I
t was by now mid-afternoon and I set off to see Hamo Gough without wasting any more time. George Applegarth seemed unaffected by my decision not to confide in him; in fact, if anything, he appeared relieved by my departure, merely remarking that he would get Reginald Kilsby to help him carry Anthony's body into the chapel and place it before the altar, as Dame Audrea had requested. I said I hoped to be back by suppertime, and would he inform the rest of the household members that I would want to speak to them that evening.
I took my cudgel and Hercules and set off, past the huddled shapes of the cottages in the nearby hamlet towards the darker, shapeless mass of Croxcombe woods. A sudden, brief shower of rain, over almost before it had begun, left water droplets sparkling everywhere and the sun gilding the edges of the leaves with haloes of soft, wet light. A few cottagers and coppicers gave me good-day as I passed; and a young man in a green velvet hunting coat and white leather boots, a hawk on his gloved wrist and silver bells on its jesses, raised his riding crop in salutation. A couple of good hounds pranced at his heels, to whose proudly waving tails and mincing ways Hercules took immediate exception, but I managed to grab him before his annoyance blossomed into a full-blown confrontation.
I had not expected Hamo Gough to be at home, and had been prepared to wait until his return, but he was there, crouched over his fire in the act of replacing the squares of turf over the smouldering wood. He straightened up at the sound of my approach â Hercules had spied the scut of a rabbit disappearing into the long grass that fringed the edge of the clearing and was barking like a fiend â and gave me a long, hard look.
âI thought thee'd be round,' he remarked, unsurprised.
âAs a matter of fact I was on my way home to Bristol when Dame Audrea sent after me. You've heard the news of Master Bellknapp's death, then?'
The charcoal burner grunted, indicating the pit at his feet. âThis lot's nearly ready, I reckon. Another day should do it.' He reverted to the subject of Anthony's murder. âThee can't keep a thing like that secret.'
âDame Audrea's hoping to,' I pointed out. âThat's why she's called me back. I have her blessing to ask questions of whomsoever I please.'
He gave a short bark of laughter. âI weren't meaning the law, Maister. Thee can keep anything from those fools if thee's a mind to. So, hast come to question me?'
âIf you're willing.'
âWhat dost want to know?'
âWell, I know, for instance, that you arranged for someone to call at the manor yesterday and tell Thomas Bignell, his wife and son that they couldn't get home to Wells last night because of a footbridge washed away in the afternoon's storm, so forcing them to remain at Croxcombe. I was in the woods later in the day and overheard your conversation with your fellow conspirator. What I want to know is the name of the person who put you up to it. Was it Anthony Bellknapp?' I wondered if he would tell me the truth, which I already knew.
Hamo Gough pondered for a moment or two, sucking his blackened stumps of teeth, then he shrugged.
âNo reason not to tell thee now, I s'pose. Ay, it were him. Appeared just after thee'd left, yesterday morning. Thought I'd heard someone prowling about while we were talking. Said 'e wanted to keep Master Bignell at the manor overnight. Could I do summat to make sure it happened.'
âDid he say why?'
âWhy what?'
âWhy he wanted the butcher to stay at the manor for the night,' I answered impatiently.
âNo.'
âDidn't you ask him?'
âNo. None o' my business. Besides, if thee doesn't ask, thee doesn't get told, and if it's anything to do with the Bellknapps, it's best not to know. Leastways, I've always found so.'
I sighed. I could tell that there was no more to be got out of Hamo on that score. But I was still curious about his digging activities.
âThe night Jenny Applegarth was murdered,' I said, âdid you see anything?'
He was at once on his guard. I could see the wariness in his narrowed eyes and the tensing of his body, like an animal scenting danger.
âWhat would I have seen?' His tone was belligerent.
âI'm asking you.'
âThen thee can ask away. I'm saying nowt.'
âDoes that mean you could tell me something, but won't?'
He shrugged. âThink what thee likes. No odds to me.'
He compressed his lips and folded his arms across his chest with a finality that said more than words. But I gave it one more try.
âYou keep looking for something around Hangman's Oak. Ronan Bignell and his two friends saw you surveying the ground there the night following the murder, and a few days or so afterwards, Ronan met you carrying a spade.'
âI digs for truffles, don' I?' Hamo spat angrily. âI told thee. Besides, thee doesn't want t' believe anything those three thieving monkeys tell thee.'
âI've seen you digging near the oak, myself.'
He fairly bounced up and down with rage.
âTruffles! Truffles!' he shouted. âI digs for truffles!' Hercules, who, up to then, had been minding his own business, objected to the charcoal burner's tone and growled menacingly. Hamo recoiled. âKeep him off me, dost hear?'
I admonished the dog, who then started barking at me, just to let me know what sort of a lily-livered milksop he thought I was before suddenly spotting a rat scurrying inside the hut through the open doorway. He shot after his quarry like an arrow speeding from a bow and, a moment later, the air was rent by a medley of shrill canine screams and yaps as he attempted to come to grips with his enemy.
I raised my voice a little in order to make myself heard.
âThe night of Jenny Applegarth's murder, did you see the page, this John Jericho, reeling around as if he were drunk and being sick?'
âThat were six year gone. Why art askin' me about Jenny Applegarth's murder? I thought it were Anthony Bellknapp thou'rt interested in.'
I hesitated. I didn't really know why myself, except for a growing conviction that the two were somehow connected. Yet I didn't see how they could be. But a memory niggled at the back of my mind; there was something I knew I ought to remember.
But the crescendo of noise from within the hut had now reached a pitch it was impossible to ignore and, abandoning our game of question and answer, Hamo and I, by mutual consent, rushed inside just in time to witness the kill as Hercules seized the rat and bit it clean through the neck with his sharp little teeth. He then laid his trophy at my feet with a proud wave of his tail.
Normally, I would have commended his efforts, but on this occasion he had completely demolished the charcoal burner's bed in pursuit of his opponent. The layers of dried bracken and leaves and parched summer grasses that had been carefully built up over the years to make a decent mattress lay scattered over the floor. The smell of mould and decay and long dead seasons, together with the dust of ages, filled the little room. A number of small, bleached-white skeletons indicated that various woodland animals had lived out their lives and met their deaths within the bed, while a nest of baby rats, waiting for the mother who would now never return, was receiving Hercules's best attentions.
Hamo Gough stared about him in dumb fury at the wreck of his sleeping quarters, several times opening and shutting his mouth like a stranded fish, in speechless indignation. I decided it was politic to leave before he could express his anger with his fists. And although I could easily have beaten him if it came to a fight, my heart would not have been in it. I wished him a brief good-day, whistled to Hercules and prepared to go. As I did so, I tripped over the grey blanket that had been Hamo's covering, but now lay, a torn and sorry mess, among the debris of the mattress. I stooped to retrieve it â it, at least, was not past salvaging â but realized as I did so that it was not really a blanket, as I had formerly assumed, but a cloak. And its original colour had been pale blue, not grey, although it had weathered to its present shade probably over a period of years exposed to the strong sunlight that poured in through the open door of the hut during the summer months.
But the thing that really arrested my attention was a shield embroidered in faded scarlet silk on what proved, when the garment was held the right way up, to be the left shoulder of the cloak. Inside the outline of the shield was a bell, over-sewn in satin stitch to form, when new, a solid block of colour. It suddenly dawned on me that I had seen this badge many times in the past three days since arriving at Croxcombe Manor: it was the badge of the Bellknapp family and adorned the livery of their servants. I shook out the cloak and held it up with both hands. It had not been made for a tall man, nor one of any great girth. Nor, I suspected, had it been worn for a very long time. Six years, perhaps?
The cloak was rudely snatched from me, and I spun round to find Hamo Gough looking positively murderous.
âGet out!' he roared. âThee and that bloody dog o' thine! Get out! Get out!'
He turned and reached for his spade, which was propped against the wall in one corner of the hut. I yelled at Hercules to follow me and ran.
He came after us, but we were too quick for him, my legs being longer and stronger; while Hercules, giving one last, defiant bark, outstripped me in the desire to save his hide. Finally, when I decided we were no longer being pursued, we eased up, trying, as we passed the cottages and duck pond, to look more like a man and his dog out for a late afternoon stroll.
I felt convinced in my own mind â but without a shred of proof â that the cloak had belonged to the missing page, and that there had been some link between him and the charcoal burner. But what that link was, I was no nearer knowing than before.
Supper was an awkward meal. Everyone avoided looking directly at any other person, and suspicion and unspoken accusations hung in the air, poisoning the atmosphere. Only the steward seemed unperturbed as he went about his official duties, attending to the comfort of both the household members and the guests â three pilgrims returning home to Southampton after visiting Glastonbury â who had begged sustenance and shelter for the night. Their presence was at once a blessing and a curse; the former because it ensured that we were all on our best behaviour, the latter because no one could discuss the topic uppermost in everyone's mind. The visitors had been informed that it was a house of mourning and were consequently very subdued, providing none of the merriment and anecdotes of the wider world that usually enlivened a stranger's visit. I noted that the Bignells were still with us, and, upon enquiry, Thomas informed me that they had decided to remain another night at Rose's urgent request.
âShe's been having fits of the vapours all day,' he confided in a low voice, ladling another helping of pike in a galentyne sauce on to his plate and shovelling it into his mouth like a man whose appetite remained unaffected by sudden death or family problems. âMaybe there was something in what Master Bellknapp wanted to tell me, after all.'
When the meal was finished and the three pilgrims had been shown to the guest chamber, I sought out Dame Audrea and again asked her permission to speak in turn to the other members of the household.
âI've already told you to do whatever you deem fit,' she said coldly. âBut don't forget young Master Attleborough.'
I promised that I would see him first, but warned the dame I thought it unlikely that he was the murderer.
âI think he would have run away by now. He had his chance when you sent him to fetch me back this morning.'
Nevertheless, I sought him out almost at once, George Applegarth having informed me Humphrey had retired to the chamber we had both shared, until sometime last night, with the murdered man. I found him sitting on the edge of his truckle-bed, his head propped despondently in his hands.
âWhat am I going to do now, Chapman?' he asked, tears welling up in his eyes. âHere I am, far from my native county, robbed of my master and not likely to find another half as good anywhere else.'
I sat down facing him, on the big four-poster bed with its hangings depicting the story of Diana and Actaeon.
Not knowing the answer, I ignored this heartfelt plea and asked, âWhen you fetched the all-night from the kitchen yesterday evening, your master was already here, in the bedchamber, when you arrived?'
Humphrey blinked stupidly at me for a moment or two, taken aback by the abrupt change of subject. Then he nodded.
âI think so ⦠Yes, he was. I remember now. He was undressed, with his bed-robe over his night-rail.'
âDid he drink any of the wine?'
Again there was a pause while Humphrey thought â a distinctly slow process.
âYes,' he said at last. âHe had a beaker almost straight away. He said he was thirsty. Then he had another one.'
âAnd after that? Did he touch the wine again?'
âI don't suppose so. He didn't usually drink as much as that before going to bed. Said too much wine gave him bad dreams. But last night, it was as if â¦'
âAs if what?'
âI don't know. Nothing really. Just a stupid idea that came into my head at the time.'
âGo on!'
âWell â¦' Humphrey was reluctant to tell me. âIs it important?'
âIt might be. Anything might be important if you want to unmask the murderer.'
âAll right. It just occurred to me that he was making up his mind to something he had to do. The wine was giving him courage.'
It was my turn to nod. âAnd what were you doing while he was drinking the wine?'
âI stripped off, ready for bed.'
âSo while you were undressing, you didn't have your eyes fixed on Master Bellknapp all the time?'
âI suppose not. Why?'
âSo you might not have noticed if he'd slipped a sleeping potion into the jug? Poppy and lettuce juice, for instance.'