‘I can see that the King wouldn’t trust my lord of Clarence,’ I answered hotly. ‘He’s proved himself a traitor on more than one occasion. But His Grace would surely never suspect my lord of Gloucester of working against him!’
‘You may well be right,’ Timothy replied, settling his elbows on his knees and leaning forward. ‘But how can he ever be certain beyond all doubt that the Duke’s patent dislike of the Queen and her numerous family might not, some day, turn to a more active hatred? Besides,’ Timothy spread his hands, ‘it’s only tit-for-tat, when all’s said and done. We have our own agents in the King’s and brother George’s households.’ He saw my expression of horror and laughed. ‘You are an innocent, Roger, aren’t you? Now, where was I?’
He went on to enumerate two more members of the Duke’s entourage who were suspected of being spies: Jocelin d’Hiver, yet another of the score or so Squires of the Household, who might, or might not, be in the pay of Charles of Burgundy’s Spy-Master General, and the man already mentioned that evening, Ralph Boyse, whose mother had been a Frenchwoman and who could, just possibly, be guilty of a dual allegiance.
‘But in God’s name,’ I expostulated, ‘if you know, or even suspect, that these men are up to no good, why do you not advise the Duke’s steward to dismiss them?’
Here a page arrived with a tray bearing a bottle of malmsey and three beakers, which he placed on the table and then withdrew. Timothy Plummer poured out a measure of wine, carefully tasted it, then filled the beakers to the brim before answering my question.
‘That would be very poor strategy. A foolish thing to do if you think about it carefully. At least we know who these men are and can keep them in our eye. If it suits us, we can even give them false information to pass on to their masters. But dismiss them and they would only be replaced by other agents, perhaps more skilful at concealment.’
Once before, I had been given a glimpse of the spider’s web of intrigue and constant double-dealing which surrounded kings and princes and had not liked it then any more than I liked it now. Even on such brief acquaintance I could well imagine the petty jealousies, the back-biting, the factions, the whispering and the strife which tore at the very foundations of every European court, and had no wish to be part of such a world. But if Richard of Gloucester’s life was truly in danger, then I had no choice except to do whatever lay within my power to protect him, however reluctant I might be to get involved. For, from our very first meeting, he had commanded my heart.
‘Very well,’ I told Timothy Plummer, ‘I accept that the enemy you know is better than the one you don’t. But you haven’t yet explained why you believe the Duke to be in mortal peril.’
‘Thaddeus Morgan brought me the news at the beginning of May, while we were on our way south from Middleham. He was heading north to Yorkshire, when he heard that the Duke and his levies had reached Northampton and were resting there for two or three days. He therefore sought me out, so as to warn me of a very strong rumour circulating among the Brotherhood that an order had gone out for Duke Richard’s death.’
‘Wait,’ I said, holding up a hand. ‘Who or what are the Brotherhood?’
It was Lionel Arrowsmith who answered. ‘The Brotherhood, also sometimes known as the Fraternity, is a network of vagabonds, rogues and petty criminals from the stews and sewers of every country throughout the length and breadth of Europe and probably beyond. These men sell information for money and are invaluable as spies, provided that you pay them well.’
Timothy Plummer nodded. ‘No one knows who the fountain-head is, nor even if there is one, nor where the organization begins and ends. No man goes by his proper name, and each has two other Brothers – one on his right hand and one on his left, so to speak – with whom he shares information, gathered from Heaven alone knows what sources; a rag-bag of rumour and gossip from which every man picks such items as he thinks he can sell, and for which he believes he can find a customer. And that is the sum total of my knowledge of the Brotherhood and probably as much as anyone knows. Thaddeus Morgan, or whatever his rightful name was, was known to my predecessor, His Grace’s previous Spy-Master, and was necessarily made known to me. And very useful he’s been,’ he added bitterly, ‘worth his weight in gold. He will be sorely missed.’
‘Someone else will no doubt take his place,’ Lionel said drily, ‘once his death becomes noised abroad. You have only to wait patiently, Tim, and you will be approached. As, of course, will be the Spy-Masters of King Edward, my lord Rivers, His Grace of Clarence …’
‘I don’t understand,’ I interrupted. ‘You mean that all these people know that Duke Richard’s life is under threat? Why then does the King do nothing about it?’
‘No, no!’ Timothy Plummer finished his wine and poured himself a second beakerful. ‘A Brother will only approach one Spy-Master at a time, the one he thinks will be most interested and who will therefore pay him most handsomely. It is a point of honour with these men never to sell the same information twice over.’
‘And you trust them to keep their word?’
‘Oh yes.’ Lionel stretched out his empty beaker for me to refill. ‘These men have their loyalties and think it bad luck to break faith.’
I twisted my own beaker, still half full, between my hands, afraid to drink too deeply after what I had already consumed that evening. I needed to keep a clear head. ‘So what else,’ I asked Timothy, ‘could Thaddeus Morgan tell you concerning the danger to His Grace?’
‘Only that rumour said it would come from within his own household and that the blow must fall before the Eve of Saint Hyacinth… But from which particular direction it would threaten was more difficult to determine, and there was a delay of several weeks before he could offer us any further information. Then, when finally he was able to promise us a name and with it, possibly, a motive, there was a further wrangle over the amount of gold demanded by himself and his informer. That money was handed over last night, as you know, and the identity of the would-be assassin ought now to be in our possession.’
‘Instead of which,’ I finished for him, ‘Thaddeus Morgan is dead and you are none the wiser.’ I pondered for a moment or two on all that he had told me and one fact puzzled me more than the rest. ‘You mentioned the Eve of Saint Hyacinth,’ I added slowly. ‘That would be the sixteenth of August, about seven weeks hence.’
‘So you see, chapman,’ Lionel Arrowsmith said, ‘that time grows pressing, particularly so since we are now completely cut off from any source of further information.’
‘But why the Eve of Saint Hyacinth?’ I pressed. ‘By then His Grace will most surely be in France. And why should a limit be put upon the deed? What will happen on the Eve, or even the Feast, of Saint Hyacinth that makes the Duke’s execution unnecessary after that date?’
Timothy raised his eyes from the contemplation of his once-again empty beaker and fixed them on my face. ‘Is that how you read it, chapman? That if we can keep His Grace from harm until then, his life will no longer be in jeopardy?’ His voice sounded a note of desperate hope.
‘I may be wrong,’ I admitted, ‘but for the moment I can see no other construction to be placed upon the condition. If, that is, you understood Thaddeus Morgan aright.’ Timothy grimaced. ‘I didn’t see him again after our first encounter, but that was the message Lionel brought me.’
‘And it was what Thaddeus told me,’ was the indignant answer. ‘Do you think me such a fool that I could misinterpret his meaning?’
Timothy raised a hand. ‘Softly, softly, Lal! No one is accusing you of anything. But it has needed the chapman here to point out its importance. Neither of us has been thinking very clearly.’