‘Yes, Mr Ball.’
‘Why? What do you want to know? He is dead and gone to dust, as we all must go. What could you hope to discover of a man who is naught but blanching bones and rotting flesh?’
‘My master John Shakespeare wishes to know more about him. Whether he had family or friends.’
Ball was a man of at least fifty, with the powerful physique of a man half that age. He said nothing for a few moments as though expecting Boltfoot to continue. He wore a sleeveless leather jerkin and no shirt so that the bulging and tanned muscles of his arms were clearly visible. Boltfoot could not help noting the intricate scar running down one arm, a mass of short and long cuts formed to make a curling serpent. Had he had it carved into his flesh deliberately – or had it been inflicted on him by an enemy? Boltfoot suspected the first option.
‘Carry on, Mr Cooper. Tell me your story. Leave nothing out.’
Boltfoot nodded. ‘Very well. Mr Shakespeare is a friend of Mr Giltspur’s widow. This murder has come as a great horror and surprise to him. He had not thought that Kat – Mistress Giltspur – was the sort of person to do such a thing. And so I believe he hoped that there might be some clue to be had from those who knew Mr Cane.’
‘And Mistress Giltspur. Where is she?’
‘I am told she has fled and is in hiding. That is the story as I know it. I am merely doing my master’s bidding.’
‘Your name is Cooper. Are you then a cooper by trade?’
‘I was, yes. A ship’s cooper with Drake. But no more. I have had enough of the sea for one lifetime.’
Ball turned to the woman from the Burning Prow. ‘What say you, Em?’
‘He is probably honest enough. Hasn’t the wit to lie. But I would like to know more. When he says his master is a friend of Mistress Giltspur, that could mean many things.’
‘Well, Mr Cooper?’
‘They lived together as man and wife, but unwed.’ He knew there was no point in trying to lie or evade the question; enough people knew the truth.
Cutting Ball laughed. ‘Then your Mr Shakespeare is a fortunate man, for she is a fine-favoured wench.’
‘Do you then know her, Mr Ball?’
Ball’s eyes clouded like the sky before a storm. ‘Mr Cooper, do you think to ask me questions? Would you like to know what happened to the last person who asked me a question?’
Boltfoot shook his head. ‘Forgive me. I meant nothing by it.’
‘Good.’ He moved forward and touched the point of his bollock-dagger into Boltfoot’s hose where his prick and balls nestled.
Another man might have recoiled but Boltfoot did not pull back.
‘Drake, you say? He is a dog. The one sea captain who ever tried to defy me. I think I will sell you, Mr Cooper. I am sure you will fetch a few shillings, perhaps a mark or two, and then I will make up some of what I am owed.’
Boltfoot could have said that he shared Cutting Ball’s low opinion of Sir Francis Drake but wiser counsel told him the subject was best avoided, and so he said nothing.
‘You are silent now, Mr Cooper. I repeat my question: do you know where the Giltspur wench is hiding?’ He still did not withdraw the tip of his blade from his guest’s manhood. Boltfoot had no doubt that if he was given the slightest provocation, he would strike it home . . . and add a sharp twist at the end.
‘No, sir.’
‘Think again.’
Boltfoot shook his head decisively. ‘No, sir, I am certain I do not know. It is possible my master has seen her, but if he did, I was not with him and I have no idea of her whereabouts. He does not tell me such things.’ Which was his first lie, for he knew that Mr Shakespeare had gone to Shoreditch.
‘Why do I not believe you?’
‘I know not, Mr Ball. I can but speak the truth. My master would never tell me more than he considered necessary. I am not privy to his secrets.’
‘What does he hope to know about Will Cane?’ It was one of the other players that spoke, the one with the rough clothes but the appearance of a gentleman.
‘I think he hopes that those who knew him would have some notion as to the truth behind the story he told in court. Perhaps there might have been some unknown reason for the accusation laid against Mistress Giltspur. Some falling-out . . .’
‘I think we should fetch your Mr Shakespeare,’ Ball said. ‘Let him answer my questions directly.’
‘He has powerful friends, Mr Ball, for he is a Queen’s man and in the close employ of Mr Secretary.’
‘That almost sounds like a threat. Have you perhaps heard what I like to do with my fine blade? With one cut, I could unman you and then, as a mercy, I might stake you out on the riverbank and watch the tide come in over your miserable head. And you would find your last breath a blessed release.’
‘It was not meant as a threat, Mr Ball. I thought you wished to know who I was and why I was asking questions; Mr Shakespeare is the reason and so I believed you would want to know more about him.’
Ball removed the point of his dagger from the vicinity of Boltfoot’s nether parts and placed it back in his belt. He took an ivory dice from his pocket and handed it to Boltfoot. ‘Throw a six and you may go unmolested; five and you’ll have a beating; four, you lose your balls; three, your eyes; two, a quick death; one, a slow death. Throw it, Mr Cooper.’
Boltfoot held the dice and turned it in his hand. Was it loaded?
‘An even thousand he throws three or less.’ It was the gentleman player who spoke.
Boltfoot turned to him and saw the light of excitement in his eyes. Was this man really staking a thousand pounds on his life or death?
Ball nodded. ‘I accept the bet. Now throw, Mr Cooper. Throw – or I will presume a one.’
He knew he had no option. This man meant every word he said. Boltfoot shook the ivory cube in both hands. He had never been a gambling man, had never seen the point in it. But this was no gamble; this was a straight choice between death or the chance of life. He threw the dice and it rattled across the table in front of him, at last coming to a stop. Two dots showed. A two. That meant a quick death, didn’t it?
‘Aha, I win!’ The gentleman said with delight.
‘And Mr Cooper loses,’ Ball said.
The woman from the Burning Prow, the one called Em, touched Cutting Ball’s bare arm. She wore a low chemise and her large, hanging breasts were scarcely concealed. What was she? Did she run his whores? ‘Don’t do it. Don’t take a stand against Walsingham.’
Ball pushed her hand away with explosive ferocity. ‘I’ll take a stand against whom I like, including you. Get out, Em. Go.’
She seemed about to say something to him, but then merely nodded her fair head and walked away towards the double doors. It seemed to Boltfoot that she was the only person in this great hall of a barn who did not fear Cutting Ball.
Ball did not watch her. Instead he picked up the dice, turned it and slammed it down so that a five showed. He then grabbed Boltfoot by the front of his jerkin and dragged him to his feet.
‘You, get out now. I will not kill you this day for you are a cripple. But if ever I hear that you have come east of the city wall again, I will shove your bollocks down your throat and your eyeballs up your arse. And then the pain will start.’ He threw Boltfoot across the flagged floor, then tossed a coin to the watchman. ‘Get the lads and give him a good beating, Potken, then deliver him to his master.’
Chapter 15
Shakespeare left Gifford to the exquisite ministrations of the Smith sisters, certain that the pink pigling would be grunting and squealing with pleasure for many hours to come. Vitally, he would not be taking his leave of them before the new day. It was a prospect that made Shakespeare’s own bedchamber seem a desolate place.
The sisters were under instructions to stay with Gifford in the chamber until nine o’clock in the morning. The housekeeper would provide breakfast for them and, while they were eating, Shakespeare would return. The Smith sisters would say a tender farewell and tell their satisfied client how boldly he had performed, and travel in their carriage back home to Westminster.