De Wolfe ran a long-fingered hand over his chin and heard the rasp of stubble. ‘I missed it on Saturday, when I was away on Crockern Tor,’ he admitted. Once a week he washed in the yard and shaved with a specially honed knife, before making his weekly change of undershirt and tunic.
‘I’ll heat some water over the fire after you’ve eaten. There’s a new block of goat-tallow soap there for you.’ With this maternal threat, she left him to his solitary meal and his rumination about what today might hold. He was supposed to attend a special sitting of the County Court later in the morning, where some declarations of outlawry, an approver and an appealer were to be heard.
After his wash in a wooden bucket in the yard, he scraped painfully at his face, using a square of polished bronze as a mirror. Matilda was tucking into a large breakfast by now, so he went back to the solar and hauled out clean clothing from his chest, kept stocked by the efficient Mary. When he was dressed, he stuck his head round the screens behind the hall door to exchange grunted farewells with his wife, then stepped into the street.
A vivid flash of lightning, forking over the roof of St Martin’s Church opposite, was followed almost immediately by a tremendous crack of thunder. The sky was virtually black and he dodged back inside to take his leather cloak and hood from a peg, as the rain started again. More thunder and lightning exploded overhead, the treacherous storm having circled back over the city.
In the farrier’s stable across the lane he could hear horses whinnying, frightened by the thunder, and he spent a few minutes with Andrew calming Odin and the other stallions, talking to them quietly and rubbing their necks. When they were calmer, he left for Rougemont, stoically ignoring the bad weather, as he had in a dozen countries over the past two decades. For years, he reflected philosophically, he had spent most of the time either too wet or too dry, too cold or too hot — there had been few periods in his life when the climate was merely pleasant.
As he walked along the upper part of the high street towards the turning to the castle, he saw Gwyn coming through the East Gate from St Sidwell’s. His stride still had a nautical roll, born of his early years as a fisherman, as he squelched along through the now sodden surface of the road. The pointed hood of his tattered leather shoulder cape was poking up above his head as a protection against the downpour. Seeing the coroner approach, he waited for him at the foot of Castle Hill, but just as John came up to him, there was a tremendous flash of lightning and a simultaneous crash of thunder. De Wolfe’s back was to the centre of the city, but Gwyn was facing it and he was momentarily blinded by the jagged fork of blue light that struck only a few hundred paces away. ‘Jesus Christ, that was close,’ he muttered, as he rubbed his eye-sockets with his knuckles.
De Wolfe swung round as a sulphurous, scorching smell wafted on the wind. Seconds later, smoke appeared over the nearest roof on the north side of the high street. Around them, stall-holders and pedlars joined with customers in gaping at the fire, then a stampede began down the road to see this new and potentially disastrous phenomenon in Curre Street.1
Gwyn’s sight returned, though he had a bright flare inside his eyeballs for the next five minutes. As he gaped at the smoke, blown down on to the street by the gusting wind, de Wolfe grabbed his arm. ‘Come on, someone’s thatch has been struck. This is coroner’s business.’
They hurried along with the rest of the crowd, down to the junction almost opposite Martin’s Lane, but on the other side of the main thoroughfare. The narrow entrance to Curre Street was blocked with curious townsfolk, but Gwyn pulled them aside unceremoniously, yelling for the King’s coroner to be let through. Fifty yards up on the right, the roof of one of the narrow houses was well alight, belching grey smoke into the sky, flames fanned by the high wind licking around the lightning strike in the centre of the thatch. Although the surface was wet from the rain, the underlying straw, almost two feet thick, was dry from the recent good weather. The ground floor of the house was a shop, its front shutters opening horizontally to form both a protective overhang and a lower counter for the shoes and leather goods the merchant sold. He was capering about in the road, screaming hysterically. There was a strong prospect that his house and business would vanish in the next few minutes.
Johnpushed through the remaining crowd, with Gwyn at his heels. ‘Anyone still inside?’ he demanded, grabbing the shoemaker by the shoulder to keep him still.
The man shook his head, his eyes rolling. ‘No, thank God, they’re all here in the street. But what can we do, sir?’
Recognising authority had steadied him, but de Wolfe could offer little useful advice. ‘Pray for a deluge, that’s all,’ he said, not unkindly. ‘If you have valuables or stock in the downstairs rooms, get them out now, before the fire burns through from the upper storey. But come out as soon as any smoke comes down.’
The merchant yelled at several young men, apprentices or sons, and they dashed into the back of the shop to recover what they could before the fire spread.
‘I’ll give them a hand, poor souls,’ said Gwyn and followed them inside. As he left, another voice spoke at de Wolfe’s shoulder.
‘He’s a member of my guild, the Cordwainers. Pray God he doesn’t suffer too much damage.’
It was Henry Rifford, a wealthy leather merchant and one of Exeter’s two Portreeves, leaders of the city council elected by their fellow burgesses. He was a humourless, pompous individual and de Wolfe was not over-fond of him. They stood and watched as the smoke and flame increased above them, but as yet there was no sign of it leaking through the shutters of the two upstairs window openings.
‘I’ve pressed the burgesses to ban any more thatch inside the city, but we can do nothing about these older buildings with straw or reed roofs,’ complained the portreeve. ‘Many other towns prohibit them — but who is to pay for slating the dwellings instead? The owners or landlords are unwilling or unable to afford it.’
Thunder rumbled overhead again as de Wolfe said, ‘If these fires spread and burn down the city, it will cost a lot more. And the loss of life must be considered, too. Both these issues bring town fires under the coroner’s jurisdiction — though I can hardly bring in an inquest verdict against the Almighty for sending a flash of lightning.’
Someone must have been praying very hard indeed, for at that moment the dark clouds overhead opened up and a tremendous deluge fell from the heavens. The wind dropped as the storm centred itself overhead and an almost vertical wall of water hammered on to the city. Everyone dashed for shelter, de Wolfe and Rifford included. They ran across the narrow street and huddled under the arcade formed by the wooden pillars that supported the projecting upper storey of the shop opposite. The downpour continued without a break, and clouds of steam began to rise from the thatched roof across the road.
‘This will help save Martin,’ cried Rifford, as the flames around the edge of the large hole in the roof subsided into an angry hiss. They watched as the relentless rain washed a sooty waterfall over the edge of the roof, bringing down blackened straw into the street.
‘Whatever’s on the upper floor will be ruined by the water if not the fire,’ growled de Wolfe, ‘but that’s better than losing the whole house — and maybe the whole street.’
The cloudburst had them pinned into their shelter for a time, and as they watched the conflagration extinguished by God’s own hand, their conversation turned to other things. De Wolfe felt obliged to enquire after Rifford’s family and learned that the Portreeve’s daughter Christina had recovered slowly from the rape she had suffered last year and had decided to continue her plans to marry the gangling Edgar of Topsham. Rifford went on to talk of the campaign amongst the burgesses to have a mayor in Exeter, instead of two Portreeves. ‘Just aping the bigger cities, I say. They’ll want a commune next, as well as a mayor — just to be like London.’