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Crispin hurried, anxious to test his theory. But he did not make it more than a few paces from Rykener’s lodgings when someone familiar passed him on the other side of the lane. The mist, as always, grumbled along the way and made even close objects difficult to discern, but there was little mistaking Matthew Middleton, the goldsmith.

The Jew.

Crispin watched him hurry along under the eaves, trying to escape the lashing of wet snow sloppily winging on the wind. His furtive movements and the unmistakable glances over his shoulder urged Crispin to cast aside his earlier quest. Westminster could wait. His instincts told him to follow.

If Middleton was trying to be subtle, he was making a poor job of it. He seemed clearly too distracted to hide his movements. He bumped absentmindedly into the whores and thieves making their way to shelter in the dim afternoon. Whatever his mission, he seemed to know where he was going, for he never veered from a direct path before him, never stopping to assess the way. He knew it.

The Jew soon followed along the Bank and took the strip of mud overlooking the Thames, heading for the territory of the potter’s kilns.

There were few along the same path but Crispin managed to pace himself behind a cart, following in its shadow even as Middleton glanced quickly over his shoulder. He had not seen Crispin, and with a hand on his sheathed dagger, Crispin hurried away from the cart to slide into the darkness of an alley, peeking out to watch Middleton disappear into the potter’s village of kilns and hovels. Moving slowly after the man, he kept his distance and watched his quarry stride down the row. He passed Dickon’s hovel and picked over the muddy way, until he reached a familiar hut.

Crispin hung back, keeping his back against a wooden post upholding a rickety canopy. Middleton knocked at the door of Berthildus the Potter and waited until someone answered. When she appeared in the doorway, her face bloomed into shock. She looked urgently both ways down the busy avenue before pulling him inside.

Crispin moved. He was under her window in an instant.

“-did you come here?” he heard her say. “That was foolish, especially in the daytime.”

“No one suspects,” he said, exasperated. “Don’t be a fool.”

“They had best not! What would I do if they made me to go to the Domus? Who could live off the pittance the king supplies those poor sots?”

“One wonders if the king truly wishes to support his converts or to starve them.”

“Aye. I do not wish to see for myself.”

“I did not come to talk to you of this.” Crispin heard the man’s shuffled step move closer to her and his voice dropped. “I came to talk to you of. . Odo.”

“Not him again! Why must it be me?”

“I’ve told you before, Berthildus. There is no one left of our people here. It must be you.”

“I can’t control him anymore than you can.”

“But you must. That Tracker has been sniffing about.”

“Tracker? I ain’t seen no Tracker.”

“He’s been asking things. You must keep an eye on Odo.”

“He’s his own man, as you well know.”

“But he has been to the northbank. To Westminster.”

“What? How do you know that?”

“There was trouble. Tell him he must stop whatever it is he is doing or it will be the ruin of us all.”

There was silence for a moment. Crispin listened hard before he heard the door creak open. He scrambled to the other side of the hut and pressed against the wall.

“I’m counting on you, Berthildus. We all are. Here. I know it has been difficult for you with Hugh away.”

There was the soft clink of coins exchanging hands.

“God grant that he returns soon,” she said.

“Yes. God keep you.” His slushy steps moved away and Crispin waited, wondering if he should question Berthildus, if anything could be gained by it. Clearly he had prodded a nerve when questioning the Jews in London. But who was this Odo and why did they both seem to fear him? Something clicked in Crispin’s head, and he thought he might just know this Odo after all.

“Master Guest.”

Crispin whipped around. Blindsided, he stared into the face of the stranger from the carriage.

“I hoped I would see you again,” said the man. And before he could answer, a fist snapped hard into Crispin’s face. Stars exploded in his vision and he fell to his knees, blood rushing down his nose and over his lips. The taste of copper flooded his mouth.

A shadow glided over him. Crispin looked up blearily into the face of the carriage driver.

The man looked down at Crispin, drew back his arm, and finished the job.

15

Crispin knew he had been dragged away. He just wasn’t certain by whom or where he had landed. The blow had not knocked him out completely. There had been vague images of alleys, ditches, and people, but he had been powerless to make any resistance. Instead, he had hung lifeless in their arms and dragged a long way.

He felt cold damp under his back when he was roused enough to care. His face hurt and his mouth was sticky from drying blood.

Raising a hand to his face, he heard the stirring in the dark room. Someone moved across the floor. He turned his head in time to see a boot jabbing toward him. A soundless cry opened his mouth as the boot sunk into the flesh between his ribs, not hard enough to break bones but enough to garner his attention.

Breathing became the first priority.

The thickened voice above him gave a mirthless chuckle. “That is for stabbing me. A man, after all, must know his place.”

Gasping seemed to work. Coughing ached his already bruised ribs so he tried to avoid it. Wrenching open his eyes, Crispin glared at the silhouette above him. “You have me at a disadvantage,” he rasped, adding with vinegar, “your Excellency.”

That seemed to satisfy the man, and he drew back, enough to show Crispin he wouldn’t kick him again. For the moment.

Slowly, Crispin rolled to his side and gingerly pushed himself upright, wary that the man would lash out at him again. Once he was standing, his eyes quickly took in his dim surroundings. A stable. Disused by the look of it. There was straw under his feet and the stench of moldy hay permeating the air. A place whose walls might well swallow his cries. But when his hand brushed against his scabbard, he was surprised to feel the knife still there.

“You have my attention,” he said guardedly, wiping his mouth with his sleeve. Where was that damned driver? “What is it you want of me now?”

“I was very disappointed with our last encounter, Master Guest. Very disappointed. When I encouraged you to continue your investigations, I did not intend for you to follow me. That was very. . discourteous.”

Crispin made an abbreviated bow in apology, but never said the words. “I cannot help, your Excellency, if my investigation led me to you.”

“Nonsense. Your insatiable curiosity led you to follow me. I’ve no doubt that this will someday be your downfall.”

“My lord, may I remind you of my current circumstances in London? I met my ‘downfall’ ages ago. And I have arrived. . intact. More or less.”

“Less, I should think.” The man cocked his head. Crispin saw the briefest of shimmer in the blond locks. Golden, one might even call them.

“What were your intentions with that child?”

Crispin was used to the dark by now. He saw the gleam of teeth with the man’s smile. “My intentions were my own.”

“Then you can understand why I was reluctant to let you escape with him.”

The man nodded and lowered his head. He contemplated the floor for quite some time. “I suppose your intentions were noble and could therefore be forgiven. In time.” The man limped a little to reach a stool and sat with a grunt. He regarded Crispin with a shadowed face and glittering eyes. “What an unusual man you are. Perhaps I underestimated you. A dangerous thing to do.”

Crispin shrugged. He looked around the room pointedly, what he could see of it. “So what now? I have apologized. May I be on my way?”