I took the proffered hand and bowed while Adela introduced me to this latest arrival. âI want him to stay and help solve this mystery,' my wife explained.
Celia smiled and I saw that her eyes were greyish-blue, like smoke, rather than the deeper colour of her siblings'. At the moment, they were twinkling with secret amusement.
âThe . . . er . . . the erring husband?' she queried, suppressing a chuckle.
âThat's all been explained,' Adela interposed hurriedly. âIt was a misunderstanding on my part. Roger has come to take me and the boys home, but as I said, I think he should stay for a while if you'll let him, and try to discover what is going on.'
âI think that's an excellent idea,' Celia nodded before Oswald could register an objection. âAn extra mind brought to bear on the subject is just what we need. And it will be the viewpoint of an outsider who is unaffected by all these accidents and deaths.' She had quite lost her sunny smile and she pressed a trembling hand to her lips. âMartin was my brother, you know,' she added.
âYes, I do realize that,' I said quietly. âI'm sorry.'
At that moment, Clemency came back into the hall, closely followed by the housekeeper.
âOh, you're home,' she said, addressing her half-sister. âWas the city very crowded?'
Celia kissed Clemency's cheek before replying. âNot so crowded as you'd expect on St George's Day, and no plays or mummings, naturally. But a lot of armed bands patrolling the streets and one or two near clashes amongst a few of them. Someone told me that it's mainly between Lord Hasting's men and those of the Woodvilles, but I couldn't say for certain.'
âMost likely.' Oswald nodded in agreement. âThere has never been any love lost between the Lord Chamberlain and the queen's family. Matters can only get worse now that the king is no longer present to arbitrate and keep them all in order.' He sighed. âI shall be relieved, I confess, when my Lord of Gloucester gets here.'
âNo word of his imminent arrival?' I asked. âI noticed that they were making ready at Crosby's Place when I passed this morning.'
At this point, Arbella Rokeswood intervened to remark acidly that dinner was on the parlour table and that unless we all came at once the food would be cold.
The parlour was at the back of the house, a large room overlooking a wild tangle of garden; a stretch of unkempt grass dotted with shrubs and trees and shadowed here and there by odd slopes and hollows. It was a children's paradise, and I could hear my stepson's excited whispers as he pointed out to Elizabeth the various hiding places it contained and the opportunity it presented for any number of games. Adam eyed them both thoughtfully but said nothing except to insist on sitting next to me at table, from time to time stroking any part of my anatomy that was available to him and smiling at me whenever I happened to glance his way.
âHe's missed you,' Adela remarked quietly, as she took her place on his other side.
I realized she must be right, the more so because he was an independent child, not given to overt displays of affection. I felt a sudden surge of guilt. I left my family alone far too much. But I had to earn our daily bread at my chosen calling and furthermore, although in the past I had resolutely refused all offer of financial help from the Duke of Gloucester, of late I had accepted his assistance to a considerable degree, a fact which made all our lives a good deal more tolerable. Affluent, even. But the extra money was not a simple gift. There were always strings attached. And of late that had meant being away from home long periods at a time. More money in my pocket or more time spent with my wife and children, that seemed to be the choice. It was not an easy one.
The dinner was excellent, and it was with relief that I realized that whatever other economies the Godsloves practised, they did not stint on food and drink. A thick cabbage broth was followed by a pair of plump fowls served with a dressing of sage and wild garlic and stuffed with onions and hard boiled eggs, everything washed down with home-brewed ale. A dish of stewed apples and figs completed a meal with which even I could find no fault.
The talk at table was at first desultory, all the women, with the exception of Adela, anxiously concerned with Oswald's well-being. Did he approve of the new sauce for the fowls? Was that particular chair comfortable enough for him? Was he tired after his morning's work? How had such-and-such a case gone? Had it been as difficult as he feared? These questions were succeeded by extolling his achievements, both sisters and the housekeeper vying with one another in the extravagance of her praise, all of which the recipient appeared to take as no more than his due. Such adulation was obviously commonplace, and I reflected that I had never before come across so tightly knit and so self-regarding a family. I felt sorry for Arbella and for anyone else who tried to infiltrate their ranks.
After a while, however, there inevitably came a lull in the conversation, so I took advantage of the sudden silence to demand more details concerning the deaths, illnesses and accidents that seemed to be dogging their lives.
âDo you truly believe that someone is trying to kill you all?' I asked, allowing a note of scepticism to creep into my voice.
No one answered for a moment or two, the sisters and Arbella looking at Oswald as though waiting for permission to speak. But when he merely shrugged, Celia said firmly, âYes.'
Clemency added, âIt certainly seems a possibility. First, our elder stepbrother was killed in a tavern brawl. A common enough occurrence you might say, but when added to a sickness that almost claimed my life, to my sister Charity's death, to my half-brother Martin's death and now to Sybilla's near fatal accident, it seems too much to be mere coincidence.'
âWhat was your illness, Mistress Godslove?' I enquired, as two young kitchen maids appeared to clear the board of our dirty plates and to place dishes of nuts and raisins in the centre of the table along with a jug of dark, very sweet wine.
Clemency smiled. âIf you are to stay and help us,' she said, âyou may as well address us by our Christian names or there will be confusion between my two sisters and myself. As for my sickness, it was a fever with a headache so severe that I could not bear light anywhere near my eyes, vomiting and a rash. Roderick Jeavons, who has been our physician for many years now, declared at the time that it was a form of brain fever and that I would die. Indeed, they tell me â' she nodded towards her brother and half-sister â âthat I was delirious for days, and that when my mind finally cleared I was so weak, they were convinced I had not long to live. So while I was lucid, they sent for Father Berowne, our parish priest, who confessed me and administered extreme unction. But in the end, the Lord spared me and I recovered.'
âWhen was this?' I asked.
It was Celia who answered. âThe year before last, towards Christmas.'
I looked at Clemency. âAnd at the time, did you accept the diagnosis that it was brain fever?'
She nodded. âOh, yes. Certainly. None of us made any connection then between our stepbrother's death and my illness. It was only last spring when Charity died after eating mushrooms, and when, the following autumn, my half-brother, Martin, was set upon by a gang of youths near Cheapside and killed, that we began to question whether my sickness really had been brain fever or some form of poisoning; when we began to wonder if someone is taking some sort of revenge against us.' She returned my gaze steadily. âYou're sceptical. I can see it in your face. You think, like Oswald â or as Oswald
says
he thinks â that these events, occurring one after the other, are nothing more than coincidence. But I would remind you that now Sybilla has almost been killed by a block of stone falling from the scaffolding around the Bishop's Gate. It bruised her right shoulder very badly. An inch or two more to the left and she would undoubtedly have been crushed to death.'
There was silence while I pondered my hostess's words. Out of the corner of one eye, I could see Adela regarding me anxiously, afraid that I was going to refuse to help her cousins. And it was on the tip of my tongue to do so. I had no wish to linger in the capital. I wanted to go home and take my family with me. I felt no interest in any of these people and had not the slightest desire to get embroiled in their affairs. It would be easy enough to convince myself that these disasters had nothing to do with one another; that they were simply isolated incidents which, although they might appear sinister when taken all together, were really unconnected. And indeed I had no need to convince myself. I was almost sure that that was the case. But it was the âalmost' that bothered me.
Even so, I was just about to declare my opinion in no uncertain terms when Celia said, âOf course, it really started, not with your sickness, Clem, but with Reynold being knifed to death in that fight in the Voyager.'
âI did mention that,' her half-sister excused herself.
âWait a minute!' I exclaimed. âReynold? The Voyager?' A memory stirred. I suddenly recollected Margaret Walker mentioning the fact that Morgan Godslove's second wife had been the Widow Makepeace, whom he had met in London. âAre you telling me that your stepbrother was Reynold Makepeace, the landlord of St Brendan the Voyager in Bucklersbury?'
âOur elder stepbrother, yes.' Clemency frowned. âYou speak as though you knew him.'
âWe did know him,' Adela chimed in. âRoger and I stayed at the Voyager, oh it must be more than five years ago now. It was before Adam was born.'
âIt was five years ago,' I confirmed. âIt was at the time of the little Duke of York's marriage to Anne Mowbray and the trial of the Duke of Clarence. But I've stayed there since, three years back when Margaret of Burgundy was here. And I heard of Landlord Makepeace's death when I went looking for him at the Voyager last October. I was never more shocked in my life than to learn he'd been killed. He was a fine and very kind man.'
âHe was,' Clemency agreed, and both Oswald and Celia nodded.
âA good man,' the housekeeper added.
âAnd now you all think that his death might not have been an accident?'
âYes.' The three women spoke as one. Only Oswald said nothing, holding aloof from comment.
âIt was the first of our misfortunes,' Clemency pointed out. âThe start of everything.'
This changed the complexion of things as far as I was concerned. I had counted Reynold Makepeace as much a friend as an acquaintance, and had been fond of him; fond enough at least for the news of his death, when it had finally come to my ears last autumn, to have saddened me beyond all expectation. If, therefore, there was a possibility that he had been murdered rather than killed accidentally, I felt I had to ferret out the truth.
âAre you saying, in all seriousness,' I asked Clemency, âthat you now believe your stepbrother's death to have been planned? That someone paid some ruffians to set on him and kill him?'
She returned my look steadily. âIt is precisely what happened to my half-brother last year, in Cheapside. It seemed like an attack by pickpockets, and indeed it was regarded as such by members of the Watch who brought his body home to us. The coroner, too, had no hesitation in accepting such a verdict.'
âYou didn't, however?'
âNo.' It was Oswald's turn to speak and he did so with the authority of a lawyer. âLoath as I am to contribute to this idea of a conspiracy against our family, I have to admit that there were a couple of suspicious circumstances connected with Martin's death. Firstly, although London's streets are, regrettably, infested with bands of armed robbers at night, very few, if any, of these men set out deliberately to kill their victims. They might knock them unconscious, and in so doing fatally wound them, but death is not their intention. Martin, on the other hand, was stabbed simply and cleanly through the heart. Secondly, although he had a full purse of money on him and was wearing a silver chain as well as several valuable rings, only one of the rings and a little loose change in one of his pockets were taken. This was attributed by the coroner to the fact that Martin's attackers had been disturbed. He chose to ignore the other far more significant fact of the way in which my half-brother had been murdered. A knife through the heart can be no accidental killing.'
âIn short,' I said, just so that there could be no misunderstanding, âyou think that these apparent robbers were really hired assassins?'
Oswald Godslove hesitated for a second, then, reluctantly, nodded.
âWell, thank the sweet Lord you've confessed as much at last,' breathed Clemency. âYou see, Roger, we need you,' she added, turning to me. âAlready you've persuaded my brother to declare openly that he agrees with us, which, up until now, he has refused to do.'
âNonsense!' Oswald retorted, nettled. âI've always said that there was something odd about Martin's death. But that doesn't mean I believe it's connected to the other mishaps that have befallen us.'
Clemency and Celia threw up their hands in disgust. âOf course they are connected,' the former declared almost angrily. âWe have never discovered who it was who left that basket of mushrooms outside the kitchen door a year ago.'
I had temporarily forgotten the death of Charity Godslove. An unsolicited gift from an unknown person did sound suspicious, I had to admit.
âDid you all eat the mushrooms?' I asked.
âAll except Oswald,' Celia answered, smiling faintly at her half-brother on the opposite side of the table.
That made sense. Picking, selling, buying and eating mushrooms was legally forbidden, although it was a law that many people ignored and whose flouting the authorities were inclined to wink at. But it was for this very reason â that the average man or woman was unable to tell the difference between a poisonous and a benign mushroom â that the ban had first been imposed. It was all too easy to make a murder look like an accident where mushrooms were concerned.