‘Get rid of that hay,’ he advised the landlord, ‘and scrub down the loft before you put any more in.
They were standing in front of the stable, the doors wide open to air it. The wave of rain had passed, but more was in the air.
‘I can’t believe it. They were only sleeping there.’ The landlord shook his head.
The Crown and Fleece would be famous for a few days. Folk would come to drink and see where the two recruits died. Tragedy was always a good spur to business.
Then the rain returned, a sweeping onslaught from the west that soaked him before he’d even reached the jail. He banked up the fire and hung his coat over a chair to dry before settling to write up the discovery of the bodies.
He stood by the window, watching the drops bounce off the road. With luck there’d be nothing else to drag him out from here. He’d complete his rounds before dawn. The river would be up, pushing hard against the banks. The way the night had gone so far it would be his luck to find another corpse in the river.
He thought back to Sunday afternoon. He’d met Emily after church and they’d walked along the river to Kirkstall Abbey. All the way out they’d prattled idly, about anything, everything, her eyes smiling and happy. They’d walked through the ruins for an hour before strolling back.
‘My father asked if we’d like to go over for dinner one Sunday,’ he said finally. For days he’d wondered how to tell her, trying to find something in their talks that would lead to it. In the end all he could do was blurt it out.
‘He did?’ she answered in surprise. ‘Was he serious?’
Rob nodded.
‘He asked me, too?’ She sounded suspicious. ‘The whore’s granddaughter?’
‘That’s what he said.’
‘Why does he want me there?’ she wondered. ‘So he can have a chance to humiliate me?’
‘I don’t know.’ He squeezed her hand. ‘I wondered if it could be his way of saying sorry.’
They strolled quietly for a while as the shadows began to lengthen.
‘What do you think? Do you want to go?’ Emily asked.
‘I’m not sure,’ he admitted with a sigh. ‘If we did and he started. .’ She looked at him expectantly. ‘If he did we’d leave and never return,’ he promised.
He’d eaten supper with Emily and her parents before returning to his lodgings. He stopped in front of the door, then turned and headed up Briggate.
His father was seated at the table scribbling notes in the margin of a book.
‘Twice in such a short time,’ Lister said wryly, taking off his spectacles and gesturing at a chair. ‘Sit down.’
Rob remained standing. ‘The last time I was here you invited us over one Sunday. Did you mean it?’
‘When have I ever said anything I didn’t mean?’ he asked with amusement.
‘And both of us?’
His father nodded. ‘Both of you.’
‘Will you be civil?’
Lister smiled. ‘I assure you, I shall be the soul of politeness. Does that satisfy you?’
‘If you insult her we’ll walk out,’ Rob warned.
‘There’ll be none of that at my table.’
‘Then we accept.’
He still wasn’t certain it had been the right decision. He looked at the rain running like a river down Kirkgate. It was done now. They’d dine with his parents next Sunday.
FIFTEEN
The rain had petered away again with the dawn, but the skies still weighed heavy, the colour of pewter, and the ground was thick with mud. Sedgwick moved through the crowds at the market, sellers crying their wares loudly, buyers haggling over the price. He had his eyes on a man who looked determined not to be noticed, watching him in case he cut a purse and tried to run.
‘Do you still want to talk to Smithson?’ Holden fell in step beside the deputy. ‘He’s in the Rose and Crown.’
‘I thought you were following Howard.’
Holden smiled. ‘He went to the warehouse when the cloth market finished. He’ll be there all day so I decided to go back to the house. Smithson’s bought a few things and now he’s enjoying a quiet drink.’
Sedgwick grinned. ‘About time I had a word with him, then.’
‘You won’t be able to miss him.’
He was right. Smithson was sitting on a bench, elbows resting on the table. He had wide shoulders, no neck and wrists as thick as some men’s thighs.
‘Hello, Hugh,’ the deputy said, settling down across from him. ‘It’s been a long time. Staying out of trouble?’
The man nodded warily.
‘That’s a good cut of cloth,’ the deputy continued, reaching across and fingering the collar. ‘Still, I hear you have a position now.’
Smithson grunted.
‘Good employer, is he, Mr Howard?’
The man put down his glass and focused on the deputy. ‘Aye, good enough. He pays well. What about it?’
‘Doesn’t look as if he works you too hard.’
‘I do what he wants.’
The deputy had forgotten the way that Smithson’s voice sounded as if it had dragged over gravel. ‘Much time off?’
‘Every Sunday.’
‘All the servants?’
‘Aye, both of us. Why?’
‘I’m just curious.’ He smiled. ‘You see much of Mr Darden?’
Smithson sat back and folded his arms. ‘What do you want to know for, Mr Sedgwick?’
‘I want to make sure you’re well looked after, Hugh. Can’t have anyone taking advantage of you.’
‘Mr Howard would never do that.’
‘Did you tell him about your past?’ the deputy wondered. ‘I know we never proved it but we were sure you were guilty.’
‘That was a long time ago,’ the man demurred.
‘You’re an honest, hardworking man these days?’
‘I am that,’ he answered proudly. ‘You ask anyone.’
‘So if I happened to see Mr Howard and mentioned that we thought his servant had once battered someone to death it wouldn’t matter to him?’
Smithson’s face set firm. ‘That would be slander.’
‘It would only be what we thought.’ He paused. ‘Although perhaps he might let you go after learning that. No more wages or time to slip away for a drink. No more Sundays off.’
The man sighed. ‘What do you want?’
‘Tell me about your employer. He likes his whores, from what I hear.’
‘I wouldn’t know.’ His mouth set in a tight line.
‘There’s a lass who works in the house, too.’
Smithson chuckled. ‘She’s forty if she’s a day. Hardly a lass.’
‘How is he with her?’
The man shrugged. ‘Same as he is with me. We know our place and he treats us fairly.’
‘And what does he do when you’re not there?’
‘I’ve no idea, Mr Sedgwick. I’m not there.’
‘Does he go out much?’
‘Aye, he’ll go to the cockfights or an assembly sometimes. Most days he’s working until after dark.’
‘He must be a rich man.’
Smithson drained the mug and stared at him. ‘Anything else, Mr Sedgwick?’ He started to rise, tall and menacing.
‘Nothing. But it’s good to know where we can find you, Hugh.’
He watched the servant leave, forced to bend his head slightly to go through the door. Smithson was clever enough not to mention the meeting to his employer; it could only bring questions the man would rather not answer.
For all that, he hadn’t learned anything other than Howard was generous, giving them every Sunday off. There was plenty a man could do with a whole day in an empty house.
The Constable had seen Rob in the morning, still bedraggled from his rounds, hair hanging in tangles around his face.
‘Emily said there was something at the Crown and Fleece.’
‘We found our answer.’
Nottingham listened with a frown, then said, ‘We should have done more there.’ He sighed. ‘Go on home and dry off.’
He’d taken the daily report to the Moot Hall and strolled down Briggate for the cloth market. Howard and Darden were standing together, discussing something intently. He raised his hat to them and continued down the street, feeling the anger of their gaze hot on his neck.