Roland was arguing good-naturedly with William’s wife, Lady Philippa – one of the few people who could contradict him and get away with it. They were talking about the castle. “I don’t think it’s changed for a hundred years,” Philippa said.
“That’s because it’s such a good design,” Roland said, speaking out of the left side of his mouth. “The enemy expends most of his strength getting into the lower compound, then he faces a whole new battle to reach the keep.”
“Exactly!” said Philippa. “It was built for defence, not comfort. But when was the last time a castle in this part of England came under attack? Not in my lifetime.”
“Nor in mine.” He grinned with the mobile half of his face. “Probably because our defences are so strong.”
“There was a bishop who scattered acorns on the road wherever he travelled, to protect him from lions,” Philippe said. “When they told him there were no lions in all England, he said: ‘It’s more effective than I thought.’ ”
Roland laughed.
Philippa added: “Most noble families nowadays live in more comfortable homes.”
Ralph did not care for luxury, but he cared for Philippa. He gazed at her voluptuous figure as she talked, unaware of him. He imagined her lying beneath him, twisting her naked body, crying out in pleasure, or pain, or both. If he were a knight he could have a woman like that.
“You should knock down this old keep and build a modern house,” she was saying to her father-in-law. “One with big windows and lots of fireplaces. You could have the hall at ground level, with the family apartments at one end, so that we could all have somewhere private to sleep when we come to visit you; and the kitchens at the other end, so that the food is still hot when it reaches the table.”
Suddenly Ralph realized he could make a contribution to this conversation. “I know who could design such a house for you,” he said.
They turned to him in surprise. What would a squire know of house design? “Who?” said Philippa.
“My brother, Merthin.”
She looked thoughtful. “The funny-faced boy who tells me to buy green silk to match my eyes?”
“He meant no disrespect.”
“I’m not sure what he meant. Is he a builder?”
“He’s the best,” Ralph said proudly. “He devised the new ferry at Kingsbridge, then he figured out how to repair the roof of St Mark’s when no one else could, and now he’s been commissioned to build the most beautiful bridge in England.”
“Somehow I’m not surprised,” she said.
“What bridge?” said Roland.
“The new one at Kingsbridge. It will have pointed arches, like a church, and be wide enough for two carts!”
“I’ve heard nothing of this,” Roland said.
Ralph realized the earl was displeased. What had annoyed him? “The bridge must be rebuilt, mustn’t it?” Ralph said.
“I’m not so sure,” Roland replied. “Nowadays there’s hardly enough business for two markets as close together as Kingsbridge and Shiring. But, if we must accept the Kingsbridge market, that doesn’t mean we have to countenance a blatant attempt by the priory to steal customers from Shiring.” Bishop Richard had come in, and now Roland rounded on him. “You didn’t tell me about the new bridge at Kingsbridge.”
“Because I don’t know about it,” Richard answered.
“You ought to, you’re the bishop.”
Richard flushed at the reproof. “The bishop of Kingsbridge has lived in or near Shiring ever since the civil war between King Stephen and the Empress Maud, two centuries ago. The monks prefer it that way, and so do most bishops.”
“That doesn’t prevent you keeping your ear to the ground. You should have some idea of what’s happening there.”
“Since I don’t, perhaps you’d be kind enough to tell me what you’ve learned.”
That kind of cool insolence passed over Roland’s head. “It’s going to be wide enough for two carts. It will take business away from my market at Shiring.”
“There’s nothing I can do about it.”
“Why not? You’re the abbot, ex officio. The monks are supposed to do what you say.”
“They don’t, though.”
“Perhaps they will if we take away their builder. Ralph, can you persuade your brother to give up the project?”
“I can try.”
“Offer him a better prospect. Tell him I want him to build a new palace for me here at Earlscastle.”
Ralph was excited to get a special commission from the earl, but he was daunted too. He had never been able to talk Merthin into anything – it was always the other way around. “All right,” he said.
“Will they be able to go ahead without him?”
“He got the job because no one else in Kingsbridge knew how to build under water.”
Richard said: “He’s not the only man in England who can design a bridge, obviously.”
William said: “Still, taking away their builder would surely delay them. They probably couldn’t start for another year.”
“Then it’s worth doing,” Roland said decisively. A look of hatred came over the animated half of his face, and he added: “That arrogant prior has to be put in his place.”
Things had changed in the life of Gerald and Maud, Ralph discovered. His mother wore a new green dress to church, and his father had leather shoes. Back at home there was a goose stuffed with apples roasting over the fire, filling the little house with a mouth-watering smell, and a loaf of wheat bread, the most expensive kind, standing on the table.
The money came from Merthin, Ralph soon learned. “He gets paid four pence a day every day he works on St Mark’s,” Maud said proudly. “And he’s building a new house for Dick Brewer. That’s as well as getting ready to build the new bridge.”
Merthin received a lower wage for working on the bridge, he explained while his father carved the goose, because he had been given Leper Island in part payment. The last remaining leper, old and bedridden, had been moved to a small house in the monks’ orchard on the far side of the river.
Ralph found that his mother’s evident happiness left a sour taste in his mouth. He had believed, since he was a boy, that the destiny of the family lay in his hands. He had been sent away, at the age of fourteen, to join the household of the earl of Shiring, and he had known even then that it was up to him to wipe out his father’s humiliation by becoming a knight, perhaps a baron, even an earl. Merthin, by contrast, had been apprenticed to a carpenter, and set on a road that could only lead farther down the social hill. Builders were never made knights.
It was some consolation that their father was unimpressed by Merthin’s success. He showed signs of impatience when Maud talked about building projects. “My elder son seems to have inherited the blood of Jack Builder, my only low-born ancestor,” he said, and his tone was amazed rather than proud. “But, Ralph, tell us how you’re getting on at the court of Earl Roland.”
Unfortunately, Ralph had so far mysteriously failed to rise in the nobility, whereas Merthin was buying his parents new clothes and expensive dinners. Ralph knew he should just be grateful that one of them had won success, and that even if his parents remained humble they could at least be comfortable. But, though his mind told him to rejoice, his heart seethed with resentment.
And now he had to persuade his brother to give up the bridge. The trouble with Merthin was that he would never see anything simply. He was not like the knights and squires with whom Ralph had spent the last seven years. They were fighting men. In their world loyalties were clear, bravery was the virtue, and the issue was life or death. There was never much need for deep thought. But Menhin thought about everything. He could not play a game of chequers without suggesting a change in the rules.