I made a move to take my leave, but they detained me, begging me to remain until their husbands came home so that I should be on hand to supply the details that their memories lacked.
‘You had best stay to supper,’ Dame Alice decreed. ‘John and my sons will surely wish to question you, and it would be as well if you remained to hand. We can make the stew go round if we scrape the pot.’
It was neither the most flattering nor the warmest invitation that I had ever received; moreover, the smell emanating from the kitchen at the back of the house was not one to make my mouth water. But it would save me a long walk to the Portsoken Ward, and ensure that I could observe all three men together instead of having to chase them from one weaving shed to another, while at least half their attention was elsewhere. So I thanked Dame Alice and said that I should be pleased to stay.
While the two younger women bustled about fetching plates and knives from a corner cupboard and bread and ale from the pantry, and while Dame Alice disappeared into the kitchen to attend to her broth, I sat quietly with my thoughts. The house was not large, and boasted only one maidservant, but I suspected that this was due far more to parsimony than to poverty. Both Alison Burnett and Dame Pernelle had insisted that John Weaver was comfortably off, even if he were not as wealthy as his brother. If, therefore, he deliberately chose to live in this modest fashion, why should he want more money? Why should he covet half the Alderman’s fortune? Not to spend it, that was certain, but then, misers did not want to spend their money, only to know that it was there, in a hole in the wall or under the floorboards.
And yet I could not bring myself to believe that even if one or all of the Weaver men had hatched this plot their womenfolk were party to it. Total innocence is very hard to simulate, and amongst three people I should have expected at least one unguarded look or word that would have indicated their complicity. But Dame Alice and her daughters-in-law had acquitted themselves without faltering. I must wait patiently, therefore, for their husbands in the hope that either John Weaver or one of his sons might supply me with a clue …
And if they didn’t? If I was convinced of their innocence as well as that of their wives, what then? I knew, at least, that Irwin Peto was an impostor, but not who else stood to gain from this fraud. And without that second, shadowy figure being unmasked, there was little chance of convincing the Alderman that he had been grossly and cruelly cheated.
Chapter Eighteen
The May days were growing longer, and it was well into the evening before the three Weaver men returned home from the Portsoken Ward, tired, hungry and none too pleased to find a stranger at their table. John Weaver demanded roughly, ‘Who’s this?’
When all was explained, however, and he and his two sons had blunted their appetites with generous platefuls of stew, I sensed the same sort of excited curiosity in their questioning and general demeanour as their womenfolk had shown, and which, to me, betokened innocence. They were either accomplished dissemblers, with long practice in the art of deception, or they had nothing to hide. Again, as with their wives, there was no momentary hesitation, no surreptitious glance at another member of the family, no feeling on my part that any one of them had been caught out by my unexpected visit. Once more, I dangled my bait of a black frieze tunic, trimmed with budge, and once more it remained untaken.
After an hour or so, I was ready to swear that no one present had been party to Irwin Peto’s masquerade, but was I being too credulous? Was one of their number, after all, the person whom I sought? Lucy Weaver could be exonerated as the instigator of the plot, for she had not known Clement, but there still remained the other five. If, however, either Dame Alice or Bridget were involved, then their husbands must be also, for Morwenna Peto was certain that the person she had seen with Irwin was a man. But I had been offered no evidence of collusion between any of the couples. That left the possibility that one of the men, or maybe two, or even all three of them together, had hatched this evil plan, yet the same objection remained. So far, there had not been a single indication of conspiracy amongst them; not one sign of guilt, however fleeting, on any of their faces.
‘My brother always was a gullible fool,’ John Weaver declared, embarking on a summary of the Alderman’s character that tallied with those I had heard before. ‘Oh, a shrewd enough businessman, I grant you, and not above a few shady dealings where he thought it worth his while. He’s a true Bristolian in not putting God before profit! But my nephew was his weakness: he loved Clement to distraction and the boy’s death hit him hard. I’m not saying Alfred isn’t fond of Alison, leastwise, he always has been until now, but the girl is more of a de Courcy than her brother ever was. Her mother’s blood runs strongly in her veins and now and then makes her a bit imperious. I used to have the feeling that Alfred wasn’t altogether comfortable in her presence, and he certainly grew to dislike her husband; called him a numskull and a popinjay within our hearing when my wife and I were staying with him in Bristol last summer. Didn’t he, Alice!’
‘Yes, my dear,’ the dame dutifully agreed.
‘So I don’t find it at all surprising,’ her husband continued, ‘that my brother has taken this young man to his heart without making any enquiries as to his bona fides. Sort of damn stupid thing he would do. Sort of damn stupid thing anyone who knows him well would know he’d do, if you take my meaning.’
I glanced sharply at my host, but the face, so reminiscent of the Alderman’s, was as bland and as guileless as before. And the subject of Clement, however intriguing, was temporarily played out. The conversation turned to other matters; what had happened that day in the Portsoken weaving sheds and tenting grounds; how well the woollen cloth was taking a new purple dye that used a greater proportion of crushed blackberries to bilberries than heretofore; and, more generally, the growing sense of unease throughout the capital and its suburbs as increasing numbers of the Duke of Clarence’s men took to the streets bearing arms.
‘There’s going to be trouble,’ Edmund Weaver opined, echoing the carter’s sentiments.
‘The King ought to do something about Prince George,’ his father added tersely.
‘It would upset Prince Richard,’ Dame Alice objected. ‘You know how fond they say he is of both his brothers.’
‘He’s a good, loyal lad,’ her husband concurred, ‘but even he won’t be able to keep the Queen’s family from Clarence’s throat for ever. If he’s any sense, he’ll stay on his own estates, up there in the north, and let the rest of ’em fight it out without him.’
There was no way in which I could prolong my stay, and reluctantly I rose from my seat. As I did so, the bells began to ring for curfew. The city gates would now be shut against me, and I must find lodgings for the night outside the walls. To my surprise, the same thought seemed to have struck John Weaver, for he said, ‘You’d better stay here, Chapman, if you don’t mind a bed on the kitchen floor.’
‘Th-thank you, sir,’ I stuttered, and glanced towards Dame Alice for confirmation.
But whatever her husband’s wishes, they were hers also, and she acquiesced willingly, promising to find blankets and a pillow after the dirty pans and dishes had been cleared away. In both these chores she and the maid were assisted by her daughters-in-law, while their husbands remained drinking ale and chatting in the parlour. I tried to make my presence as unobtrusive as possible, but occasionally they remembered that I was there and revived the subject of ‘Clement’ and his reappearance. For the most part, however, they seemed to have lost interest in the matter.