‘You’ll need these,’ he rasped, handing one to each of them. ‘Now, follow me.’
He led them round to the back of the church to a long windowless shed. He opened the padlock on the door and waved them in.
‘Feast your eyes!’ he jibed. ‘I bury the poor bitch in an hour. You’ll find a candle on the ledge to the right of the door.’
Corbett went first into the darkness and immediately caught the stench of putrefaction. He was glad he had the sponge and that his stomach was strong. Ranulf, however, went a dull grey colour so, after he had used a tinder to light the candle, Corbett told him to wait outside.
‘Ignore the rats!’ the priest called out. ‘The coffin is on trestles in the centre.’
Corbett held the candle high and, despite the discomfort, felt a tinge of compassion for the lonely, oblong box. Cade, muttering curses, lifted the loose lid and revealed the ghastly sight of the woman lying there. Apparently, she was to be buried as she had been found, no attempt being made to dress the body. Her face, white as chalk, looked even more garish in the flickering candle flame, her skin was already turning puffy, her body bloated with corruption. Corbett examined the long purple gash which had severed the windpipe. Cade, one hand cramming nose and mouth, lifted the poor girl’s dress. Corbett took one look at the mutilation, turned away and vomited the wine he had just drunk. He staggered to the door, a white-faced Cade following him into the sunlight. Corbett threw both sponge and candle at the feet of the priest.
‘God have mercy on her!’ he muttered between bouts of retching. ‘She was someone’s daughter, someone’s sister.’ He suddenly thought of his young daughter, Eleanor. Once, the mass of mutilated flesh he had just glimpsed, must have been a young child cooing in a cradle.
‘God help her,’ Corbett repeated.
He sat in a half-crouch and cleaned his mouth with the back of his hand. Ranulf brought an ewer of water from the priest’s house and, without a by your leave, he held it up for Corbett to wash his hands and face. The clerk then stood, glared at the priest and undid the neck of his purse.
Two silver coins went spinning in the priest’s direction. ‘Here, Father!’ Corbett muttered. ‘I want a Mass sung for her. For pity’s sake, before you bury her, douse the coffin in a mixture of vinegar and rose water and place a white cloth over the corpse. She probably lived a wretched life, died a dreadful death. She deserves some honour.’
The priest tapped the silver coins with the toe of his high-heeled boot. ‘I’ll not do that,’ he squeaked.
‘Yes, you bloody well will!’ Corbett roared. ‘You’ll get someone to do it and, if you don’t — and I will check — I will make it my business to have you removed from this benefice. I understand His Grace the King needs chaplains for his army in Scotland.’ He stood over the now frightened priest. ‘My name,’ he whispered, ‘is Sir Hugh Corbett, Keeper of the Secret Seal, friend and counsellor of the King. You’ll do what I ask, won’t you?’
The priest’s bombast collapsed like a pricked bladder. He nodded and carefully picked up the silver coins. Corbett didn’t wait but walked back to the wicket gate, where they had tied their horses, and stood for a while drawing in deep breaths.
‘Whoever did that,’ he nodded back to the church, ‘must be both evil and bad.’
Cade, who still appeared nauseous, just muttered and shook his head whilst Ranulf looked as if he had seen a ghost. They walked down the Poultry, their stomachs unsettled as they passed the stinking tables and shearing tubs of the skinners who sat, knives in hand, scraping away the dry fat from the inside of animal skins before throwing the finished pieces into tubs of water.
Ranulf, now revived, cat-called the apprentices who stood waist-deep in the large vats of water, kneading the soaking skin with their bare feet. The abuse was swiftly returned but most of the skinners’ venom was directed at a man chained by the beadles to the pole of one of their stalls. A placard round the fellow’s neck proclaimed how the previous night, whilst drunk, this roaring boy had moved amongst the skinners’ houses mewing like a cat. A barbed insult, implying that some skinners tried to trade cat skin in the place of genuine fur.
At last, Corbett and his party reached the Mercery where tradesmen behind stalls shouted that they had laces, bows, caps, paternosters, boxwood combs, pepper mills and threads for sewing. They passed the great seld, or covered market, in West Cheapside, finding it difficult to manage their horses because of the cows being driven up the Shambles towards the slaughter houses at Newgate. The animals seemed to sense their impending doom and struggled at the ropes round their necks. The horses caught their panic and whinnied in fear. Further up near Newgate, the slaughterers had been busy, turning the cobbles brown with blood, gore and slimy offal. They passed through Newgate, the summer breeze wafting the fetid odours of the prison and the foul stench of the city ditch which ran alongside of it.
‘A morning for bad odours,’ Cade mumbled. He pointed to the city ditch, a seething cauldron of stale water, dead rats, the carcasses of cats and dogs, human waste and rotting offal from the markets. Cade nudged Ranulf playfully in the ribs.
‘Keep on the straight and narrow,’ he warned. ‘From next Monday, the sheriffs intend to use all malefactors in the city gaols to clear the ditch and have the rubbish rowed out to sea to be dumped.’
Corbett, still thinking about the corpse he had just viewed, stopped at Fleet Bridge to buy a ladle of fresh water from tipplers selling it from stoups and water barrels. The others joined him and they washed their mouths before continuing down Holborn towards the Strand. They passed the church of St Dunstan’s in the West, the Chancery record office, went under Temple Bar and on to the broad Strand leading down to Westminster. The great highway was lined by the freshly plastered and painted great inns belonging to certain nobles; the road was busy with judges, lawyers and clerks, dressed in their rayed gowns and white coifs, making their way to and from the courts.
Outside the hospital of Our Lady of Roncesvalles, near the village of Charing, Corbett stopped to admire the new beautifully carved cross erected by his royal master in memory of his beloved wife Eleanor. Moving on, they rounded a bend in the road and saw before them the gables, towers and ornately carved stonework of Westminster Abbey and Palace. Entering the royal precincts by a small postern gate in the northern wall, they saw, to the right, the great mass of the abbey and, nearer to them, wedged neatly between the abbey and the palace grounds, the beautiful church of St Margaret. Yet the splendour of both the abbey and the church was tarnished by rusting scaffold stacked haphazardly against the walls by the masons who had ceased work when the treasury had run out of money to pay them.
Cade pointed north, around the other side of the abbey. ‘Over there,’ he remarked, ‘in the middle of a small orchard you will find the ruins of Father Benedict’s house and,’ he moved his arm, ‘behind the abbey church is the Chapter House where the Sisters of St Martha meet. Shall we go there first?’
Corbett shook his head. ‘No, first we will visit the palace and see the steward, he may be able to give us more information.’
Cade pulled a face. ‘The steward is William Senche. He’s usually half-drunk and can’t tell you what hour of the day it is. You know how it is, Sir Hugh, when the cat’s away the rats will play.’
They led their horses into the palace yard. The King had been absent from his palace for several years and the signs of neglect were apparent; weeds sprouted in the palace yard, the windows were shuttered, the doors locked and barred, the stables empty and the flower-beds overgrown. A mongrel dog ran out and, hackles raised, stood yapping at them until Ranulf drove it off. Near the Exchequer House, overlooking the overgrown riverside gardens, they found a glum-eyed servant and despatched him to search out William Senche. The latter appeared at the top of the steps leading from St Stephen’s Chapel and Corbett muttered a curse. William Senche looked what he was: a toper born and bred. He had bulbous, fish-like eyes, a slobbering mouth and a nose as fiery as a beacon. With his scrawny red hair and beetling brow, he was a very ugly man. He had already sampled the grape but when he realised who Corbett was, he tried to put a brave face on it; his answers were sharp and abrupt but he kept looking away as if he wished to hide something.