Timothy frowned. âBut the man you followed to the Breton ship had, according to you, been prowling around the living quarters above the goldsmith's shop and, again according to you, let himself out with a key. You don't have keys to other people's property unless they've been given to you.'
âOr stolen. Or given to you by some other person than the one concerned. You'll have to tread warily, Timothy. Without positive proof, you can't go accusing a wealthy Bristol citizen, especially not one who is a friend of the mayor and sheriff, of treasonable activities. King Richard won't thank you for alienating a city as rich as this one, whose wealth he may have need of one day. Take it from me, insult a Bristolian and you insult the whole population. You're dealing here with a town that, during the reign of the second Edward, built a wall between itself and the castle and defied authority for three long years until eventually the king had to send an army with siege machines and batter it into submission. The memory of that episode still fills every man, woman and child with pride after more than a hundred and seventy years.'
âWhich just goes to show,' Timothy spat, âwhat a lot of traitorous dogs the inhabitants of this godforsaken city really are. Oh, all right, all right!' He waved a dismissive hand as I would have protested further. âI understand what you're saying and I'll walk carefully. But you must admit the circumstances are suspicious. Then there's this odd business of the treasure at Tintern Abbey. Do you have any idea what it might be?'
âHow can I?' I was suddenly impatient. âI told you, it's never been found. If young Peter Noakes did discover anything, he hid it so effectively that no one can find it. But that begs the question, was there anything more than the account books and diary to be found in the first place? For fourteen years no one ever considered that there might be, and then . . .'
âAnd then?' Timothy prompted.
âAnd then . . . Oh, I don't know!' I exclaimed, tired and irritated. The smoke from the fire was making my head ache, I wanted my supper and all at once I was sick of the subject, sick of going round in circles, every now and then catching, or so it seemed to me, a little gleam of light, only to lose it again. Who were those men who had arrived at Tintern Abbey all those long years ago whose crime, whatever it was, had so revolted the monks that they had begged the abbot not to give them shelter? And why had the abbot chosen to do so in spite of all their pleadings? Had the criminals brought treasure with them which he had agreed to keep concealed; treasure so valuable that he had had a special hiding place made for it in his own lodgings? And what was the connection between Walter Gurney and Sir Lionel Despenser? Because it seemed to me that this notion of there being more to the Tintern treasure than simply the original documents had arisen only after Walter had become the knight's head groom.
Or was that, too, just my imagination?
âRoger! Are you all right?'
Timothy's concerned voice brought me back abruptly from where I had been floating somewhere near the ceiling, and I realized that in another moment or two I would have lost consciousness. I felt deeply ashamed of such weakness, my only excuse being that it had been a stressful year one way and another, and that I had suffered an illness during the course of the summer which had left me prey to an exhaustion which occasionally threatened to overcome me.
Fortunately, at that moment, Adela called us out to supper.
A further discussion after the meal â more fish as it was Friday â decided nothing but that Timothy would return to London the following day, after visiting the mayor and sheriff, leaving me, as he put it, to âpoke and pry around' in the hope that I might stumble upon some answer to the riddle of what, if anything, was going on in Bristol.
âThere's no point in my staying,' he said, ânow that my identity has been revealed. If a plot is being hatched to succour Henry Tudor, then the conspirators won't make a move while they are aware of my presence in the city.'
âWhat will you tell the king?'
He grinned and slapped me on the back. âThat the investigation is in the capable hands of his loyal subject, Roger Chapman. He will be more than satisfied.'
I groaned. Here I was, mixed up in Richard's affairs yet again, and how it had come about I had no very clear idea. Our lives seemed destined to intertwine. The only bright spot in a day which seemed to have flashed past in a series of not altogether pleasant surprises was that while Timothy and I had been talking John Carpenter had arrived to mend the damaged shutter, so I was spared another uncomfortable night sleeping â or rather not sleeping â in the kitchen.
But if I had expected a well-earned rest, I was destined to disappointment. My sleep was troubled by dreams. In one, Timothy and I were building a wall between ourselves and the goldsmith's house in St Peter's Street when Oliver Tockney arrived to say that the king was coming and asking what I had done with his pack as he daren't go home without it. âIt's in Gloucester Abbey,' I said, and the next minute I was standing looking down at Robert of Normandy's effigy in the choir. A second later, I was tapped on the shoulder by Jane Spicer, holding Juliette's baby in her arms and saying, âThat's the wrong tomb. It's the other one.'
And then I woke up.
It was Adela who was tapping my shoulder. âWake up, Roger! You've been tossing and turning all night. I've hardly had a wink of sleep and now it's high time we were stirring.'
She sounded aggrieved, looking as little refreshed as I felt myself. And to make matters worse, I could hear rain pattering at the shutters and a rising wind moaning around the housetops. Moreover, I knew that today I must get out with my pack or money would be in short supply, a circumstance for which I should quite rightly get the blame. As I dragged on my clothes preparatory to staggering downstairs and braving the icy water of the pump, I roundly cursed Timothy Plummer for leaving me with the responsibility of discovering what â if anything at all â was going on in Bristol that was a threat to King Richard's peace.
Breakfast was a quiet meal, even the children appearing somewhat subdued. The next day being Sunday, Adela announced that she would hear the passages of scripture that they should have learned by heart as soon as she had washed the dishes. This was greeted with a general moan which evoked my sympathy. I had endeavoured to teach them a little Latin from my own scanty knowledge, but it was not enough. They learned by rote, reproducing the sounds without any clear idea of what they were saying. Occasionally, in my more heretical moments, I wondered if anyone would ever continue Wycliffe's work and eventually translate Holy Writ into English. It was not, naturally, a thought that I expressed out loud.
I was struggling to make sense of my dream. The building of the wall had undoubtedly been prompted by the episode in Bristol's past that I had told to Timothy the previous afternoon, and that had led on to Edward II and his tomb in Gloucester Abbey. No great mystery there then! And yet I couldn't rid myself of the notion that the dream had been of more significance than that. It had been trying to tell me something, but I was too stupid to see what it was. There was another thing, too, niggling away at the back of my mind; something Adam had said. But what? And I also kept seeing in my mind's eye the contents of my pack strewn across the kitchen floor. Why, I had no idea. I was tired. I was feeling overwhelmed with responsibilities and people. I needed, as was so often the case with me, to be by myself.
What better excuse then than to get out on the open road, away from my nearest and dearest, for the most cogent of all reasons, to make some money? Breakfast over, I rose briskly to my feet and announced my intention.
Adela expressed her approval, but frowned when I said that I might be away for a night, or even two.
âTomorrow's Sunday. Wherever you are, don't omit to go to church if at all possible.' I gave my promise. âAnd take Hercules with you,' she added.
The dog looked up from the bone he was gnawing and gave me a leery stare. He could hear the rain and wind as well as I could and was obviously not eager for a closer acquaintance with either.
I shook my head. âNot this time.' I could see that Adela was about to argue the point when I was struck with inspiration. âWith all these robberies going on, you'll need him to guard you.'
âHe can sleep on my bed and then I'll feel safe,' Elizabeth announced, a statement at once hotly contested by Nicholas and Adam, who both maintained they had a superior claim to Hercules's protection.
I left them wrangling and went upstairs to put a clean shirt in my satchel, wrap myself in my thickest cloak and hood and then return to the kitchen to pick up my pack and cudgel.
âWhere will you go?' my wife asked as she kissed me goodbye.
âI thought I might walk as far as Keynsham again.' It hadn't been my intention, but the words just seemed to form themselves naturally in my head.
âDon't forget to bring us back presents,' my daughter reminded me, breaking off in mid-argument to slide from her stool and put up her mouth for a kiss.
I stroked her soft cheek. âBe a good girl and help your mother while I'm away.'
A slightly mutinous set to her lips made my heart sink and I said sharply, âNow, Bess!'
âLet things be, sweetheart,' Adela whispered, drawing me towards the door. âThere's nothing to worry about,' she urged when we were out of earshot. âShe's at a difficult age.'
Gloomily, I agreed. But sometimes it seemed to me that females were always at a difficult age however old they might be. I thought for a moment that it was on the tip of Adela's tongue to demand a definite day for my return, but she refrained. She knew only too well the wanderlust that gripped me every now and again.
I hugged her and stepped out into the storm buffeting its way down Small Street. I had intended to continue straight on to the Redcliffe Gate, but at the junction of Broad Street and High Street I hesitated, then walked a little way along Wine Street to Master Callowhill's house.
T
he servant who answered my knock, a stout body with a gimlet eye, took one look at me and my pack, said sharply, âNothing today, my man!' and made to close the door.
I stuck my foot in the narrowing gap and asked to see Master Callowhill.
âBe off with you!' she retorted angrily. âNeither the master nor the mistress deals with the likes of you.'
âJust tell Master Callowhill that Roger Chapman would like a word with him,' I snapped.
I had no great hope that this information would carry any weight and was preparing myself for battle when, to my astonishment, she immediately stepped back and held the door wide.
âOh, him!' she grunted, beckoning me in. âWait here. I'll fetch the master.'
Nothing could have shown me more plainly that the reputation I was gaining throughout the city was no figment of my imagination. The perception of me as someone who was in Richard's pay, first when he was Duke of Gloucester and now that he was king, was growing. My prolonged absences, both last year and this, the rumours that I had been engaged on secret work for him, had confirmed a steadily increasing belief, no doubt fostered by Margaret Walker and her precious friends, that I was someone to be reckoned with, if not actually feared. It accounted for a certain change in attitude amongst my friends, some of whom had definitely become more reserved in their dealings with me, whilst others, mainly the ones I liked least, were more ingratiating.
I was not kept waiting many moments. Master Callowhill emerged from one of the doors on the right-hand side of the hall, the white cloth tied around his neck indicating that he was still at breakfast.
âMaster Chapman!' His tone was effusive. âCome in! Come in! You're abroad early. We're still eating I'm afraid. But come and share a pot of ale with us.' He laid a broad arm across my shoulders, practically propelling me into the dining parlour where his wife and children were seated around a laden table, and refusing to take no for an answer.
I felt uncomfortable and stupid in my old clothes and looking, I was sure, like a drowned rat. But no one seemed to notice anything amiss, Mistress Callowhill giving me a courteous greeting, the daughter of the house rising from her stool to bob me a curtsey, the elder of the two boys hurrying forward to relieve me of my pack and cudgel and the younger one offering me his seat.
âNow,' Henry Callowhill said as soon as a maid servant had appeared with a clean beaker for me and he had filled it from the pitcher in the middle of the table, âlet me guess why you're here. Rumour has it that this gang of robbers also attacked your house the night before last. You wish to know, as I do â as we all do â what measures the City Fathers are taking.'
Mistress Callowhill gave a visible shudder. âIt's dreadful! Dreadful! So many houses broken into in one night! Ours! Yours! Lawyer Heathersett's! Master Foliot's! And now we hear Alderman Roper suffered a similar fate yesterday evening.'
I gave a startled glance in the wine merchant's direction.
My host nodded. âOur servant, Molly â the one who opened the door to you â has a sister who works for the alderman and who was round here at first light this morning to tell Molly the news. It seems that not only did these villains search as much of the house as they could without waking the sleeping household, but they went so far as to disturb the body of poor young Peter Noakes which was lying in its coffin. In case, one can only suppose, there was anything of value hidden underneath it to be buried with him. You may not have heard, Master Chapman â'
âYes,' I interposed. âYes, I had been told by Mistress Ursula that the alderman had returned from Tintern with his nephew's body the day before yesterday.' I put down my beaker and, leaning forward for greater emphasis, asked, âMaster Callowhill, what was stolen from this house?'