‘Nick says that he’s a lonely man who does not make friends easily.’
‘He certainly has my friendship,’ said Hoode. ‘Michael will do anything for me. Had you come an hour earlier, you’d have met him yourself. He’d just come back from the market.’ He indicated a bowl of fruit. ‘That is what he bought for me.’
‘How kind!’
‘Doctor Zander prescribed fresh fruit, so Michael brings whatever I need. At the doctor’s behest, he has even made and fed me a broth. Oh, yes,’ he went on, ‘Michael Grammaticus is much more than a gifted playwright. He’s been friend, nurse, and cook to me as well.’
At the rear of the Queen’s Head was a small garden, tended by Leonard, that produced a few vegetables as well as a variety of flowers. It was there that Nicholas Bracewell finally tracked down the card player. Philomen Lavery cut an odd figure as he strolled around, gait slow and head down in contemplation. He could be no more than thirty, but the grey hair and pinched face added at least another twenty years to his appearance. What struck Nicholas was the paleness of the man’s skin. Blue veins ran in tributaries all over his forehead, and his eyebrows were no more than wisps of white hair. Lavery was a small man with an almost feminine daintiness about him. Owen Elias had said that he might pass as a priest, and Nicholas could see why. There was a faintly spiritual air about Philomen Lavery.
When Nicholas introduced himself, the other man gave a self-effacing smile.
‘Your reputation goes before you, sir,’ he said.
‘What reputation?’
‘The landlord tells me that you are the prop that holds up Westfield’s Men. Actors are a breed apart. They live by different rules than the rest of us. It must be difficult to work with such capricious and quicksilver characters.’
‘We have our awkward moments,’ admitted Nicholas.
‘Yet, from what I hear, you take them in your stride.’
‘I try, Master Lavery. I try. But what brings you to London?’
‘I came to do some business,’ replied the other. ‘Most of my day is spent at the Royal Exchange with other merchants. My evenings, as you know, are dedicated to business of another kind.’
‘Yes,’ said Nicholas. ‘I wished to speak to you about that.’
‘I am all ears, my friend.’
Lavery seemed so friendly and looked so innocuous that Nicholas found it hard to believe he was involved in deception at the card table. His doublet and hose were of good quality but muted colours, and he wore no hat while enjoying the evening sunshine in the garden. His grey locks were ruffled by a light breeze.
‘I gather that some of my fellows visit you in your room,’ Nicholas began.
‘That is so. You are welcome to join them.’
‘I’ve no love for games of chance.’
‘Then why do you work in the theatre?’ asked Lavery. ‘Is that not the biggest game of chance of all? Think what risks you run every day. You are at the mercy of the weather, the city authorities, and the fickleness of your audiences.’
‘Do not forget the plague, Master Lavery. That closes down every playhouse.’
‘In short, you live by putting yourself in jeopardy.’
‘There’s every likelihood of it,’ conceded Nicholas. ‘That is true.’
‘Then you are a brave man, Master Bracewell. You and your fellows tempt fate in your occupation. It requires a lot less courage to play a game of cards.’
‘Courage or folly?’
Lavery smiled. ‘That depends on whether you win or lose.’
‘My concern is with those who lost,’ said Nicholas. ‘Two of the hired men came to grief so badly at your table that they were forced to ask for their wages in advance. Both were married men who lacked the money to feed and clothe their families.’
‘Then they were unwise to play cards. Each did so of his own free will.’
‘Only because the game was here to tempt them.’
‘They’d find cards or dice in many taverns, if they knew where to look. And I did not sit down with my pack in the taproom. I simply asked the landlord if he knew of anyone who might enjoy a game or two.’ He gave a hollow laugh. ‘I lived to rue the day I made that request.’
‘Why?’
‘Because he was the first through my door. Adam Crowmere is the luckiest man I have ever played against,’ he complained. ‘I thought myself hard done by when I lost seven shillings to a laughing Welshman last night.’
‘That was Owen Elias.’
‘No sooner had he quit my room than the landlord steps in and wins almost twice that much from me. If I do not recoup my losses tonight,’ he said jokingly, ‘I may not be able to pay the rent.’ He looked up at Nicholas. ‘Why not come to my room?’
‘I told you. I’ve no interest in cards.’
‘You’ll take an interest in these, I believe.’
‘Will I?’ asked Nicholas.
‘Yes, my friend. I can see in your face that you think me a cheat. I do not blame you for that,’ he said, holding up a hand. ‘When a stranger like me arrives here without warning and coaxes money out of the purses of your fellows, you are bound to think me a cony-catcher. Examine my pack of cards and you’ll find them clean and unmarked.’
‘I do not accuse you of deception, Master Lavery.’
‘Then why did you accost me out here?’
‘To see you for myself and to tell you of my worries.’
‘I am pleased to meet you,’ said Lavery, ‘but you bear your anxiety to the wrong person. If some of the actors cannot afford to lose, keep them away from my room. I’ve no wish to deprive any wife or child of sustenance.’
‘Master Firethorn has already given a stern warning. After the performance this afternoon, he told the whole company about the danger of playing cards.’
Lavery’s eyes gleamed. ‘But therein lies its excitement.’
‘There’s no excitement in losing all your wages.’
‘Oh, but there is, there is. As soon as you turn over the first card, your heart begins to beat much faster. Win or lose, you feel the blood pulsing through your veins. And do not tell me you’ve not courted danger in your time,’ he went on, head to one side as he grinned at Nicholas. ‘I talk to a man who once sailed with Drake around the world. What terrors and tempests you must have endured! And yet you are afraid of a harmless game of cards. Shame on you, my friend!’
Philomen Lavery gave a nod of farewell before heading back toward the inn. He was a mild-mannered man whose voice was soft and educated, yet Nicholas had found the conversation rather unsettling. He was convinced that Lavery was no cheat, preying on gullible fools who were enticed to play cards with him, but he was still uneasy. He sensed that he was at a disadvantage. Nicholas had learnt very little about the man. Lavery, on the other hand, seemed to know far too much about him.
The high ideals that inspired those who first set up Bridewell as a workhouse had long been abandoned. It was a house of pain now. Hywel Rees hated everything about it. Its constraints irked him; its regimen was strict and its atmosphere oppressive. Boys like Ned Griddle endured it all with quiet resignation, but Hywel could not do that. He was a natural rebel who was ready to question, challenge, and, if necessary, resist. It earned him a few beatings from the keepers, but his spirit was not broken. After five long days in Bridewell, he was as defiant as ever.
‘Have you never tried to escape, Ned?’ he asked
‘Never.’
‘Why not?’
‘Where would I go?’
‘Back home to your family.’
‘I have no family,’ said the boy. ‘My mother died years ago, and I’ve no idea who my father was. We lived on the streets. When they let my brother out, that was his only home. He’ll sleep in the open till the bad weather comes.’
‘And then?’
‘He’ll have to find cover.’ Griddle looked gloomily around the room. ‘At least we have a roof over our heads.’
‘Yes,’ said Hywel resentfully, ‘and four thick walls to keep us in.’
‘We get our meals.’
‘Do you call that food? It makes my stomach turn. When I worked on a farm in Wales, we gave better fare to the pigs.’ His lip curled in disgust. ‘I thought they were meant to cure us here. With food like that, we are more likely to catch a foul disease.’