The Tarnished Chalice (45 page)

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Authors: Susanna Gregory

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BOOK: The Tarnished Chalice
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Michael nodded. ‘I am sure you are right.’

‘Aylmer was too cautious to sell it as the Hugh Chalice, but was quite happy to collect twenty shillings for a silver cup. He may have had redeeming thoughts towards the end of his life, but he was a despicable man.’

Michael sighed. ‘Simon confided a few other things while you were consulting with Bunoun. I asked why folk had joined his group, and it sounded as if he had applied a good deal of moral pressure. I suspect that is why they fell away so readily – their allegiance was not willingly given. Still, at least we know what the mark means. I assumed it was sinister, but it was not. He also denied impregnating
Christiana’s mother, but admitted to setting his house alight – for the Hugh Chalice.’

‘How did he think that would help?’

‘As we suspected, Gynewell had intimated he might be in line for the Stall of Sanctae Crucis, so he burned down his home to draw attention to himself. It worked: he was offered the post in a matter of days. It meant full-time duties in the cathedral where the cup was to be displayed, and would have allowed him to guard it.’

‘Where is the chalice now?’ asked Bartholomew. ‘Simon’s, I mean, not the others.’

Michael removed something from under his cloak, and Bartholomew saw the familiar, dented vessel with its worn carving. ‘He asked me to make sure it is presented to the cathedral on Sunday.’

‘It looks just like the others,’ said Bartholomew warily. ‘And I thought he was uncertain about it.’

‘He claims it is the real one, because St Hugh would not let him die without seeing it after his years of devotion. So, I shall put it in St Katherine’s Chapel with the others, and de Wetherset can decide.’

Prior Roger was full of questions when Michael presented a sixth cup for his growing collection, and it was some time before he allowed the monk to go. Wearily, Michael returned to the guest-hall, where he found Bartholomew already asleep. The monk had often envied his friend’s ability to doze through all manner of commotion, and in this case, the chamber in which he rested contained de Wetherset and Suttone, who had lit several candles and were making no effort to lower their voices. Cynric was honing his sword on a whetting stone, and Whatton and a few friends had just started to bellow psalms in the building next door.

‘He refused to tell us anything,’ said de Wetherset,
indicating Bartholomew with an angry flick of his thumb. ‘He said he was tired, and that we would have to wait until tomorrow. Then Whatton came to tell us Simon is dead, and invited us to sing songs for his soul. Is it true?’

Michael nodded. ‘And I do not want to talk tonight, either. However, here comes Hamo. As he was outside his prior’s door when I gave my account of what happened, you can ask him about it.’

Suttone regarded Hamo in surprise. ‘I thought you would have abandoned eavesdropping, considering you had an accident the last time you did it. How is your arm, by the way?’

‘You hurt yourself listening to private conversations?’ asked Michael disapprovingly.

‘It happened the other night, when you and Matthew were assaulted,’ elaborated Suttone. He gave a rather malicious smile. ‘Hamo was so determined to hear what Prior Roger was saying to Whatton in the Lady Chapel that he tried to climb the ivy on the wall outside – I could see him through the window. And all the time, you were in the orchard, fighting for your life.’

‘Our Lady Chapel is a difficult challenge for eaves-droppers,’ said Hamo, making it sound as though the fault lay in the building, rather than the activity. ‘And the only way to monitor discussions is to go outside and scale the wall. I heard the clash of arms as you fought off your attackers, and I was so frightened that I fell and stunned myself. By the time I had recovered, Cynric was saying that you had escaped and Tetford was dead.’

‘Why were you trying to listen to your prior?’ asked Michael curiously.

‘He wanted to know whether Whatton was going to be promoted to Brother Cellerer,’ supplied Suttone helpfully. He assumed a pious expression. ‘Nosy men will die when the plague comes again.’

Michael smiled, noting that the timing of the incident eliminated Hamo, Roger and Whatton as candidates for the ambush. He wished Suttone had mentioned it sooner. ‘Would you mind extinguishing the lamps and going downstairs to talk? Matt will snore through the trumpets of Judgement Day, but I require silence and darkness for my slumber. Good night, gentlemen.’

He lay on his bed and hauled a blanket over his face. He did not think he would sleep, because his mind teemed with questions, but he did not want to spend the night chatting to de Wetherset and Suttone, either. He needed time alone, to consider what he had learned and try to instil some order into it. Therefore, he was surprised when he opened his eyes to find the room full of daylight.

‘Roger ordered the bells silenced this morning,’ explained de Wetherset, watching him look around in confusion. ‘You seemed so exhausted last night, that I thought you might appreciate longer in bed.’

‘It was our suggestion,’ said Suttone shyly. ‘Roger was set to produce some really loud music today, as he now has six Hugh Chalices lined up on his altar, but we persuaded him that your repose was important to solving the mysteries that have beset his city. Grudgingly, he agreed.’

Michael sat up and scrubbed his face. Bartholomew was shaving in some hot water Cynric had brought, and had changed his clothes. By comparison, Michael felt soiled and grubby. He swung his large legs over the side of the bed.

‘I have a lot to do today,’ he said ungraciously. ‘You should not have let me waste time.’

‘Your wits will be sharper with the additional rest,’ said de Wetherset. ‘I am trying to help you, Brother. If I am an instrument of the saints, then I should put my talents to good use.’

Michael glanced sharply at him, but could see no trace of humour in the ex-Chancellor’s face. His ploy to prevent de Wetherset from harming Bartholomew at some point in the future had worked better than he had anticipated.

‘Roger invited Gynewell to come and hear your account of Simon’s death,’ said Suttone. ‘I heard him arrive a few moments ago.’

‘He heard cloven hoofs rattle across the cobbles,’ murmured Cynric. He was in a foul mood, furious that he had not been there when Michael and Bartholomew had been attacked a second time.

Michael stood, stretched and performed his morning ablutions. Then he donned a fresh habit and asked Cynric to air the one he had been wearing, so it would be clean for the Sunday celebrations – if he lived that long. In an attempt to alleviate the guilt he felt for not protecting his scholars, Cynric went to the kitchens and forced the cook to prepare the best breakfast the convent could provide, fingering his dagger meaningfully as he recited a wholly unreasonable list of demands. The meal took three men to carry, and won Michael’s instant approval.

‘It is healthy to consume a decent breakfast,’ he declared, when Bartholomew warned that he might be sick if he ate more than a dozen eggs. ‘I am sure Surgeon Bunoun would agree.’

‘Bunoun is an excellent medicus,’ agreed de Wetherset. ‘Look what he did for Dalderby, although the reprieve was only temporary. I heard Miller killed him, by hitting him over the head with a stone.’

‘It is a bad time for men to slaughter each other,’ said Suttone worriedly. ‘In four days, we shall have our installation, the General Pardon and Miller’s Market, all at the same time. If there are tales that the Guild and the
Commonalty have been killing each other, blood will flow for certain.’

‘The city felt very uneasy yesterday,’ agreed de Wetherset. ‘Men were gathering in groups, according to affiliation, and that is always a bad sign. I remember it from my Cambridge days.’

When Michael had reduced Cynric’s fine spread to a few gnawed bones and a sizeable midden of eggshells, the four scholars walked across the snow-covered ground to Prior Roger’s solar, where Bishop Gynewell was prodding the fire into a furious glow that was too hot to be comfortable for anyone else. Prior Roger stood near a window he had eased open, and Hamo was pouring cups of wine and readying platters of pastries. Bartholomew saw they were expected to consume yet more of the Gilbertines’ hospitality, and hoped Michael would not make himself ill.

‘There you are,’ said Gynewell, bouncing across the floor to offer them his ring. ‘It is a cold—’

‘There was a lot of snow last night,’ said Roger. ‘Have you seen the thickness of it on the chapel roof? I do not think I have ever known such weather. Well, there was last year, I suppose. And Fat William died on an equally bitter night the year before that, God rest his soul.’

‘Fat William died of a surfeit of oysters,’ explained Hamo when Gynewell looked bemused. ‘He was feeding quite happily, when he started to gag. Then he shuddered, gasped and drummed his feet until he died. Poor Fat William!’

He crossed himself, while Bartholomew wondered whether Fat William’s oysters might have been tainted with the same poison that had led to Flaxfleete’s demise. The symptoms sounded very similar.

Gynewell manoeuvred a chair directly in front of the hearth, sprang into it, then listened carefully while Michael
outlined what had happened in the Church of the Holy Cross.

‘That leaves just you three,’ he said to Michael, de Wetherset and Suttone when the monk had finished. ‘You must promise to be very careful over the next four days. I do not want to tell the hopeful crowds that the ceremony is cancelled because all the canons-elect are dead.’

‘You are expecting crowds?’ asked Suttone in surprise. ‘I assumed everyone would prefer Miller’s Market.’

‘Dean Bresley suggested we hold the service earlier,’ explained Gynewell. ‘Now people can attend the ceremony first, and go to the fair afterwards.’

Michael was horrified. ‘The previous timing meant the two factions would remain separate, but now everyone will go to both, and fights will be inevitable. What was Bresley thinking?’

‘That he does not want anyone to know which side is the stronger,’ explained Gynewell. ‘He says the more powerful one will see it as a favourable omen for war. In this way, the two parties will never know the extent of each other’s army, and he thinks it is the best way to keep the peace.’

Suttone swallowed nervously. ‘Who knows with this city? It is worse than Cambridge!’

Michael turned his thoughts to his investigation. ‘Before he died, Simon gave us several clues, and I mulled them over at breakfast this morning. I now know enough to begin the process of unveiling Aylmer’s killer.’

Bartholomew regarded him in astonishment. ‘Do you? Last night you were ready to give up.’

‘Food, Matt,’ said Michael. ‘It does wonders for a man’s mind. I mean to start with young Hugh.’

‘My cousin, the choirboy?’ asked Suttone in astonishment. ‘I do not think he killed Simon!’

‘No, but he will know who did,’ replied Michael. ‘The
message Simon asked him to deliver to Chapman was intercepted by someone – and that same someone then arrived with armed cronies at Holy Cross. I shall have this killer yet. He will not outwit Cambridge’s Senior Proctor.’

Bishop Gynewell wanted to witness the impressive sight of six Hugh Chalices standing in a row in the Chapel of St Katherine, and his companions were more than willing to escape the stifling heat of Prior Roger’s solar and walk in the cold church. When they arrived they found Dame Eleanor on her knees before the altar and Christiana sitting at the back, waiting for her to finish. She had been slouching, and hastened to adopt a suitably elegant pose when she saw admirers might be watching her.

‘Dame Eleanor says it is not for a poor woman to say which is the real cup,’ she whispered, as they came towards her. ‘So she is praying to them all.’

Michael rested an unnecessary hand on her shoulder. ‘I am sure she is right, and there are almost certainly more to be found. We happened on these by chance; logic dictates that there will be others.’

Gynewell was unhappy. ‘I am afraid I cannot tell which is the original one now. I suppose we will have to send them all to Avignon, and let the Holy Father decide.’

‘There is no need for that, My Lord,’ announced de Wetherset. ‘I told you, I have a talent for detecting an air of sanctity in such things. If there is a real chalice, I shall be able to identify it for you. I know I could not do it yesterday, but I have recited several very eloquent prayers since then, and I am sure St Hugh will help me now.’

He went to stand at the altar, where his shuffling presence disturbed Eleanor. With a sigh, she rose and joined the others in the nave, hobbling slightly after kneeling so long.

‘I have been praying for Simon. And the others who have died – Aylmer, Dalderby and Tetford.’

‘We all need to pray,’ said Hamo. He raised his hands in the air, and closed his eyes. ‘In fact, we should praise the Lord with—’

‘Alleluia,’ agreed Roger with enthusiasm. ‘Let us lift our voices to the Heavenly King.’

‘Dame Eleanor has been petitioning St Hugh on my behalf, too,’ said Christiana to Michael, as the Gilbertines began to rail. ‘She has asked him to send me a good husband. I am not sure I shall follow your advice of taking the veil and soothing my loneliness with lovers.’

‘I did not put it quite like that,’ said Michael, startled. ‘I said there are ways to—’

‘We have learned a good deal about the Hugh Chalice,’ interrupted Bartholomew. He did not think Michael should have that sort of discussion with a bishop standing within earshot. ‘We know Simon and Aylmer were the friars charged to bring it to Lincoln, but that Aylmer sold it because he could not resist the temptation of easy money.’

‘Twenty shillings,’ said Suttone, shaking his head. ‘He could have had ten times that.’

‘Perhaps he did,’ Bartholomew pointed out. ‘We do not know the Geddynge priest was his first and only victim. It is possible that he had already sold it several times before.’

‘And it has languished in Lincoln for the last twenty years,’ Michael went on, reluctantly dragging his attention from Christiana’s kirtle and focussing on his investigation, ‘because Miller knew Shirlok had escaped hanging, and did not want to attract his attention by hawking the goods that had been used to convict him. Meanwhile, the fraternity was Simon’s idea. Aylmer joined so as not to reveal his role in the original theft; Chapman enrolled because he sincerely
believes it belongs here; and I suppose Flaxfleete and Herl subscribed later.’

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