He got to the tinker shop and trudged up the stairs, flicking the mud from his hand to retrieve the key from his pouch. He put the key to the lock but the door swung open freely. He dropped the key, grabbed his dagger, and shouldered the door wider.
The room lay in disarray. The table, the chair and stool were all cast aside. His bedding had been tossed about with some of the hay from the ripped mattress making a long trail across the floor. His bowls and spoons were scattered as well as his basin and water jug which sat in a pool of rippling water under the far window.
His first thoughts were of Jack Tucker, and a very descriptive curse left his lips. But when he made a circuit of the room he found his family rings scattered on the floor, thrown from their hiding place. If Tucker had ransacked his room, these prizes would not have been left behind.
The chase. It had been a ruse. But what were they looking for?
He stood with shoulders sagged for a few moments, simply surveying the carnage. Then he knelt by the overturned chest and picked up his spare pair of underbraies that had been cast from the coffer.
The floor behind him creaked and he whirled, drawn dagger in one hand, underbraies in the other.
The woman stared at him, her perfect brows arched in surprise.
“Are you Crispin Guest?” she asked. “I’ve been looking for you.”
CHAPTER NINE
“I am Crispin Guest.” He felt warmth spreading throughout his muddied cheeks. Trying not to look at the garment in his hand, he sheathed the knife and struggled to his feet. He stood in the center of his shambles of a room, mud on his clothes, and a jagged smile slashed across his face. “I fear you have not caught me at my best.”
She returned his smile with a rueful wince. “I should hope not.”
He tossed the underbraies under the bed and lifted a chair upright. Stooping to raise the table he found the wayward candle stub and set it in the center of the nicked wood. “I…er…seem to have had unwanted visitors. Please.” He gestured to the chair but she did not sit.
Her dark eyes studied him suspiciously, eyes as dark as her hair braided into two plaits and framing her head in tightly wound buns. A ring of pearls ran across her forehead matching a pearl necklace at her throat that led Crispin’s eye to a neckline cut in the French fashion and to breasts mounding the brushed wool of her gown. “I have heard how you helped others find lost things…lost people,” she said and strolled into the room, glancing at his few possessions sprinkled about the floor.
Crispin pulled at his muddy coat to straighten it, mustering as much dignity as he could. “I am honored.”
“Can I trust you, sir?”
“I am trusted in all my endeavors. I may not be a wealthy lord-” and he opened his arms unnecessarily to display himself and the room- “but none can speak ill of Crispin Guest. Not these days, at any rate.”
Her taut shoulders relaxed. “Yes, I have heard much about you. I wonder if you have recently recovered an article of any import. Such I sometimes hear of at court and I find it…fascinating.”
He measured her. “Nothing lately that would interest the court. And surely you did not come all this way to the Shambles merely to ask to be regaled of my feats of investigation.”
“Indeed not.” She turned at just the correct angle to catch the best light from the window. She thrust out her chin, artfully elongating her neck. “You do get to the point.”
Crispin watched the display with admiration. “The point, damosel? The point is for you to make. What would you have me seek? Thing or person?”
“Person.”
He retrieved the water jug-glad it still had water in it-and repositioned the tin basin on a shelf. He pushed up his sleeves and poured the water in the basin and then paused. He looked back at her for permission and she gave a slight nod for him to continue. He offered her the chair again and she took it this time, though she made a show of it, arranging her skirts about her legs, but not quite to hide them.
Crispin took a moment to consider her. He knew she came from court by her jewels and the expensive cut of her gown but seldom did his clients include the highborn. Only shopkeepers and a few landowners used his services. Those from court were another matter. Memories ran long at court, and certainly his name still conjured the same amount of head wagging and varying degrees of revulsion and sympathy as they had these last seven years.
“Your name, damosel, eludes me,” he said. “I do not traffic in court these days.”
She smiled politely and showed by her silence that she knew his history. “My husband is Henry FitzThomas,” she said simply. “Lord Stancliff.”
“Then you are Lady Vivienne.” His mind shuffled the names and painted them with vague likenesses. It settled on Henry FitzThomas, the corpulent fool whose wife of twenty years spent him nearly to poverty. When she died, he married this one, some twenty years his junior and all the court jeered. Apparently the man had wealth enough to woo the young Vivienne into an old man’s bed.
He dipped his hands into the cold water and splashed his face. The cake of soap had not been disturbed in the aftermath of the ransacking. He took it up and wetted it in the basin. “Is there a reason you come to my lodgings without an escort? A woman of your position would surely send for me, not come to my doorstep.”
She sighed. “These are personal matters, Master Guest. I have my reasons.”
“Indeed. I am the friend of last resort. This is how I make my living.”
He continued washing and in that time his words finally sunk in. She raised her head, forming her lips into a charming red “o”. “Payment? Of course. I have coin, sir. I can pay.”
He raised his hand magnanimously and even smiled, though it was the kind he reserved for such occasions. “Perhaps you should first tell me who this person is and why you search for him.”
Her features darkened, whether from anger or shame he could not tell. “That is a long tale. And I shall not burden you with particulars.” Vivienne gazed steadily at Crispin. “I merely need you to follow him.”
He scrubbed the back of his neck and up his arms until the basin was as brown and murky as the Thames. “Follow, Lady? I am not in the habit of shadowing men without good cause.”
“But this is a matter of much import!” She controlled the panic in her voice by laying her delicate hands on her thighs, thighs that were easily defined by the cascading gown’s drape. “He has something of mine. An object of great price. I naturally want it back.”
“Naturally.”
“It is something I desperately need. I want him followed so that I may retrieve it.”
“And what is this object?”
“That is not your concern. You have only to follow him. My coin buys that and only that.”
He took up a relatively clean cloth and wiped his face and hands. If she was trying to intrigue him she succeeded. “I take it he is an important man. May I know his name?”
She hesitated. “Is a name important?”
“It makes it easier to inquire.”
“Then you shall have to work that much harder, Master Guest.”
Crispin made a half smile and clutched the damp cloth. But she offered nothing more. “My lady, do you jest with me?”
“No indeed. It is a puzzle for you.”
He waved his hand. “Very well. Continue. The rest should be just as disarming.”
“He was staying at the Spur,” she offered suddenly. “Perhaps he is still there.”
“If you know that, then why don’t you inquire at the Spur yourself?”
She raised her chin. “Don’t be absurd.”