“Of course not.”
“You see? It’s best if they think you’re a simpleton. After all, you did come here underneath the cart of the man who regularly delivers the wine to Melaten. He might be a bit annoyed when he hears about it.”
“More than annoyed,” said Jacob. “He was told I’m a thief.”
“Who told him? The men who stopped the cart?”
“Uh-huh.”
“Now that is interesting. What are you supposed to have stolen?”
“One guilder.”
“Oh, what a naughty fox-cub you are!”
“Forget the jokes. I’m supposed to have—”
Jaspar shook his head and put his finger to his lips. “We’ll talk later. Here’s our friend.”
The man, who turned out to be the hospice master himself, came carrying some clothes tied up in a bundle and two rattles.
“Too kind,” said Jaspar with an extravagant bow. His nose and chin looked as if they might get stuck in the ground. Jacob hesitated, then quickly followed his example.
“Not at all,” replied the man. “It’s we who have to thank you, Father.”
“You will get the clothes back.”
“No hurry. And they’ve just been washed, so you needn’t worry about touching them.”
“Once more, thank you.”
“God be with you in your difficult task.”
They said farewell and left the hospice through the orchard. There was a narrow gate there that was open all day. That was the way Jaspar had come in.
Jacob was relieved to be out of the leper colony, though at the same time he was ashamed of his fear and would gladly have stayed awhile. He somehow felt he had run away again instead of facing up to something important, bringing unhappy memories to the surface. He kept looking back as they made their way along the road to Cologne. He sensed he would not forget his involuntary visit that quickly. Then, suddenly, he felt strong and full of life again. The lepers had lost everything. He still had a chance of winning.
Jaspar seemed to have guessed his thoughts. “The disease bothers them less than it does healthy people,” he said. “If you’re incurably ill and dead for the world, what’s to stop you laughing at yourself? They have no hope or, to be more precise, one should say they are free from hope. A huge difference. Paradoxically, losing everything can mean you lose despondency and despair as well.”
“Have you been there before?” asked Jacob.
Jaspar nodded. “Several times.”
“Were you never afraid of becoming infected?”
“No. It’s all rather exaggerated. Although no one will admit it, in fact you have to have damn bad luck to catch it. You only saw the sick people, but there are two living in Melaten with their spouses, and they’re not infected.”
“I thought the lepers were forbidden to come into contact with healthy people.”
“They are, unless an uninfected person joins them of their own free will. Other people go to Melaten as well, the carter with the wine, for example, and the washerwomen. And you know the man with the bells who goes around begging for them, he’s dealing with them all the time. But you hardly ever hear of people like that catching the disease, and if they do, it’s only after many years. No, the lepers are not a real danger. They are a warning to the arrogant. Leprosy doesn’t distinguish between rich and poor; anyone can catch it. A just punishment God visited on those accursed crusaders, to bring back together with all the treasures they stole from the East.” He glanced at Jacob and grinned. “Good old Hannes gave you quite a fright, didn’t he?”
“Hannes is the one with no face?”
“The worst case in Melaten. It’s odd that he’s alive. Still alive, I mean.”
“Still laughing, too,” said Jacob. “But tell me, how did you find me? What happened to you after we split up?”
Jaspar made fluttering movements with his fingers. “I got away,” he laughed. “I think the men hadn’t actually been ordered to capture us, just to stick to us until our crazy crusader could dispatch us in some quiet corner. It’s probably a bit different with you, but they can’t just kidnap or even kill me in the middle of the street. What they hadn’t counted on was that we would smell a rat and run off. They were suddenly afraid they’d lose sight of us and be blamed for it later, so they dropped their pretense and took chase. They didn’t send the most intelligent specimens of humanity after us, thank God. Unseen by them, I went straight into St. Mary’s. It never occurred to the idiots I’d hide in the first church I came to. It was obvious they wouldn’t stop to think until they got to Highgate. Then they’d retrace their steps. So I went straight out by the side door and back to Haymarket, hoping I’d find you there. No problem! That clout on the head with the radish was quite spectacular. I couldn’t join up with you, but I saw everything from a distance. When I realized you were safe for the moment under the cart, I strolled along a good way behind. It wasn’t going that fast and I assumed it would have to stop somewhere. Then when I saw it turn into the gate at Melaten I had to get a move on, but I was too late, they’d already closed the door. Fortunately I know Melaten and I know the little gate at the back.” He nodded smugly. “So that’s how I saved you. You can write me a thank-you letter—oh, no, of course you can’t. And all the time I was trotting along behind, I kept wondering, why doesn’t the Fox jump off? To be honest, I still don’t understand.”
“Because the Fox was trapped,” said Jacob sourly. “He’d got his paws stuck in between the planks.”
“And couldn’t get them out?” Jaspar laughed out loud. “That story would get me a drink in any inn in Cologne.”
“I think I’d prefer it if you kept it to yourself.”
“If the men who were after you only knew! But they know nothing. I imagine they haven’t been told what it’s all about. They’ll have just been given some cock-and-bull story why we have to be caught.”
“They knew damn well why they were chasing me,” said Jacob.
“You? Oh, yes, you’ve stolen one guilder, you rascal. Who from, if I might inquire?”
“Matthias Overstolz.”
Jaspar stopped and stared. “From him? But why him, for God’s sake?”
“I didn’t steal it,” Jacob protested. “He gave it to me. Yesterday morning. And now I’m supposed to have stolen it.”
“One moment,” said Jaspar. He seemed confused. “Why would Matthias Overstolz give you a guilder?”
“I was standing outside their house in Rheingasse, trying to wrap my jerkin around my head. Haven’t I told you this?”
“No,” said Jaspar, frowning. “Who knows what else you’ve forgotten to tell me.”
They walked along in silence for a while. The sun was low in the sky, making the fields and meadows all around glow with an almost unnatural intensity.
“Fox-cub, are you telling me the truth?”
“Why do you ask?”
“Jacob,” he said, “we only met yesterday. I have great but not unbounded trust in you. So just reassure me. Is everything you have told me so far the truth?”
“Yes, dammit, it is.”
“Good.” Jaspar nodded. “Then presumably we know the name of at least one of those who ordered Gerhard’s death.”
“Matthias Overstolz?” asked Jacob, dumbfounded.
“And not only him,” Jaspar went on. “Suddenly everything’s clear. I’ve been racking my brains to think how our meeting with the witnesses could have got out. I’m afraid I let too much slip to Bodo, and of course he couldn’t wait to tell his fellow magistrates about it. And one of his fellow magistrates—”