16 - The Three Kings of Cologne (34 page)

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Authors: Kate Sedley

Tags: #tpl, #rt, #Fiction, #Historical, #Mystery & Detective

BOOK: 16 - The Three Kings of Cologne
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‘I killed her,’ he said. ‘I had to. Isabella had attacked my wife with a knife. It was Amorette’s life or hers.’ He drew a deep breath. ‘It wasn’t the first time she had done so. Once before, Isabella tried to stab her mother while in a towering passion.’

‘What provoked her rage on that day?’ I asked, wondering if I were being told the truth or not. And yet, after all I had learned about Isabella, it had the ring of authenticity about it.

As though reading my thoughts, my companion raised his head and stared defiantly at me, the eyes, in which blindness was steadily and surely taking a hold, sparking with anger.

‘You may believe me or not, as you please, but what happened, happened exactly as I shall relate it to you. Everything is as clear in my memory as if it had occurred only yesterday.’ A great sob was wrenched out of him, but he had his emotions under control again almost at once. ‘It would be a wonder if it were not. There’s not a single day has passed in the last twenty years when I haven’t gone over those dreadful events in my mind and wondered if they could have been avoided. To kill one’s own child must be the most heinous crime before God and man.’

‘Tell me how it came about,’ I suggested gently. I found myself beginning to feel sorry for the old man.

Jonathan nodded. He was calmer now, breathing easily, an expression of relief smoothing out his features. The dreadful secret, suppressed for so long, was at last going to be shared with another.

‘Isabella had been out riding all day; a day of terrible wind and rain. In the morning, after breakfast, my wife had pleaded with her not to leave the house; to forgo her exercise just for once. Isabella was suffering from the flux and my wife considered it unwise for her to ride at all in the circumstances, but especially in such weather. I added my voice, begging our daughter not to be so foolish. Begging is perhaps not the right word. Ordering would be a better one.’

‘To which Isabella took exception,’ I hazarded. Although from what I knew of her, it was more a statement of fact than a guess.

Master Linkinhorne pulled down the corners of his mouth. ‘She had long outgrown our control.’ He shrugged. ‘You think me weak, I’ve no doubt. Most fathers would have taken a strap to her, put her under lock and key, but somehow I could never bring myself to do so. She was the child of our old age, Master Chapman; the child Amorette and I had given up hope of having when the Lord saw fit to send her to us. We lavished love upon her from her birth; no child could have been more cherished. And how did she repay us? With contumely, with vituperation, with … with … I must say it, with hatred.’ There was a pause, then he grimaced ruefully. ‘But I think, if memory serves me right, I told you all this when you came to see me three weeks ago. You must forgive me if I repeat myself. It is, unfortunately, a habit of old age.’

‘No matter. But you were telling me about the day of the murder,’ I prompted.

He visibly flinched at the last word, and said nothing further for a moment or two. Then he took another deep breath and continued.

‘Ah, yes. The murder. Although I must confess that I’ve never thought of it as such.’ A further pause, and then he shook his head vigorously as if renouncing something.

‘That’s not quite the truth, though, is it? If I hadn’t considered it to be murder, I wouldn’t have concealed what happened – even to the extent of sending out the servants next day to make enquiries as to Isabella’s whereabouts and who might have seen her.’

I frowned. ‘But not very urgent enquiries. Nor did you pursue them for any length of time. Once I began to suspect you, your apparent indifference to what might have become of your daughter, the ease with which you seemed to accept her disappearance, only added, in my estimation, to the weight of evidence against you. But you still haven’t told me precisely what happened that day she returned from riding.’

Once more, he lifted his frail shoulders and dropped them. ‘As I’ve said, it was a dreadful day. When Isabella came home not long before suppertime, she was soaked to the skin. She went straight up to her chamber and changed her gown from the old purple one she had put on that morning – one she kept for dirty and muddy days – to the green silk one my wife had made for her a few months earlier. Then she joined us in the solar where Amorette was doing her embroidery, seated at her frame, and I was idling away an hour before the evening meal. I asked her – Isabella that is – where she had been and what she had been doing in such weather. My attitude, my tone of voice were moderate enough, I can assure you, even though my wife and I had both been extremely worried for our daughter’s safety. They certainly didn’t warrant the unrestrained outburst of fury with which my question was greeted. (Although, in all honesty, I have to admit that the flux always made Isabella even more ill-tempered and intractable than she normally was.) For some reason – women’s reasons again, perhaps – our daughter’s insolence infuriated Amorette. She got to her feet in such a rage that she was almost speechless and did what I had never seen her do in her life before. She slapped Isabella full across the face with such force that Isabella was sent staggering back against the wall, cutting her bottom lip on one of her teeth.

‘Amorette and I had been eating fruit; some of the previous autumn’s apples taken out of winter store. There was a knife, lying on the plate along with the cores and peel. Before I realized what was happening, Isabella had seized it and was attacking her mother in a frenzy. My wife was fending her off as best she could and calling to me for help. I tried to drag Isabella away, but she was like a woman possessed, lending her the strength of ten. Within seconds, I was bleeding from a cut to my hand.’

‘So you hit her with something. Something heavy,’ I said, as once again Jonathan Linkinhorne paused.

‘Yes.’ The monosyllable fell flatly between us, heavy as lead, before he went on, ‘There was a pewter vase in a niche in the wall. I hit my daughter over the back of her head with it.’ Tears welled up suddenly in his eyes, furrowing his cheeks; great sobs racked him, the more shocking and poignant because they were silent. ‘I didn’t mean to kill her,’ he rasped after a moment, ‘just to stop her killing Amorette. She fell where she stood, but when we turned her over, to pick her up, we found Isabella was dead.’

The voice faded and became suspended, and the old man’s chest heaved as though he could barely breathe.

‘I’ll call the Infirmarer,’ I said anxiously, getting to my feet.

‘No!’ Jonathan gasped, reaching up and plucking at my sleeve. ‘I’ll be all right in a moment or two. I’ll tell you the rest. It will be a relief to unburden my conscience after all these years.’

So I sat down again on the edge of the mattress and waited for the spasm to pass. When it had I asked, ‘Did none of the servants hear anything of this quarrel?’

He shook his head. ‘They had all gone home. The only two who might have done were both out of the house. Emilia Virgoe, Isabella’s old nurse, and her maid, Jane Honeychurch, were both absent that day. I forget why.’

‘Mistress Virgoe told me that she was staying with her sick sister in Bristol. You had given her leave of absence to do so. As for Jane Honeychurch – Goody Purefoy as she is now – she said …’ My voice tailed off as memory came flooding back and I recollected exactly what it was that Jane Purefoy had said.

The old reprobate on the bed gazed limpidly back at me, but a tic suddenly appeared in one of his cheeks. ‘What did she say?’ But the question was tentative.

‘That she had gone into Bristol to visit her foster mother. That your wife, who was visiting a friend there, had taken her in the covered waggon. That Mistress Linkinhorne also brought her home again, after dark. That, by then, Isabella had already disappeared.’ During the ensuing silence, Jonathan Linkinhorne and I stared each other out, but his gaze was the first to drop. I went on remorselessly, ‘Isabella didn’t attack your wife, did she? She had done so once, but not on that occasion. Suppose now you tell me what really happened.’

I thought, by the way he compressed his lips, that he would refuse to say anything more. There was, after all, nothing I could do to force him to speak. He was a sick old man and there were no witnesses to the conversation we had just had. But in the end I think, as he had said, the need to unburden himself was genuine. Reluctantly, he abandoned his former story.

‘All right,’ he admitted. ‘I didn’t kill Isabella. She wasn’t attacking my wife. As you’ve discovered, Amorette wasn’t even there. But my cousin was.’

‘You mean Sister Walburga?’ I interrupted.

Jonathan nodded. ‘Yes, Jeanette. She’d entered the Magdalen nunnery as a postulant some few days before and had come to take formal leave of me. It isn’t a retired order, but she knew that we wouldn’t see much of one another in future, and she wanted my blessing. My approval, I suppose, of what she was doing; of the step she had taken. And it was while she was with me that Isabella came home.’ He heaved himself up a little in the bed. ‘What I told you just now wasn’t altogether a lie. Parts of it were true. But it was Jeanette and I who were in the solar when Isabella came in after changing her gown. I did ask Isabella where she’d been and she did fly into a rage, but it was me she attacked with the fruit knife …’ His voice became suspended.

‘And it was Sister Walburga who hit her with the vase,’ I finished for him.

‘Yes. I didn’t want to implicate her unless I had to.’

‘So what did you do when you realized that your daughter was dead?’ I asked, although I could guess at least part of the answer.

‘It was getting dark. I had promised Jeanette some vegetables to take back with her for the nuns, and they’d been dug up earlier by one of the men before he went home, and loaded into the cart we used for market. She said I must help her put Isabella’s body into the cart as well, and drive back with her to the nunnery. It’s outside the city walls, like this place, so curfew didn’t matter. She said a grave had been dug in the nuns’ graveyard for one of the Sisters who was very sick and had been expected to die, but who, in my cousin’s opinion, was more likely to recover. I asked what would happen if she didn’t, but Jeanette said it was a chance we had to take. And if she did get better, my cousin said it would be an easy enough matter to plant the idea of a miracle in the minds of the other two nuns.’

‘Which she successfully did, according to Sister Apollonia,’ I said. ‘But go on.’

My companion shifted restlessly. ‘There’s not much more to tell. We had the house to ourselves: the hands we employed, the two girls and the men, all had homes in the village. We couldn’t afford to feed them more than their dinners. Only Emilia and Jane Honeychurch lived with us. So we put Isabella’s body in the cart, I drove it to the graveyard, we buried Isabella in the vacant grave, I left Jeanette at the nunnery door, together with the sack of vegetables, and returned here. I turned Isabella’s horse loose and lived in dread for the next few days that it would make its way back again. But it never did. It was a valuable animal and someone no doubt found it wandering and thought his luck was in.’

‘Your wife?’ I queried. ‘Did you tell her the truth?’

‘Oh, yes. I had to.’ The rheumy eyes clouded over. ‘It hit her hard, but in the end, she agreed that we had to protect Jeanette because she had only been protecting me. We made a pretence of searching for Isabella, but of course we knew we would never find her. We knew where she was all the time. But the knowledge was too much for Amorette to bear. The following year she drowned herself in the Avon. Of course, most people thought it was an accident, and there was no proof to the contrary. Even I couldn’t swear it was suicide, although naturally I had my doubts …’

‘You told me, when we spoke before, that you sent that day to Emilia Virgoe’s cottage to ask if Isabella were there, yet you knew she wasn’t at home.’

‘God’s fingernails, man!’ Jonathan thumped his coverlet in exasperation. ‘As far as I knew then, what I told you didn’t matter. I didn’t think you were going to ferret out the truth and disturb my peace.’ He began to breathe heavily again. ‘And you can’t be sure that what I’ve told you now is really the truth, can you?’ He gave a wheezing laugh that stuck in his throat and threatened to choke him.

He was right, of course. He had told me two different stories within a very short space of time, adapting the second to fit the information I had gathered for myself.

Jonathan gave a throaty chuckle which rapidly degenerated into a spasm of coughing. When, finally, he could speak, he wheezed, ‘Jeanette, if you question her, will deny everything.’ I wondered how he knew that. ‘And then you won’t know who to believe, now will you?’

‘I know Isabella was killed at home by you or whoever was with you.’

‘I’ll deny everything I’ve told you. I’ll swear you’re making it up.’

I hesitated. I knew that such evidence as I had was flimsy. A lawyer who knew his trade – and which of them doesn’t? – could easily bemuse Hob Jarrett and his two cronies into doubting the evidence of their eyes; into doubting even that there was a piece of Isabella’s gown still in the grave, let alone that it had been green. Silk or velvet? They had described it as both at one time and another. And Robert Moresby’s evidence, relayed to me by Juliette? On reflection, no colour of the gown Isabella was wearing had been mentioned, nor, as Adela had guessed, would Master Moresby wish to get involved. No, I might have solved the mystery, but I would never prove my case. It was true, what Jonathan Linkinhorne and everyone else had said from the beginning: it was all too long ago. Raking over such cold and dead ashes was a profitless pastime, a wasted effort.

‘What will you do now?’ Jonathan asked. His voice, in the last few moments, had grown fainter.

I glanced at him in concern, but he waved his hand at me impatiently, a dismissive movement as if he understood that there was nothing left for me to stay for.

I got to my feet. ‘I’ll tell Mayor Foster what I’ve learned. The rest is up to him.’

My companion smiled weakly, but his tone, when he spoke, was a little stronger.

‘He won’t do anything. At least, not if he’s wise. Warn him, if you have to, that I’ll refute everything I’ve told you.’ He was seized by another bout of violent coughing before adding faintly, ‘I intend to end my days, whatever their number, here and die in my bed. And if His Worship has any intention of visiting me himself, with the mistaken notion that he can wrest the truth from me, tell him to spare himself the trouble.’ He sketched a ghastly smile. ‘I may even do that for him.’

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