The Hawks of Delamere d-7

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The Hawks of Delamere d-7 Page 25

by Edward Marston


  There was a shriek of protest as Durand was dragged across the bailey and taken down into the dungeons. The dwarf unleashed a torrent of abuse at Ralph but the latter only smiled benignly.

  ‘I had guessed his identity even before he gave us the proof of his treachery just now. It was Golde who put me on to him,’ said Ralph airily. ‘She told me that I should never trust a man who allows bad beer to be served.’

  Epilogue

  A single week effected the most profound changes in Chester.

  Restored to the shire hall, the commissioners sat in judgement on a stream of cases and managed to put right some glaring anomalies missed by their predecessors. Land formerly in the possession of Raoul Lambert was either returned to its original holders or their heirs, or distributed between other tenants with claims against him.

  Ralph Delchard was at his most effective, Gervase Bret was a penetrating examiner of evasive witnesses, Canon Hubert was pleased that the Church was able to recover so much land which had been seized unjustly from it and Brother Simon was happy to be engaged in the work which had brought him to Chester in the first place. The four of them worked well as a team and they left the city in no doubt that the King’s writ ran as far as Cheshire.

  After losing Raoul Lambert and being duped so effectively by the Welsh, Earl Hugh was strangely subdued and Brother Gerold’s influence over him gradually increased again. The conscience which had smitten him intermittently in the past no longer seemed quite so incompatible with his behaviour. Though the banquets continued unabated and the hunting expeditions resumed, the earl nevertheless seemed to have mellowed slightly. He was even observed talking to his wife on one occasion.

  Eiluned was given a Christian burial by Gerold but her accomplices were imprisoned in the dungeons along with Durand and the man they had tried to rescue. At Ralph’s suggestion, Gruffydd ap Cynan was treated with the respect due to his position and allowed regular exercise and edible food. The Prince of Gwynedd still languished in captivity but there was a definite improvement in his lot.

  At the end of another satisfying day, the commissioners were entitled to congratulate themselves. Canon Hubert led the way.

  ‘We were in supreme form today,’ he boasted.

  ‘You always are,’ said Brother Simon.

  ‘Thank you.’

  ‘Hubert is right,’ said Ralph. ‘It was our most productive session so far. The more cases we study, the more clearly does Lambert’s villainy emerge. He stole land from everyone.’

  ‘With the help of a certain friend in an exalted position,’

  reminded Gervase discreetly. ‘That is how he got away with it.’

  ‘Property was his payment,’ said Ralph.

  ‘Yes, Eiluned was right about him. He was the earl’s executioner. Whenever someone had to be removed to satisfy a whim or pay off a grudge, Raoul Lambert was called in. He knew the earl better than anyone.’

  ‘That is why he had to be bribed into silence.’

  ‘Yes, Ralph.’

  ‘And why Hugh was so shocked by his death. He leaned so heavily on Lambert when he was alive. A man like that could not easily be replaced.’

  Brother Simon stifled a yawn then shocked them all. ‘I miss Archdeacon Idwal,’ he admitted.

  ‘Saints preserve us!’ exclaimed Hubert.

  ‘That is like saying you miss a disfiguring disease,’ said Ralph.

  ‘Idwal was a menace.’

  ‘There was no real harm in him,’ said Simon.

  ‘That is where you are wrong,’ chimed in Hubert. ‘I was on hand to prevent him from committing a serious crime that would have left the cathedral without its most treasured relic. As it is, the Gospel of St Chad has been rescued and Idwal has gone home to Wales with his tail between his legs.’

  Simon was wistful. ‘I still miss him.’

  ‘Why?’ demanded Hubert.

  ‘He enlivened the city.’

  ‘Wildfire would do that.’

  ‘And cause less damage,’ added Ralph.

  ‘I agree with Brother Simon,’ said Gervase. ‘Idwal brightened up our day. As long as you did not stand downwind of him, he could be a charming companion. And he did persuade Gruffydd ap Cynon to urge peace on his followers.’

  ‘The Welsh are a bizarre race,’ opined Hubert. ‘None more so than Idwal. What kind of man imagines that he can get away with a crime against a cathedral? I simply would not condone it.’

  The four men packed up their satchels and made for the door.

  Hubert remembered an invitation he had been asked to pass on.

  ‘One moment, my lord.’

  ‘Yes, Hubert?’

  ‘You and your dear wife are cordially invited to dine at the bishop’s palace tomorrow, if you are free.’

  ‘We should be delighted to, Hubert,’ said Ralph with gratitude.

  ‘When the festivities are over.’

  ‘Festivities?’

  ‘Golde and I have to go down to the river first.’

  ‘Why?’

  ‘To see punishment being meted out.’

  ‘To whom?’ asked Simon.

  ‘The brewer who supplied that disgusting beer to the castle.

  Golde reported him in order to save others from the fate that she suffered. He was ordered to pay a fine of four shillings.’

  Gervase baulked. ‘As much as that?’

  ‘The brewer took the same view and refused to pay.’

  ‘What will happen to him?’

  ‘He has been sentenced to the cucking stool.’

  ‘Serves him right,’ said Hubert.

  Simon was more sympathetic. ‘You mean that he will be strapped in and ducked under the water?’

  ‘Yes,’ said Ralph, ‘and I hope that he swallows a mouthful every time he goes under.’

  ‘Why, my lord?’

  ‘Because then he will know what his beer tastes like!’

  Brother Simon emitted his first laugh of the year.

  FB2 document info

  Document ID: fbd-eeba87-8713-a449-ca81-8a44-56c8-1a5391

  Document version: 1

  Document creation date: 15.07.2013

  Created using: calibre 0.9.36, Fiction Book Designer, FictionBook Editor Release 2.6.6 software

  Document authors :

  Edward Marston

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