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‘Please come inside, Sir John, I will explain.’

He led the way through a heavy leather door-drape into a comfortable, almost opulent room, where padded benches, a table and several carved chairs indicated that this was well above the usual standard of furnishing. The bareness of the whitewashed walls was relieved by fine tapestry hangings, depicting classical battle scenes and religious events. An ornate gilded crucifix was the only evidence that this was the residence of a canon of Lichfield and his entourage.

‘I am Gilbert, the canon’s chaplain. Please be seated, coroner.’ Again, Gwyn and Thomas were left standing, but after Gilbert’s instruction to the lay brother to fetch refreshments, they were invited to a brocade-covered bench against a wall and included in the offer of ale, wine and pastries.

De Wolfe suffered these formalities impatiently, then returned to his need to speak to the Exchequer official.

‘I am in some difficulty over that, I fear,’ replied Gilbert, anxiously. ‘We have not seen him since yesterday morning. He did not return home last evening and failed to appear again today.’

A small bell of alarm began to chime in John’s head. ‘Is that unusual for him?’ he asked.

‘It is indeed, he is a man of most regular habits. He never misses a meal, as we have one of the best cooks in Westminster.’

‘Where was he yesterday later on? Do you know anything of his movements?’

The chaplain shook his head. ‘Martin, his steward, might be aware of those, but he is out at present — riding the roads between here and the city, in case the canon has come to some harm there.’

‘The city? Was he going into London yesterday?’

Gilbert lifted his shoulders in a gesture. ‘I did hear some talk of it when we came back from attending Prime at St Margaret’s. But Martin would know.’

Further questions confirmed that no one in the household had any idea of where their master had gone. When the steward returned a short while later, he was unable to shed any light on the disappearance, but it was obvious that the chaplain and servants were worried about Simon Basset’s vanishing act, especially if it was going to affect their comfortable life in this very desirable residence.

‘There was no sign of him along the roads,’ said Martin, a strongly built man with a black beard. ‘He mentioned the previous evening that he might have to ride into the city sometime in the day, but he didn’t say where he was going — and I’m not sure if he went or not.’

John sighed — this investigation seemed to run into the sand at every turn, like his inquest on Basil. He tried again.

‘Let’s get this straight! Your master went off yesterday morning, presumably by horse?’

‘Yes, I saw him trotting off up the Royal Way, so I presumed he was going to the city and probably to the Great Tower, where the Treasury stores some of its valuables.’

‘We were there yesterday and I am sure that the Constable would have mentioned if Canon Simon had been there, as his name was central to our discussions,’ countered John. ‘So it seems unlikely that he went to the Tower.’

Martin scratched his beard thoughtfully. ‘Of course, he could have gone anywhere in that direction,’ he mused. ‘Anywhere at all in the city — or he could have turned at Charing and gone up to the Oxford Road. Or maybe he called at some religious house on the way — the Templars, even.’

‘Why the Temple?’

‘The king has a great partiality for the Poor Knights of the Temple of Solomon, as well as for their money, for he borrows greatly from them. The Exchequer has considerable dealings with them, my master visited them frequently to arrange or repay loans. In addition, some of the Treasury bullion is often stored in their vaults for safety.’

John knew that a steward was privy to much that went on in the household, but he seemed unusually well apprised of national finances.

‘So he could have gone to the Temple?’ he queried.

Martin turned up his hands in a Gallic gesture. ‘Of course! But he could equally have gone to a score of places elsewhere.’

This was getting them nowhere, so the coroner drew the questioning to a close and rose from the chair to leave.

‘But in all this,’ he concluded, ‘the strange aspect is that the canon did not say that he might be away for a time — nor did he later send any message that he would be delayed in returning home?’

Martin and the chaplain both nodded. ‘It is most unusual, which is why we are so concerned. What shall we do, Sir John? Should we inform the Lord Treasurer and the other lords of Exchequer?’

‘I’ll do that myself, as soon as I get back to the palace,’ promised de Wolfe. ‘Meanwhile, I suggest that you send to the New Temple and any other likely places, to see if Simon Basset is there or has been there in the last day. If you have any news, be sure to notify me at once, d’you hear!’

His tone made it clear that he wanted his orders carried out promptly and with that he led his pair of assistants out of the house, leaving a worried and apprehensive household behind him.

With an absentee Chancellor, as well as an absentee king, de Wolfe decided to consult the Chief Justiciar about Simon Basset’s disappearance. However, he was told that Hubert Walter was across the river, inspecting the progress of his pet project. This was the building of a palace for himself in Lambeth as a London residence, as it was said that he wanted a magnificent house to spite his rival, the Bishop of London. The two major churches, one at Westminster Abbey and St Paul’s Cathedral, were in competition for funds and the expression ‘robbing Peter to pay Paul’ had arisen from the names of their respective patron saints. Any prospect of seeing Hubert Walter that day was dashed when his clerks said that he was riding to Canterbury and would be absent for at least four days.

De Wolfe turned instead to the Keeper of the Palace, but found that Nathaniel de Levelondes was preoccupied with the coming royal visit and the move of the whole court to Gloucester.

‘Report it to the Lord Treasurer,’ he muttered absently. ‘He’s in charge of all those money-grubbers.’

Frustrated, de Wolfe went back to the Exchequer building at the other end of the palace, but the chief clerk told him that the Treasurer had gone back to his estates in Northamptonshire.

‘Have you any idea where Canon Basset may have gone?’ he demanded of the old clerk. ‘His household have had no news of him since yesterday morning.’

Once again, enquiries were made among the other clerks sitting at their desks, but no one had any suggestions.

‘Did he not have duties here each day?’ demanded the coroner.

The grey-haired official shook his head. ‘We are busiest when the sheriffs come to pay in their county taxes, but between times the senior officials attend only when there is something specific to be done. Canon Simon should have been here this morning to peruse and sign some documents, but they can wait until he appears.’

Cursing under his breath, John went up to his chamber facing the river, where Gwyn and Thomas were waiting. He told them of his fruitless attempts to arouse some interest in the disappearance of the man who had the only other key to the notorious treasure chest.

‘I wouldn’t give a damn about the fellow himself, if it weren’t for the fact that I have been saddled with this commission from the Justiciar to investigate the theft,’ he fumed.

‘Maybe that clerk down at the front is right,’ soothed Gwyn. ‘Perhaps come Monday morning, he’ll turn up as usual.’

The coroner marched impatiently up and down the room, his back hunched and his head jutting forwards. The swept-back black hair, which he wore unfashion-ably long, bounced on the collar of his grey tunic and once again Thomas was reminded of a large crow strutting about the garden.

‘Where the hell can he have gone?’ he rasped. ‘I’ve got a bad feeling about this, but short of searching every house in London, there’s little we can do.’