Read New Blood From Old Bones Online
Authors: Sheila Radley
âWell, then â you may stand surety for your brother if you wish. But I hope for your sake,' Justice Throssell added in warning, âthat your trust in him is not misplaced. I can show you no favours. If Gilbert should flee, your money will be forfeit.'
Will swallowed his unease. âSir,' he agreed, rising to his feet. âI'll go and find him now.'
Justice Throssell trotted beside him to the door. âBring your brother before me as soon as you can. But mark me, Will â if you have not persuaded him to come within two hours, I'll have him fetched by the constable's men. And if he's already fled, I'll authorise a hue-and-cry and have him hunted down, Ackland or no.'
Prising Ned Pye away from the Woolpack, where he was teasing the hostess with flattery in the hope of being quietened with a free refill of ale, Will returned with him to the castle.
âIs my brother at home?' he called to the yardman, as they clattered through the gatehouse amid the usual commotion of dogs and fowls.
âAye, sir'croaked Jacob, taking their horses as they dismounted. âMaster Ackland's been about the yard in an evil humour all morning. He stamped off not so long ago in the direction of the old keep.'
âI must go up there and speak to him. I hope to bring him down with me, and the three of us will then ride into the town together. Have his horse saddled and ready, Jacob.'
Ned had been listening with some scepticism. âI doubt your brother will be brought down so easily,' he said as they went through the herb garden and round the side of the house towards the upper ward.
âI must try to make him see reason. If I can't â if he prefers to flee â then he must take the consequences. But at least I shall have told him what the consequences are.'
Aware that Gilbert might be looking out from the old keep, they kept their voices low and made soldierly use of natural cover as they approached the great earthwork. Ned Pye stared up at the precipitous scar, the chalk a brilliant white against the darkly overcast sky. â
That
is the way you climbed when you confronted your brother the other day? With your leg weakened from wounds? I wonder you didn't fall and break your neck.'
âI climbed it often enough when I was a boy.'
âThat proves you're no wiser now than you were then,' said his servant severely. âSurely you're not going to climb it again?'
âNo, I've learned my lesson. Last time, my brother saw me climbing and became enraged, thinking I was spying on him. This time, with two of us, our tactics will be different. I shall take the path that winds up through the scrub and emerges on the far side of the keep. I'll draw Gib's attention by calling to him as I go. Meanwhile, you will climb up on this side, unseen, to give me support.'
â
I
am to climb the cliff?' Ned was indignant. âHa â I might have known it! Servants must always expect the dangerous tasks ⦠Well, if I reach the top without breaking my own neck, what am I to do then?'
âStay out of sight, and come to my help only if I call. I may need you if Gib becomes violent.'
âAnd if he sees me while I'm making the climb?'
âHe'll kick flints down on your head, I shouldn't wonder. If he does,' Will advised, âyour best plan is to duck.'
A westerly wind had risen, loosening the first drops of rain from the heavy clouds. Will left the cover of the orchard trees and made an open approach to the upper ward.
âHo there, Gib!' he called loudly, before taking to the path that snaked up the scrub-covered side of the earthwork. âWhere are you, brother?' he went on, pausing occasionally in his brisk pace. âGib, I say â are you up there?'
There was no answer. Reaching the top he began to search the ruins, and found Gilbert leaning his arms on a chest-high stretch of broken wall, gazing out over the roofs of the town in a brooding silence. Approaching rain had already obscured the great grey bulk of the priory, but the bell for the noonday Choir Office made its powerful presence, visible or not, known throughout the valley.
Will joined his brother, standing beside him and leaning his own folded arms on the wall. âShall we go to dinner?' he suggested.
âI'll eat my dinner when I please,' Gilbert growled, without turning his head.
âWhy not, since you're the master here?' said Will, humouring him. He fell silent for a few moments. The rain, sweeping across from the west, dashed against their faces, but neither brother moved.
âNo doubt you've heard what's being said about you in the town?'
âHa!' said Gilbert with contempt. âThe fools say I killed the prior's bailiff â but the murdered man cannot even be recognised!'
âThat was true until this morning. But Justice Throssell has now heard that recognition's been made. The corpse is undoubtedly Thomas Bostock's.'
Gilbert's head jerked round towards his brother, his cap and his beard streaming with rain. What little could be seen of his weather-worn face had paled, making the bruising on one cheek and the livid weal on the other more clearly visible.
â
Undoubtedly
? How can that be?' he blustered. âI heard it said that the face of the corpse was battered beyond all knowledge.'
âSo it was. But Justice Throssell has now been told that Walter Bostock had a distinctive birthmark on his body â and so had the corpse. There's no longer any doubt, Gib. The prior's bailiff has been murdered.'
Gilbert flung himself away and began to stride up and down between the broken walls, but with some caution, as though his back pained him. âThen may his soul burn in hell,' he muttered, âfor he deserved to dieâ'
He stopped abruptly in mid-pace. âBut I did not kill him!' He strode back to Will and thrust his thick finger to within an inch of his brother's face. âMark me: I am not his murderer!'
âDo you swear it?'
âAye â by the Holy Cross of Bromholm!'
Will was heartened by his brother's use of one of the most solemn and binding of all oaths. Even coming from a man who practised his religion only when it suited him, it carried conviction.
âThen who is the murderer, Gib? Do you have evidence against anyone?'
Gilbert turned away impatiently. âIf I had, I'd have told you before now. The murder could have been done by any one of the priory's tenants. They all hated the bailiff, though most were too cunning to say so â the constable especially. Aye, you'd do well to suspect the constable!'
âThen I'll do what I can to find some evidence. But meanwhile, the charge has been laid against you. Master Justice Throssell requires you to attend him at once to answer to it.'
â
To attend him? To answer a false charge?
God's blood, am I to be treated like a common suspect!' Gilbert's face was so purpled with rage that his injuries hardly showed. âNever! The Acklands were lords of this valley for two hundred years, and I'll not be summoned to attend a mere magistrate.' He stabbed his finger at Will again. âGo back to Justice Throssell, brother, and inform him that I am not guilty.'
Will shook his head. âGib,' he said patiently, âI cannot do that. The law requires you to answer in person to the justice of the peace. All I can do for you is to keep you company. Otherwiseâ'
Gilbert thrust his wet face menacingly close to Will's. âOtherwise what?
Make
me go, will you, little brother?'
âWhy should I trouble?' said Will, folding his arms. âThe choice is yours. If you're not willing to come with me to the magistrate, he'll send the constable and his servants to arrest you and take you there by force.'
âThe constable â by force?'
Gilbert let out an infuriated roar. âGod's death, I'd sooner leave Castleacre than submit to that! Out of my way!'
Will stood his ground. âIf you flee, you'll only harm your cause. Listen to me, Gibâ'
But Gilbert was beyond reason. His instant response was to strike out at his brother. Will saw the ham-like fist coming and jerked his head aside, but the glancing blow was fierce enough to rock him back on his heels. Gib turned and broke into a pounding run, making his way in the driving rain round the outer passage of the keep towards the top of the path.
But Will was by far the more agile of the two, despite his old wounds. He cut off a corner of the keep by vaulting over one broken wall, and then scrambled up another, cursing when his boots slipped on the wet flints and he cracked his knee. As he stood up on an empty window embrasure just above head level, he caught a glimpse of Ned Pye leaning comfortably in a sheltered corner, keeping an eye on what was happening.
The empty window was one of the many vantage points Will had used in his youthful single combats with his brother. As Gib ran by below, Will leaped on to his heavy shoulders and wrapped his arms round his brother's neck, bearing him to the ground.
â
Now
will you stay and listen to me,' he panted, kneeling astride and pinning him face down on the grass-grown passageway.
Gilbert slammed his hands impotently on the wet turf. âMy back is hurt â get off me!' he protested through gritted teeth.
âPains you, does it?' said Will callously, exploring the tender, swelling flesh on his own cheek with cautious fingers. âHow did you come by the damage â and to your face as well? Brawling, were you?'
âWhat's it to you? My horse put a hoof in a rabbit hole and threw me into a bush. Get off me, do you hear!'
Gilbert gave a sudden heave of his great shoulders and rolled over, breaking Will's hold and elbowing him in the ribs for good measure. Lumbering to his feet he set off again towards the path. Will followed him at a run, flinging himself forward to seize Gib round the knees, at the same time thrusting the weight of his shoulder behind his brother's thighs. Hobbled, but carried forward by his own momentum, Gib thudded to the ground and lay there winded.
This time, Will intended to make sure that his brother heard him out. Gilbert's cap had fallen off in their struggles. Sitting astride his shoulders, Will seized his attention by grabbing a handful of the rain-matted hair at the nape of his neck and pulling back his head, making him roar a protest.
âQuiet, Gib, and listen. Flee if you will, for I'll not try to stop you again. But remember this: if you flee, it will convince the justice of the peace that you must be guilty of the murder.'
He paused, wiping the rain out of his eyes with his sodden sleeve while he waited for his words to sink in.
âDo you understand? If you did not commit the crime, you must go before Justice Throssell and plead not guilty. And then, on the strength of your solemn oath' â he eased his grip on his brother's hair â âI'll set about finding the real murderer.'
âHa!' snorted Gilbert. âWhat chance have you of that, when it's most likely the constable himself? And meanwhile, you expect me to lie in that stinking town gaol, awaiting trial? Never!'
âThen you must do as you please,' snapped Will, out of patience at last. He released Gilbert's hair and stood up, rubbing his cramped thigh. âI've told Master Justice Throssell that if you'll agree to be bound over to appear at the next Quarter Sessions, I'll keep you out of gaol by standing surety for you. But if you'd sooner flee, and be hunted down by hue-and-cry â then go, and the devil take you.'
The rain had begun to ease. Will strode towards the path, trying not to limp, and Gilbert hurried after him.
âNot so hasty, brother. In truth, I did not know you had any surety to offer.'
âI have a few savings. But mark me, Gib: I can't return to my studies at Gray's Inn without them. If you flee, you'll deprive me of both my money and my profession.'
With some effort, Gilbert formed his features into an unaccustomed expression of gratitude. âOn my oath, I shall not flee. And you're welcome to stay here as long as you please â aye, and at my expense!'
It was strange to think that the enraged brother who had ordered him from the castle two days ago had now become a suppliant, following anxiously on his heels as they descended the narrow winding path through the scrub. Will muttered his thanks for the invitation to stay, but avoided any more discussion.
With a full year's study still to complete, he needed to return to London for the start of the Michaelmas law term. He hoped to set off from Castleacre in four days'time, on Wednesday; at the latest on Friday.
It was not lack of money that would prevent him from going. Meg would undoubtedly be willing to release him from his bond by standing surety for Gib herself. But duty to his family required him to stay until he had discovered the true murderer.
As everyone knew, the solemn process of the law was no guarantee that justice would be done. If Gilbert remained the suspected offender, his plea of not guilty at the Quarter Sessions would be of no avail. There was good evidence that he had threatened to kill the bailiff, and the jurymen â chosen for their local knowledge and likely acquaintance with the facts of the case â would almost certainly find him guilty.
Until their grandfather's day, convicted felons who could read had been able to escape hanging by pleading benefit of clergy. But murderers were no longer given that benefit. The only thing that could save Gib from being hanged would be the discovery that another man had committed the crime. Small wonder, then, that he was suddenly anxious for Will's help.
They had reached the foot of the mound. Will turned to reassure his brother, and saw that Ned Pye was following them down the path at a discreet distance, wisely preferring not to descend by way of the chalk cliff.
âBe of good cheer, Gib!' he said, concealing his own unease by slapping him over-heartily on the back. âI'll find the murderer as soon as I can, with my servant's help. Ned is a good man to have at your shoulder in perilous times, and he'll be as loyal to you as he is to me.'