Ranulf stared at him anxiously. ‘So, what’s the problem, Father?’
‘It’s his spirt I’m worried about.’
‘What do you mean?’
‘He might have a horror of violence, particularly weapons.’
Ranulf bit his lip. ‘Go on, Father.’
‘Well, we gave him a knife to cut his meat. He did more damage to his fingers than he did to his food.’
Ranulf leaned back and laughed in sheer relief, patting Father Thomas gently on the hand. The apothecary sat puzzled by Ranulf’s outburst.
‘Oh, I’m sorry, Father. I must apologise. Didn’t you know?’
Father Thomas shook his head.
‘Never give Maltote a knife, a spade, anything which will cut. He will only harm himself and everyone else in St Bartholomew’s! Yet, Father, I do thank you for your care.’
‘Don’t you wish to see him?’
‘He’s sleeping?’
‘Yes, yes, he is.’
‘Then let him be, Father. I have other business to tend to.’
Once outside St Bartholomew’s, Ranulf strode back across the common and, covering his face against the terrible smells from the city ditch, followed the winding cobbled alleyway down to the entrance to Fleet prison. The porter was not too accommodating; only after silver had changed hands was Ranulf allowed into the grim, stinking entrance hall. A burly gaoler with greasy spiked hair and a drink-drenched face accosted him.
‘What do you want?’ the fellow asked, wiping his hands on a stained leather jerkin.
‘A word with Puddlicott.’
The gaoler’s thick lips parted in a smile.
‘Ah, the plunderer of the King’s treasure! We have orders to allow no one near him.’
‘Whose orders?’
‘Sir Hugh Corbett, Keeper of the Secret Seal.’
Ranulf fished in his wallet and took out a warrant bearing Corbett’s seal. ‘My master sent me! Do as I say!’
Naturally, the fellow could not read but he was impressed by the seal and even more so by the silver piece Ranulf placed on top of the warrant.
‘You’d better come with me. He’s nice and safe now. Comfortable lodgings he has, well away from the rest of the scum.’
The gaoler led him through a cavernous chamber where the common felons crouched, chained to the wall. The manacles were long enough for the prisoners to stand up and walk about but now they huddled under threadbare blankets, moaning and whimpering in their sleep. Ranulf looked with distaste at the long common table covered in greasy dirt where mice, impervious to their presence, still gnawed at the dirty scraps of food and globules of fat strewn there. A few of the prisoners woke and staggered towards them; dirty, fetid men and women clothed mostly in rags, their bare skin showing terrible sores and purple bruises. A guard shouted at them and the prisoners slunk away.
Ranulf and the gaoler left the hall, crossed a stone-flagged corridor past grated windows where felons awaiting the death cart shook begging bowls through the bars, cried or shouted abuse. They climbed slimy, cracked steps into a long, torch-lit corridor containing a number of cells. Ranulf immediately knew where Puddlicott was lodged, by the two guards crouching outside. They hardly stirred as the gaoler unlocked the door and ushered Ranulf in.
‘Puddlicott, my lad!’ the gaoler shouted. ‘You poor benighted bastard! You’ve got a visitor!’
Ranulf peered through the gloom. The cell was a perfect square, clean and swept. There was a privy in the corner, which evidently drained down to the city ditch, and even some furniture: a small table, a broken stool and a long bed with a straw-filled mattress on which Puddlicott now half sat, his face heavy with sleep. At last he shook himself awake, stretched and yawned. Ranulf had to admire his coolness. The prisoner smiled at him.
‘There’s a candle on the table but I have no flint.’
Ranulf took his own and the candle sparked into light. Puddlicott went to piss in the privy, plucked up his cloak and came back to sit on the edge of the bed.
‘So, Corbett has sent you again, eh? Has he missed something out?’
Ranulf sat on the table. ‘Not really, we now know what happened. You apparently slipped in and out of the country when you wished, and moved sacks of coin to Gracechurch Street down to the docks by using a dung cart.’
Ranulf leaned back and stared at the ceiling. He and Corbett had made one mistake: never once had they asked why an important envoy like de Craon had not chosen a better lodgings. Yet, there again, accredited envoys had every right to choose where they stayed.
‘Didn’t you wonder,’ Ranulf abruptly asked, ‘why some of the whores invited to the abbey were murdered? Some of your girls must have been amongst the victims?’
Puddlicott shrugged his shoulders and pulled his gown tighter. ‘You know the way of the world. It’s Ranulf, isn’t it?’
His visitor nodded.
‘Men die violently, as do women and children, so why shouldn’t whores.’ Puddlicott stretched his legs. ‘Your master will keep his word about my brother?’
‘Yes,’ Ranulf answered. ‘And if you tell me more, you have my oath that twice a year I shall go to St Anthony’s to make sure all is well.’
Puddlicott got to his feet and went to stand over Ranulf. ‘Corbett didn’t send you. You’ve come here on your own. I have told you what I know and, although I think all law officers are bastards, you are not here to gloat. So what is it? The slayer of the prostitutes?’
‘No,’ Ranulf answered defensively. ‘We have our own thoughts on that.’
‘What then?’
‘Information!’
‘For Corbett?’
‘No, for myself.’
Puddlicott roared with laughter and went back to sit on his bed. ‘So, that’s your game, Master Ranulf? The servant competing with the master? Why do you think I have more information?’
Ranulf leaned forward. ‘I accept,’ he began, ‘that de Craon would come to England to take the treasure home. I also understand why he would hide away but, what I can’t understand, Master Puddlicott, is why you, digging away at the foundations of the crypt, had to leave such an important task and go back and forth to France!’ Ranulf looked at the prisoner. ‘That’s the only loose thread. Why didn’t you stay in London? What was so important that you had to journey backwards and forwards to Paris. We know you did; your accomplices stated how you would disappear for weeks. So, what else were you up to?’
Puddlicott waggled a finger at him. ‘You’re very sharp, Master Ranulf. Corbett didn’t ask me that.’
‘Perhaps he thought you were going back for fresh instructions.’
Puddlicott shrugged. ‘So?’
‘So,’ Ranulf replied. ‘Will you tell me the real reason?’
Puddlicott lay back on his bed, crossing his hands behind his head.
‘You’ve got nothing to lose.’
‘I’ve got nothing to gain,’ Puddlicott snapped.
‘There’s your brother, and, as you know, Puddlicott, the hangman has his own way of easing pain. I am also sure our good friend the gaoler could provide a deep-bowled cup of spiced wine before your last ride in the death cart.’
Puddlicott lay whistling softly through his teeth.
‘Agreed,’ he said sharply and swung himself off the bed. ‘I am a dying man, Ranulf. You know any oath made to me is sacred.’
‘I’ll keep it.’
Puddlicott tapped his feet on the ground. ‘Would you like to look on the face of Christ?’ he asked suddenly.
‘What?’
‘Would you like to look on the face of Christ?’
‘Of course. What do you mean?’
‘You know the Order of the Templars?’
‘Of course!’ Ranulf snapped.
‘Well,’ Puddlicott drew in his breath. ‘I don’t know the full story but sometimes de Craon babbled in his cups. His master, Philip of France, is desperate for money; the roads of northern France are clogged with men-at-arms as Philip assembles his armies for all-out war against Flanders.’ Puddlicott held a hand up. ‘I realise you know that. Anyway, Philip has heard of a precious relic, the Shroud of Christ held by the Templars.’