‘Brother Athelstan?’ Thorne wiped his hands on a napkin, which he passed to his wife. ‘What do you want now?’
‘You keep a journal of who stays here, who hires a chamber,’ Athelstan waved a hand, ‘and so on. I think you do.’ He smiled. ‘Mistress Eleanor, I understand you keep records as skilled as any chancery clerk?’
‘Of course,’ Thorne declared. ‘I will show you.’ He brought the ledger and Athelstan took it over to the window seat to study the entries. He leafed through the pages and soon found what he was looking for.
‘It is as I thought,’ he murmured. He rose, handed the ledger back and informed the taverner that he wanted to wander around The Candle-Flame so he could acquaint himself a little more closely. Thorne agreed and offered some refreshment. Athelstan refused and led his small escort out into the Palisade. All the remnants of the burning had been removed. The only scar was a stretch of blackened, ash-strewn earth where the execution stake had stood. Athelstan strode on. He pushed open the door to the Barbican and crossed to where he believed the inferno had been deliberately started. He calculated the size of the searing scorch mark against the wall. Athelstan stood staring; in his mind’s eye he imagined the assassin slipping into the Barbican with sacks of oil. His assailant split the skins, dousing the cot beds and other furniture, then a flame would be thrown. Of course, before this happened, the assassin secured the trapdoor with bolts from below, thus trapping him on the upper storey. Athelstan shivered at what might have happened and shook his head at Tiptoft’s questions.
‘This is a seat of murder,’ he whispered. ‘And I have seen enough.’ Athelstan led his escort back outside. He walked across the Palisade and paused to visualize what the assassin must have seen on the night those two archers were murdered. Satisfied, the friar returned to the tavern. He walked up the stairs and inspected the loft chambers on the topmost storey. He noticed in one gallery the narrow bed chambers overlooking the stableyard and Athelstan, who had entered one room, realized he had a clear view of where Lascelles had been standing the morning Beowulf had loosed that crossbow bolt. The friar opened the small horn-covered door window. He leaned out, pretending to be a bowman and, once again, tried to recall those who had been with him in the stableyard below. Afterwards Athelstan went down to the gallery where Scrope had his chamber; both that and the one opposite were open, being cleaned by maids and slatterns. Athelstan inspected each room carefully before scrutinizing the bolt and lock on the door to Scrope’s chamber. He noted what he wanted as well as the staircase at the near end of the gallery, which would provide swift escape to the floor above. Athelstan, his mind now buzzing like a beehive as he confessed to Tiptoft, thanked Mine Host and made his way back to St Erconwald’s. Two relic-sellers tried to pester them, and Athelstan recalled the relics described in Scrope’s vademecum on Glastonbury. As soon as he was back in his own house, Athelstan studied the pilgrim’s guide.
‘Sancta spina,’ he breathed, ‘and, talking of holy things …’ Athelstan left and visited the church to have words with Pike and Watkin. They seemed as happy as Bonaventure before a fire. Benedicta and the rest had brought hot food as well as a small tun of ale. Looking around the church, Athelstan was amused at how pious his parishioners and others had become. Usually at this hour, the nave would lie empty. Now people wandered about inspecting statues, shrines and the chantry chapel. Visitors clustered around the ankerhold, whilst another group, escorted by the Hangman, seemed fascinated by the different wall paintings. Athelstan smiled to himself. Watkin and Pike were being closely watched by both friend and foe. Leaving the church, he asked Benedicta to take Tiptoft and the men-at-arms to The Piebald to break their fast, then begged her to buy supplies for his own house. He asked her to spread the word that he was not to be disturbed; ordinary parish business would have to wait. After that Athelstan retreated into himself, locking himself away, chatting now and again with Benedicta and Tipftoft, whom he despatched into the city with sealed letters for Sir John and other individuals. For the rest, Athelstan sat at his kitchen table testing the hypotheses he had constructed: four strands, each of them quite separate and distinct but all intertwined around two different clasps, the season and the place. Eventually he received replies, all despatched in confidence, from the city. Athelstan’s conviction that he was following the right path strengthened. He sent a letter to Sir Robert Paston, closeted against his will at The Candle-Flame. He instructed Tiptoft to deliver the letter, wait for a reply and spend the time making certain discreet enquiries amongst the servants. Athelstan, brooding on what might happen, became concerned that those whom he wanted kept at The Candle-Flame might slip away, so he petitioned Cranston to have a ring of steel placed around the tavern and two war barges stand off the quayside close to it.
Naturally this quickening of events attracted the attention of Thibault, whose spies kept a rigorous watch over St Erconwald’s. The Master of Secrets sent Albinus, a sinister-looking mailed clerk and Lascelles’ apparent successor, to make enquiries, which Athelstan deftly deflected. The two friars, Roger and Marcel, also objected, pleading benefit of clergy, the rights of Holy Mother Church and the pressure of important business. Athelstan replied that what he needed them for was the unmasking of murder and the restoration of justice; this was their God-given duty as much as his. Painstakingly, Athelstan continued to build his case. He spent three days on it before despatching Tiptoft late in the afternoon to ask Sir John Cranston to join him in sharing one of Merryleg’s finest creations. Cranston arrived to find Athelstan’s kitchen scrubbed clean, the platters, knives, horn-spoons, jugs and mazers glimmering in the light. Athelstan served freshly minced beef pie, a fine Bordeaux, pots of vegetables and sugared almonds to add, as he teased Sir John, a little sweetness. He reported how the two sanctuary men now lived in the lap of luxury, being better served than My Lord of Gaunt in his palace at the Savoy. Only when the friar fell silent did Cranston lean across and squeeze his arm.
‘What have you discovered?’ the coroner asked.
‘I cannot tell you, Sir John, not yet. It’s not because I don’t trust you. I need you to listen and I need you to judge. You will sit and hear the case I prosecute. Now, I have little knowledge of the law,’ Athelstan paused. ‘Sir John, what powers do you have, I mean, as a judge?’ Cranston sipped at his wine.
‘Well, I am Lord High Coroner, a justice of the peace-’
‘You have the power of oyer et terminer, to hear and decide?’ Cranston screwed his eyes up.
‘I can, in times of great danger to the Crown, the realm and the community, assume certain powers and listen to pleas of the Crown.’
‘I would like you to do that.’
‘It will mean going to Thibault … Oh, no.’ Cranston paused at the look on Athelstan’s face. ‘You mean Gaunt?’ Again the look.
‘Oh, sweet God in heaven,’ Cranston whispered, ‘the young king himself?’
‘Go to him tonight, Sir John, where he shelters at the Savoy. Beg him for my sake to commission you as the king’s own justiciar in the wards of Southwark with special power to sit, listen, judge and condemn at a special session to be held in The Candle-Flame tavern.’
‘When?’
‘At the very latest the day after tomorrow.’
‘But why, Athelstan?’
‘Sir John, I swear, you will sit and have to judge heinous offences: treason, murder, theft, blackmail and horrid conspiracy. If these cases were referred to King’s Bench or an ordinary assize, certain people would flee and escape true justice. Others, because of cruel threats against them, risk being adjudged guilty as those who practice such cruelty. Thibault would interfere. He is secretive but also a bully boy. I want justice, Sir John, not revenge.’