Geoffrey thought this was nothing to be proud of, given the fact that Shrewsbury was not noted for his chivalry or his attention to the other knightly arts. Uncharitably, Geoffrey wondered how much Olivier’s knighthood had cost him, for he was certain that the chicken-hearted man whom he had encountered outside could never have lasted long in any serious battle.
As if sensing his reservations, Olivier set out to prove him wrong, reciting a list of his military successes. Geoffrey listened with growing astonishment, until Olivier mentioned his leading role in the Battle of Civitate. Geoffrey was no military historian, but he knew about the battle in which Tancred’s ancestors had captured Pope Leo IX, and he also knew it had taken place almost fifty years before. If Olivier had even been born then, he would have been little more than a babe in arms.
“I see,” said Geoffrey, somewhat at a loss for words after Olivier had described in detail the way in which he had pitted his few loyal troops against the superior numbers of the enemy. Olivier’s eyes gleamed with fervour, and Geoffrey wondered whether he might have misheard. “The Battle of Civitate, you say?” he asked, to be certain.
“The very same,” said Olivier proudly. “It was I who captured that crafty old Pope and flung him into my deepest dungeon. I kept him there for years.”
“Really?” queried Geoffrey lightly. He wondered whether Olivier thought he was a half-wit to be mislead by impossible stories, or whether the small knight was trying to test his intelligence in some bizarre manner. “But I understood that Pope Leo was released as soon as he had renounced his holy war against the de Hautevilles.”
Olivier shot him an unpleasant look at this contradiction. “Quite so. But he was in my dungeon first. And of course, I was at the Battle of Elgin, when King Duncan was slain …”
Since that battle occurred sixty years before, Geoffrey began to doubt whether Olivier was in complete control of his faculties.
“I could teach you Crusaders a thing or two. And then there was the battle of—”
“You could talk about your victories all night, Sir Olivier,” said Bertrada smoothly. “But you should save something with which to entertain Geoffrey tomorrow.” She turned to Geoffrey. “Now, you say you remember Henry, but this is his wife Hedwise, whom you have never met.”
The golden-haired Hedwise stepped forward, smiling with the face of an angel, although her eyes held an unmistakable glint of something far from seraphic. “Henry has told me a lot about you.”
Geoffrey was sure he had. He bowed politely over her proffered hand, but was discomfited when she clutched his fingers and refused to let go. On the opposite side of the room, Henry rose to his feet at the ambiguous gesture, and Geoffrey was uncertain whether to snatch his hand away, or to leave it where it was. For once, the dog proved it could be of occasional value, and came to his rescue by sniffing around her gown and then beginning to raise its back leg. Hastily, Hedwise abandoned Geoffrey and moved away.
“That is an extraordinary animal,” observed the bitten man in some admiration. “Although you have all but ruined it. Have you not trained it at all?”
“And this is Stephen, your middle brother,” said Bertrada flatly, indicating him with a dismissive flap of her hand. “As you may have guessed, his main interest in life is dogs.”
It was clear to Geoffrey that Bertrada’s introduction was intended to be offensive to Stephen, although Stephen did not seem to resent it. He gave Geoffrey a conspiratorial grin, and slapped him on the shoulder in a friendly fashion. He did not look in the least bit like the gangling eighteen-year-old Geoffrey remembered. He was tall, although he lacked the bulk of Henry and Walter, and his reddish hair was cut very short under his cap, so that he looked like the soldiers who had been shorn after an outbreak of ringworm at the Citadel in Jerusalem. And, since Henry and Bertrada had wives, Geoffrey assumed it must have been Stephen’s spouse who had died the previous year, and whose name the Mappestone scribe had not bothered to mention in the letter he had sent to the Holy Land.
Stephen knelt, and earned the immediate affection of the dog by handing it something brown and nasty looking from his pocket. Seeing the dog’s attentions were occupied, Hedwise stepped forward again, oblivious or uncaring of Henry’s resentful stare.
“Henry and I were married five years ago,” she said. “We already have one heir, and we are hoping another is on the way.” She patted her stomach meaningfully.
Heir to what? thought Geoffrey. As a third son, Henry’s chances of inheriting anything of value from his father were virtually negligible—only slightly better than Geoffrey’s.
“Hedwise. Is that a Saxon name?” he asked, searching about for a subject that would not be contentious.
“Yes, it is!” spat Henry, striding forward and dragging Hedwise away from Geoffrey. “And we are proud of our Saxon heritage!”
“You are a Norman, Henry,” said Walter with a weariness that suggested this was not the first time the subject had been raised. “Being born in England rather than Normandy changes nothing.”
“That is not the opinion of our King!” said Henry, standing with his legs astride and his arms folded. “And if anyone claims different, I will reveal him as a traitor!”
Geoffrey looked from Henry to Walter in bewilderment. So much for his choice of a frictionless subject. Stephen shook his head and sighed, and continued the dangerous business of tickling the dog’s stomach.
“Let us not discuss Saxons and Normans tonight either,” said Bertrada grimly. “Perhaps Geoffrey will tell us about the Crusades …”
“Why should we not discuss my heritage now?” demanded Henry. “Is it just because he has deigned to grace us with his presence, just as Godric is about to die? Well, I for one do not care! None of us asked him here, and none of us want him, despite the way the rest of you are fawning around him.” He swung round to Geoffrey. “This manor is rightfully mine, and I mean to have it—whatever I need to do to get it!”
Geoffrey studied him thoughtfully. And did that include poisoning their father, he wondered.
Geoffrey yawned as he sat in the great wooden chair near the fireplace, and wished he were anywhere but at Goodrich Castle. Next to him, Walter and Stephen perched on stools and stretched their hands towards the flames in the hearth, while Bertrada and Hedwise affected attitudes of boredom.
“I will have Goodrich!” Henry declared as he paced back and forth, fuelling his anger by repeated swigs from the wine that he carried in a stained skin tied to his belt.
“How?” asked Geoffrey, genuinely curious to know why his brother thought he would stand even the remotest chance of inheriting Goodrich over his two older brothers and Joan.
“Walter was born in Normandy, as were Joan and Stephen. I was the first to be born here and, by rights, this English manor is mine! The King himself laid claim to the English throne on exactly the same …” He paused, struggling to find the correct word.
“Pretext?” supplied Geoffrey helpfully.
Henry glared at him. “King Henry is like me in more than name. And he supports my claim to the manor entirely.”
“He does not!” cried Bertrada, outraged. “You have never spoken to the King!”
“Oh, but I have, Bertrada,” said Henry smugly, “and he sees a similarity between his claim to the English throne, and mine to the manor of Goodrich. He says he will back me in any court of law.”
“How could you have met the King?” said Walter derisively. “You would never have been permitted into his presence.”
“Wrong, brother. I met the King at Chepstow around Christmastime, when I took him that letter from our father.”
“Rubbish!” snapped Walter. “The letter might have reached the King—although I sincerely doubt it—but you certainly would not have done.”
“What letter was this?” asked Stephen, looking up from where he was still rubbing the dog’s stomach. “I know of no letter our father sent to the King.”
“Some legal document or other about La
nn Martin,” said Walter dismissively. “Nothing of any importance.”
Geoffrey suspected that the letter had contained something rather more than petty legal niceties regarding Lann Martin. The King had received a letter from Godric around Christmas, containing details of his alleged poisoning, and it seemed as though Henry, quite unwittingly, had delivered it for him.
“Sir Olivier arranged for me to be introduced,” said Henry, turning to the black-haired knight.
“Olivier?” queried Stephen, abandoning the dog and turning on the small knight. “Why should Olivier do such a thing?”
“Well, it was not me, exactly,” said Olivier quickly, shooting Henry a withering glance for his lack of tact. “It was more Joan’s idea.”
Geoffrey wondered what the chances were of slipping unnoticed from the hall, saddling up his horse, and riding as far as possible from Goodrich and its quarrelling inhabitants. He saw exactly what was happening: Walter, Joan, Stephen, and Henry had been arguing about how Godric’s estates should be divided for years, and unfortunately for Geoffrey, he had arrived at a time when these long-standing battles were intensified because of their father’s impending death.
Walter was the eldest, and by rights should inherit the bulk of the manor—and since Godric Mappestone had been adding to it ever since he had been granted his initial, quite sizeable tract of land by the Conqueror, it was an inheritance worth owning. Not only did it include Goodrich Castle but it boasted several profitable bridges and fords over the River Wye, as well as the little castle at Walecford.
Joan seemed to have secured herself a decent dowry—Geoffrey’s manor—in addition to a well-connected husband, but it seemed that Olivier was seeking further to improve his fortunes by adding Goodrich to it.
Geoffrey glanced at Stephen, who seemed uninterested in the conversation, although that was not to say that he was uninterested in Godric’s will. As the second son, Stephen was to inherit a manor and several villages in the Forest of Dene. But there were rigid laws that applied to settlements in forests, and it was not an especially appealing inheritance. It would certainly interfere with the breeding of hounds—apparently Stephen’s passion—because all dogs in the woods were required by law to have three claws removed to ensure they did not chase the King’s deer. Stephen would almost certainly prefer to inherit Goodrich, but his chances of doing so while Walter lived were non-existent.
And Henry—regardless of the trumped-up reasons he might have invented for him to inherit Goodrich—would never do so as long as Walter and Stephen were alive.
“You probably do not fully understand the validity of my Henry’s claim,” said Hedwise sweetly, forcing Geoffrey to pay attention to her. “You have been away for so long that you cannot know what has been happening in our country. Well, you see, King William Rufus was killed in a hunting accident in the New Forest last August, and our new King is Henry, his younger brother.”
“I have been in the Holy Land, not on the moon,” said Geoffrey, smiling at her notion that he could be so uninformed. “I am not so out of touch that I do not know who is the King of England.”
He could have mentioned that he had spoken with the King just two days previously, but the less she and the rest of his family knew about what the King had charged him to do, the better.
“But you do not know the basis on which King Henry holds the throne, rather than giving it to his oldest brother, the Duke of Normandy,” said Henry, with his customary acidity. He kicked at a stool until it was in a position he considered satisfactory, and slumped down on it, scowling into the fire. “You have no idea of what King Henry’s arguments are!”
Geoffrey most certainly did, for it had been a popular topic of conversation across most of Europe, and he had grown bored with being regaled with people’s opinions on the matter. A fourth son seizing a kingdom from under the nose of a first son was not a matter that had passed unnoticed in neighbouring countries.
“William the Conqueror had four sons,” began Hedwise. Geoffrey wondered if she thought he was simple, for who in Christendom did not know of the Conqueror’s rebellious sons? “The eldest was Robert, who was bequeathed the Dukedom of Normandy.”
“I know all this,” said Geoffrey in an attempt to suppress her somewhat patronising history lesson. “I was in the Duke’s service, if you recall.”
“The second son was killed when he fell from his horse in the New Forest many years ago,” she continued, as though he had not spoken. “The third was Rufus, to whom the Conqueror bequeathed the Kingdom of England, and the fourth was Henry, who was left no land, but plenty of silver.”
“Which he increased considerably by his shady business dealings,” added Walter hotly. “The man is a grasping thief as well as a usurper.”
“That is treason!” yelled Henry, stabbing an accusatory finger at his brother. “Henry is our rightful King! He was born in the purple—born when his father was King. Of course he is our rightful monarch!”
“You would think that!” drawled Stephen laconically, “since it fits your own claims so cosily.”
“If Henry was the rightful heir, then why did he make such an undignified dash to Westminster to have himself crowned?” demanded Walter. “Why did he not wait, and secure his older brother’s blessing?” He appealed to Geoffrey. “Henry was crowned King three days after Rufus’s death! Three days! You call such speed the act of a man with a clear conscience? Henry knew the throne rightfully belonged to the Duke of Normandy! Tell him, Geoffrey!”
Geoffrey did not want to be drawn into a debate fraught with such dangers. As a former squire of the Duke of Normandy, he felt a certain allegiance to him, strengthened by the fact that Rufus and the Duke had signed documents, each naming the other heir. The Duke’s claim to the English throne was legal and even moral. But Henry was the man who had been crowned King in the Abbey at Westminster, and he was the man who held the most power in England. Henry also had reliable ways of discovering who was loyal and who was not, apparently, since he already knew about Walter’s lack of allegiance to him. Geoffrey had no intention of taking sides in an issue that could be construed as treasonable.
“The Duke has enough to occupy him without attempting to rule England too,” he said carefully. “Normandy is not peaceful, and there are many rebellions and uprisings that need to be brought under control. It is better that King Henry holds England, and the Duke holds Normandy.”
“But the Duke does not hold Normandy,” pounced Henry immediately. “Luckily for Normandy! When he decided to go gallivanting off on Crusade, he sold Normandy to Rufus. It is now part of King Henry’s realms.”
“The Duke did not sell Normandy to Rufus!” protested Walter indignantly. “He merely pawned it to raise funds for his holy Crusade. And he pawned it only on the assurance that he could reclaim it on his return.”
“But unfortunately, Rufus is no longer here to sell it back to him,” observed Stephen, looking from Walter to Henry, as if he were amused by the dissension between them. “And anyway, the Duke cannot buy it back, because everyone knows he has no money.”
“Nonsense!” spat Walter. “The Duke made a profitable marriage, and has plenty of money to purchase Normandy.”
“He does not,” shouted Henry triumphantly. “He has squandered it all already. The Duke may be a fine warrior, but he is a worthless administrator, and he would make a worse king.”
Voices rose and fell, Henry’s loudest of all. Geoffrey shivered, and stretched his hands out to the fire. He was still damp, and no one had bothered to stoke up the fire since the servants had retired to bed. He was also hungry, but the food laid on the table looked greasy and stale, and anyway, he had not been offered any.
He flexed his aching shoulders, and cursed himself for ever considering something as foolish as returning to Goodrich after so many years. He looked up from the flames to the door at the end of the hall, thinking that if Caerdig had not ambushed him and Aumary had not died, Geoffrey would not have been charged by the Kin
g to investigate the mysterious happenings at Goodrich Castle, and he would have no reason at all not to stride down the room, fling open the door, and escape from his family once and for all. Even the dangers of travelling alone on the forest roads would be nothing compared to the battleground his family had created. He wished fervently that he had never set eyes on Aumary.
He tuned out the quarrelling voices, and thought about Enide, imagining how unhappy she must have been, trapped among their schismatic siblings. No wonder she had taken a lover! Had she seen Caerdig as a way to leave Goodrich, aware that her days there were numbered when someone had begun to poison her? Could Geoffrey believe Henry’s claim that the poachers had confessed to her murder, or was there truth in Walter’s belief that Caerdig may have hired them? Or had Henry hanged two innocent men for some sinister reason of his own?
Geoffrey stared into the embers of the dying fire, and let the sounds of dissent wash over him. He closed his eyes, and tried to imagine what Enide might have looked like. But he was tired, and almost immediately began to doze. He awoke with a start when he became aware that the hall was silent, and that everyone was looking at him. Since he had not been listening to them, he did not have the faintest idea what he was supposed to say. He smiled apologetically, and took a deep breath to try to make himself more alert.
“See?” said Henry, favouring his younger brother with a look of pure loathing. “He does not even do us the courtesy of paying attention to what we say!”
“No matter,” said Olivier, coming to sit on a stool near Geoffrey, and slapping the younger knight’s knee in a nervous attempt at camaraderie. “I merely asked whether you had managed to do much looting while you were in the Holy Land.”
“We heard there was looting aplenty to be had once Jerusalem fell,” said Walter eagerly, his argument with Henry forgotten. “And we heard that the knights had the pick of it.”
A Head for Poisoning Page 11