“Why did you not tell me these things?”
“Because I did not want you to be in danger, or even to know we had such a dangerous thing in our possession.”
Awdrey shuddered. “I can’t go through all that again. Not again. Our house wrecked, our possessions…” She turned to the old stern-faced servant. “Thomas, did you see anything? Were you not here?”
The man shook his head. “Mistress Harley, if I had been here, they would not have entered. At least, they would have had to kill me first. I took the boys to Snow’s tenement to buy hay for the stables. I had no idea that anyone would even think of entering, still less steal from Mr. Clarenceux. But locks are easy to pick. If the thief came in by the back door, if he knew what he was after, he could have been out within a few minutes.”
“Not ‘he’-‘she,’” Clarenceux frowned. “I saw Rebecca Machyn yesterday, and she was not at all normal. She told me she was going away-even said that people had been encouraging her to steal the document.”
“Sir, with respect, she might simply have told those same people where to look. She did not necessarily steal it herself or even sanction the theft.”
Clarenceux nodded. He glanced at Awdrey and knew what she was thinking. You should not have trusted Rebecca so much. He knew because she had been proved right.
“What now?” she asked.
“Well, I am now a traitor in the eyes of those who would have Mary Stuart proclaimed queen, and a traitor in the eyes of Elizabeth’s Protestant supporters. It is likely this house will be searched as soon as the authorities realize where I stand. Most searches take place after dusk, when people are at home and alone. We need to be prepared.”
“I cannot believe this is happening,” muttered Awdrey.
“Awdrey, it is happening. I am going to be arrested and tried. Our possessions, goods, and chattels will be forfeit. If the searchers come this evening…” Clarenceux paused. “The Lord preserve us. Thomas, I want you to leave now. Go to your nephew’s house. You cannot stay here.”
“Mr. Clarenceux, I intend to stand by you.”
“Thomas, the best outcome to this situation I can imagine is that you and I are alive in a month’s time. I can ensure that that will be at least partly the case by sending you away now. There is nothing you can do for me here.”
“Sir, I am disappointed to hear you say that.”
“Thomas, old friend. I want you to live. The theft of that document may well cost me my life.” Clarenceux looked him in the eye. “One day you may serve me again. But not now.”
“I am not going, Mr. Clarenceux,” Thomas told him obstinately. “I will always serve you.”
“If you are so determined, then look after my wife and daughters.” He glanced at Awdrey. “I want you to go to your sister’s house in Devon.”
She looked at him steadily. “So far? I would rather stay with Lady Cecil. Or even your friend Julius.”
“You do not understand how serious this is. People will use you and the girls to get to me. Walsingham knows about Summerhill-he has sent men to search Julius’s house in the past. And what reason are you going to give Lady Cecil for seeking Sir William’s protection? That I have lost a politically valuable document? Sir William himself charged me with guarding it with my life. You must go further.”
“I am not going further than one day’s ride,” Awdrey declared.
Clarenceux stared at her. He thought of all the dangers in the city and how he needed to confront certain people and how they might retaliate against his family. Julius was at least wholly trustworthy. “Very well. Thomas will escort you down to Chislehurst tomorrow morning. Take Joan with you. Take all the horses too. If I need a mount, I will hire one. Pack in readiness now. I will write to Julius and explain. I’ll tell him I will join you when I can.”
15
That afternoon, Clarenceux took down his sword from above the fireplace in his study. He often said that guns were of little use: fire them once and you have to spend the next five minutes reloading them, during which time your assailant might run you through with the meanest weapon. It was easy to say that in a tavern conversation. Now, considering the danger, he wished he had the equal of the armaments that people might use against him. If someone drew a loaded pistol on him, he would have no defense but to hope the wheel did not ignite the gunpowder or that the person aiming it missed.
He put the sword back regretfully. He had to walk across London. Carrying a sword would be foolish, enough to get himself arrested by a constable. Instead he fastened a sheathed dagger with a foot-long blade onto the left-hand side of his belt, and a shorter-bladed knife to his right. They would be concealed by his cloak. He took a deep breath and mentally braced himself for what he had to do, then went downstairs and out of the house.
He walked quickly across the Fleet, stepping between the puddles, toward Ludgate. Normally the center of the street was a packed line of horse dung, trodden into the mud; now, after the heavy rain, it combined with the clay soil to give the street a rich, earthy smell. Cartwheels had churned up the surface. In such conditions anyone of quality would normally insist on riding or being carried in a chair, to preserve their clean clothes. Clarenceux was too anxious for such niceties. When a cart passed, flicking up mud, he simply walked faster.
Passing under the old stone arch of Ludgate, he wanted to run to his destination. But he knew that would draw attention to himself. He threaded his way between the people, walking through the lanes and alleys, beneath rows and rows of houses, all darkened with the upper stories projecting out over the lower ones. The barrels that were meant to be full of water in case of fire were mostly full of refuse, empty, or leaking out into trampled muddy patches of ground. Some alleyways were littered with detritus where people passing along had dropped parts of pies or bones, and the local householder had not cleared up outside his front door. In places people had strewn old rushes from their halls across the street. Clarenceux carried on through the noisome foulness toward Little Trinity Lane, mainly along the back streets, always avoiding the eyes of people walking toward him.
At the door to Rebecca Machyn’s house, he drew his day-to-day knife and banged hard with the hilt three times on the oak. He waited barely twenty seconds and then knocked again. And again. There was no sound from within. He stepped back into the street and looked up, to see if anyone was watching from upstairs. But if so, they avoided him. He knocked on the door again.
He knew that, when watchmen had gone looking for Rebecca in the past, she had taken refuge on the other side of the road, at Mrs. Barker’s house. He glanced at that proud building, wondering if she was over there now-perhaps even observing him.
Still no answer.
After another minute he walked to the end of Little Trinity Lane. Then, counting his steps-one hundred and fifty-he turned right at the end and then right again, counting the same number of paces down Garlick Hill. When he reached the correct spot, he found the nearest passageway through to a backyard tenement. Many of the old merchants’ properties here were subdivided, due to the heavy overcrowding, with ramshackle houses built in adjoining yards, each containing one or two rooms. He went down an untidy alley, with an overflowing trough of water and puddles beneath the eaves of the shingle-covered roofs. An old woman was sitting spinning in the doorway of a single-story lean-to. He nodded to her politely.
“My good woman, is that the back of the Machyn house?”
She looked at him suspiciously. “What do you want to know for?”
“My name is William Harley, Clarenceux King of Arms. I am a friend of Rebecca Machyn. She is sick, taken to her bed, and no one is looking after her. Her stepson is a wastrel, so I am worried that the front door is being left unanswered.”
“’Tis indeed Goodwife Machyn’s. And I know the young man. Drunkard, he is. It sounds as if it is a good deed that you do-and I can see you’re no thief, sir.”
Clarenceux thanked the woman, then shifted a barrel to enable him to climb over th
e wall and up on to the roof of the outhouse, making sure the weapons underneath his cloak remained concealed. After jumping down into Rebecca’s yard, where he was greeted by the stench of the privy, he unlatched the rear door and entered the house.
It was silent. The storeroom at the back was where the food was kept: a sack of oats, another smaller one of flour. There were turnips and apples, leeks and onions. Hanging up on a hook were the thin remains of a flitch of bacon, most of which had been consumed.
“Hello? Rebecca? John? Are you here?”
He went into the hall. The ash on the hearth was not even warm. An empty wooden tankard and bowl stood on the table, with crumbs of bread strewn across the surface. There were two old candle pricks there too, and a rushlight holder. A pottery wine flask, covered in wicker, lay on its side on the floor. The rushes needed changing.
Clarenceux started to look around the hall systematically. There was no proper paneling, only a section in one corner that had remained when most of the original wainscoting had been removed. The walls had been whitewashed and were bare, except for Henry’s painted cloths and a crucifix. There was a lidless chest of cookware by the fireplace, full of old chafing dishes and skillets, brass pans, and bashed pewterware. Apart from that there was only one other chest. He lifted the lid and looked through the contents: a rolled-up old shirt, a blanket, several towels and tablecloths, and two old books in which Henry Machyn had written some heraldic notes. In addition, there were some old wooden toys, a linen sheet painted as a St. George’s flag, some dice, a couple of wooden board games, and a pipe. A cursory inspection was enough for Clarenceux to be sure that the document was not in this chest. Nowhere else in the hall looked likely.
He went through to Henry Machyn’s old workshop at the front of the house. Nothing had changed since his visit the previous day. The four large chests were still there, in the dim light. Clarenceux pulled back the shutters and lifted the lid of one. He had presumed they were Rebecca’s possessions, ready for her departure; but inside were the old tools of Henry Machyn’s trade as a merchant tailor. There were scissors and knives, rulers and various scraps of cloth. The next chest he opened contained rolls of black cloth and tenterhooks for hanging the same. There were also a couple of books showing the heraldic designs used by members of the nobility and gentry, whose arms Henry had been paid to depict at their funerals. A third chest was full of candles, many of wax and good quality. The last held rolled-up lengths of linen.
Clarenceux climbed the stairs and went into the front chamber, above the workshop. It was almost empty, except only for a large old featherbed, unmade, with sheets that were so creased and soiled they were disgusting. There was also a sea chest in the corner, which obviously belonged to John Machyn. Clarenceux ignored it and went into the back chamber, directly above the hall. Here there was a small fireplace with firedogs and some skillets and other cooking apparatus. A small bed was set against the whitewashed wall opposite the fire; a table and a chair stood next to the rear window, which was unglazed. Candlesticks and pewterware adorned the table, and bellows, tongs, two low stools, and andirons were neatly arranged in front of the fire. The shutters were ajar, and Clarenceux could see out over the yard. A chest in the corner was full of neatly folded, clean bed linen. Another chest held Rebecca’s personal linen and dresses. On the topmost sheet in the clothes chest was a book-a copy of the New Testament in English. He recalled that her late husband had taught her to read. In a small wall cupboard was a box containing needles and thread.
Clarenceux was perplexed. The house was not well kept but nor was it falling down. Many families were crammed into single rooms in and around this part of the city. Here, Rebecca and John Machyn both had space. Her living quarters seemed to have shrunk to this single room: she cooked and ate, read and slept in here. Downstairs had been largely abandoned to John Machyn and the chest full of memories of another era. But there were signs of a modest wealth, such as the books and pewterware-all of which were worth money. There were candles and a great deal of linen: these too could have been sold. It gave Clarenceux the impression that Rebecca had not been entirely honest with him, for she was not as short of money as she claimed.
He felt the mattress of the bed for any sign of the document but found none. He then embarked on a thorough search of her chamber; it was not there. Eventually he gave up and went up to the top floor. This was dim and did not contain much. There was an old cradle, an old broken bedstead, a loom, some worn-out curtains for a bed, a broken chair, and a cot. A chest in a corner turned out to have nothing but old coverlets and blankets in it: a spider crawled across the topmost one as Clarenceux opened the lid.
There was nothing here. She had abandoned the house. She had abandoned everything.
She had abandoned him.
16
Clarenceux did not go to bed until very late. He waited up long after Awdrey had gone to sleep, fearful that Walsingham’s men would come to search the house. When he finally did retire, he did not sleep soundly. His mind shifted between horrible illusions and terrible realizations. In the early hours, long after the candle above had spluttered out, he rose and felt his way downstairs. He had no wish to wake Thomas, who was sleeping in the hall. He sat in the kitchen, by the small light of the glowing coals of the fire.
Lady Percy, the dowager countess of Northumberland, was the person most on his mind. Of all the people who knew he had the document, and how powerful it was, she was the most likely person to have ordered it to be stolen. He and Rebecca had visited her at Sheffield Manor just before Christmas. She had exhorted him to use the document-and had given him money in the belief that he would do so. She was so bitter about her treatment at the hands of Henry VIII, and so coldheartedly jealous over Lord Percy’s affections for Anne Boleyn, that Clarenceux knew she would have been angry to learn that he had done nothing. And she was not a woman to be left angry.
Lady Percy had shown a fondness for Rebecca too. She liked strong-minded women. Perhaps Rebecca had gone to Sheffield Manor with the document? Maybe at Lady Percy’s direction?
Now, as he gazed at the embers of the fire, Clarenceux acknowledged that he had overlooked Lady Percy. She knew what was going on, surely; she certainly knew about the document and the Knights of the Round Table. She had spies and contacts with Queen Mary in Scotland. Most of all, she knew the identity of Sir Percival-the one so-called Knight who was the linchpin of the secret organization. Not even he, Clarenceux, knew that. He suspected that she could activate and instruct the remaining Knights whenever she felt like doing so. The distance from London to Sheffield had meant that Clarenceux had not taken her into account. Now he saw that she was like a poisonous snake lying hidden, waiting for its prey.
Getting up from beside the fire, he poured himself a large draught of wine then gulped it down, hoping it would help him sleep. He would go and see all the surviving Knights, he decided, starting the following day.
17
Monday, May 8
James Emery’s house was in Huggin Alley, which ran between Little Trinity Lane and Huggin Lane, almost directly opposite Painter Stainers’ Hall. It was a modest merchant’s house, not as prestigious a building as Mrs. Barker’s nearby, having none of the carvings on the projecting first-floor beams and much less glazing. Nevertheless, it was well kept. It had not been divided into tenements and had been maintained by its occupier with its old stained glass, carved stone fireplace, polished iron chandeliers, and painted wainscoting.
It was late morning. Bright sunlight was drying out the mud of the previous day’s downpour. Clarenceux was wearing his longest cloak, which reached almost to the ground. He had strapped his sword beneath. When he knocked, an elderly manservant came to the door.
“Good day to you,” Clarenceux said. “I wish to speak to Mr. Emery.”
The man frowned. “You are not welcome here, Mr. Clarenceux. I would have thought you would have known better than to come.”
“As I said, I wish to speak to Mr. Em
ery. Unless he would prefer that I shout out what I have to say from down here in the street, you had better admit me.”
“Mr. Clarenceux, I really-” But he got no further than that. Clarenceux pushed past him and stepped into the house. The elderly man tried to block his way, but to no avail.
“Is he upstairs, in the hall?” Clarenceux looked at the man and judged from the lack of response that he was. He turned and headed up the stairs, climbing two at a time.
James Emery was gray haired, about ten years older and five inches shorter than Clarenceux. He was seated at a table, eating alone, with a book open beside him. Hearing the heavy footsteps, he threw his napkin onto the table and rose to his feet.
“What are you doing here?” he asked, seeing Clarenceux. “I will not have you in-”
“Where is Rebecca Machyn and where is the Percy-Boleyn marriage agreement?” demanded Clarenceux, striding forward.
“You should not have come here.”
“Damn what I should and shouldn’t do. The very fact you say I should not have come here makes me certain that this is exactly the place to be. Now, where is she and where is the document?”
“I know neither of those things, and that is the truth.”
“But you know who is behind this. You know why she has gone and who is advising her.”
Emery remained silent.
“I thought as much.” Clarenceux walked over to the table and glanced at the bright plate and the meat on it, the wine flask and the bowl of last season’s apples and pears beside it. The elderly manservant entered. Ignoring him, Clarenceux turned back to the table, lifted the flask, and took a swig. “Sit down,” he said. Emery was hesitant but Clarenceux pulled the chair out for him and took a step away, giving him space. Emery sat.
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