Authors: The Medieval Murderers
âBut you did just that,' said old Dame Pauline sulkily. âAnd
I
was forced to pay the price. Racing around after deer at my age! It is all wrong, and I shall write to the Bishop about it. Prioress Christiana is not fit to rule our houseâshe cannot even read. I am the only literate woman there.'
âSo you remind us day and night,' sighed Rose, stepping smartly to one side when William made a trial sweep with the sword that came perilously close to her elegantly tailored habit.
âYou say you are visiting Lymbury,' said Michael to Askyl. âHow long have you been here?'
âA few weeks,' replied the knight. âI have no family of my own, so it is good to be among friendsâLymbury, William and Dole. Lymbury has been very generous with his hospitality.'
âYou are both priests?' asked Bartholomew of the
chaplain and vicar, wondering whether William had been ordained; an interest in weapons was something he should have forsworn.
Dole nodded. âWe took holy orders when we returned from Poitiers. I did it out of a conviction that I had killed too many Frenchmenâalong with the fact that I am unlikely to secure a bride with no nose. War has made me ugly, I fear.'
âThat is not true,' said Rose. Dole's eyes blazed with sudden hope. â
Joan
will have no trouble getting a suitorânow her husband has left her a fortuneâand
she
is ugly.'
Dole's eager expectation faded abruptly, while hot colour rose in Joan's cheeks.
âWe shall see who secures the better husband,' said Joan coldly. âYou regard yourself a beauty, but you are swarthy and you dye your hair.
Mine
is naturally fair.'
âLadies, please!' snapped Michael, when the altercation looked set to continue for some time. âA man lies dead, and you should be ashamed of yourselves, quarrelling over hair. Now, Dole: you were telling us why you decided to become a priest.'
Dole nodded again, and looked at Bartholomew. âIf you were at Poitiers, you do not need me to tell you that while it was a glorious victory for England, there was something deeply distasteful about so much killing. I was detailed to help bury the dead afterwards, and it took days. When Lymbury told me it was in his power to appoint me as chaplain to Ickleton's nuns, it seemed right to accept.'
âAnd you?' asked Michael of William, who was removing Lymbury's blood from the sword with some spit and his sleeve.
âIckleton needed a vicar, and I needed somewhere to live,' replied William. âPriests have been in short
supply since the plague, and villages are grateful for whoever they can get.'
âThat is true,' said Michael. âBut there are some standards, even so.'
âDole and I both know Latin,' said William, as if he imagined this to be the sole criterion. âAnd Lymbury liked me to write out his various wills and manage his domestic accounts in addition to my parish duties. Like most military men, he was illiterate.'
âLymbury offered you and Dole comfortable posts, but gave nothing to Askyl?' asked Michael, turning to the knight.
Askyl shrugged. He was standing by the hearth, poking the ashes with a stick and careful to stand precisely equidistant from his two female admirers. Bartholomew wondered whether he knew how fine a figure he cut in his half-armour and nonchalant pose.
âI am a knight, not a priest,' said Askyl. âHe asked me to be his bailiff, but I think Hog might have had something to say about that.'
âYes, I would,' said Hog firmly. âMy family have served his for generations, and I would not have stood by while I was ousted.'
âNor would I,' said James, who had returned with Dame Pauline's wine. âIt would not have been right. My family has always been loyal to the Lymburys.'
âWhat will happen now he is dead?' asked Bartholomew. âIs Joan his sole heir?'
âI shall have to dig out his most recent testament and see,' said William. âHe kept changing his mind, and I cannot recall what he said the last time.'
âIt will leave everything to me,' cried Joan, suddenly alarmed. Rose started to laugh.
âI do remember that his friends were remembered, though,' said William, still polishing the sword. He
smiled, rather nastily. âCall it self-interest, if you will, but that little detail stuck in my mind.'
The discussion quickly degenerated into another row, and this time even the two servants joined in. Michael rubbed his temples, letting the furious voices wash over him, while Bartholomew went to sit next to him and wished he was back at Michaelhouse. His restful jaunt was becoming unpleasant.
âWe are unlikely to get our ten marks now Lymbury is dead,' said the physician to Michael. âAnd if several wills exist, all contradicting each other, we shall have to wait for lawyers to sort them out.'
âThat could take months, and we need new latrines now,' grumbled the monk. âBesides, a man has been murdered, and I doubt
these
people will see justice doneâthey are too wrapped up in their own concerns. I do not think I have ever encountered so many blazing hatreds under one roof. At least we scholars keep our dislikes decently concealed under a veneer of civility.'
âThen you had better resume your questioning, or you will have another death on your hands. Dole's surliness has finally shaken William's equanimityâand William is holding that sword.'
âThe so-called Sword of Shame,' said Michael thoughtfully, watching the vicar grip the hilt. âIs it valuable, do you think? It looks to me as if William intends to keep it for himself.'
âAll good weapons are expensive, and that one is better than most. Perhaps he knows Lymbury left it to himâor perhaps he added a codicil without Lymbury's knowledge, to be sure he inherits it.'
âWe know Lymbury could not read, so a dishonest clerk could write whatever he liked and be sure of having it signed and sealed. Is William dishonest, do you think?'
âHe is not a very devoted priestâhe is not rushing
to take Lymbury's body to his church and pray for it. But dishonest? I suppose that depends on how badly he covets that sword.'
While they had been talking, Dole had opened a chest and retrieved several documents. He regarded them with exasperation. âHere are his wills, but none is dated, and several are unsigned. Lawyers will be wrangling over these for years.'
âThis is
your
fault,' shouted Joan, real tears appearing at last as she glared at William. âYou were his clerkâyou should have made sure they were in order.'
William was smug. His flash of temper with Dole had cooled, and the sword lay on the bench, gleaming from its recent polish. âThose are just drafts. The latest willâsigned
and
datedâis in a safe place. Lymbury was fond of his riches, and liked thinking about where to bequeath them.'
âAll this is very interesting, but it is not helping us learn what happened to him this morning,' said Michael. âWhat time did you all arrive for the hunt?'
âSir Elias and I were already here, obviously,' said Joan, going to stand at the knight's side, âsince we live in the manor-house. William arrived next, then Dole, and finally Rose and Pauline.'
âIt was horribly early,' said Dame Pauline bitterly. âBefore breakfast. It is not good for elderlyâ'
âHog and James were here, too,' interrupted Joan. âThey had already saddled the horses, and came inside to eat a bowl of pottage with us before we left.'
âWhen was this?' asked Michael. âJust after dawn?'
âMuch later,' said Hog icily. âDawn has different meanings for men who need to make the most of daylight hours, and I had been in the fields for some time before I came to prepare the horses. James and I ate the pottage while we waited for the nuns to arrive. Then, eventually, after more valuable time was
lost in idle chatter, they all trooped outside and mounted up.'
âBut not Lymbury?' asked Michael. âWhy not?'
âAfter the pottage, he decided to forgo the pleasures of the kill and think about his last testament instead,' replied Askyl. âIt was not the first time. As William says, he enjoyed composing them.'
âDid anything happen to make him think he might need one soon?' asked Michael.
âHe had aching bones,' supplied Pauline, rubbing her hip. âLike me. But he was not ill.'
âWas there an argument, then?' Michael raised his hands. âForgive me: that was an extremely foolish question, given the present company. What I meant to ask was: was there an argument more bitter than your usual quarrels, which prompted him to alter the terms of his most recent will?'
âWe do not know the terms of his most recent will,' said Dole, regarding William coolly. âSomeone will not tell us what they are.'
âThey are confidential,' said William. âBut you will all know tomorrow, because I shall read them to you. I refuse to do it today, while the poor man is still warm. It would be disrespectful.'
âUnlike playing with his sword,' muttered Dole.
Michael tried to steer the conversation back to that morning, and was obliged to raise his voice when everyone started to yell at William for his hypocrisy.
âSo,' said the Benedictine, once he had silenced everyone by picking up the sword and dropping it to the floor with a metallic clang. William squeaked in horror, while Hog was furious about the damage to the highly polished floorboards. âYou all rode away to hunt.'
âJames did not,' said Joan. âHe stayed here to make sure Philip had everything he needed.'
The boy swallowed. âSir Philip sat in his chair and stared out of the window. Eventually, he said he had thought long enough, and told me to fetch William the Vicar. I looked in the meadows, then down by the river, but there was no sign of him. Then I met Prioress Christiana, who asked me to carry eggs to the convent for her. But by then I was hungry, so I went home for some bread.'
âYou were eating, when you should have been following orders?' asked Joan accusingly.
James blushed and stared at his feet. âI am sorry, My Lady, but I did not linger at home long. I finished the food, then ran to the upper pastures. But William was not there, either. It was only when the whole hunt was coming back to the manor-house that our paths finally crossed. By then, I had been racing around for hours.'
Bartholomew recalled the boy's flushed face when they had first met, and imagined the Lord of the Manor must have been growing impatient, being forced to wait so long for the priest to arrive.
âDid you go back inside the house at all after Lymbury had sent you to fetch William?' he asked.
James shook his head vehemently. âNo, I did not. He would have been angry to see me without the vicar, and I am not a fool. I just told you
everything
I did.'
Michael raised his eyebrows. âSo, no one can confirm where you were for most of the time?'
âI saw James leave the manor-house,' said Hog. âWe are short-handed from losing men in the French wars, so I was in the top field on my own. But I saw James leave, and I did not see him go inside again until you all arrived back from the hunt. James cannot possibly be the killer.'
âHe canâif Lymbury was dead before James left the house,' Michael pointed out.
âWell, he was not,' said James firmly. He raised his
chin defiantly, trying to mask his unease. Bartholomew felt sorry for himâhis was an unenviable position. âHe was alive. I did
not
kill him.'
âOf course you did not,' said Hog soothingly. âYou have no reason.'
âExcept the possibility of losing a hereditary post to Askyl,' said Michael. He raised his hand when Hog started to object. âI am not saying James
did
kill Lymbury. I am merely pointing out that he has a motive and he was the last person to see Lymbury alive. And the same goes for you, Hog, as far as motive is concerned. You say you were working alone, so it is possible that
you
slipped into the house after James had left, and killed the man who was thinking of dismissing you.'
âIt was wicked of Sir Philip,' said Hog sullenly. âI have spent my whole life on this manor, and he had no right to threaten my position. But I did not kill him for it.'
âSo, the hunt eventually comprised Askyl, William and Dole, accompanied by Rose, Joan and Pauline?' asked Michael thoughtfully. âJames was searching for William, and Hog was in the fields?'
âYes,' said Askyl. âSo
we
six hunters are innocent of this murder, because
we
were away from the house.'
âYou remained together all day?' asked Michael.
âWe are not wolves, hunting as a pack,' said William scornfully. âOf course we did not stay together. Sometimes we were in pairs, sometimes in threes, sometimes alone.'
âThe woods are not far from the hall,' Michael pointed out. âSo, any of you could have come back, killed Lymbury and returned to your sport with no one any the wiser.'
The six looked at each other. âYes, I suppose so,' admitted Askyl. âBut we did not. Someone would have seen usâone of the peasants in the fields.'
âNot so,' said Hog, a little smugly. âAt William's request, I sent them to the far meadows todayâas I informed the hunt as it left. No labourer would have noticed anyone moving between house and woods.'
âI was concerned for the welfare of my flock,' declared William defensively, when accusing eyes swivelled towards him. âI am their priest. Several of them were ridden down last time, and I did not want it to happen againâI did not direct them to the far meadows for sinister reasons. Besides, if Hog was in the top field, he would have seen the killer leave the woods alone, without the others.'
âThere is a hollow,' explained Hog. âI could not see the manor-house all the time.'
âThat is not what you said when we accused James of being the culprit,' pounced Michael. Hog glared at him, but made no reply.