Krall continued glowering for a second, then stepped back and rolled his shoulders. ‘He betrayed you first, boy. Major Auwerk has the key now?’
‘Yes.’
‘So you went to clean the room. How much work is that, usually?’
‘Not much. Glasses and a bottle or two. The chairs and so on to put back in place. Sweep and dust.’
‘How many?’ The German Crowther spoke was a great deal better than Mrs Westerman’s, though as he spoke Krall could almost smell the dusty air of a university lecture hall.
‘How many what, my lord?’
‘How many glasses?’
‘It changed. Never more than seven. There are only seven glasses in the case.’
‘Today?’
‘None used. All clean.’
Krall heard Mrs Westerman whisper something to Crowther, and he said, ‘Mrs Westerman wishes to know if this decanter and glass were in this temple. And if you include them in your count.’
Wimpf’s fingers were digging into the rug underneath him. ‘The decanter and glass were there — I’ve not seen them before. The seven glasses are nice. Special. Wine goblets. Countess Dieth was sitting in a chair in the centre of the room facing the door. I just came in and she was there. I thought she was sleeping, but then I saw her hand. I was scared, I ran out to Major Auwerk’s room in the barracks and told him. The decanter and glass were on a little table next to her. Just as they are now.’
‘And the picture?’ Krall asked.
‘On the back of the door like here. The chalk was still on the floor. I copied it properly. The Major checked.’
‘So, facing her when the door was shut? I see.’ He rubbed his chin. ‘Right then, Christian, on your feet and straighten yourself out.’
The boy leaned on the bed as he got up and winced. Krall realised he must have thrown him quite hard, and found he did not care. He reached into his pocket. ‘Here is paper and pencil. Draw the room as you saw it. And draw a plan of how to reach it.’ The boy hesitated. ‘Do it, Wimpf, if you want to keep that head on your shoulders.’
‘Young man,’ Crowther said, ‘how much blood was there?’
The boy shook his head. ‘Not a great deal, my lord. A few splashes under her hand. I cleaned it all up.’
They watched him as he drew with shaking fingers. After a few minutes he laid down his pen and Krall examined the sheet — clear enough. ‘Not bad. Stay out of the Major’s way today. I suppose you were asked to keep an eye on me and my English friends? Then as far as he is concerned, that is what you are doing. Avoid him until I get word to you. Now out you go.’
Wimpf paused at the door. ‘Mr District Officer?’
Krall held up his hand. ‘I don’t know, boy, what will happen to you. I can’t see into the future. But don’t despair. I doubt your fate will be any worse than the usual mix.’
They watched him leave.
‘Good God!’ Harriet said when the door had shut. ‘You knew all along, didn’t you, Herr Krall?’
‘As Mr Crowther said, madam, I am not stupid. There was the smear of chalk on his sleeve, and the maid they told me had discovered the body has the wits of a pea-hen. Can’t believe Swann didn’t spot this nonsense.’ He sat down on the bed again, well satisfied. ‘I suspect young Wimpf thought me a bit of a country cousin, as do most of the people at court, so I thought I’d make use of you and all your cleverness. He might have kept lying to me. It worked too.’
‘Who is Major Auwerk?’ Crowther asked.
Harriet was studying the symbol on the door. ‘He accompanied us from the border, Crowther, at the head of that party of Hussars. What his role is in this …’
‘We’ll find out soon enough — he won’t be going anywhere,’ Krall said. ‘Now, I am afraid you had better see the Countess.’
There was light enough now. He blew out his candle.
V.3
Michaels liked the farmland round Oberbach. As the light of the new day found him he was letting his horse amble along the valley with a pipe in his mouth and a sense of cautious approval. The wooden houses he could see from the road were neat, their gardens well-tilled, and the fruit trees that hung over his way were showing the signs of cheerful new growth. Walnut. Apple. Almond. The chimneys of the farms were already pushing woodsmoke into the first sunlight and he thought contentedly of the morning scenes playing inside. The wife at the fireplace, a child at her skirts and her kitchen clean. His own wife would also be up and working at this hour. She was efficient and quick in her movements, sometimes she hummed at her work, and sometimes not. He would walk out round the yard, see to the horses and scan the hedgerow for something pretty to bring back into the kitchen. He had told his son to bring his mother the first primrose he found. He hoped the boy had remembered, trusted he had. He felt it likely they were thinking of him now and felt a solemn happiness.
Michaels entered the town itself from the north, and by the number of travellers he nodded to on the road, suspected he was arriving on a market day. Woman walked along the verges in pairs with baskets over their arms, their aprons washed to a startling, public whiteness. The old town gate under which he rode was hung with baskets of spring flowers and the main street had the look of a place recently scrubbed clean and smiling. The death of the Lady during their carnival had left no visible scar. The old houses in the square looked confident and prosperous. Their half-timbering was outlined in red and green, and the shutters were all folded back. The newly built Town Hall with its wall of tall windows seemed designed to flatter its citizens, not cow them into obedience. It was a proud little place, bustling already, speaking of a group of people who had money enough to satisfy their hungers, then were in the habit of looking about them to see what could be improved.
After two hours of wandering through the marketplace and complimenting the women on their produce and the men on their stock, Michaels thought that if he had ever to leave his own place in Hartswood, he could do a lot worse than taking over the stable where he had left his horse and settling here among these handsome, homely streets and pleasant faces. There had been talk of this last year having been all cruel weather, and the fat on the animals being hard come by, but there were both buyers and sellers enough, it seemed to him, and the local wine was a sweet and delicate thing and had much to say of sunlight and rich soils. He had also realised, with regret, that the trail of Beatrice did not reach here. People stopped in their work and folded their arms to consider, but one after another they shook their heads.
‘We get people passing through often enough,’ one woman selling eggs from a basket over her arm told him. She was red-cheeked and cheerful-looking and wore a shawl round her shoulders Michaels’s own wife would have coveted. ‘But a young girl on her own would have been noticed and looked to.’
‘It would have been two years ago …’
‘It’s not a big town! If she’d stayed here, worked here at all, we’d know her face. A girl with black hair, who liked to wear it loose would be noticed in an hour! Mostly the strangers we see are men travelling about for one reason or another.’
‘She had a fancy to go into service in a great house,’ Michaels said, turning his round hat in his hands.
‘Why come this way then, rather than stay where she was among all the court and their nonsense?’ She spoke almost affectionately, as if the Duke was a child to be indulged with pretty toys, and shifted her basket so her hip could take the weight of it. Michaels only shrugged. She pursed her lips, thinking, then lifted a finger. ‘There are a few places beyond the village of Mittelbach. Estates with fancy houses. You might ask of her along that road. Take the north road back two miles or so, and you’ll see the turn to it heading up the hill, to the west — lies just past old Hahn’s farm. He has five pear trees below his house and coming into flower. You can’t miss the way.’
A man passing in homespun, a pair of rabbits slung over his shoulder, heard her and laughed.
‘What’s the fella ever done to you, to send him to M
ittelbach, Maud?’
‘Keep your nose out of others’ conversations, Georg, or expect to have it snipped off!’ Then she turned back to Michaels with a blush. ‘Though he’s right enough. It’s a mean little place. Their pastor does nothing but drink and their head man’s a devil.’
Georg did not seem to be over-worried about his nose. ‘The blacksmith has an amulet — you know, got the hair in it of that robber who killed three travellers in Gottingen in seventy-nine. Means he can’t be vanquished by any man. He deals out the beatings the headman prescribes. Almost killed a woman there last year.’
‘Did kill her!’ Maud replied. ‘A chill like that would never have carried her off if he hadn’t knocked the health out of her. And she was no adulteress, just had a jealous husband and a friendly disposition. There, you see? We all know each other’s business round here.’
‘Why don’t they complain to the Duke?’ Michaels asked.
‘Not his people. It’s the land of one of the Imperial Knights, surrounded by Maulberg, but not Maulberg, you know? There are a few up that way. A big house, some land, some grand fella who acts like a king and spends all that can be dragged out of the soil on silks to wear in another man’s palace. They don’t care what happens to the people as long as their stewards roll up with a bag of coins once a quarter.’
Michaels thanked her and offered her a coin from his own bag. She laughed at him. ‘No charge for a chat, brother. Keep your money and buy one of May’s cheeses with it; you’ll get nothing worth eating in Mittelbach.’
Harriet was becoming accustomed to spending time with the dead, but that was not the same as being unfeeling in their presence. Countess Dieth was much her own age, and in her interviews with Krall about the death of her friend, she had answered like a woman of passion and intelligence. Harriet remembered her expression when she had understood the effect of the mask — her fear — and suddenly the death of this woman seemed to fall hard on Harriet’s shoulders. What could she — should she — have done yesterday? It seemed to her now that she had spent half the day wandering the palace grounds. She had not pushed.
The doors closed behind them, and Harriet hesitated halfway up the short aisle. It was not a large chapel, but beautiful in its light and proportions even if the floor was messy with dust and wood shavings. Harriet was flanked by carved stalls; she saw the small organ, its pipes freshly gilded, on the south wall, the pulpit to the right, and there the Countess lay, like a sacrifice, on a table covered with white linen set before the altar. There were candles at her head and feet, but the day was bright enough now to make them unnecessary. She was lit by the morning sun coming through the stained glass of the east window. Her plum-coloured dress was patterned with the red, blue and yellow of the Arms of Maulberg. Pushed against the walls were a pair of scaffold frames. Harriet looked up to where the frescos on the ceiling had been abandoned partway through their painting. Christ in the centre, fully coloured and robed. Around Him, any number of angels faded into outlines and bare plaster. Harriet noticed that the colour of Christ’s robe was the same as the Countess’s dress. He had His arms held out wide.
She took another step forward and watched as Crowther opened one of the Countess’s eyes with thumb and forefinger. Krall took a seat in the stalls.
‘Was she suffocated with the earth in her mouth?’ Harriet’s voice sounded hollow, and loud to her in the empty space.
‘Suffocated, I think,’ he answered, without looking up. ‘The earth may have been placed in her mouth after death however. If, when I open the body, I find there is soil in her stomach and throat, then we may conclude …’
‘I understand.’
Crowther moved to the other side of the body and stooped, apparently examining the left wrist. As she watched him, he became suddenly still, frowning, then he let out his breath and turned away. She had never seen him give any sign of distress or discomfort in the company of the dead; his normal attitude was a quiet curiosity.
‘Crowther, what is it?’
He stood aside.
Trying not to think of the living woman, Harriet finally stepped forward and looked carefully at the body. There were lines around the eyes, across the forehead that Harriet recognised from her own mirror. Then she examined the skin around the throat, the uninjured wrist, the nails on that clean right hand. No bruising she could see at all. No nails broken, no sign of restraint. It was just as they had been told of Lady Martesen’s body. She thought of Kupfel’s drug. The soil in the mouth. There was unlikely to be a ready supply of soil in the temple any more than there had been a convenient method of drowning Lady Martesen in the haberdasher’s back room. Whoever had done this had brought his tools with him. So he had planned these embellished killings; he did not slice the wrist, then change his mind.
She stepped round the Countess’s head to her left side, feeling like a traveller ordered by her guidebook to examine the peculiarities of a certain effigy, and turned her attention to the injured wrist. The deep slash had let the flesh separate to expose the meat and matter below. The hand was blackened with blood. It had run from the wound and across her palm, then travelled along the fingers. Its course was easy to read. The thumb was clean. She spoke as she thought. ‘The blood on the hand suggests the heart was still in motion when the injury occurred, does it not? This is a flow, a wound in living flesh.’ She glanced up at him and Crowther nodded. ‘We had thought the lack of blood might mean these wounds to the wrists were made after death, but it cannot be so.’ She remembered what Krall had said about the place where Bertram Raben had died. That there was not enough blood. And no mention of any blood at all at the scene of the death of Herr Fink.
‘That footman talked of blood in the room where she was found. You translated the word he chose as “drops”, if I remember.’ Crowther nodded again. ‘That does not suggest the quantity of blood that would result from this wound. It must have poured out. There should have been pools of it.’ The wound must then have been inflicted, and allowed to give forth a profusion, before the victim’s mouth and nose were sealed and her heart ceased to beat. So where in the name of God was the blood?
It came to her like knowledge remembered, a simple fact she had always known, but had forgotten momentarily. She felt her own blood begin to roar in her ears, and thought of an account Crowther had given her of an execution he had attended in Germany, of people crowding round the trunk of a freshly executed criminal with their cups held high to catch the blood that flowed, outpourings of the final beats of a heart that did not yet know itself dead.
‘Oh God, Crowther. Whoever did this collected their blood.’
Turning away, she walked quickly into the darkest corner of the chapel and put her hand against the wall. For a moment she hoped she might be able to control the clenching in her stomach, but as if it wished to taunt her with a separate will, her mind filled with every incident of blood-letting she had ever seen. With the eyes of a child she saw the door to her father’s room open and the local doctor emerge cradling a bowl of bright red from his regular spring bleeding; she found herself on the red-painted orlop deck of her husband’s ship assisting the ship’s surgeon among the shattered and struggling victims of a surprise attack from privateers; she was watching blood pool on the floor of the Great Chamber at Thornleigh Hall; she was bent over her husband while her skirts soaked in his blood; she was watching some man, a bowl in his hands, patiently collecting the flow from Countess Dieth’s unmoving, pliant fingertips. She struggled for the door, wrenched it open and stepped in to the courtyard, panting hard.
Crowther watched her go, but knowing what was in her mind did not follow her at once.
‘Mrs Westerman is a clever woman,’ Krall said softly.
‘Yes, she is. And it is both her gift and her curse that what she understands, she must also feel,’ Crowther replied. ‘Whatever good we have done in the past, at moments such as this, Mr Krall, I wish to God it were not so.’
V.4
The contrast betwe
en Mittelbach and Oberbach was stark. Turning off the road back to Ulrichsberg seemed to drop Michaels back into another age. One would have thought this country had been crossed by warring troops only months ago rather than twenty years in the past. It seemed a land whose people had been torn from it, and not returned. Though the rising ground to the north of the track showed signs of having been cultivated in the past, the terracing was only visible as ripples in the undergrowth. A few ancient, struggling vines curled up the remains of the poles. Near Oberbach they flourished, here they were broken and wild. The first house he saw was a ghost, the door hanging off and the garden all brambles. It was like the enchanted villages in the stories his mother used to tell him and he approached the huddle of dwellings expecting a witch.
No witch. Instead he saw chained to the flogging post in the mean village square a boy, not more than ten years old. A woman was crouching by his side, weeping and trying to wash the child’s wounds. The punishment was fresh; across the boy’s back Michaels could see the open wounds of whip blows. Six of them, and deep enough to scar. The boy was unconscious, his weight hanging from his wrists. The manacles looked too large for him. He was like a child in his father’s coat.
Michaels dismounted and led his horse to one of the buildings. There were two men standing outside with pint pots in their hands. They were watching the woman trying to support the child’s weight so the manacles would cut into her son no more, their faces blank.
‘What’s the offence?’ Michaels said quietly.
The man nearest turned and looked him up and down. He was shorter than Michaels by a head and his shape reminded Michaels of the snowmen his children had made in the churchyard that winter. They had lined the path to the church door, annoying the vicar and amusing the gentry. He had beaten them for the impertinence, but not hard. The snowman removed his pipe from his mouth and spat on the ground.
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