The King's Spy (Thomas Hill Trilogy 1)

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The King's Spy (Thomas Hill Trilogy 1) Page 18

by Swanston, Andrew


  Thomas stared across the table at the black eyes, and saw the evil in them. ‘Thomas, this is foolishness.’ Again Rush’s voice had changed. ‘If you tell me everything, I can help you. I have influence with the king. If you know why Master Fletcher was killed, I urge you to tell me. Otherwise …’

  Thomas rose and went to the door. Rush leapt off the chair and exploded in fury.

  ‘You stupid little man. Tell me what you know, and you may live. Stay silent and you will die. You have my word on it.’

  Thomas ignored him, and rattled the door. It was opened by the gaoler.

  ‘Take him up,’ yelled Rush, ‘and make him suffer. I want the truth out of him.’

  Hands still tied and neck in the iron ring, Thomas was dragged up the steps to the cell. The gaoler locked him back in his place, untied his hands and left without a word.

  Thomas tried again to concentrate on the wall. He could not do it. His mind was not working. He needed food and water. Without them, the vague idea would stay vague.

  ‘On yer feet, ’ill,’ ordered the gaoler the next morning. ‘You’re a popular little bugger. You’ve got another visitor.’ After the same procedure with the chain, Thomas was led roughly through the door. He could barely stand and the light outside the cell hurt his eyes. He stumbled down the steps to the guardroom, expecting to see Rush. A figure was standing by the gaoler’s table. He squinted at it. It was Jane.

  ‘Bring two chairs, man, and be quick about it,’ she snapped at the gaoler. ‘You’ve been well enough paid.’ He lumbered off to find chairs. Jane came to Thomas and held him by the shoulders. ‘Thomas, I weep to see you like this. Have you been harmed?’ Thomas shook his head. The gaoler brought the chairs. ‘I wish to speak privately to Master Hill,’ Jane told him. ‘Return in half an hour.’ As soon as the gaoler had disappeared up the steps, Jane produced from under her shawl a bottle, half a chicken and a small loaf. ‘I thought you might need these.’ Thomas smiled as she untied his hands. ‘Eat first, then we’ll talk.’ She watched silently as he drankale from the bottle and ate a chicken leg.

  ‘Jane …’ began Thomas, when he had finished.

  She put a finger to his lips. ‘Let me speak first, please.’ He nodded. ‘There are things you should know. After Edward was killed at Edgehill, I was lonely and vulnerable. My family had been friends with the Faynes for years, and I had known Francis since we were children. At first, I thought he cared. He can be charming if he wants to be, and he’s always attracted the ladies. He comforted me, but I broke it off as soon as I realized his true character – jealous, vindictive, violent. He was furious. He wasn’t used to being rejected. It was an unpleasant time – threatening letters, unwelcome meetings in the street, insults. He made up stories about me, malicious and untrue. That’s what he’s like. I thought it was over when he left with his regiment. Then I came to Oxford with the queen and found he was here. When I refused him, the insults started up again.’ Jane’s words had come tumbling out, as if they could wait not a second longer to be spoken. Now she stared into Thomas’s eyes. ‘I’m sorry I lost my temper in your room. I have missed you.’

  ‘And I you,’ he croaked. ‘I’m sorry you see me like this. I do not recommend gaol for an invigorating change of scene.’

  Jane smiled. ‘Your old wit, Thomas. That’s good, and much needed. This is a fearsome place. Until we have you released, you will need all your courage and humour.’

  ‘Jane, I did see you walking with Fayne.’

  ‘I know. I decided to try to placate him. I reminded him that our families were close, and said that I hoped we could be friends. He wanted to sleep with me. When I refused, he accused me of being a bookseller’s whore, and hit me. I left him in the street, ranting and raging like a lunatic.’ She smiled. ‘I heard that you exacted retribution for me. I must say I was surprised, Thomas. You had given no hint of your fighting skills.’

  ‘I am not proud of what I did. I abhor violence. I can scarcely believe what I saw at Newbury.’

  ‘We hear that six thousand men died there. The king grieves greatly for the loss of his friends, especially Lord Falkland. His mood is sombre.’

  ‘It was pointless, Jane. Thousands more widows and orphans, and for nothing.’

  ‘I know. For nothing. As Edward’s death was for nothing.’ She paused. ‘Thomas, Simon has told me about Erasmus Pole, about Abraham Fletcher’s murder, about your room being searched and about your lost key. You are in grave danger.’

  ‘Rush came here yesterday, hoping to find out what I know. I am sure it was he who had me sent here. He offered help and he made threats. Why would he do that unless he is serving another master?’ Thomas paused. ‘And he has tried to divert attention from himself by warning me about you.’ The colour drained from Jane’s face. Thomas looked down at his feet. ‘Tell me you had no part in this, Jane, please.’ It was no more than a whisper.

  ‘Thomas,’ she replied softly, ‘I swear that I had no part in the murder of Abraham Fletcher. I heard of it only from Simon.’

  Thomas nodded. ‘Thank God. In this hellhole, the mind plays tricks. We know Rush had an accomplice who searched my room. He could not have done it himself. I believe it was Fayne.’

  Jane shut her eyes and breathed deeply. Then she took his hands in hers. ‘Rush is a monster. But he has the ear of the king, and it would be foolish to move against him without proof. Have you any proof?’

  ‘No. We have evidence of opportunity and we have our instincts, but we do not have proof. Not yet.’

  ‘Not yet?’

  ‘Jane, has Simon told you about the message?’

  ‘Not a particular message. I know about your work because you told me. That’s all.’

  ‘Then, for your own safety, I shall not tell you either. However, there is a slight chance that, if I can escape from here, I will be able to furnish proof.’

  ‘Thomas, the coroner’s jury will assemble in three days. In the absence of the king, Simon is trying to persuade the queen to sign an order for your release. The queen is always reluctant to act without the king’s agreement, and would prefer to wait until he is in a more receptive mood. That might be too late. If the coroner’s jury send you for trial at the Assizes, even the king would hesitate to intervene.’

  Jane reached for Thomas’s hands. They were trembling. ‘Then we must hope for the queen’s assistance,’ he whispered. ‘Rush is a vile murderer, a torturer and a traitor. He must be exposed.’ His voice was trembling too.

  The half-hour was almost up. Jane retied Thomas’s hands. As they heard the gaoler’s footsteps on the stones, she leaned forward and brushed her lips against his. ‘Simon will bring news as soon as there is any. Be brave. I shall be thinking of you.’

  ‘And I you, Jane. Thank you for coming.’

  Back in the cell, fortified by the food and ale, Thomas tried again to trap the elusive thought that somehow linked the wall and the cipher. He counted the stones again, and pictured the mason. Neither helped. He stared at the wall, willing it to speak to him. For a long time, it remained silent. Then, without warning, it spoke.

  The patterns made by the rows of stones jumped out of the wall. He could see them clearly. There were four distinct vertical columns of stones, each one with a pattern of its own. Half-stones and whole stones in the first column, and whole stones attached to one or the other in the second column. He saw four columns making the whole. All day, he studied the rows of bricks and thought about how he would use the insight he had at last captured to break the cipher. The Vigenère square could be broken. He was sure of it.

  The cramping pains began that night. They started in his stomach and spread rapidly to his chest and legs. His joints ached and his head was on fire. He sat shivering and trembling until morning, unable to prevent his stomach convulsing and his bowels voiding themselves, until, too weak to sit any longer, he slid down the wall and lay on his side, his head resting on his dead neigh-bour and his legs pushed up into his stomach by the man in front
.

  At first he was conscious. He saw the gaoler come in and the big bearded man seizing a loaf. He heard the whimpering of men dying and in pain. And, as clearly as if he were looking into a mirror, he saw himself. His mind, cruelly separated from his body, hovered in the foul air of that hellish place and watched death take him.

  Later, slipping in and out of consciousness, he lacked the strength to move and knew that the will to survive was draining out of him. Courage and humour, Jane had said. Thank God she could not see him like this. When the gaoler next came in with bread, he was kicked in the back, and heard a distant voice say ‘finished’. He knew then that it was over.

  An hour later, he did not hear the commotion outside the cell door, and he did not see the door open and the iron collar removed from his neck. When strong arms lifted him from the floor, he opened his eyes and tried to focus. He vaguely saw a face he recognized and heard a voice he knew, but could not place them. The effort was too much. His eyes closed and he passed out.

  CHAPTER 11

  ON A GLORIOUS June day Margaret and he had taken the girls for a walk in the water meadows outside Stockbridge. They were bright children, especially interested in nature and words. Both were blonde, with their mother’s brown eyes and dimpled chin. They set out a meal under an oak tree near a narrow stream, normally clear and shallow, but on that day running faster and deeper than usual from the recent rains, and brownish from mud that had slipped from the bank. Sometimes they saw trout in the stream, but not that day. It was too muddy. Margaret and he put out a cold chicken, small loaves she had baked herself, cheese, butter, apples stored since the autumn and a dish of early raspberries. There was apple juice for the girls and bottles of sweet elderberry wine for them.

  After they had eaten, Thomas entertained the girls with a game he had invented for them. He spelt out a new word, and they had to find its meaning. They could ask him ten questions and then had to make a guess. That day, the first word had been arboreal. It was a difficult one, they did not guess it, and he had to explain it to them. The afternoon was warm and they dozed under the oak tree. The girls were old enough to play by themselves for a while, and he and Margaret would be woken if they were needed.

  It was cooler when Thomas managed to open his eyes. He could not see the girls, so he called for them. There was no reply. Margaret immediately awoke. They called again and again, and walked up and down the bank of the stream. Surely it was too shallow for either of the girls to have been in danger, even if they had somehow slipped in? They walked back and forth calling the girls’ names. Still there was no reply. Margaret began to panic.

  ‘Thomas, where are they? They wouldn’t run off. Someone must have taken them. Please God, no. Who would have taken them? Thomas, who would have taken them?’

  ‘Hush now, Margaret. They haven’t been taken. They’ve wandered off and will be back soon. We’ll wait here a while.’ But he too was worried. This had never happened before.

  They stood together under the oak tree, taking it in turns to call out, and scanning the meadow and hedgerows for a glimpse of the girls. There was neither sight nor sound of them. Suddenly, a shower of twigs landed on their heads. They looked up expecting to see red squirrels in the tree. There were indeed squirrels – two of them – but they were blonde, not red, with brown eyes, dimpled chins and big grins. Margaret was furious.

  ‘Come down at once, you two. What are you doing up there? We were worried. Didn’t you hear us calling?’

  The girls climbed out of the tree. ‘Of course we heard,’ said Lucy. ‘You were asleep, so we climbed the tree.’

  ‘Yes,’ said Polly, ‘we wanted to be arboreal.’

  Margaret did her best to be cross. ‘Arboreal, indeed. That’s the last time you play your uncle’s games, if they give you ideas like that.’

  He winked at them. ‘I’ll think of a better word next time. Something safer. Terrestrial, perhaps.’

  ‘That’s enough, Thomas. Gather up the things, girls, and we’ll go home.’

  Thomas woke and called for Margaret. His room had been changed. His bed was against the wrong wall, and the window had been covered. Why had she covered his window? He struggled off the bed and stumbled to the window. It was not there. He looked about. Where was the window? He saw a door. It was locked. He rattled the handle and called again for Margaret. There was no answer. He fell to the cold stone floor and passed out.

  When he woke again he was on the bed, a thin blanket over him. He was hot. He threw off the blanket and immediately started shivering. He retrieved the blanket and lay on his side with his eyes open. The shivering stopped, and he was hot again. His mind registered a fever. Images of the castle and the cell came back to him. Gaol fever. Where was he now, and how did he get here? Why was he alone? He reached out a hand to a small table beside the bed and lifted a cup to his mouth. Cold water dribbled between his cracked lips and down his chin. He held on to the cup and managed a few more sips. Then his eyes closed.

  While Thomas slept, Simon de Pointz came quietly into the room, carrying a wooden chair. He felt Thomas’s forehead, wiped it with a damp cloth and sat down on the chair. He smiled and said a short prayer of thanks. Boyish but for his lack of hair, Thomas Hill, at no more than five and a half feet tall, philosopher, cryptographer and pacifist, was not a man to be taken lightly. By the grace of God, he was going to survive.

  Simon was still sitting by his bedside when Thomas awoke again. He handed Thomas the cup of water and helped him to drink. ‘There you are, Thomas,’ he said quietly, ‘and looking a little better. Best stay on the bed, though. I found you on the floor yesterday.’

  Thomas had no recollection of the floor, or of anything much else. ‘Simon? Where am I?’

  ‘You’re in a safe place. A Benedictine abbey near Botley. Another of the few that survived. The abbot is an old friend. The monks know they have a visitor, but none of them knows who you are. They won’t trouble you.’

  ‘How long have I been here?’

  ‘This is your third day. Are you hungry?’

  Thomas realized that he was. ‘Ravenous.’

  ‘Then I’ll fetch something for you. Stay on the bed unless you need the bucket. It’s in the corner. I don’t want to have to scrape layers of shit off you again.’

  Simon was back in a few minutes with soup and bread. With a little help, Thomas managed to swallow some of each, and immediately felt stronger. His arrest and the castle gaol came back to him. ‘When did I last eat?’ he asked.

  ‘I can’t be sure,’ replied Simon, ‘but at least four days ago.’

  ‘What was it? Gaol fever?’

  ‘Probably. We got you out just in time.’

  ‘How?’

  ‘Jane Romilly persuaded the queen to sign a paper ordering your release. It might or might not have been lawful but it impressed the gaoler, and he had little choice but to obey.’

  ‘Is Jane safe?’

  ‘Quite safe. Rush won’t risk the queen’s anger.’

  ‘And Rush?’

  ‘Furious. He’s got half of Oxford looking for you, but he won’t find you. Even the queen doesn’t know where you are.’

  Thomas hoped that Simon was not just saying that for his sake. Rush would indeed be furious that Thomas had been released and was not likely to give up the search easily. ‘And what now?’

  ‘Now you stay here until you’re fully recovered. The message is safely hidden, as are your papers. Tell me when you’re ready to resume work on them.’

  The message. The Vigenère cipher. Abraham. The cell. Stones in the wall. An idea. What was it? Thomas could not remember. It would come to him later. ‘Simon, is there any way I can send a message to my sister? The letter I entrusted to Rush will have got no further than his fire. After he’d read it, of course.’

  Simon looked doubtful. ‘It won’t be easy. Since Newbury, it’s hard to know which side is where. And bands of clubmen are attacking them both. The roads are much more dangerous than when we came h
ere. Still, I’ll try to think of something. Now rest again, Thomas. I’ll come back this afternoon.’

  The pattern of Simon’s visits continued for two days. Morning and afternoon, he came bearing food and news, and to observe the patient’s progress. He brought a copy of a new Oxford newsbook, Mercurius Rusticus. ‘There you are, Thomas,’ he laughed, ‘you’ll enjoy that. Full of careful scholarship and excellent writing.’ Of course, it was nothing of the kind, being little more than satirical attacks on high-minded Puritans and their ill-disciplined soldiers. It could just as well have been written by high-minded Puritans about ill-disciplined Royalists, as most of the London newsbooks were. Verborum bellum. A war of words. John Hampden and ‘King’ Pym were vilified for their treachery, and there was an article on the so-called ‘Rules of War’, an expression that had always struck Thomas as absurd. There were no rules, or, if there were, neither side took any notice of them unless it suited them to do so. A town was sacked and burned. One man killed another. A woman was raped and her child slaughtered. At Bristol, Captain Brooke and his men had acknowledged no rules. War was not a game of tennis. The loser could not protest that the winner had broken a rule, nor did the winner have to play a point again. His opponent was dead. C’était tout.

  And so was dear Abraham. His old tutor and friend, nearly blind, scholarly, gracious – tortured and murdered, and almost certainly by a man whom the king trusted unquestioningly. Rush. A monster capable of inflicting indescribable pain on an old man. And worse, there had been something about that awful scene in Abraham’s chamber that suggested the torturer had enjoyed it. Otherwise why take his eyes? Thomas screwed up his own eyes and tried to make the picture of that room go away. He knew Rush was the murderer. All he lacked was proof.

  He was desperate for news of Margaret and the girls. With Simon’s money, they should want for nothing as long as the farmers and merchants could still bring their wares to market. But he had been away for six weeks. Had the war come to Romsey, had there been fighting in the streets and the fields, or was there still peace? Had there been more unwelcome visits by men of either side? Perhaps Margaret had closed up the shop and gone to stay with her sister-in-law in Winchester. If she had, no letter would reach her. He could only hope Simon would come up with something.

 

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