De Luci stood aside to permit a priest to take his place. ‘My personal chaplain,’ he identified, as he assisted Linnet to her feet. ‘My lady, I will ensure your husband has the comfort of God in his extremity and that you are seen safely to your lodgings.’
‘Thank you, my lord, I am grateful,’ Linnet’s response was flat with shock. Two dusty brown patches smeared her gown where she had been kneeling.
De Luci patted her hand and began making arrangements to bear Giles home delegating Joscelin to provide escort.
‘My lord?’ Joscelin looked at de Luci askance and touched the angry weal traversing the left side of his face. The chaplain was shriving Giles lest he should die on the way home. Linnet de Montsorrel had taken her son from her maid and, ashen-faced, was hugging him tightly in her arms. ‘Are you sure you want me for this duty?’
Again de Luci gave him that piercing look. ‘You’re the best man I have. I could send FitzRenard but I really need him elsewhere.’ He gnawed on his thumb knuckle, briefly pondering. ‘I’ll send someone over to relieve you before vespers. With Montsorrel stricken like this, it will be prudent, I think, to have royal troops keep a friendly eye on his household.’
Chapter 7
In the bedchamber above the hall, Linnet listened to her husband’s breathing. The sound was akin to a dull-bladed saw dragging through wood. Mad, she thought, I will go mad, and turned away to pace the floor before she was tempted to seize a pillow and press it over Giles’s face. She clenched her fists and halted as she reached the wall of whitewashed dung and plaster. Outside, the shutters rattled as a storm wind tried to gain entry, while within herself a storm fought to escape. ‘Jesu,’ she whispered, closing her eyes.
Giles groaned her name and she returned quickly to his bedside. He tossed his head, moaning softly in the grip of a dream induced by the poppy in wine she had given him. She laid a calming hand across his forehead but his eyes jerked wide open and fixed on her, the pupils black pinpoints in the fogged blue irises.
‘The strongbox!’ he bubbled, and seized her wrist in a grip that was still frighteningly strong.
‘Lie still, my lord,’ she soothed. ‘You must conserve your strength.’
His grip tightened painfully. ‘The strongbox . . .’ he repeated through bloodstained teeth. ‘Give it . . . to Leicester.’ He fell back against the pillows, breath rasping. His grip slackened. She snatched back her wrist and rubbed it, her own breathing loud with distress. If she permitted Leicester to take their coin, she would beggar her son’s inheritance for another man’s glory. She could not do it and yet, if young Henry’s rebellion was successful, she would face terrible repercussions for denying his cause valuable funds.
‘How does he fare, madam?’
Stifling a cry she spun to face Hubert de Beaumont. Her knees almost buckled with terror. Beaumont was squat, but powerful. His ugly tenacity had always reminded her of a bull-baiting dog. ‘My husband needs rest,’ she managed to say and leaned against the wall for support.
Beaumont considered her closely and clicked his tongue against the roof of his mouth. ‘A bad business. The horse coper’s in the stocks and he’ll be lucky to escape the gibbet, selling a killer like that. He must have known the brute had that trick.’ Advancing to the bed, he leaned over the dying man.
Linnet struggled for composure. ‘I beg you not to disturb him,’ she said.
Beaumont straightened and looked at her. ‘As soon as I have possession of the silver your husband promised to Lord Leicester for his Normandy expedition, I’ll leave you both in peace.’ He removed a sealed parchment from the pouch on his belt. ‘Here’s my writ of authorization.’
The Earl of Leicester’s seal dangled on a plaited cord, heavy with the weight of authority and obligation - far too heavy for her to accept into her own hands. ‘My husband said nothing to me of such a promise. I cannot give you what you ask.’
Hubert’s brows drew together across the bridge of his nose. ‘Why should Giles have told you?’ he dismissed. ‘This is men’s business. You would do well to obey.’
Linnet clasped her hands. Her eyes widened with innocent distress. ‘You are right, this is men’s business and I am unable to deal with it. Perhaps when Giles has improved—’
‘Improved, my arse, he’s as good as a corpse!’ Beaumont scoffed. ‘Lord Leicester wants the silver.’ His glance flickered to the money chest beside the bed.
Linnet set her jaw. ‘My lord Leicester will have to wait on the justiciar’s yeasay,’ she said, and going to the chest sat down upon it.
Giles made a strangling sound as he strove to sit up. Beaumont’s eyes bulged. In two strides he had reached the strongbox, seized her arm and flung her aside. ‘Where’s the key?’ he snarled.
‘I don’t know.’ She rubbed her bruised arm.
Beaumont turned to the bed. ‘Key?’ he demanded of the choking Giles, who garbled his wife’s name and pointed an accusing finger.
Linnet slowly backed away from Beaumont until her spine struck the wall and she could retreat no farther.
Beaumont’s arm flashed out and he seized her round the neck. ‘Where is it, you whore?’ His thumb pressed against her windpipe.
Her breath crowing in her throat, Linnet struggled but his grip was too strong.
Ella, who had gone to fetch her mistress a hot posset of milk and nutmeg, halted in the doorway, taking in the scene with horror. Uttering a gasp, she cast the drink aside and fled back down the stairs to fetch help.
‘Tell me!’ Beaumont roared, his fingers tightening. Linnet kicked and struggled and did not answer but Beaumont had noticed a leather cord around her neck, beneath his squeezing fingers, and that it disappeared beneath her undergown and tunic, concealing whatever was strung upon it. Panting with exertion and triumph, he set his fist around the cord and twisted.
Joscelin heard the church bells striking the hour of vespers as he unburdened his bladder in the latrine pit at the foot of the garth. The sky over Westminster was darkly overcast, closing hard on a thin, silver rim of setting light over the Tyburn.
Readjusting his braies, Joscelin started back towards the house. The garden was neglected, although there were signs that it had been hastily tidied. There were no neatly planned and well-tended herb beds as there were at his father’s house, just straggles of half-wild sage and lurching clumps of rosemary. He supposed that although Giles probably used this place for bachelor pursuits when he was in the city, it seldom became a domestic household.
He glanced at the shuttered window above the hall where Giles was slowly bleeding his life away and told himself that the horse would have rolled on Giles whether he had struck out with the stool or not, but the feeling of guilt remained.
Giles’s heir was a frail child whose lands would have to be administered by a guardian for many years, in whatever form that took. He suspected the Crown would sell the widow and her son by right of marriage to the highest bidder and entrust the buyer with the child’s well-being and administration of his lands. From what he had seen, Giles de Montsorrel had been a poor husband and father but his successor would not necessarily be any more competent.
His ruminations were curtailed by Malcolm, a young Galwegian soldier in his troop who was sauntering on his own way to the latrine pit.
‘Lady Montsorrel’s got a visitor, sir.’ His French carried a lilt of Lowland Scots. ‘A paunchy wastrel from Leicester’s household. Said he was a friend of the Montsorrels, but I misliked his manner so I took his sword before I let him go up.’