Read 31 - City of Fiends Online
Authors: Michael Jecks
I do wonder whether the mention of murder and the vision of rampaging hordes which it brings to mind are due to someone’s misreading Coulton’s book when they put the comment up on
Wikipedia.
Don’t get me started on inaccurate quotations on Wikipedia!
However, although this researcher may have had a problem, there is no doubt that Berkeley’s contemporaries did view his death in an especial light. For several years after his demise (and
to the disgust of Bishop Grandisson, according to Professor Nicholas Orme in his
Death and Burial in Medieval Exeter
, Devon & Cornwall Record Society, 2003), pilgrims went to pray at his
tomb. This cult lasted until the 1340s, after which it dwindled.
So, I was left with the idea of a bishop who was revered by his people, even to the extent that they would travel to visit his tomb under the disapproving eye of his successor. A man who had
died suddenly – and a man with the magical name of Berkeley – just at the time that King Edward II was being held by Berkeley’s brother at the castle that still holds their name.
And also, of course, at the time when certain men were trying to free their King from that castle.
And
when the Dunheved brothers had succeeded in doing so.
Is it any wonder that a fiction writer would be attracted to this story?
As always, my gratitude goes to my copy editor, Joan Deitch; to my marvellous editor, Jessica Leeke; my agent Eddie Bell; and the many people who have contributed (knowingly or not) to the story: Jules Frusher, Kathryn Warner, the excellent Ian Mortimer, and all the many others whose research I have shamelessly pinched!
My greatest thanks must go to my wife and kids for their patience and fortitude during the writing and editing of yet another book. Love you all.
And as ever, any errors are my own.
Unless they were caused by my mislaying an important note after being called out to liberate a cricket ball from the barn roof . . .
Michael Jecks
North Dartmoor
July 2011
Relationships are always changing. Sometimes their adjustments are so gradual, we hardly notice them; occasionally they are shattered by shocks that devastate all concerned,
but whether they alter with glacial or lightning speed, the effect can be profound.
In a family, in a village, in a city, the connections that matter most are those with our nearest family and friends, yet they are the ones which are tested daily. These are the people whom we
can most easily upset – and yet they are the very ones upon whom we most depend.
Disputes can occur at the drop of a hat: a misinterpreted expression, a careless word, a hand held too long – all can lead to sharp words, bitterness and rancour.
Reconciliation may be straightforward if attempted with speed, but it is less certain when allowed to fester. It is better, so they say, not to sleep on a quarrel. But all too often men and
women lie weeping into the night over cruel words. Words which were uttered in the heat of the moment and which were never intended to have a lasting impact; or worse, words which were precisely
considered – and all the more vicious as a result.
In the year 1327, all over the kingdom people went about their business in a state of constant worry because they feared what the future might bring.
Their King, Edward II, had been forced to abdicate.
The uncertain political situation affected everyone: the merchants and traders of Exeter, just as much as elsewhere in the realm. In such a climate, even mild-mannered people became
uncharacteristically quick to take offence; disagreements abounded and could grow into outright feuds, petty disputes into fist-fights. Even murder.
In one street in Exeter that June, an argument that arose from an ill-considered reckless threat grew to dominate the lives of all about and escalated into a disaster that would overwhelm them
all with hideous acts of violence. All for love, for loyalty, or for honour.
And none of those who were intimate with the victims or protagonists would be untouched by the consequences.
Feast of the Nativity of St John the Baptist
1
, first year of the reign of King Edward III
Petreshayes Manor, Yarcombe, East Devon
The smoke could be seen clearly from half a mile away. In the still air of the summer’s evening, the columns rose from the manor’s fires like pillars supporting the
sky.
‘Hold!’ commanded Sir Charles of Lancaster, peering ahead. There was no sign of alarm. A wood on their left offered some protection, while to the right there were some fields,
pasture, common land. All ideal for pursuing their victims, should they escape.
‘Here we are, boys,’ he breathed.
His men stared. There was a heightened tension, the awareness of an imminent fight. Breath rasped, and he heard the soft hiss of a blade being drawn, the jangle of bit, the squeak of leather,
the hollow clop of a hoof.
‘That’s the manor,’ his guide said. Wat Bakere was a rotund, smiling man, but he wore a scowl today. ‘You’ll find it easy to overrun. Kill them all.’ He was
pointing at the church and manorial buildings over at the other side of the dirt road. It curled about the line of the manor, which was a prominent landmark.
‘You’re sure they are there?’
‘Ulric told you, didn’t he? He said they would be,’ Bakere said, jerking a thumb at the lad behind him.
Sir Charles nodded.
He was a tall man, fair and handsome as a Viking, and ruthless as a berserker. During the last civil war he had fought against the King for his lord, Thomas of Lancaster, and when Earl Lancaster
was executed, Sir Charles had been exiled. That was five years ago, and when he begged for a pardon for his offences, his King had been gracious. He was rewarded with positions of trust, and given
a living once more.
He asked for no more; he had given his word and his hand to his King, so when Edward II was captured by his enemies, Sir Charles became a recusant knight. He would not renege on the new oaths he
had given his King. Instead he left the comfortable billet in the King’s manor at Eltham where he had lived for the last months, and rode into the twilight to take up arms on the King’s
behalf.
Now the King’s son had taken the throne, Sir Charles was a renegade. A felon. Because he would hold to his vow.
Today, with his band of warriors committed to the King, he would begin the fight to return Sir Edward of Caernarfon, as he was now labelled, to his natural place on the throne of England.
Sir Charles looked at Ulric of Exeter. He was more trustworthy than Wat Bakere. Bakere had been given to him by Stephen Dunheved, a man who appreciated the value of good information, but it was
Ulric, the merchant’s fellow, who had brought the details. Returning his gaze to Bakere, he nodded.
‘You were the baker at this manor?’
Bakere rolled his eyes impatiently. ‘Yes. I told you – I’d been here two years when I left a fortnight ago.’
‘But even then you heard that the Bishop and his entourage were to come here?’
‘Yes.’ Wat looked up at him, his eyes creased in sardonic amusement. ‘You don’t know what it’s like. They hear their lord’s coming to visit, and all hell is
let loose! Rooms must be cleaned, beasts must be slaughtered, money must be counted and recounted, food stores checked so the master can see nothing’s been lost or stolen . . . there’s
no peace for anyone. As soon as his visit was announced, the villeins were driven lunatic by the steward’s demands. So was I. I needed more flour for their food, and the steward was never
willing to—’
‘What makes a man like you become disloyal to his master, I wonder?’
‘I owe them
nothing
!’
‘I see,’ Sir Charles said languidly. He suspected that Wat had been found with his hand in the food bin. Bakers were notorious for making undersized loaves, keeping back the excess
flour to sell, or making their own loaves larger than those for others. A greedy little man, this Wat.
He turned his attention back to Ulric. The scrawny wretch was looking miserable. It was he who had brought confirmation that Bishop James Berkeley was heading this way, and now he knew the
consequences of his report, he was regretting it. The lad was too young; he needed his spine stiffened.
Sir Charles studied the road ahead and soon made his dispositions. The men for the woods dismounted, the youngest boys taking the reins while the older men shifted their weapons on their belts,
bound quivers to their hips or backs, laced their bracers, and strung their bows. There was little sound from any. All knew their part.