‘Well, sir,’ said Nixon, seeming surprised. ‘It’s going to rain soon; can ye not feel it hanging in the air?’
Now he mentioned it, the air was sultry and heavy and the warmth was oppressive. Carey had only his shirt on under his padded jack but was still feeling sticky. He sniffed the air. If it rained Wattie Graham’s trail would be a great deal harder to follow back…But then Lady Widdrington might even stay at Thirlwall for an extra day…No, she wouldn’t; he was fooling himself.
‘Yonder’s the road to Brampton,’ said Nixon after a long straight canter.
‘I know, Sergeant,’ said Carey. ‘We’re going to Gilsland first.’
‘Why?’
Carey stared at him for a while. Eventually Nixon got the message and coughed.
‘Why, sir?’
‘Because I want to talk to Dodd about something.’
Sergeant Nixon was frowning heavily, but then he shrugged. There was no love lost between him and Dodd, but neither were they enemies and nor were their families at feud.
Even so, Carey nodded at Long George and Bessie’s Andrew. Long George let his horse fall behind until he was at the rear of the men, while Bessie’s Andrew came up to Carey’s left shoulder and looked thoroughly nervous. God help me if Sergeant Nixon gets suspicious, Carey thought, then dismissed the thought from his mind. Sergeant Nixon wouldn’t get suspicious, that was all there was to it.
As Carey’s body swung rhythmically with the horse’s stride, he turned over and over in his mind the various loose combinations of ideas he was trying to form into a sensible plan. Scrope had been willing enough to let him try and deal with Wattie Graham’s raid, but was as hamstrung by lack of men as he was himself. He had barely ten men in the place and all of them were needed. He hadn’t even let Carey send off his clerk, Richard Bell, with a message to Forster because, as he pointed out, the Bells were yet another surname at feud with the Grahams and he didn’t want to lose the one man in the West March who had a thorough grasp of March Law. He had promised to send for a few of the gentlemen to the south of Carlisle, but had opined that they were unlikely to be reliable in a fight against the Grahams.
‘Most of ‘em pay blackrent to Richard Graham of Brackenhill,’ Scrope had said, looking tired. ‘None of them want any trouble with that family.’ Brackenhill was the acknowledged Graham headman and wealthy enough to arm most of his own men with guns.
What I need in this Godforsaken country is at least a hundred men I can trust and some decent ordnance, Carey thought bitterly. And pigs will fly before the Queen gives me the money to find them.
Monday 3rd July 1592, evening
Sergeant Henry Dodd nodded at his brother Red Sandy, and the laden cart creaked off towards their main hay barn. The two small English Armstrongs, cousins of Janet, who had been helping him load, sat quietly together on top. One of the sandy heads was nodding.
‘Lizzy,’ called Dodd, and a freckled face under a mucky white cap peeked over. ‘Stop your brother from sleeping or he’ll fall off.’
‘Ay, Mr Dodd,’ she said, hiding a yawn. ‘Will ye be wanting us back again?’
He did really, but hadn’t the heart. ‘No, sweeting, get to your bed.’
Red Sandy touched up the oxen and the cart creaked away, a plaintive yell floating from the top as Lizzy obediently pinched her brother to wake him up.
The sun was down and there was another field to get in, but after that, it was done. Janet was coming towards him across the stubbly meadow with bits of hay stuck to her cap and a large earthenware jug on her hip. She smiled at him, and the back of his throat, which felt as if it had glazed over with the haydust stuck to it, opened a little involuntarily in anticipation. He put his hands behind the collar of his working shirt and eased the hemp cloth off the sunburn he’d collected a few days before while mowing this same field. He resisted the urge to have a go at the itchy bits of skin that were coming off because if he started scratching, all the little bits of dust that had got inside his clothes and stuck to his skin would start itching too and drive him insane.
Janet arrived where he stood leaning on his pitchfork, gave him the leather quart mug she had in her other hand and filled it with mild beer. He croaked his thanks, put it to his lips, tilted his head and forgot to swallow for a while. It almost hurt, it felt so good. He finished two thirds of it before he came up for air.
‘Ahhh,’ he said, and leered at her. Janet had untied her smock and loosened the laces of her old blue bodice to free her arms for raking and there was a fine deep valley there, just begging for exploration. Not in a stubbly field though, and they were both too old and respectable now to bundle about in the haystack, but a marriage bed would do fine, later, if he wasn’t too tired. And if he was, well, there was the morning too before he had to set off for Carlisle. She leered back at him and took breath to say something that never was said.
‘Och, God damn him to hell,’ moaned Dodd, seeing movement, men on horseback breasting the hill in the distance over her shoulder, and instantly recognising the man in the fancy morion helmet at the head of the patrol riding towards them along the Roman road. ‘God rot his bloody bowels…’
‘Eh?’ said Janet, startled. She turned to look in the same direction as her husband, and her eyes narrowed.
‘But those are Lowther’s men he’s with.’
Dodd knew with awful clarity exactly what the thrice damned Deputy Warden was doing out at Gilsland with Lowther’s Sergeant and Lowther’s bunch of hard bargains. Full of wordless ill-usage, he picked up his pitchfork and drove it tines first into the ground, narrowly missing his own foot.
‘Make yerself decent, woman,’ he growled unfairly at his wife, who had only been behaving as a good wife should to her hardworking husband. She gave him a glint of a stare and he handed her what was left of his beer by way of apology. Still, she tied her old smock again, pulled up her bodice lacings and the curves of her breasts went back into their secret armour.
Dodd folded his arms and waited for the Deputy to come to him. There was some satisfaction in the thought that he must be hot wearing a jack and morion in this weather, followed by a gloomier memory of just how miserable a jack could be in summer.
Carey left Lowther’s men at the wall and came trotting over.
‘Good evening, Sergeant. How’s the haymaking?’
The bloody Courtier had probably been sitting on his arse all afternoon, unlike Dodd, who could only bring himself to grunt.
‘Well enow.’
‘Have you finished yet?’
Resisting the urge to snarl that if he was finished he wouldna be standing in a field like a lummock, he’d be at table stuffing his face, Dodd gestured in the direction of a long triangle of land which still had its neat rows of gold. Carey’s face clouded over.
‘Ah,’ he said.
‘What’s the trouble, Sir Robert?’ asked Janet. ‘Is it a raid?’
Carey sighed and slid from his horse. ‘In a manner of speaking, Mrs Dodd,’ he said. ‘I’m sorry to trouble you when you’re so busy, Sergeant; if I had any other choice I wouldn’t be here.’
Dodd grunted again, only slightly mollified, jerked his pitchfork out of the ground, straightened the bent tine with his clog heel, put it on his shoulder and set off for the last field. Janet picked his abandoned jerkin off the ground, and her own rake, and went with him. The Courtier went too, leading his horse.
As they went he talked, and in Dodd’s mind a picture formed of what was happening. At the end of it, he commented, ‘Wattie Graham must be fair annoyed to be risking a foray into the Middle March and so close to Tynedale. Who put him up to it?’
‘I’ve no idea, though I could guess.’
‘Well, ye canna take fifty assorted Grahams and broken men with that lot over there.’
Carey half-smiled. ‘I’m aware of it, Sergeant.’
‘What’s she…what’s Lady Widdrington worth at ransom, then?’
‘I haven’t the faintest idea and I have no inten
tion of paying it in any case.’
‘No,’ agreed Dodd. ‘That’d be for her husband to do.’
‘Dodd,’ said Carey with a certain amount of effort. ‘I am not going to allow her to be taken.’
That’s what being at Court and listening to all them poets did for you, Dodd thought savagely; it rotted your brain.
‘I dinna ken what ye can do about it, sir,’ said Dodd, looking about for the other cart which should have finished and come back by now. Oh yes, there it was, being driven by Willie’s Simon with his bandaged arm. Janet had already set down her jug and his jerkin and started in on the furthest row to pile it up. Two of the other girls came down off the wall where they had been waiting and drinking, and started on two other rows. The cart creaked in at the gate and lined up, ready for him. Normally Willie’s Simon would have been helping Dodd pitch the hay, but the wound from an arrow in his arm ten days before was still not healed enough so Dodd had it all to do himself. Janet raked ferociously, muttering under her breath; Dodd knew she was calculating how much more food Sergeant Nixon and the others would require, when she was already feeding too many mouths.
‘How long would this normally take?’ Carey asked fatuously, waving at the field.
‘I’d leave it till the morrow, but it looks like rain,’ said Dodd, driving his pitchfork into a bundle and twisting to lift and throw. ‘It’ll be fair dark by the time we finish.’
‘How many pitchforks have you got?’
What was the Courtier blethering about now?
‘Four. Three over by the barn.’
Carey waved his arm at the men still sitting like puddings and letting their hobbies crop wildflowers from the wall’s base.
‘Sergeant Nixon,’ he roared. ‘Over here!’
Nixon came trotting over, looking very wary.
‘Send a man over to Sergeant Dodd’s barn and fetch the spare pitchforks.’
Nixon’s face became mutinous. ‘We’re on patrol,’ he said. ‘We didnae come here to help wi’ Sergeant Dodd’s…’
Carey didn’t appear to have heard him.
‘I will pay an extra sixpence to each man that gives a hand with a pitchfork,’ he said. ‘You can draw straws to decide which will be the lucky ones. The others can help rake if they want sixpence too.’
‘I done my own fields yesterday…’ whined Sergeant Nixon and then seemed to forget what he was going to say when Carey glared at him.
‘Nixon, either you can do what you’re told or you can go back to Carlisle, with no sixpence for a little bit of extra sweat and no chance of what’s at Brampton.’
Dodd pricked up his ears at that and exchanged glances with Janet. Sergeant Nixon’s mouth tightened, he turned his hobby and cantered sullenly off to his men. A chorus of whines and moans rose from them and then stopped, presumably at news of the sixpence which was a full day’s pay for haymaking.
‘Right,’ Carey said to Dodd. ‘I want your professional advice and I want men, and I can see I’ll get neither if you’re worrying about your hay.’
For a wonder, the men did come over, although not Sergeant Nixon who clearly regarded this as beneath his dignity, nor the Lowther cousin. Billy Little came back shortly after with the pitchforks. Then there was an argument over who would stand on the wagon to pack the cart. Willie’s Simon couldn’t do it because of his arm and the girls were busy raking with Janet. The others felt it was beneath their dignity to do a wean’s job and said so at length. Carey listened impatiently for a while, then tethered his hobby to a bush and started undoing the fastenings of his morion helmet and the lacings of his jack. What the devil was the man playing at, Dodd wondered, in the middle of explaining that as the head of the household he couldn’t possibly stand on the cart…
Carey took his morion off, scratched his hair and put the helmet down carefully on the wall. His sword belt he laid down beside it, followed by his knife-belt, then he slid his shoulders out of his jack, revealing a darned but very fine linen shirt. Janet was staring at him open-mouthed as he hung his armour over a stone, turned and grinned at Dodd who was just beginning to suspect what the madman had in mind.
‘I’m afraid I’d be a danger to man and beast with a pitchfork,’ he said. ‘But I know how to pack a cart, so I’ll do that.’
He turned and jumped up onto the empty cart, took the small rake lying in it.
Dodd made a short rattle in his throat. Carey was rolling up his sleeves.
‘Barnabus will want to kill me,’ he muttered to himself. ‘What’s the problem, Sergeant?’
What Dodd wanted to say was that he had never in all his life heard of a Courtier to the Queen helping to load a haywagon like a child. In fact his mouth was open to say it but no words came out.
Janet was better with her tongue. She came over to the cart and looked up at him severely.
‘Sir,’ she said. ‘It’s not fitting. You’re the Queen’s cousin.’
Carey raised his eyebrows at her. ‘Yes,’ he said down his nose. ‘I am. That’s why I can do what I bloody well choose.’
Sergeant Nixon and the Lowther cousin, who were looking after the horses leaned on their saddle horns and openly gawked at the insanity of the Deputy Warden. Carey was telling the truth; he coped perfectly well with the forkfuls of hay being tossed up to him and didn’t trample it down too much. Nor did he fall off when Willie’s Simon was too busy staring to warn him when the oxen moved on along the rows. In fact, the lunatic looked as if he was enjoying himself. Certainly he was whistling something irritating.
Dodd shook his head to clear it and bent to his work. After a while he began to see the funny side, and his ribs almost burst with the effort not to laugh. The last field was cleared in record time with so many helpers, and as Willie’s Simon goaded the oxen through the gate, Carey slotted his rake in behind the seat and jumped down.
‘What’s the joke, Sergeant?’ he asked as he came over, brushing bits of hay off himself.
Dodd snorted and put his pitchfork on his shoulder to follow the cart back behind the barnekin wall.
‘Only I was thinkin’ I’d be willin’ to take ye on for the harvest, sir, if ye was free,’ he said grudgingly while Carey hefted up his jack and put it back on again.
‘Thank you, Sergeant,’ said Carey deadpan. ‘I’ll certainly consider your offer.’
***
Janet had already gone back to their peel tower ready to welcome them in with the best beer and lead them to their suppers. The trestle tables were packed tight with friends and neighbours in the hall of the tower and Dodd presided over the lot of them at the head of the top table. He had offered the place to Carey but Carey had courteously refused and sat at his right instead. Once Dodd had swallowed enough pudding to quiet his empty stomach, he banged mugs with Carey and laughed again.
‘I’ll have to ride wi’ ye against the Grahams now,’ he said, not feeling as miserable about it as he might otherwise have done.
‘Yes,’ answered Carey equably. ‘I know.’ He finished his beer and sighed. ‘God, that’s good.’
He lifted his mug in salute to Janet who tilted her neck to him in acknowledgement. Dodd poured himself some more before the Courtier could finish the lot.
Janet always served the strongest beer for this supper, unless you included what she gave to the harvesters after the last sheaf was in, which could knock you over. She was sitting at the next table which was packed with local girls who had been helping with the raking and the stacking. Word had evidently gone round about the Courtier. Many of them were wearing ribbons in their hair and craning their necks to stare at the Deputy Warden. At least half had forgotten to tighten their bodice lacings which offered a very pleasing view. Dodd saw that Carey was human enough to be admiring it. After all, it was very distracting.
‘So what would you advise, Sergeant?’ Carey asked after a moment’s thoughtful pause.
‘I’d advise not mixing it wi’ them,’ said Dodd, wiping beer off his mouth and digging into his food ag
ain. ‘Wi’ the Grahams, I mean,’ he clarified round a lump of beef, and Carey grinned perfect understanding. ‘But what would be the use?’
‘Come on, Dodd,’ said Carey. ‘Be reasonable. I can’t let Wattie Graham lift Lady Widdrington. I couldn’t hold my head up again in this March.’
‘Ay, he’s puttin’ a bit of a brave on ye,’ agreed Dodd. ‘The cheeky bastard.’ He snorted again at the memory of the elegant Deputy sweating on his hay cart. That would be something to think of on his deathbed, he decided; it would cheer him up no end. ‘Well, sir, if it was me running the rode, and I had the start that he’s got, I’d steer well clear of Bewcastle itself and lie up by Hen Hill or Blackshaws in the forest for tonight. I’d give it till the sun was up to let the lady get well on her way, then I’d cross the Irthing above the gorge and use the rough ground and the Giant’s Wall as cover until I got to the Faery Fort at Chesterholm, and I’d nip her out there.’
‘Right,’ said Carey. ‘Now, how many men do you think we could scrape up overnight?’
‘If we ring the bell…’
‘No, I don’t want to do that; he might hear it. I want to stop Wattie quietly if I can.’
‘Quietly,’ repeated Dodd. ‘Well, it doesnae make so much odds because we’ve got the night. Have ye not tried to warn Captain Carleton what’s afoot?’
‘Of course I have,’ Carey said. ‘But I’m not betting on my messenger getting through. It would only be sensible for Wattie to send some men out to Thirlwall Castle overnight to keep an eye on what’s going on and make sure Carleton hasn’t convinced Lady Widdrington to let him send some men with her.’
‘Ay,’ nodded the Sergeant. ‘Ye’re right. I’d do it.’
‘So would I.’
‘Well, then, it’s nobbut a couple of miles to Thirlwall. We get the men together, we deal with Wattie’s lads and we warn the Castle what’s afoot. Then we escort her along the road to Hexham.’
‘Of course, there’s the possibility that Captain Carleton’s in on it as well.’
2 A Season of Knives Page 9