John studied Crispin silently for a time before he turned his gaze. He stared at the wall facing him a scant few feet away. “Would that I knew the answer to that.” He sighed and dragged himself forward, giving Crispin’s shoulder a friendly cuff. “Come along. I’m cold. And I have wine at home.” John beckoned but Crispin hesitated. “Come along. I don’t bite. That costs extra.”
“You are a pig,” spat Crispin.
“Very likely,” he agreed.
Reluctantly, Crispin followed him down the muddy lane, trying to keep his distance, afraid someone might think he had hired the man.
They turned down another tight alley and up a short flight of stairs to the narrow door of John’s lodgings.
Inside, the room was cold. The hearth had burned low and John rushed in to stoke it back to life. He dropped a bundle of sticks and a square of peat on top of the burgeoning flames and stood back, rubbing his thighs to warm them. “It was cold in that alley with my bum waving in the wind.”
Crispin sneered in his direction but joined him by the fire. “You said something about wine.” Anything to change the subject.
John smiled at him and curtsied. “Where are my manners?” He took a drinking jug from a shelf, removed the cloth covering, and offered it first to Crispin. Grateful, Crispin took it and drank. It filled his hollow belly. He knew he should be hungry. It had been a long time since he’d eaten. But he didn’t feel the least like having food right now. He drank a bit more before handing the jug to his companion.
John drank with a loud exhale and lowered the jug. “It was a harsh day, Crispin. And a long, cold night to come. Would that I could find a nice man to keep me warm at night.”
Crispin ignored the man’s leer. “Why must you be so disgusting? You know I hate that kind of talk.”
“And yet you befriended me anyway. One has to wonder why.”
“I just. . did. God knows why.”
“So far, He hasn’t told me.”
“Would you add blasphemy to your many sins?”
“Why not? If I’m for Hell then I might as well make it a fast journey.” He pulled a stool over and sat, offering the other to Crispin. The room was small and spare, not unlike Crispin’s own, though it was considerably more dilapidated. The sky was clearly visible through a hole in the roof where a shaft of gentle snowflakes softly fell. Crispin edged his chair to the side to avoid the snowfall and scooted closer to the fire till his toes nearly burned.
He couldn’t help stealing glances at his companion. “Must you continue to wear that?”
John put a hand to his breast. “Would you prefer I remove it?”
“Er. .”
With a smirk, John snapped to his feet and wriggled, loosening laces, until it slid down his slim form and pooled at his feet where he stepped out of it. He scratched luxuriously at himself over his shift. “Better?”
Crispin gestured to his braided hair and the man sighed elaborately. “For a man who is paying me nothing, you are certainly demanding.” He sat and began to unbraid his hair, pulling his fingers through the loosened strands until they fell in kinked waves to just below his jaw. When he was finished he posed with an inquiring brow.
Crispin drank from the jug again and nodded. “At least you look like a man again.”
“I am a man, you know.”
“Then why not look like one? Why do you insist on this?”
John paused, rubbing his hands for warmth. “I don’t whore all the time. Sometimes I work as an embroideress and so I must go on as Eleanor. But I have lain with women. Nuns mostly.”
Crispin spit his wine across his chest.
“Careful there, Master Guest.” He pounded on Crispin’s back. “That is all the wine I have.”
Crispin wiped uselessly at the front of his coat. “You are telling me tales again,” he choked out.
“No. Women of all sorts pay me. I do not discriminate. One hole is like another.”
“God’s blood!”
“Enough of this!” He settled on his stool again and plucked the drinking jug out of Crispin’s hand and took a swig. He wiped his mouth and settled his gaze on Crispin’s squirming form. “You asked me a very provocative question before. ‘What makes a man want another man?’ Wasn’t that it, Master Guest? And just why should you be so interested in my answer?”
There was nothing for it but to drop his heated face in his hands again. Crispin turned his head from side to side. He couldn’t forget Julian. It would take a very large dose of wine indeed for that to happen. “Just tell me!” he hissed through his fingers.
John slouched. He set the jug down between his legs and rested his long fingers on his knees. “I wish I knew,” he whispered. He cast a glance to the gown on the floor and a wash of uncertainty changed his expression for only a moment before it was lost again in the room’s shadows.
For the years Crispin had known him, John seemed to be a merry fellow. John had helped Crispin when he had first come to the Shambles, showed him how to stay alive on the streets, where the best almshouses could be found for food, prevented him from losing his way. He had never tried his wiles on Crispin except for his occasional seductive banter. Crispin felt slightly ashamed that he had done little to return John’s charity and instead offered the man scorn. It seemed ungrateful, but it was always difficult for Crispin to reconcile John’s kindness with his predilection for dressing as he did and laying with men.
But now John’s usual merry demeanor seemed swallowed by his thoughts.
Rykener settled on his stool and never looked at his friend as he spoke. “When I was a child,” he said softly, “I adored my mother’s things. Her gowns, her veils. I wanted so much to wear them. I knew such thoughts were wrong, but I would steal away from my chores to merely touch them. But it wasn’t until I was a lad of thirteen. I was working in Madam Elizabeth Bronderer’s stew as a scullion when she dressed me in women’s clothes for the first time. It was a scheme of hers, but. .” A look of bliss passed over his face. “Ah Crispin, it was wonderful,” he said at last. “I was no longer a scullion after that.”
“A woman’s gown is one thing. But playing the mare-”
“I tried, Crispin,” he said wearily. “Truly, I tried. Madam Bronderer had me lay with women, too. But. .” He shook his head. “A wife and children at my knee. What man does not want these things? And yet. .” He rubbed his arms absently. “Have I not prayed enough, done enough penance? Even as a child I denied myself food and drink in recompense for my sinful thoughts. Even Madam Bronderer would admonish her ‘girls,’ as she called us, to pray. But there was never any joy with women. Only with men. Why should that be so? Alas. I continue to sin. And pray. I do not know which is the stronger.”
Crispin shrugged. “I know not either, John. We each have our burdens.”
“Yes, that is so.” He sniffed and clapped his thighs with his hands. “Well, did I answer your question, at least?”
The discomfort returned. “Erm. . I suppose.”
John smiled. “I wish I could be more like you, Crispin. You’re very brave.”
In the face of it, Crispin was beginning to think that this wasn’t quite true.
“I have shared my tale with you. Now you must tell me why you ask, Crispin. Come now.”
“There were murders, John,” he said carefully. “Vile murders of boys. And they were. . sodomized.”
John dragged his cloak from the floor and pulled it about him. “Oh.” He rose and leaned over the small hearth. His face, usually so pliable, seemed to harden before Crispin’s eyes. “And so you come to me. Do you accuse me, then? I am a man who indulges in the pleasure of other men so I must be a defiler of boys as well, is that it? Am I also a murderer?”
It was the furthest thing from his thoughts and yet his thoughts had been so jumbled he hadn’t quite known what he said. He had never seen Rykener so angry before. He slowly stood. “I am not accusing you, John. That was not my intention. Forgive me if I have offended you.”