Heartstone (31 page)

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Authors: C. J. Sansom

BOOK: Heartstone
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‘Arsehole. As for Carswell, you'd do better not to encourage him. Half those actor folk drink themselves into the gutter.'
‘You are in a poor humour today. Missing Tamasin?'
‘I wonder how she is faring all the time.' He looked at me. ‘And I wonder what you are planning to do about that Ellen.'
I did not reply.
IT WAS AFTERNOON, and we had eaten by the roadside, before the cart was finally repaired. It took twenty men with ropes to reload the cannon. The cart pulled in to the side of the road to let the company past. We continued south, ever deeper into the Forest of Bere.
I made my way up to the head of the company, where Leacon rode with Sir Franklin. ‘George,' I said, ‘we will be parting shortly.'
‘Ay. I am sorry for it.'
‘And I. But before we go I wonder if I could ask another favour.'
‘I will help if I can. What is it?'
‘If Portsmouth is full of soldiers, I imagine a good proportion of those who served professionally in the past will be there.'
‘Yes. Portsmouth is becoming the focus of all the military activity.'
‘If you get the chance, I wonder if you could ask whether anyone ever heard of a man called William Coldiron. He is my steward, for the time being at least.' I told him the story of Coldiron and Josephine, how from what I had overheard in the tavern it seemed he had never married. ‘If anyone knows his history, I would be interested to hear it. I do not believe his tales of killing the King at Flodden, but certainly he has been a soldier.'
‘I will ask if I get the chance.'
‘If you do, maybe you could write to me at home.'
‘I will. And if you should come to Portsmouth while you're here, look for me. Though I will have a busy time keeping these fellows in order. I hear the town is chaos, full of foreign soldiers and sailors. The company will be pleased to see you too.'
‘They do not all think me an unlucky hunchback?'
‘Only a few joltheads like Sulyard.'
‘Thank you. That means a lot.'
I rode back to the rear of the company. The road began slowly ascending and the pace slowed. I was half asleep in the saddle when Dyrick roughly shook my arm.
‘We turn off here.'
I sat up. To our right a narrow lane led into deep, shadowed woodland. We pulled aside. I called out, ‘George! We leave you here!'
Leacon and Sir Franklin turned. Leacon gestured to the drummer, who ceased drumming. The company halted, and Leacon rode back to us. He gripped my hand tightly. ‘Farewell, then.'
‘Thank you for letting us ride with you.'
‘Yes,' Dyrick added with unaccustomed grace. ‘I think we would have had another two days' riding without you to speed us on.'
I looked into the captain's tired, haunted eyes. ‘I am glad we met again,' I said sincerely.
‘And I. We must move on now, it will be late when we reach Portsmouth.' Dyrick called a farewell to Sir Franklin, and he half-raised a gloved hand.
Some of the soldiers called goodbyes. Carswell waved. Leacon rode back to the head of the company.
‘God go with you all,' I called out.
The trumpet sounded, the supply carts trundled past us, and the company marched away, the tramp of their footsteps fading as they rounded a bend. We turned into the lane.
THE FOUR OF US rode under the trees. All at once everything was silent, no sound apart from the chirking of birds. I was conscious of how tired I was, how dusty and smelly we all were. Suddenly the path ended at a high old stone wall. We passed through a gateway into a broad lawned area dotted with trees, a knot garden full of scented summer flowers to one side. Straight ahead stood what had once been a squat Norman church, with a wide porch and arched roof. But now large square windows had been put in at each side of the door and in the walls of what had once been the attached cloister buildings. Tall new brick chimneys rose from the cloister roof. I heard dogs barking in kennels somewhere behind the house, alerted by the sound of the horses. Then three men in servants' smocks appeared in the porch. They approached us and bowed. An older man with a short blond beard followed, wearing a red doublet and a cap which he swept off as he came up to Dyrick.
‘Master Dyrick, welcome once more to Hoyland Priory.'
‘Thank you. Your master had my letter?'
‘Yes, but we did not think you would arrive so soon.'
Dyrick nodded, then turned to me. ‘This is Fulstowe, Master Hobbey's steward. Fulstowe, this is Master Shardlake, of whom I wrote.' A bite in his tone at those words.
Fulstowe turned to me. He was in his forties, with a square, lined face, his short fair beard greying. His expression was respectful but his sharp eyes bored into mine.
‘Welcome, sir,' he said quietly. ‘These fellows will take your horses.' He turned to the porch. ‘See, Master Hobbey and his family wait to greet you.'
On the steps four people now stood in a row, a middle-aged man and woman and two lads in their late teens: one stocky and dark, the other tall, slim and brown haired. All four seemed to hold themselves rigid as they waited silently to receive us.
Part Three
HOYLAND PRIORY
Chapter Seventeen
WE DISMOUNTED. Fulstowe gave Feaveryear a formal smile. ‘You are well, master clerk?'
He bowed. ‘Thank you, Master Fulstowe.'
Fulstowe looked at Barak. ‘You must be Master Shardlake's clerk?'
‘I am. Jack Barak.'
‘The groom will show you both your quarters. I will have your masters' panniers taken to their rooms.'
I nodded to Barak. He and Feaveryear followed the groom, other servants leading the horses. Dyrick smiled. ‘You will miss your amanuensis, Master Shardlake. Well, it is time you met our hosts and their ward.'
I followed him towards the steps, where the quartet waited. I saw that near the rear wall of the enclosed gardens a butts had been set up, a mound of raised earth with a round cloth target at the centre. Behind it was what looked like a jumble of gravestones. I followed Dyrick up the steps.
Nicholas Hobbey was a thin, spare man in his forties, with thick grey hair and a narrow, severe face. He wore a blue summer doublet of fine cotton with a short robe over it. He clasped Dyrick's hand warmly. ‘Vincent,' he said in a clear, melodious voice, ‘it is good to see you here again.'
‘And you, Nicholas.'
Hobbey turned to me. ‘Master Shardlake,' he said formally, ‘I hope you will accept our hospitality. I look forward to relieving the anxieties of those who sent you.' His small brown eyes assessed me closely. ‘This is my wife, Mistress Abigail.'
I bowed to the woman Michael Calfhill had called mad. She was tall, thin-faced like her husband. The whitelead powder on her cheeks could not conceal the lines beneath. She wore a wide-skirted, grey silk dress with yellow puffed sleeves and a short hood lined with pearls; the hair at her brow was a faded blonde, turning grey. I bowed and rose to find her staring at me intently. She curtsied briefly, then turned to the boys beside her, took a deep, tense breath and spoke in a high voice. ‘My son, David. And my husband's ward, Hugh Curteys.'
David was a little under normal height, solid and stocky. He wore a dark brown doublet over a white shirt with a long lacework collar. His black hair was close-cropped. Black tendrils also sprouted at the collar of his shirt. Reverend Broughton had said David was an ugly child and he was on the verge of becoming an ugly man; his round face heavy-featured and thick-lipped, shaved close but still with a dark shadow on his cheeks. He had protuberant blue eyes like his mother, his only resemblance to either parent. He looked at me, his expression conveying contempt.
‘Master Shardlake,' he said curtly, extending a hand; it was hot, damp and, to my surprise, callused.
I turned to the boy we had travelled over sixty miles to meet. Hugh Curteys was also dressed in dark doublet and white shirt, and he too wore his hair cropped close. I remembered Mistress Calfhill's story of the time he had nits, and chased his sister round the room laughing. I was conscious of Emma's cross round my neck, where I had worn it for safe-keeping on the journey.
Hugh was a complete contrast to David. He was tall, with an athlete's build, broad-chested and narrow-waisted. He had a long chin and a strong nose above a full mouth. Apart from a couple of tiny brown moles his would have been the handsomest of faces were it not for the scars and pits of smallpox marking its lower half. The scarring on his neck was even worse. His upper face was deeply tanned, making the white scars below even more obvious. His eyes, an unusual shade of blue-green, were clear and oddly expressionless. Despite his obvious good health I sensed a sadness in him.
He took my hand. His grip was dry and firm. His hand was callused too. ‘Master Shardlake,' he said in a low, husky voice, ‘so you know Goodwife Calfhill.'
‘Indeed.'
‘I remember her. A good, fond old lady.' Still no expression in those eyes, only watchfulness.
The steward Fulstowe had come up the steps and stood beside his master, observing us carefully. I had the odd sense he was watching the family to see how they performed, like a playmaster.
‘Two letters arrived for you this morning, Master Shardlake,' he said. ‘They are in your room. One for your man Barak too. They were brought by a royal post rider on his way to Portsmouth, I think he had ridden through the night.' He looked at me keenly. ‘One letter had the Queen's seal on it.'
‘I am fortunate to have the Queen's solicitor for a friend. He arranged to have correspondence sent on to me by the post riders. And collected too, from Cosham.'
‘I can arrange for a servant to take letters there for you.'
‘Thank you.' I would make sure they were well sealed.
‘Master Shardlake is modest,' Dyrick said. ‘He sometimes gets cases from the Queen.' He looked meaningfully at Hobbey. ‘As I told you in my letter.'
Hobbey said smoothly. ‘Shall we go inside? My wife dislikes the sun.'

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