‘But he didn’t, did he?’ Nottingham said. ‘Not in his pack, not in his room.’ He was staring at Paul who shook his head slowly and sadly. ‘So you killed him for nothing.’
‘We didn’t kill anyone,’ Peter yelled.
‘That pack and your clothes say you did. Very loudly.’
‘We don’t know where they came from,’ he blustered.
Nottingham scratched his chin and shook his head. ‘You don’t think anyone’s going to believe that, do you?’
The silence filled the room for a long moment. The Constable walked out, Sedgwick right behind him, letting the lock click heavily.
Nottingham sighed deeply. ‘Now we just have to get them to the scaffold.’
‘The alderman’s going to fight you all the way.’
‘There’s too much here, even for him.’ He gestured at the evidence in the deputy’s arms. ‘He’ll fight until he realizes he can’t win.’
‘He’ll hate you.’
Nottingham smiled and shrugged. ‘He won’t be the first, will he?’
He felt drained, a body emptied of everything. The energy and the fury had vanished now that the chase was over. He sat down heavily, the seat hard against his back.
‘So what now, boss?’
‘We wait for the alderman and his lawyer. Keep those things out of the way. We’ll let them rant, then present them with the evidence.’
He didn’t have long. Within five minutes Henderson had arrived, the lawyer trailing behind him, the master and his dog.
People claimed that the merchant had been handsome when he was younger, but there were few signs of it now. His face had turned hard and coarse, with no warmth in the eyes or mouth. An expensive wig sat awkwardly on his broad skull. He wore good plain clothes, his coat and breeches as sober as a Quaker’s, but they couldn’t hide the way his large body had thickened, ripened with fortune.
The lawyer, lean and long, had the feral look of an ambitious man, his gaze darting around eagerly for opportunities. His waistcoat was fine silk in bright colours, his suit deep plum velvet, a testament to his fees. He had the air of a man who spent every day around corruption and had come to relish the scent.
‘Where are they?’ Henderson demanded. His hands were shaking with fury.
‘They’re in a cell. Where they belong, Alderman.’ Nottingham’s reply was equitable.
‘You don’t treat my lads like that.’
Nottingham stood. He was taller than the merchant and looked down at him.
‘I’ll treat them the way I treat everyone else when they’re guilty of murder.’
‘Murder?’ the lawyer asked. ‘That’s a very serious charge, Mr Nottingham.’
‘With very serious consequences,’ the Constable reminded him.
‘You have proof, I take it?’
Nottingham gazed slowly from one of them to the other before he answered.
‘I do,’ he announced.
‘Oh aye? Is that like that proof you’ve had before?’ Henderson gave a short, coarse laugh. ‘Evaporated like warm piss, that did.’
Money and threats will do that, Nottingham thought.
‘John.’ The deputy brought Isaac’s pack and the clothes from the corner.
‘That’s the pack of the man they murdered, and the clothes they wore when they killed him.’ He couldn’t resist adding, ‘It was Isaac the Jew they killed.’
‘And where did you find these things, Mr Nottingham?’ the lawyer wondered.
‘In the bedroom the brothers share,’ the Constable told him.
‘What?’ Henderson exploded, his face red, spittle flying from his lips. ‘You went through my house?’
‘I did.’
‘And who gave you the right to do that?’
‘The law of England,’ Nottingham replied. ‘Ask your man.’
Henderson turned furiously on the lawyer, who gave a short, embarrassed nod.
‘Get them out here,’ the merchant demanded angrily. ‘I want to see them.’
Nottingham gestured to the deputy, never taking his eyes off Henderson. The lock clicked and in a few seconds the brothers appeared, their hopes raised by the arrival of their father.
‘Did you do it?’ Henderson asked bluntly.
‘Of course not.’ Peter held his head up defiantly.
‘See there, Constable?’ the merchant demanded. ‘He says they’re innocent.’
Nottingham had to stop himself laughing. ‘The evidence says otherwise. And if you don’t know the penalty for murder, Mr Henderson, I’m sure your lawyer will tell you.’
The merchant glared at his sons and gestured at the clothes and pack. ‘He says these were in your room.’
‘He must have put them there,’ Peter said.
Henderson rounded on the Constable.
‘He’s accusing you.’
Nottingham shrugged.
‘Ask your servants. We didn’t bring anything with us. What do you think we did, bring it in by magic?’ He looked at the lawyer. ‘They’ll go to the Assizes.’
‘It won’t stand,’ the merchant threatened.
‘He’s wanted us for a long time,’ Peter complained. ‘He’d do anything to get us.’ He sounded desperate, trapped.
The door opened. Josh walked in slowly, leading the old woman who lived in the room beneath Isaac’s. A heavy coat seemed to weigh her down, her skin almost translucent. She looked around with her sightless eyes, taking in the warmth, the feel of people close by.
‘Sorry, boss,’ Josh apologized. ‘It took us a little while to get here.’
‘That voice,’ the woman said.
‘Which one?’ Nottingham asked.
‘The young one.’ She spoke clearly, sounding more like a girl than a woman who’d experienced so many years of the world’s cruelty. ‘The one who said you’d wanted them for a long time. That’s the man I heard in Isaac’s room.’
It was perfect, Nottingham thought. He couldn’t have asked for more. The timing, the clear honesty of her words.
‘Thank you,’ he told her.
‘Are you going to believe that blind bitch?’ Peter shouted.
Nottingham rounded on him.
‘I’m going to believe the truth. And the truth is that you and your brother murdered Isaac the Jew, broke into his room, and robbed him.’ He looked at the merchant, daring him to speak.
Henderson gazed at his sons.
‘You stupid bastards,’ he said dismissively, turning to leave, the lawyer fast behind him.
‘Put them back in the cell,’ Nottingham ordered. ‘Thank you for that,’ he said to the woman. ‘Josh will see you home. You’ll have to testify in court.’
She nodded, and reached out, her fingertips lightly tracing his face, feeling the cheeks, the jaw, tenderly across the mouth.
‘You’re a good man,’ she pronounced softly, then Josh guided her away.
He slumped in the chair and pushed the fringe off his face.
‘So that’s that,’ Sedgwick said. ‘We’ve got them, finally. Nice and quick, too.’
Nottingham shook his head. ‘You know Henderson won’t let his boys walk to the gallows that easily. He’s disgusted now, but he’ll fight for them in court. Better lock that evidence up somewhere safe or it’ll vanish before the trial. I’ll go and inform the Mayor.’
‘I’ll walk up with you.’
For a moment the offer astonished him, then he remembered. Wyatt. The man had been out of his mind for hours. He smiled and shook his head.
‘If it makes you feel better.’
Seventeen
For once, Nottingham didn’t have to wait to see the Mayor. The clerk, a harried, anguished man, ushered him through as soon as he arrived. This, the Constable thought bleakly, is where the fight for the Henderson brothers begins.
Edward Kenion put down his quill, scattered a little fine sand over his words to dry the ink, and sat back in his chair. His stock was glistening white and perfectly tied, the periwig neatly powdered and fresh. But his eyes were tired, the flesh of his cheeks mottled.
‘I’ve heard from Alderman Henderson.’
‘I’d be surprised if you hadn’t. I’m sending his sons to the Assizes.’
Kenion sighed. ‘What charges?’
‘The murder of Isaac the Jew.’
The Mayor was silent for a few moments, running his tongue across his lips.