Recalling their faces now, he wondered whether he had been fleeced as many gulls in a new town would be. There was something about their looks which had struck him as perhaps a little secretive. One man with a face so bearded he looked like a gorilla, had winked to a companion as soon as Paul entered. That was odd, now he came to think of it: the men had all exchanged glances when he walked in, and the bearded man had been the one who accepted him into their game, but they had none of them asked who he was. After all, he was a stranger in their midst. But perhaps his face was already known to the garrison. He was the confessor to the young duke, after all.
With a flash, he remembered that today he was supposed to be aiding the duke with his lessons.
His predecessor as tutor had been a very widely read man, apparently, called Bury. But he had been sent to be Constable of Bordeaux, because Roger Mortimer had said that the town needed a good man at this difficult time. Now the prince seemed to feel the need for more education, almost as a defence against more work.
Rising and washing his face quickly, Paul shivered and made his way to the duke’s chamber.
‘Enter!’
‘My lord, I hope I find you well?’ Paul said as he knelt just inside the doorway.
‘No one has poisoned me today. Not that I know of, anyway,’ Edward replied, somewhat dully.
Paul licked his dry lips. ‘I am sure no one would wish to do that, my lord.’
‘Are you? Then you don’t know the world in which I live, priest,’ Edward said with heat. ‘My mother looks upon me only as a sacrificial groom, to marry to the best family she can find. My father hates me — he thinks I have defied him and am staying here of my free will, with the man whom he detests above all others — Roger Mortimer. He blames me, because I am to be married against his will. He made me promise that I should not allow myself to accept any treaty of marriage while I was here with my mother, but she began negotiating to sell me six months ago. The only man who has no say in it is me!’
Paul was not prepared for such a declaration. His lips felt gummy, his flesh was clammy, and he had an oily churning in his belly. ‘I am sure you would prefer to have some peace, my lord. Look, I’ll leave you this morning. You are feeling out of sorts, and won’t want lessons from a poor instructor like me. You should get some rest, and we can continue tomorrow.’
‘No, stay here. In faith, you are truly my man, aren’t you? You are my confessor, my own private companion?’
‘I hope so, my lord. I have the duty of secrecy.’
‘Then advise me. What should I do? I cannot escape this trap here. I would have to run a long way to outrun the guards set all about me. Yet I ought to return to England. I promised my father that I would do that.’
‘Whether you promised or not, if you are being held against your will, it matters not. It is not your fault if you are prevented from doing your father’s will.’
‘You say that, but I am a duke! I was born to command. From my first weeks, I have been a royal earl in England. I have managed my household, controlled my estates — with a little help, it’s true, but mostly on my own. And yet here I don’t have anyone I can rely upon.’
‘There are some. The men I came here with, they are all determined to serve you.’
‘Oh, really? They are determined more to remain as far as possible from Sir Hugh le Despenser, I have heard. Assassins, felons — outlaws all. They do not fill me with confidence.’
‘They should, my lord. They may appear to be little more than draw-latches, but they are strong, and they have little to lose. It’s true that they’re all enemies of the Despenser, but if they can demonstrate loyalty to you, they may be able to hope for a pardon, if you could speak to the king on their behalf.’
‘You think so?’ The Duke of Aquitaine closed his eyes in despair. ‘You do not know my father, nor the Despenser. The latter is vile. He considers only his own interests. I don’t know how he has inveigled his way into my father’s affections, but there is no doubt that he has done so with enormous skill. My father will do nothing without the approval of Despenser. He will not order his men-at-arms, he won’t command the admirals, he won’t rest or even take a piss, I sometimes think, without gaining the approval of that cursed knight! And if Despenser thought I was a threat to him personally, I would wager heavy odds that my life would be at threat.’
‘No matter. Despenser can’t live for ever. While there is the chance that you may return to England, the men here are your best guarantee of security. They will not throw away the only asset they have: your friendship.’
‘You think so, seriously? You believe that they could prove to be a reliable force to protect me?’
‘Yes, I think so. Look at them: what would they gain by being traitorous to you? The friendship of Despenser — who would trust to that!’
‘My father,’ the duke said bitterly.
Chapter Twenty
Bishop’s Clyst
The bishop tried to concentrate on the latest set of accounts for the rebuilding of the cathedral, but his mind would not focus. He had never known such doubts. Even in France last year, when he learned that the queen and Mortimer were plotting his death, he had not been as confused and scared as he was now. Once upon a time, he had taken upon himself all the accounts for the Exchequer and had sorted them into rational blocks, making the taxation a simpler task and freeing the king to do more as he wished. In those days, he had possessed the most logical brain in the country, he reckoned. And now? Now he couldn’t concentrate on a simple set of accounts from the cathedral fabric rolls.
It was a relief to see the knight at his door. ‘Sir Baldwin, please enter — enter. It is most kind of you to come all the way out here.’
‘John tells me that you have been unfortunate enough to have had another message?’
‘He speaks before he ought to,’ the bishop said, turning a cold eye upon his servant.
‘Aye? And if I did not, what then?’ John de Padington said belligerently. ‘Would you willingly inform the good knight after he came to see you, or would you try to keep it hidden?’
‘Enough, steward! Fetch my guest some wine and begone! You have no sense of propriety.’
‘Propriety, is it?’ John muttered perfectly audibly as he turned his back and walked to the buttery. ‘And I suppose propriety will save a bishop’s life?’
‘Ignore the old fool,’ Bishop Walter said. ‘I am truly most glad to see you, Sir Baldwin. Tell me, how are the plans for the array proceeding?’
‘Not so well, it would appear, as the plans for your death. Show me these messages, Bishop. I know that they are unpleasing, but perhaps I can learn something from them.’
‘I doubt it,’ Bishop Walter said. He stood and walked to a small chest placed on a table opposite the fire. Opening it, he moved some scrolls and leather wallets aside before finding the purse. ‘Here it is. The notes are inside.’
Baldwin took the notes. ‘Which was first, which second?’
‘That one you hold there: you who think … and so on — that was first. The second was that The author of so much … and that is the latest.’
Baldwin read it. ‘Your doom approaches. The city will not avail you now. What do you think that means?’
‘Simply that there is no defence in the city of Exeter, of course. What else could it mean? And it’s not surprising. The city contains many who dislike me. There are men there who would willingly collaborate with an assassin. I have made enemies in the Priory of the Dominicans, I have enemies in the city itself, and there are too many easy methods of ingress to the Close and the bishop’s palace. That was why I moved myself to here. I think that this should be a safer base from which to assert my freedom and independence.’
‘It is well fortified,’ Baldwin said. He was still studying the little scraps of parchment. ‘The writer has a good hand,’ he said at last. ‘Each one is perfectly legible.’