to gather up as many ferns as possible.’

Busse was startled. ‘Me?’

‘If you want to sleep dry and not freeze, you’ll help me now. We need to cover this shelter in ferns and leaves – anything. And we need to be quick, before that snowstorm starts!’

Chapter Fourteen
Exeter City

As
the light outside faded, Baldwin and the coroner demanded candles, and remained sitting with the man who had dared to make
use of demons to achieve his ends.

Or so it had been said.

Baldwin was not prey to fears about men such as this. He was perfectly comfortable with the notion of an all-powerful God
who would remove the foolish from the world without any need for his help. And there was not too much to be fearful of about
this fellow. He did not inspire terror in Baldwin’s breast.

‘How long have you lived here?’

‘In Exeter, you mean? Or Stepecote Street?’ His voice was harsh and rasping, and sounded forced, as though it took a great
deal of effort to speak at all. The pain he suffered was clear: he kept swallowing, each time wincing, and his eyes were watering
freely.

‘Either,’ Baldwin said, but this time more gently. ‘Take your time, friend; your voice is clearly giving you trouble.’

Langatre was a chubby fellow who was little more than thirty years old, Baldwin decided. He had the weakly chin of a man who
was not destined for greatness of any sort, but
there was little enough malice in his eyes. Rather, he displayed more the appearance of a man who laboured under a great fear.

Other books

Alexxxa by D. T. Dyllin
Salt Story by Drummond, Sarah
Red River Showdown by J. R. Roberts
Cloud Dust: RD-1 by Connie Suttle
The God of Olympus by Matthew Argyle
Flirting with Destiny by Corona, Eva
The Honest Folk of Guadeloupe by Timothy Williams
Agent Garbo by Stephan Talty
Shetani's Sister by Iceberg Slim