The House of Crows smoba-6 Read online

Page 4


  Athelstan had reached the line, ‘Life immortal, life divine’, when Cranston dug him in the ribs. Athelstan opened his eyes and realised they had reached King’s Steps. Moleskin was resting on his oars, staring at him curiously.

  ‘I am sorry,’ the friar muttered, and followed Sir John out of the boat, up the slippery, mildewed steps and along the pathway into one of the courtyards of the palace. All around him rose great, majestic buildings: Westminster Hall where the King’s court sat, St Margaret’s Church and, dominating them all, the Confessor’s Abbey, its huge towers soaring up into the sky. Westminster was always busy. Pedlars, hucksters, journeymen and traders all made a living from those who flocked there: plaintiffs, defendants, lawyers, sheriffs and, more importantly, members of Parliament.

  Cranston told the friar to wait by a huge stone cross and went into the abbey through a side door. He was gone some time, so Athelstan sat down on the stone steps leading up to the cross and watched the red-capped judges in their ermine-lined black gowns sweep by: the serjeants-at-law in their white hoods strutting, arm in arm, heads together, discussing the finer points of some statue or legal quibble. Athelstan smiled as a huckster barged between them, shouting at the top of his voice how he had, ‘Oysters! Fresh oysters for sale!’

  Two bailiffs came next, a string of prisoners in tow. Athelstan stared compassionately at the captives. All were in tatters, their faces unshaven; their boots and shoes had already been stolen by the gaolers of the Fleet or Newgate Prisons. The bailiffs stopped to refresh themselves at a water tippler’s. Athelstan rose, slipped the boy a coin and, taking his bucket and ladle, went along the line of prisoners offering each a stoup of water. Thankfully, the bailiffs did not protest, and Athelstan had just handed the bucket back, murmuring his thanks, when he glimpsed a face he recognised.

  ‘Cecily!’ he shouted.

  The young blonde-haired girl, dressed in a long yellow taffeta gown, looked round, startled. Athelstan noticed the black kohl around her eyes, and saw how her cheeks and lips were heavily rouged.

  ‘Cecily!’ he shouted. ‘Come here!’

  The young girl tripped across, face as innocent as an angel’s.

  ‘Father, what a surprise. What are you doing here?’

  Athelstan fought to keep his face severe. ‘More importantly, Cecily, what are you doing here?’

  The young girl opened her pert little mouth.

  ‘And don’t lie,’ Athelstan warned. ‘I missed you at Mass this morning and we had an important parish council.’ He grasped her hand and thrust one of his precious pennies between her fingers. ‘Now go back,’ he ordered. ‘Go to King’s Steps. You’ll find Moleskin there. I need you, Cecily.’ He leaned closer. ‘There’s been a demon seen near St Erconwald’s.’ He gripped her warm hand and tried not to flinch at the cheap perfume the girl had covered herself in. ‘Now go back there and help Benedicta! Stay away from here!’

  Cecily, biting her lips, nodded. Athelstan pushed her gently away. ‘Go straight home!’ he ordered. ‘I’ll ask Benedicta when you arrived.’

  Cecily was already running, and Athelstan gave small thanks that Cecily’s curiosity about a demon would, perhaps, outweigh any reason for her to stay here. He sat back on the steps and glared around, noticing how the young women flocked here, as noisy as starlings.

  ‘This is God’s house,’ he muttered. He glanced at a pair of girls flirting with an overdressed lawyer. ‘Sir John’s right! It is a “House of Crows”.’

  Athelstan recognised the attractions of such a place for people like Cecily. Men from all over England came here: free of their wives and families, they would take full advantage of their short-lived freedom to indulge their every whim. Athelstan glanced towards the abbey. Perhaps the Parliament would change things for the better. Even his parishioners had talked about it.

  Pike the ditcher, however, had been as cynical as ever. ‘Only the lawyers get to Parliament,’ he had declared, ‘and we know what liars they are!’ Pike had lowered his voice. ‘But when it comes, when the great Change comes, we’ll hang all the lawyers!’

  ‘Dreaming, Brother?’

  Athelstan looked up sharply. Cranston was just popping the cork-stopper back into his miraculous wineskin.

  ‘Most of the abbey is sealed off,’ the coroner explained. ‘The Commons are now sitting in the chapter-house and will be until well in the afternoon. So,’ he helped his companion to his feet, ‘let’s look at the corpses. They both lie coffined in the Gargoyle tavern.’

  He led Athelstan out of the abbey precincts, along quiet side streets and through the deep arched gateway into a large courtyard which fronted the Gargoyle. It was a long, spacious tavern, three storeys high, its frontage smartly painted, the plaster gleaming white between black polished beams. The roof was tiled and the elegantly boxed windows were full of leaden glass. The courtyard was a hive of activity: ostlers and grooms took horses in and out, a farrier covered in sweat hammered at an anvil. Geese and chickens thronged about the stable doors, scrabbling for bits of grain. Dogs yapped and huge, fat-bellied pigs, ears flapping, snouted at the base of a large, black-soiled midden-heap.

  They entered the tavern hallway. The paving stones were scrubbed, the walls lime-washed, the air fragrant with the smell of sweet herbs and savoury cooking. The taproom was large and airy: there were vents in the ceiling between the blackened beams, and large, open windows at the far end looked out over a garden and one of the largest stewponds Athelstan had ever seen. A few customers sat about, mainly boatmen from the river though, even here, the lawyers thronged, sitting in small alcoves, manuscripts on the tables before them as they whispered pretentiously to each other.

  ‘You wouldn’t think the corpses of two murdered men lay here, would you?’ Athelstan whispered at Cranston, who was smacking his lips and looking around. ‘No drinking,’ Athelstan warned. ‘We have business with the “House of Crows”, remember?’

  ‘And what’s your custom, sirs?’ a tall, thickset man asked.

  ‘None at the moment,’ Cranston replied, ‘except a word with the landlord.’

  The man spread his hands. ‘You are talking to him,’ he replied. ‘I am the tavern-master, Cuthbert Banyard, born and bred within the sound of Bow Bells.’

  Athelstan stared at the fellow. He had a strong, arrogant face, burnt brown by the sun, with a thick bush of black hair. The eyes were deep-set, the nose curved slightly; his chin, close-shaven face and thin lips gave him a stubborn look. A man with a sharp eye to profit, Athelstan thought.

  The taverner gestured at his stained cote-de-hardie which fell down to just below the knee. ‘It’s a fleshing day,’ he explained. ‘Meat has to be cut and blood spurts.’

  ‘As it does in murder,’ Cranston retorted.

  Banyard drew his head back.

  ‘I am Sir John Cranston, Coroner of the city. This is Brother Athelstan, my secretanus, parish priest of St Erconwald’s in Southwark.’

  Banyard smiled deferentially. ‘My lord Coroner, how can I help?’

  ‘First,’ Cranston replied, ignoring Athelstan’s groan, ‘a blackjack of ale. Your best, mind you, not the scrapings of some open cask. And whatever smells so fragrant in your kitchen?’

  ‘Capon cooked in mushrooms and onions.’

  ‘One dish.’ Cranston looked at Athelstan. ‘No, two dishes of that, and a drink, Brother?’

  ‘Some ale,’ Athelstan replied resignedly.

  Cranston swept by the landlord to a table under the window: ignoring Athelstan’s warning glances, he began to point out the different herbs growing in the garden.

  ‘Now that’s motherwort,’ Cranston explained. ‘You can tell by its hard, brownish stalk: it makes mothers joyful and settles the womb, provokes urine, cleanses the chest of phlegm and kills worms in the belly.’

  Cranston turned, rubbing his hands, as the tapster laid down two pewter dishes with delicate strips of capon covered in rich sauce followed by two pots of ale. Cranston and Athelstan took out their horn sp
oons. Athelstan nibbled, for he had little appetite. Sir John finished his, then attacked his companion’s with equal relish. Once he had finished, Cranston beckoned over Banyard, who had been standing in an alcove watching them closely.

  ‘Sit down, man. Where are the corpses?’

  ‘Upstairs, each in their chamber,’ the landlord replied, wiping his hands carefully on a napkin. ‘It’s good that you ate, my lord Coroner, before you viewed them.’

  Cranston turned on his stool and leaned against the wall.’ ‘Corpses don’t upset my humours, man. Human wickedness does. Sir Henry was killed when?’

  ‘Late last night. He went into Sir Oliver’s chamber.’ He pointed to a slattern, a jolly, bouncing girl with long blonde hair. She was at the far side of the tavern, busily serving a number of boatmen and laughing at their banter. ‘Christina saw the door open and went in. You could have heard, the screams at Whitefriars. I ran upstairs. Sir Oliver was in his coffin, Sir Henry dead as a doornail upon the floor.’

  ‘And where were his companions, the other knights?’ Athelstan asked.

  ‘Most of them were in their chambers,’ Banyard replied.

  ‘Most of them?’ Athelstan queried.

  Banyard smiled deprecatingly. ‘Brother, I have my hands full managing a tavern. I cannot tell you where each of my guests goes in the evening.’ Banyard grinned. ‘Though it would be interesting to speculate.’

  ‘What do you mean by that?’ Cranston demanded.

  ‘My lord Coroner, it’s best if you ask them.’

  ‘And so all the knights and representatives from Shrewsbury stay here?’ Athelstan asked. ‘Is that customary?’

  ‘Yes, it is,’ Cranston intervened. ‘Members of Parliament tend to sit according to their counties or lordships. The chancellor issues a writ, convoking a Parliament, to every sheriff in the kingdom. He then organises a meeting of the freeholders of the shire who elect their representatives.’ Cranston grasped his chin. ‘There have been Parliaments at Westminster for the last hundred years, and the Commons are becoming more organised.’

  ‘You know a lot, my lord Coroner.’ Banyard’s admiration was obvious.

  ‘Ahem, yes.’ Cranston cleared his throat. ‘I am writing a treatise.’

  Athelstan closed his eyes and just hoped Cranston wouldn’t wander off on some interminable lecture. The coroner must have caught his look because he grinned.

  ‘Suffice to say I’ve studied the whole question of Parliaments. However, as I have said, they are becoming more organised. They have a speaker, they meet in their own chamber, and they have learnt not to grant taxes until certain demands are met.’ He blew his cheeks out. ‘Accordingly, many members know a Parliament is to be summoned months in advance.’

  ‘And that is what happened here,’ Banyard added. ‘Weeks ago the knights sent a courier asking me to set chambers aside. We have all the representatives from Shrewsbury here.’

  ‘Yes, yes,’ Cranston snapped, ‘but when did they arrive?’

  ‘Oh, nine days ago,’ Banyard replied. ‘Five days before the opening of Parliament.’

  ‘And before these deaths, nothing amiss happened?’

  ‘Nothing.’ The landlord shook his head. ‘Very little, my lord Coroner, except talking. They’re all very good at talking. They’d break their fast talking and return from Westminster to sit in the taproom here and gossip until even the dogs droop with exhaustion.’

  ‘And Bouchon’s death?’

  Banyard pointed across the room. ‘He and his companions were over there feasting and drinking. Oh, they were all full of themselves, though I noticed Bouchon looked quiet and withdrawn. They drank deep.’ Banyard pulled a face. ‘But why should I object? Well, on that particular evening, the gentlemen were discussing business of a different sort, the pleasures of the flesh.’

  ‘You mean a bawdy house?’

  ‘Yes.’ Banyard looked uncomfortable. ‘Now, there’s nothing of that sort here, sirs. I keep a respectable house, though I confess I turn a blind eye to whomever they bring back.’

  ‘This bawdy house?’ Cranston demanded.

  ‘Dame Mathilda Kirtles conducts a discreet establishment,’ Banyard replied. ‘In Cottemore Lane, a little further down the riverside.’

  ‘And did Sir Oliver leave with them?’ Athelstan asked.

  ‘Oh no. Towards the end of the meal, Sir Oliver rose, put his cloak on, pulled his hood up and left the tavern. The others called after him but the man was lost in his own thoughts. He was gone in the twinkling of an eye.’

  ‘And you don’t know where?’

  ‘My lord Coroner, I was busy that night. Ask any of the servants here. I never left the tavern. We closed well after curfew. We have a licence to do so,’ he added hastily.

  Athelstan sipped from his blackjack and stared round the tavern. It was, he thought, a veritable palace amongst hostelries: the plaster walls were freshly painted, the rushes underfoot were green and crisp and, when he pressed his sandal down, he could smell the rosemary sprinkled there. The tables were of oak and finely made. There were stools, proper benches, and even a few high-backed chairs. Glass and pewter plates stood on shelves. Above them on the mantelpiece was a colourful depiction of a gargoyle fighting a knight which curled and writhed around its opponent’s sword. The food was well-cooked and, from Cranston’s murmurs of pleasure, the ale was undoubtedly London’s finest.

  ‘You do a fine trade here, Master Banyard,’ Athelstan commented.

  ‘Oh, most comfortable, Brother. Most comfortable indeed.’

  ‘Do you know most of the people who come here?’

  Banyard’s eyes moved quickly. ‘Yes I do, Brother. And, if they are strangers, they always come back. I can tell from the cut of a man’s cloth what he is: a boatman, a serjeant-at-law, a courier, a bailiff, or one of the royal officials from the Exchequer or Chancery. But, before you ask, I saw no strangers, nothing out of the ordinary.’

  ‘And Sir Oliver’s body?’ Cranston asked.

  ‘It was found downriver,’ Banyard replied. ‘Some fishermen found it amongst the weeds near Horseferry.’

  ‘Oh, of course.’ Cranston leaned back. ‘I remember playing there as a boy.’ He declared. ‘The weeds grow long, lovely and thick.’ He smiled over at Athelstan. ‘Just near Tothill Fields.’

  ‘How did they know it was Sir Oliver?’ Athelstan asked.

  ‘Oh, he had some documents in his wallet, water-stained but still legible, so the fishermen called a clerk. He could tell from the cut of the corpse’s clothes that he was a man of importance: the body was brought back into Westminster Yard, where Sir Miles Coverdale, who is responsible for guarding the precincts of the palace, recognised the corpse and sent it back here.’

  ‘And was a physician called?’ Cranston asked.

  ‘The man was dead and smelt of fish, Sir John. But no,’ Banyard added hurriedly, seeing the coroner frown. ‘He was taken upstairs. In the afternoon his companions came from the chapter-house. I hired an old woman from Chancery Lane. She stripped the body and laid it out in a shift.’ Banyard glanced at the timbered ceiling. ‘But I’ll be glad when they move it and the other to the death-house at St Dunstan’s in the West.’

  ‘Quite so,’ the coroner nodded. He waved his empty tankard in front of Banyard’s nose, hoping the taverner would refill it, but Banyard, used to such tricks, refused even to notice it.

  ‘There was no mark on the corpse?’ Athelstan asked.

  ‘So the old woman said.’

  ‘And Sir Henry?’

  ‘Well, he seemed the most upset of Bouchon’s companions. I offered to send for a chantry priest to come and conduct the death-watch. He agreed. Now Father Benedict, he’s a Benedictine monk,’ Banyard explained, ‘and chaplain to the Commons. But he’s so busy that I sent for a chantry priest from St Bride’s in Fleet Street. You can go there and ask. But as for last night — well, you’d best ask the wench. Christina!’

  The slattern whom Athelstan had noticed earlier came across
, her milk-white face slightly coloured from the heat of the kitchen, her rich blonde hair now firmly tied back by a ribbon. A pretty, lively lass with merry blue eyes and lips which Athelstan quietly thought, God must have made for kissing. She wore a thin stained smock pulled tightly over an ample bosom, girdled at her slim waist by a red woollen cord. She grinned at Sir John and blinked nervously at Athelstan, but the friar could tell by the way she answered Banyard’s call how the landlord must be the love of her life.

  ‘Sit down, girl.’ Cranston pointed to a stool at the next table. ‘It’s good to rest from your labours. Perhaps, Master Banyard, some ale for all of us, eh?’

  Banyard just sat on his stool, staring at him; eventually Cranston sighed and dipped into his purse. ‘And don’t worry about the cost,’ he snapped.

  Banyard called to one of the potboys, then turned to Christina. ‘Don’t be nervous, lass. This is the famous Sir Jack Cranston.’ He glanced slyly at the coroner. ‘And Brother Athelstan, his secretarius.’

  Christina blinked prettily. ‘I have heard of you, sir.’

  Cranston preened like a peacock whilst Athelstan quietly prayed that the girl would keep the flattery to a minimum.

  ‘Last night,’ he asked abruptly, ‘when Sir Henry was killed. .?’

  ‘Choked he was,’ the girl replied swiftly, taking the ale from the tapster and supping at it greedily. She licked the froth from her upper lip. ‘Just like a chicken. The string was tied round his neck as tightly as a cord round a purse.’

  ‘Tell Sir John about the priest,’ Banyard insisted.

  ‘We were busy last night,’ Christina replied. ‘Master Banyard here was in the cellar.’ She turned and smiled beatifically at the taverner. ‘A priest came in.’ The girl cradled the tankard then raised it to press against her flushed cheek. ‘He was cloaked and cowled, the hood pulled well across his face. I was very busy. I saw the rosary beads in his hands. I asked him if he was the chantry priest. He nodded.’ She shrugged. ‘I told him where the chamber was but he was already going upstairs. The tap-room was thronged,’ she continued. ‘I never gave him a second thought. Later on, I took a tankard up to Sir Henry Swynford. He was just sitting in his room, staring into the darkness. Only one candle was lit on his table. I asked him if he was well and he muttered some reply.’ Christina sipped from the tankard.

 

    Book of Shadows Read onlineBook of ShadowsThe Merchant of Death Read onlineThe Merchant of DeathDark Queen Waiting Read onlineDark Queen WaitingDevil's Wolf Read onlineDevil's WolfThe Lord Count Drakulya Read onlineThe Lord Count DrakulyaA Shrine of Murders Read onlineA Shrine of MurdersThe Eye of God Read onlineThe Eye of GodA Maze of Murders Read onlineA Maze of MurdersThe Hangman's Hymn Read onlineThe Hangman's HymnThe Godless Read onlineThe GodlessDeath's Dark Valley Read onlineDeath's Dark ValleyQueen of the Night ar-4 Read onlineQueen of the Night ar-4Ghostly Murders Read onlineGhostly MurdersSaintly Murders Read onlineSaintly MurdersThe Field of Blood Read onlineThe Field of BloodHugh Corbett 10 - The Devil's Hunt Read onlineHugh Corbett 10 - The Devil's HuntAssassin in the Greenwood hc-7 Read onlineAssassin in the Greenwood hc-7The Song of the Gladiator Read onlineThe Song of the GladiatorHugh Corbett 17 - The Mysterium Read onlineHugh Corbett 17 - The MysteriumThe Mask of Ra Read onlineThe Mask of RaAn Evil Spirit Out of the West (Ancient Egyptian Mysteries) Read onlineAn Evil Spirit Out of the West (Ancient Egyptian Mysteries)Herald of Hell Read onlineHerald of HellMathild 03 - The Darkening Glass Read onlineMathild 03 - The Darkening GlassDark Serpent (Hugh Corbett 18) Read onlineDark Serpent (Hugh Corbett 18)House of the Red Slayer smoba-2 Read onlineHouse of the Red Slayer smoba-2The Gallows Murders Read onlineThe Gallows MurdersThe Straw Men Read onlineThe Straw MenThe Great Revolt Read onlineThe Great RevoltThe Rose Demon Read onlineThe Rose DemonBy Murder's bright light smoba-5 Read onlineBy Murder's bright light smoba-5Templar Read onlineTemplarMurder Most Holy Read onlineMurder Most HolyThe House of Shadows Read onlineThe House of ShadowsA Brood of Vipers srs-4 Read onlineA Brood of Vipers srs-4Song of a Dark Angel hc-8 Read onlineSong of a Dark Angel hc-8Satan in St Mary hc-1 Read onlineSatan in St Mary hc-1Mathilde 01 - The Cup of Ghosts Read onlineMathilde 01 - The Cup of GhostsThe Anger of God smoba-4 Read onlineThe Anger of God smoba-4Isabella and the Strange Death of Edward II Read onlineIsabella and the Strange Death of Edward IIThe Midnight Man ctomam-7 Read onlineThe Midnight Man ctomam-7The Assassin's Riddle Read onlineThe Assassin's RiddleHugh Corbett 15 - The Waxman Murders Read onlineHugh Corbett 15 - The Waxman MurdersBloodstone smoba-11 Read onlineBloodstone smoba-11Bloodstone Read onlineBloodstoneThe Gallows Murders srs-5 Read onlineThe Gallows Murders srs-5The Midnight Man Read onlineThe Midnight ManA Brood of Vipers Read onlineA Brood of VipersThe Templar Magician Read onlineThe Templar MagicianHugh Corbett 11 - The Demon Archer Read onlineHugh Corbett 11 - The Demon ArcherHugh Corbett 14 - The Magician's Death Read onlineHugh Corbett 14 - The Magician's DeathCandle Flame Read onlineCandle FlameThe Nightingale Gallery smoba-1 Read onlineThe Nightingale Gallery smoba-1The Anger of God Read onlineThe Anger of GodThe Book of Fires Read onlineThe Book of FiresPrince of Darkness hc-5 Read onlinePrince of Darkness hc-5The House of Crows smoba-6 Read onlineThe House of Crows smoba-6The Grail Murders Read onlineThe Grail MurdersBy Murder's Bright Light Read onlineBy Murder's Bright LightHouse of the Red Slayer Read onlineHouse of the Red SlayerThe Devil's Domain Read onlineThe Devil's DomainThe Relic Murders srs-6 Read onlineThe Relic Murders srs-6A haunt of murder ctomam-6 Read onlineA haunt of murder ctomam-6The Straw Men smoba-12 Read onlineThe Straw Men smoba-12Hugh Corbett 06 - Murder Wears a Cowl Read onlineHugh Corbett 06 - Murder Wears a CowlAn Ancient Evil (Canterbury Tales Mysteries) Read onlineAn Ancient Evil (Canterbury Tales Mysteries)The Grail Murders srs-3 Read onlineThe Grail Murders srs-3The Fate of Princes Read onlineThe Fate of PrincesThe poisoned chalice srs-2 Read onlineThe poisoned chalice srs-2Hugh Corbett 12 - The Treason of the Ghosts Read onlineHugh Corbett 12 - The Treason of the GhostsHugh Corbett 13 - Corpse Candle Read onlineHugh Corbett 13 - Corpse CandleThe Season of the Hyaena (Ancient Egyptian Mysteries) Read onlineThe Season of the Hyaena (Ancient Egyptian Mysteries)The White Rose murders srs-1 Read onlineThe White Rose murders srs-1The Devil's domain smoba-8 Read onlineThe Devil's domain smoba-8A Pilgrimage to Murder Read onlineA Pilgrimage to MurderRoseblood Read onlineRosebloodThe Relic Murders Read onlineThe Relic MurdersThe Assassin's riddle smoba-7 Read onlineThe Assassin's riddle smoba-7Angel of Death hc-4 Read onlineAngel of Death hc-4Dark Queen Rising Read onlineDark Queen RisingThe Nightingale Gallery Read onlineThe Nightingale GalleryThe House of Crows Read onlineThe House of CrowsSpy in Chancery hc-3 Read onlineSpy in Chancery hc-3