Ordeal by Fire
a
Bradecote and Catchpoll
Mystery
SARAH HAWKSWOOD
For H. J. B.
Contents
Title Page
Dedication
Map of twelfth-century Worcester
September 1143
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Historical Note
About the Author
By Sarah Hawkswood
Copyright
September 1143
Chapter One
‘Fire!’
The cry spread almost as swiftly as the flames, from person to person as from straw to straw of the crackling thatch.
‘Fire!’
Panic was mixed with action as anxious mothers dragged wide-eyed children from the spectacle. Neighbours, with as much an eye to preventing the blaze reaching their own property as to aiding the unfortunate silversmith whose workshop was alight, came running with buckets and pitchers to take water from the nearest well, and poles and hooks to pull down the burning thatch.
Serjeant Catchpoll was on his way back to the castle after visiting one of the burgesses. He had been sent by the sheriff to report the successful apprehension of the thief who had stolen the good man’s three best pullets. It was a call of courtesy, and Catchpoll, who was not a naturally courteous man, was not best pleased, but William de Beauchamp, lord Sheriff of Worcestershire, was himself far too important to make such a visit. Instead, he had delegated his serjeant so that the next meeting of the burgesses would not lead to their whining petition for greater diligence in upholding the king’s laws by the sheriff and his men.
The serjeant halted, making a swift assessment of the situation. Fire was the great fear of townsfolk, with their homes and businesses cheek by jowl, and nearly every one of them constructed of wood, and daub, and thatch. A fire that Catchpoll could remember from his youth, back in 1113, had cost dozens of lives, and livelihoods too. One of his own cousins had perished then, and there had been fire both accidental and intentional in the years since.
He considered running to the castle to bring the men-at-arms to assist, but it was clear that the alarm had been raised swiftly and it was a windless afternoon. Running was not something he did from choice at his age. The inhabitants of the street had pulled down the little thatched lean-to abutting the neighbouring premises, disregarding the pleas of the owner, and had created a small firebreak. Women were throwing water at the wall of this adjacent property, and already the smoke was more in evidence than the flames.
Catchpoll pulled a face. He could, as the sheriff’s officer, make his presence known and take charge of the scene. On the other hand, the locals were doing pretty well on their own, and if the fire were not sufficiently damped down and erupted again later there could be no blame laid at his door. He held back and waited, inconspicuously; he was a man who could merge into the background when occasion arose. Eventually the number of people in the street began to thin, leaving only the tradesman and his immediate neighbours surveying the scene. Puddles of sooty water lay in every depression of the trampled earth of the narrow street, and the scattered thatch was strewn as if thrown randomly by a giant hand. Charred beams pointed accusing black fingers heavenward, and the frame of the lean-to stood precariously at a drunken angle. The owner of the structure was still complaining vociferously, but nobody was paying him any attention whatsoever.
Serjeant Catchpoll took a deep breath, and promptly coughed as the ghost of an acrid tendril of smoke caught in his throat. He had hoped to step forward looking official, but found himself being thumped on the back by an elderly and sparsely toothed woman, attracting the attention of the sorry-looking party while bent double and with streaming eyes.
The diversion caused the lean-to’s owner to cease his complaint. After a minute, Catchpoll stood upright again. He hawked, paused, and spat into the soot-flecked dust.
‘You know me. I am the lord sheriff’s man, and he will want to know of this. How did the fire start?’ he asked, still wheezing slightly.
‘How do you think?’ demanded the lean-to owner, grumpily. ‘You’d think any man with a furnace in his premises would keep a better eye on it, not risk his neighbours through negligence.’
‘’Twas not negligence, as I and my journeyman could tell you if you would but listen.’
The silversmith, sitting on an upturned tun, wringing his hands, roused himself from his gloom, and the journeyman, while having a burnt hand tended by a winsome maid who had eased his discomfort as much by her presence as her ministrations, looked round to confirm his master’s words.
‘True enough. The fire did not start by the furnace, and it was banked down low this afternoon. Master Reginald was selecting stones for setting in a chalice, and I was polishing. The fire was in the thatch at the rear of the shop when we first noticed it.’
Serjeant Catchpoll frowned. A fire was bad, but a deliberate fire was far worse.
‘Don’t you take what that longshanks says as truth,’ piped up the old woman who had clapped Catchpoll on the back. ‘He’d swear sunrise was sunset to keep in his master’s favour. He’ll not have the wherewithal to wed else, and he can’t afford to wait long. She,’ and the woman pointed a dirty-nailed finger at the journeyman’s ministering angel, ‘won’t be able to hide the result of their sinning ’neath her gown much longer.’
The young woman reddened and threw her a fulminating glance, but the old woman merely laughed mirthlessly. Catchpoll’s eyes, like everyone else’s, dwelt upon the girl’s figure, which was shapely in a voluptuous way. If she was carrying, well, perhaps another woman could tell, but the serjeant certainly could not, and the other men looked as surprised. Indeed, the owner of the lean-to stood agape, his jaw working silently for several seconds and his face assuming a purple hue, before he could find his words.
‘You … You … lecherous, whoreson rogue! Ruin my daughter, would you! I’ll have you whipped. Indeed, I’ll do it myself.’ He lunged forward, and the girl placed herself smartly between father and lover, looking not chastened but belligerent.
‘Out of my way, you ungrateful wench. What your poor mother would have—’
‘My “poor” mother would have said I should have been wed long since, not kept to labour in her stead because you are too close-fisted to employ a woman to keep house for you. It’s you who should be shamed, not I. Edwin has good prospects with Master Reginald, and is no mean match for the daughter of an idle, ale-swilling fletcher like you.’ She turned to her lover. ‘Will you take me dowerless, love?’
‘You know that, Winflaed, but after this,’ he waved his sound hand at the smouldering shop, ‘I know not how we’ll manage.’
Master Reginald, who had originally been contemplating the future in a very despondent fashion, seemed to have pulled himself together during the altercation over Winflaed, and now, though blackened of face and singed of brow, looked much more his normal, competent self.
‘I’ll swear not all is lost, Edwin. Whatever lies charred out the back, the flames have not done more than blacken the very front of the shop, so the ready pieces should be undamaged, and if it did not get too hot, the tools and
gemstones will be there amongst the ash and soot. We can get the building repaired, even if I have to give bracelets and clasps in payment, but it’ll mean a few weeks under an awning, and that’s no place for a woman, especially if she is … Once there’s proper chambers again you can bring your bride, and I’ll make you my partner when your time is up next Lady Day. Let her stay with her father till all’s ready.’
‘As if I’d have her.’ The fletcher curled his lip disdainfully. ‘Giving herself like some cheap forlegnis in an alley, and behind my back too.’
Serjeant Catchpoll had been diverted by the unexpected turn of the conversation, but was keen to get back to the sheriff with a report, and now spoke up, his voice authoritative and calm.
‘She’d scarce do so in front of you.’ At his quip the old woman laughed, and choked as a consequence. ‘You’ll take her back, Master Fletcher, with a good grace, and make efforts to give her a dower if you value your own standing. And you,’ he turned on the old woman, ‘will keep your tongue between the remains of your teeth and not spread gossip. Many a child arrives a mite early, and nothing is said.’ He dusted his hands together, dismissing the subject. ‘Now, can we get back to the fire? If you and your journeyman are certain that the fire did not start in the workshop, could it have started accidentally to the rear, with a stewpot mayhap, Master …?’ He frowned, for Catchpoll liked to know the craftsmen of Worcester, and this one’s name eluded him for the minute.
‘Reginald Ash is the name.’ The silversmith gave a bitter laugh. ‘Fitting, today, eh? But the fire starting from a cook-fire? No, I’d swear not. A girl comes and sets a pot cooking slow for us during the afternoon, but she don’t normally do that till the bell has struck for the afternoon service in the cathedral, and I did not hear her out back.’
‘Nor I either,’ agreed Edwin, ‘and we weren’t beating metal, nor any other noisy task.’
‘Well, where would I find the girl to find out for sure?’ Catchpoll could foresee the sheriff wanting to be clear about this.
‘Opposite, next to Adam Merlie, the coppersmith. She’s Widow Wick’s daughter, Agnes.’
‘And would there be anyone you know of as would want you out of business, Master Ash?’
The silversmith shook his head. ‘No, none. I keeps to myself, and have no bad blood betwixt me and any man that I knows of. My goods are well made and sold for a fair price, and there has never been any complaint otherwise. No, there is no reason anyone should want to burn me out.’
Serjeant Catchpoll rubbed his grizzled chin. ‘Well, I will report all this to the lord sheriff, and let him decide whether it was malice or accident.’
He left the silversmith and his man, aided no doubt by the girl Winflaed, to begin the business of clearing and salvage, and went in search of Agnes Wick. She proved an unhelpful witness. The girl was slow-witted and vague, and her mother was much inclined to speak for her or suggest what she should say. She seemed unsure as to whether she had been to the smith’s, but her mother, fearing blame might come their way, swore with more vehemence than veracity that the nasty business could have nought to do with her ‘poor Agnes’.
Catchpoll was left with little that he could lay before the sheriff as good evidence for accident or crime. He returned to the castle unhappily aware that William de Beauchamp would most likely leave the decision whether to investigate further up to him, and knew the blame could be laid at his door if it proved he had made the wrong choice.
He was still pondering his unenviable position when he entered the castle bailey, and stopped short. He had left but an hour or so previously, and all had been quiet and everyday. Now the bailey was full of bustle, with horses, men-at-arms and a noticeable number of black-habited monks.
‘What in the Lady’s Name is going on?’ the serjeant asked of the gate guard, who was taking considerable interest in a monk’s spectacularly unsuccessful attempts to get an obstinate mule into the stables.
‘Well, the Brother has been trying to …’
‘No, cabbage-head, what is all this about?’ Catchpoll waved an arm at the scene within the bailey.
‘Ah well, the lord Bishop of Hereford has descended upon us all, in some state, because of some dispute. All above our level I expect, Serjeant.’
‘Above yours, aye, but not necessarily mine.’ He did not spare the guard another glance, but made his way through the throng to the kitchens. He knew the cook well, and also knew that the cookhouse was the hub of the wheel of knowledge within the castle. Drogo the Cook seemed to know what was going on before it even happened, and Catchpoll wanted to appear before the sheriff as fully informed as possible. Experience had taught him that being abreast of the news always gave the sheriff the idea that Serjeant Catchpoll was one step ahead, and Catchpoll enjoyed that.
Drogo was shouting orders at a scullion, while waving a ladle in the manner of a battling bishop with a mace. Catchpoll grinned.
‘A few more for supper, then?’ he quipped.
Drogo rolled his eyes. ‘Ravenous wolves would be easier. Here’s me, with Aelfred down with an ague, and two wenches sickening for heaven knows what, and the lord Bishop of Hereford arrives, without warning, with an army to protect him and half an abbey to pray with him. And then he sends down asking for herons! Not even just one! How much does this man eat? I thought men of God were meant to think of their souls, not their bellies! Where am I to get herons for tonight? Will they fall like manna from heaven or does the lord bishop think there is a fresh heron stall at the gate?’
Catchpoll sympathised, as one sufficiently up the scale of hierarchy to be called upon by name and given Herculean tasks to be performed instantly. His grin spread, ever more skull-like.
‘Give ’em chicken and say they are stunted heron, friend.’
Drogo lobbed the ladle at him, but he ducked with surprising alacrity, and it caught the spit-boy on the back of the head instead. The lad yelped.
Catchpoll put up his hands placatingly. ‘Fair enough, not a good suggestion. Just tell me in a few of your well-chosen words what is going on, and I’ll leave you in peace.’
Drogo told him, succinctly, but with adjectives that made the girl shelling peas turn crimson. The bishop, travelling, so he said, with a large party for protection in such perilous times, had come to drag the sheriff off to the northern border of the county to sort out a land dispute where one of his holdings was involved. The sheriff would normally demur, but the thought of having the bishop and all his minions eating him out of house and home, and ‘bleating’ in his ear for days, swayed him.
‘Well, I suppose I had best find out what the lord sheriff wants me to do, pox on it. Hope he doesn’t keep me kicking my heels for long. My wife has a nice fat partridge hanging ready to put in a pudding for tonight, and she makes a fine partridge pudding.’ Catchpoll’s mouth watered at the prospect.
‘Puts plenty of gravy with it, I’ll be bound, and not too much seasoning. Now I always say—’
‘No time to listen to your sound cooking advice, Drogo. Must get to the lord sheriff and report.’
Before the cook could say another word, Catchpoll had gone.
William de Beauchamp, lord Sheriff of Worcestershire, was not a happy man. He found the society of clerics both boring and disquieting. He was a man who preferred action to pontification, and was distrustful of those who fought with clever words. He noted his serjeant’s arrival in his hall with the relief of a man who sees reinforcements arriving to lift a siege, and drew him forth by an exchange of glances and a slight nod of the head. The bishop was in full flow, but the sheriff cut across him without compunction.
‘You have seen Ranulf Fuller, Catchpoll? And he is content?’
‘Aye, my lord. You’ll have no moaning from him, leastways not more than usual, but as I returned there was a fire in the shop of Reginald Ash the silversmith.’
‘Much damage?’ The sheriff frowned.
‘No, only to the silversmith’s premises. The neighbours were quick about dea
ling with it, and prevented any real spread.’
The sheriff looked more cheerful. ‘Good, then …’
‘There was, my lord, some suggestion that the fire was not accidental.’ Catchpoll kept his own face expressionless as the frown reappeared between the sheriff’s brows, and a grimace of annoyance twisted his mouth.
‘You said “suggestion”. Is it an idle claim to keep the man’s neighbours from calling down curses on him, or are there grounds for thinking it was indeed a fire that was set?’
It was Catchpoll’s turn to look unhappy. His grizzled, mobile face was screwed up into an expression of contemplation, and his head nodded from side to side as he weighed the matter. This was what he had feared might happen. The sheriff was going to leave the decision on action up to him. Catchpoll far preferred being given a task, a scent to follow, and then getting on with it without interference. Making the initial judgement was, in his view, much more difficult. If he said it warranted investigation and it turned out to have been a simple mischance, the sheriff would berate him for wasting his time. Yet if it was deliberate and he ignored it, well, the consequences could be too unpleasant to contemplate. He pulled at the lobe of his left ear, meditatively, and sucked his teeth.
‘It’s a tricky one, my lord, honest it is. The smith and his journeyman swear the fire started in the back of the premises, not in the workshop, and definitely not at the furnace, which they say was not in use today. I thought perhaps it could be a cooking fire. A girl comes to set a pot for them in the afternoon. Trouble is, the girl is about as bright as a plough ox, if that, and I would not like to say whether what she said was true, what she thought was true, or what she thought her mother and I wanted her to say. All I would vouch for is that if the fire was lit through malice, it was not the girl that did it.’
The sheriff was no fool. He knew that Catchpoll was now trying to pass this potentially poisoned chalice back to him. His eyes narrowed for a moment, but then, to Catchpoll’s surprise, he smiled; it was a small, grim smile. He was being called away by the Bishop of Hereford, and a suspicion alone was not sufficient to detain him. He cast a swift glance at the prelate, who still wore an affronted expression at having been abandoned in full flow so that the sheriff could discuss shrieval business with an underling. The smile twitched.
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