Simon slipped inside the forge and crossed the floor to the far side, which lay in comparative darkness without candles or braziers to illuminate the gloom. There was a movement ahead, and he stepped backwards so that a shaft of light lit his face, smiling to reassure his quarry.
“It’s all right, I mean no harm, I just wanted to chat.”
The noise stopped - he could see no one, but was convinced that he was the subject of a detailed study. Just when he was beginning to think that he was alone and had imagined things, he heard her speak. “What would a bailiff want to talk to me about?”
He grinned. “The ale in your tavern, Rose? But perhaps better would be how you rate the men here: your mother wants me to find out who was the murderer of the two novices and wishes you to help.”
“Who is my mother?”
“Prioress Elizabeth. You see, I already know much and now I must find out who killed the novices.”
She stepped into a low glimmering light that came from a tiny window high in the wall, and stood still, surveying him with a serious expression. “Why should I trust you?”
“Why should you
not
trust me?”
“Two are dead already. A third might not matter to the person who could kill twice.”
“But why should anyone hurt you?” Simon asked with genuine surprise. “Surely the person who killed these two was someone within the cloister, and the reason for their deaths must lie within the convent itself. You aren’t part of it, are you?”
“Me a part of this?” she asked, a smile pulling at her mouth. She gazed at him dubiously. “You know who my mother is, you know what I do here. Of course I am a part of the place, and one of the worst parts to many minds. Think of it: fornicating with the canons, perverting them and making them break their vows of chastity. I am thought evil by the godly here. Don’t
you
think me evil?”
As she spoke, she approached nearer Simon, head slightly to one side, arms hanging still at her sides. Her hair was long, and hung over her shoulders in a shamelessly wanton manner, but her behaviour was most decorous, and she walked so smoothly it was like watching a ghost drift over the stones. She was an odd mixture of child, whore, and lady.
Simon laughed. “Rose, there’s no need to try to tempt me. All I seek is a murderer.” He strode to a bench and motioned to his side. She gave a brief nod.
“Very well, but if you don’t like what I’ve got to say, don’t blame me.”
“The girls who died - did you know them?”
“I tend to meet all the novices,“ she said. ”They come to me out of interest, I think, and from a desire to get into my mother’s good books. Not that talking to me is likely to help them much!“
She chuckled then, and Simon had to grin at the sight. Rose gave herself up to the pleasure, leaning back and gazing up at the rafters as she chortled. For the rest of their conversation she often did that; breaking off in the middle to give a delighted and delightful belly laugh, her hair dancing all down her back, arms straight, elbows locked, hands resting on the bench. When she was finished, she turned to eye Simon directly, without shame or embarrassment. “Moll wasn’t a very nice girl, you know.”
“No?”
“She was very religious, I reckon, and that made her difficult to get on with. It was all right for me, but the others found her tiring. She would keep on at them.”
“You found her easier to deal with?”
“Oh yes. I found her no difficulty at all. She thought I was the lowest of the low, but as such I merited some attention, and she often tried to persuade me from my ”path of dishonour“ as she liked to term it.”
Simon pulled a face. “Just what you needed to hear.”
“It was hardly novel to me,” she agreed, then chuckled. “My mother has spoken the odd word to me on occasion.”
“With a mother like yours, a woman so steeped in the religious life, what made you choose your profession?” Simon asked.
She grinned. “If
you
wanted to rebel, how would you go about it? I didn’t know she was my mother until I was fifteen. All that time I thought I was the daughter of someone lowly - just a cottager from a local vill who had got herself impregnated and passed her illegitimate daughter - me - to the local nuns to look after. But then I discovered whose daughter I was.”
“How did you find that out?”
This time there was no mirth in the grin. “It was dear Margherita who let it slip. Oh, I expect it was partly by accident - but not entirely. All along she wanted to get back at Mother for being elected when Margherita wanted the top job for herself. She thought I would create a scene - I don’t know, maybe go to Mother and scratch her face, accuse her, scream abuse at her - anything! But I didn’t. I stored it up, just like a good little nun, and thought about it until I felt I would explode.”
She was staring out over the top of the forge now, but her eyes appeared to be staring out over an unimaginable distance. “Then one day I had to know whether it was true, and I went to see her in the cloister. I was going to speak but she started crying. Not making a noise, just weeping, with tears rolling down both cheeks. She’d guessed what I’d learned, and I didn’t need to ask her then. I just told her I was leaving.”
“Up to then you were a novice?”
She gave him a sharp glance. “Of course. But not now. And I never took even the lower vows, so I can’t be forced to return against my will. Not like a real nun running from the place,” she added as an afterthought.
“Are you thinking of someone in particular?”
“You’ll know who I mean soon enough.”
“Do you mean that this person could be the murderer?”
“Oh no!” she laughed again.
“How did your mother feel about Katerine?”
Rose thought. “Katerine was enthusiastic about the place. She always kept her ear to the ground and figured out which way a vote might go, who would say what and why. Katerine would have been an invaluable assistant to my mother. Intelligent and well-informed about how the other nuns felt. And ruthless.”
Simon fell silent. “You said that you thought you could be in danger, that the person who killed twice may not hesitate to do so again. Why should
you
be in any danger?”
“Like I said, Bailiff, some here look down on me because I bring an ill reputation to the convent. They think I’m dishonouring the place. Some might be willing to remove me and my wrongdoing.”
“Who?”
“Well, Margherita, for one.”
Elias felt his mouth fall open with dismay as the suffragan bishop inched his way to his feet with regal slowness. His finger shot out and pointed from the bottle in his claw-like left hand to the smith himself. “You, Elias, planned to run away with these pitiful rags so that you could escape the evil of your deeds.”
“What?” Elias squeaked.
“You murdered the two girls because otherwise they would have told the prioress about your unchastity.”
“I couldn’t have - I was with the infirmarer.”
“When?” Bertrand sneered. “You dare suggest that you were with the infirmarer when these girls were killed?”
“Yes, when Moll died, at any rate.”
Bertrand was silent a moment, then his voice dropped to a hushed horror. “At
night?
You went and ravished the poor child in her own
bed?
Is there no end to your hideous concupiscence? You dared to take a holy child, a—‘
“Oh, for Christ’s sake, it wasn’t like that,” Elias said, holding out both hands in appeal. “I wouldn’t have touched her if she hadn’t wanted—‘
‘Silence!“
Bertrand roared. ”Your assertions of her unchaste behaviour are no protection to you, and your attempt to throw the blame on her shows only a contemptible cowardice on your part. What of the second murder this morning? Do you declare that you were with your lover when Katerine died?“
“No, but I was waiting for her - at the grille between the cloisters.”
Paul whispered to the bishop. “I saw him there, my Lord.”
Bertrand ignored him, his voice hardly altering. “Who saw you there? Who can confirm your innocence?”
“Well, the prioress - she saw me there.”
“Bishop…‘ Paul said, and Bertrand angrily motioned him to be silent. ”While the novice was being killed?“
“I don’t know, I…‘
That was better, for Elias’s voice betrayed his nervousness. Although it was quite possible that the man’s damned concubine would affirm his innocence of Moll’s murder, and Bertrand himself knew Elias was innocent of Katerine’s death, Bertrand knew he had Elias by the balls. “So you have no witness to corroborate your stories? I congratulate you, Paul, it seems you have indeed found the murderer.”
“I’m no murderer.”
“So you say, but the evidence is overwhelming.”
“You must believe me, Bishop. I had no reason to want to harm either of those girls.”
Bertrand sneered. “I don’t presume to understand the murderous instincts of a madman.“
“How can I convince you I’m innocent?” Elias threw himself on the ground before the priest and grabbed at his feet, missing the left one, but catching hold of the right. “I’ve never hurt anyone in my life!”
His voice was muffled, for his face was in the straw of the chamber’s floor, but Bertrand heard his words clearly enough. He turned to Paul. “You may leave us, my son. I wish to speak to this man alone.”
It was difficult to keep the glee from his voice. Looking down upon the bedraggled brother, Bertrand saw only the man who would destroy Lady Elizabeth.
Simon pulled a splinter from the bench, played with it, then tossed it away. Finally he faced Rose. “What possible reason could Margherita have to want to hurt either of those girls? She seems the woman most determined to protect the name and reputation of the convent, come what may.”
“You think so?” Rose said. “Margherita is certainly determined to have a convent to run. To make certain of it, she’s prepared to do anything to harm Lady Elizabeth, my mother.”
Simon lifted his leg so that he sat straddling the bench, facing the young girl. She spoke with an easy assurance based upon certainty, and Simon was experienced enough in interrogating felons to recognise the truth in her voice. All his life he had held priests, monks, nuns, canons, canonesses and all the other confusing clerical folk in high esteem, thinking them somehow above such foolery and pettiness. Now he saw that all men and women were alike: if they wanted power, they would fight for it, and those who sought power over other people were by definition the very men and women who should never be allowed it.
Naturally he excluded himself from this calculation.
Rose added, “Margherita has dropped poison into the ears of all the nuns at every opportunity. That my mother killed the first novice is only the latest lie.”
“How did you hear that?”
“You spoke loudly in the tavern.”
He had to grin in mute recognition of her skill as a spy while she laughed aloud once more. Then a faint creasing of her brow made him give her an enquiring look.
She glanced away, almost coquettishly ‘I just wonder whether Margherita has told any other stories,“ she said.
“Forgive me, but you appear very attached to your mother for a girl who left this place to rebel.”
“Is it any surprise? I was terribly upset when I found she was my mother, and tried to hurt her as cruelly as I could. I whored for pennies, when all my mother wanted was for me to be happy and safe. She was trying to protect me from shame and save me embarrassment, but all I saw was that she had hidden herself from me - rejected me, if you like.”
“Although in reality she had managed to keep you with her all your life, instead of being sent away to another convent, and presumably she made sure you were educated.”
“Educated? Oh, yes. I could read to you from any book in the convent, or add up any of the figures on any of the account rolls. Not many here can do so well as me. I think I even made Margherita nervous.”
“Why so?”
“Oh, when I went too near, she’d cover up her accounts before she’d talk to me, as though she was hiding them in case she’d made a mistake. The last treasurer often messed things up. In fact, Margherita had to correct many of the older account rolls when she took on the job.”
“I’ve heard so much about money here,” Simon mused. “It seems the most important thing in the life of this convent.”
“Of course it is. Without money the place would collapse. Haven’t you heard about Polsloe? Bishop Stapledon himself has had to order them to keep better control of their accounts, keeping records of what the bailiffs and reeves bring in, and making sure that everything is noted down. That’s the only way to prevent the lazy buggers thieving all the convent’s money.”
“You don’t have a very high regard for the men,” Simon observed with a smile.
She didn’t return it. In a cold voice, she said, “When you sell your body to a man you lose respect for him. You soon learn that one man is much like another when his tunic is lifted and his hose are down.”
Simon cleared his throat with swift embarrassment, but she grinned and widened her eyes at him. “Mind, I’d be happy to keep an open mind with
you,
Bailiff.”
Chapter Nineteen
Outside the church, Luke stood trying to keep a calm demeanour while the painful thudding of his heart threatened to burst his chest asunder. That poisonous old
bitch!
She had no right to rail at
him
for his misbehaviour, not after giving birth to Rose. Luke knew all about Rose, oh yes. Who didn’t inside this damned convent? At least he’d never fathered a child on a nun; his sins were trifling compared to hers.
But her threat had struck home with a terrifying accuracy. It had only been a short time before that he had been thinking about his good fortune in knowing the right cleric to bribe in Exeter, but if the prioress was to go over his head to Walter Stapledon, the Bishop of Exeter, then Luke could be dragged from this place in a moment. And knowing Stapledon, that was just what the pompous bastard would do. He would remember his message to Bertrand and demand that Luke be shoved away, far away.
Luke’s one consolation was that the place had lost much of its attraction now With the communicating door locked there was going to be little opportunity for meeting Agnes or any of the other girls.