‘But something else had happened two days previously, far away on the other side of the continent; something that removed at a stroke the reason for the murder that the assassin had been paid to do. The messenger reached him at the very last moment, when he was already about to enter the secret passage. The message was given and the assassin gave vent to his fury, cursing his master and damning him for changing his mind and calling off a perfectly good plan over which the assassin had spent so long in painstaking preparations.
‘Grandfather was on his way out of the castle following a visit to our patient and, hearing someone approach the stable entrance to the secret passage, had quickly hidden. He heard every word. Now my dear Grandfather’ — she bestowed a tender look upon the old man — ‘is normally adept at moving quietly and not alerting people’s attention to his presence — blindness has made his hearing very sensitive, you see, and he dislikes a lot of noise, even noise that he makes himself.’
‘The killer heard him?’ de Gifford put in.
‘Yes, yes, he heard me,’ Benoit said crossly. ‘I do wish you would not speak about me as if I were not here! His ears must have been as sharp as mine, for I swear that I was silent as a mouse as I stood there in terror listening to them speak of the murder that had been about to take place.’
‘I expect you gave that little throat-clearing cough, Grandfather,’ Sabin said gently. ‘It is something of a habit of yours and, indeed, I believe that you scarcely are aware that you do it.’
‘I do not have a little cough!’ Benoit exclaimed, which seemed to prove his granddaughter’s point.
‘So the assassin not only knew he had been overheard but also by whom,’ Josse said reflectively.
‘Exactly,’ Sabin confirmed. ‘As soon as Grandfather came home and told me, the first thing I asked was, did they know you were there? He said no, he didn’t think so, but we could not take the risk. I went straight back to our patient and made up some tale about having to set out straight away for some ingredients required in the treatment and I said we’d have to go far afield. Our patient agreed — well, I phrased it so that there was no choice — and that night Grandfather and I set out.’
‘Why did you go to Troyes?’ Josse asked.
‘It is a town we visit quite frequently for the purchase of supplies,’ Sabin replied. ‘We have friends there — or rather, we had.’
‘Did they perish in the lodging house fire?’ Josse asked sympathetically.
‘They did.’ Sabin’s tone was curt, as if she were warning Josse away from matters that caused her pain.
‘And in Troyes you met Nicol Romley,’ de Gifford said, ‘and, afraid and far from home, you confided in him and told him of your peril.’
‘It was not quite like that,’ Sabin began.
But Benoit interrupted. ‘No, it was me, silly old fool that I am.’ He was holding Sabin’s hand tightly. ‘I had too much wine, my friends, and when Sabin brought Nicol to the tavern where we were eating our supper, I wanted to impress her young companion with our importance — he couldn’t be allowed to think that we were just nobodies!’ He shook his head sadly. ‘I let my tongue run away with me and I told him why Sabin and I had left the comfort and safety of our home and were forced to act like fugitives.’
‘He was impressed, Grandfather,’ Sabin said kindly. ‘You did at least achieve what you set out to do.’
‘It is no consolation whatsoever, Sabin, as well you know,’ he replied. ‘Because of me and my blabbermouth, Nicol was killed, as was the poor merchant with whom he travelled back to England. Sabin and I have been forced to travel miles and miles, then cross the narrow seas and travel some more, and the dear Lord alone knows when we shall be able to go home again!’
‘It may be safe to go home some time soon,’ Sabin said softly. ‘The assassin is dead.’
‘Who is your patient?’ Josse asked. ‘I believe I have already guessed, my lady, but I wish you would tell us.’
She turned to him. ‘She is the Duchess Constance of Brittany,’ she said simply. ‘She is in the early stages of leprosy.’
De Gifford gave a gasp, quickly suppressed, and Josse would have had a similar reaction but for the fact that he had already worked out the disease, if not the victim; he had remembered how, when he had first met Sabin, she had been distressed at being shunned as a possible carrier of the foreign pestilence. He recalled her exact words: I know how it affects the soul to be treated as a leper.
He had thought, even then, that the passion with which she spoke suggested that the pain came from personal experience. Now, guessing that she had great affection for her mistress, he knew he was right. Fear of how people would react if her shameful secret were to come out must make the Duchess Constance’s life a veritable misery.
‘I believe,’ he said slowly, ‘that I am now able to name the assassin’s victim.’ She was watching him steadily. ‘I believe that he is young Arthur of Brittany, Constance’s son.’
Sabin let out a short gasp. ‘You are right, Sir Josse.’ Then she slumped, dropped her face into her hands, and through them muttered, ‘So now you know.’
De Gifford was looking puzzled. ‘Arthur of Brittany,’ he said slowly, ‘is the posthumous child of Geoffrey, younger brother of our King Richard.’
‘More relevant is that he has been named by Richard as his heir,’ Josse said. His mind flying to put the puzzle together, he raced on, speaking fast. ‘All the time that Richard was a captive of Duke Leopold, only Arthur stood between the throne and the man who wants it with such hunger.’
‘Prince John,’ breathed de Gifford.
‘Aye, Prince John. They say he has been plotting with Philip of France to keep King Richard imprisoned, if not for ever then at least until the two of them have mustered the power to complete their overrunning of Richard’s continental territories and are strong and powerful enough to fight anyone who tries to wrest them back. It is in Philip’s interest to have his ally John on the Plantagenet throne — Philip has no wish to see Arthur there. The Bretons are not, never have been and never will be friends of the French.’
‘So while Richard was out of the way — an arrangement that John has tried to make permanent — the only man between John and the throne is Arthur of Brittany?’ de Gifford demanded.
‘He is not a man,’ Sabin put in reprovingly. ‘He is but six years old.’
‘The assassin would have killed a child?’ De Gifford’s furious incredulity showed what he thought of that.
‘That is what paid killers do,’ Josse said.
‘But why did the assassin’s master — Prince John — call him off?’
Josse had been thinking about that. ‘I believe that I know,’ he said, ‘or, at least, that I can give a likely reason. King Richard was originally to be released on the seventeenth of January; that was the date set back in October of last year. But later it was postponed — nobody seems to know why, although many suspect that it was because Prince John and the French king put in a higher bid.’
De Gifford looked horrified. ‘Then — good God, if they had succeeded, then that vast ransom that we have raised and that has caused such terrible hardship would have been all for nothing!’
‘Aye,’ Josse agreed, ‘I do not suppose for a moment that anybody would have got their money back. But it did not happen, Gervase; our Richard has not been wasting his time while in captivity and it is ever a policy of his to befriend those who might subsequently be useful to him. He made allies of some of the empire’s influential princes and it is said that it was they who persuaded Duke Leopold that it was not fitting to sell a king as if he were a side of bacon being bargained over by two old women in the market place.’
‘So-’ De Gifford was clearly concentrating hard. ‘So the English bid was accepted?’