‘And maybe it will,’ said Firethorn, exasperated by the mention of Barnaby Gill, ‘but the final decision about tomorrow lies with me, and, in deference to the company’s feelings, we’ll rest your play awhile.’
‘The company’s feelings? What on earth are they, Lawrence?’
‘I can see you are not well-versed in the ways of the theatre. Actors are ever at the mercy of superstition. If something goes awry during a performance, it plants a fear in their mind. And there cannot be a more worrying mishap onstage than the death of a member of the cast.’
‘Do you mean that the actors refuse to play it again?’
‘No,’ said Firethorn, choosing his words carefully, ‘they will do as they are told, but they’d prefer to leave your comedy aside tomorrow. They are not in a mood to do it justice and believe, in any case, that we should rest your play as a mark of respect to Hal Bridger.’
‘An assistant stagekeeper?’ scoffed Hibbert.
‘Nick Bracewell agreed.’
‘Who manages Westfield’s Men — you or him?’
‘I do,’ said Firethorn, straightening his shoulders.
‘Then why bother with the riffraff of the company, for that is all they are. Assistant stagekeepers and book holders!’ He gave a derisive laugh. ‘Any fool could do such an office. It’s work for trash, for rabble, for scum, for the sweepings of the streets.’
‘It’s work that has to be done well,’ said Firethorn with passion, ‘or playwrights like you and actors like me are made to look ridiculous. Never condemn those behind the scenes, Saul. Our success rests on them as much as on our own abilities.’
‘I dispute that.’
‘Then we must agree to differ.’ Firethorn rose from his chair. ‘I’ll bid you good night and hope that wiser counsels prevail on the morrow, and that you come to see Nick Bracewell in a fairer light.’ Hibbert stifled a retort. ‘It’s another reason why Black Antonio holds the stage in your place, Saul. It will keep you and Nick apart.’
‘We’ll meet again ere long, I assure you.’
‘Then do so as fellows in the same company. Are we agreed?’
Hibbert gave a reluctant nod but his eyes were smouldering.
It took Nicholas Bracewell the best part of the morning to track down the man. Simeon Howker’s name was the last on the list and Nicholas had to work his way through the others before he finally trudged off in the direction of Clerkenwell. The shop was in a narrow lane that twisted between rows of filthy tenements. Few in such a poverty-stricken area of the city could afford a doctor or a surgeon, none could aspire to the services of a physician. The vast majority therefore fell back on their local apothecary, hoping that his herbal remedies would cure the vast range of diseases and disabilities that they took to his door. Nicholas was easily the healthiest man ever to step over the threshold.
‘Yes, sir?’ asked the apothecary.
‘Simeon Howker?’
‘The very same.’
‘I’m a friend of Doctor Mordrake,’ said Nicholas, barely able to see the man in the dark interior of his shop, ‘and I’m hoping that you may be able to help me.’
‘If you have dealings with Mordrake, you’ll not be needing me. He knows of herbs that I’ve never even heard of, and can cure anything from smallpox to the standing of the yard.’ He stepped out of the shadows. ‘Do you have trouble with the standing of your yard,’ he said with a crude cackle. ‘’Tis a common problem among men. It either stands when you would have it flaccid, or lies dormant when it needs to rise and bid welcome to a lady. Is that your ailment, sir?’
‘No,’ said Nicholas. ‘I only came for information.’
‘Even that has a charge on it.’
Simeon Howker was a short, stringy man in his forties with a lean face that was fringed by a wispy ginger beard. Wearing a black gown and a black skullcap, he peered at his visitor over a pair of glasses. The shop was small, cluttered and musty. Around its shelves, Nicholas could see endless bottles of herbs. Howker named them at speed.
‘Aconite, buckthorn, buttercup, cinquefoil, wild cherry, darnel, hellebore, hemlock, laburnum, larkspur, lobelia, mandrake and many more besides,’ he said. ‘Most are harmless unless mixed with other herbs. Several that are poisonous can yet be used as remedies if sold in the right compounds.’
‘And you know how to make those compounds, I daresay.’
‘Of course, good sir. I am part apothecary and part magician.’
‘You may also be an accessory to a murder.’
‘What’s that?’ said the other, so startled that he retreated into the shadows. ‘I’ll hear no wild accusations in my shop, sir. I’m a law-abiding man, as any of my customers will witness.’
‘It’s one of those customers I came to talk to you about,’ explained Nicholas. ‘Someone recently asked you to make a lethal compound for him that would kill as soon as it was swallowed.’
‘Rat poison is all that I sell.’
‘This poison was bought by a rat and I’m anxious to catch him. The compound that you mixed for him sent a young friend of mine to an early grave. I want his killer brought to justice.’
‘I had no truck with him. Why come to me?’
‘Because your name was on the list that Doctor Mordrake gave to me, a list of five apothecaries, who’d sell their souls rather than earn an honest living.’ Howker started to bluster. ‘Save your breath to tell me what I came to find out and do not try to deceive me,’ warned Nicholas, fingering his dagger, ‘or I’ll cut the truth out of your miserable carcass.’
‘I made no poison, sir. It was one of the others.’
‘They didn’t dare to lie to me and neither must you. Monkshood, belladonna, henbane, a pinch of foxglove and something else to make it more deadly still — those were the ingredients.’ He moved forward to confront the apothecary. ‘And you mixed them, did you not?’
‘No, no,’ cried the other. ‘I swear that I refused to do it.’
‘Then someone did come in search of the poison?’
‘Came and went away. I practise no witchcraft. I would never make such an evil potion.’
‘You’re a craven coward who cannot admit the ugly truth,’ said Nicholas, whipping out his dagger and holding it at the man’s throat. ‘I’ll ask you one more time. Lie to me again and I’ll send you off to join my friend on a cold slab.’ Howker started to quiver. ‘Now — who instructed you to make that poison?’
‘Nobody.’
The dagger pricked his throat and made him yell. ‘Who?’ said Nicholas, knowing that he was at last on the right trail.
‘He did not give a name.’
‘When did he come?’
‘Two days ago.’
‘Alone or with someone else?’
‘On his own,’ said Howker. ‘If you please, sir, could you put that dagger away before it hurts me? I’ll tell you what I know, I promise you.’
Nicholas sheathed his weapon. ‘What did the man ask for?’
‘A deadly poison. He said his farm was overrun with rats.’
‘Did you believe him?’
‘Not for a moment, sir. He was no farmer. And he bought too little of the compound to deal with a plague of vermin. But he paid me well,’ he remembered, ‘and stood over me while I mixed the compound.’
‘Describe him.’
‘It’s very gloomy in here.’
‘Describe the man,’ insisted Nicholas. ‘You saw him well enough to realise that he was not a farmer, and if you work in this light every day, you must be used to it. How tall was he?’
‘About your height, sir.’
‘His build?’
‘Much slimmer than you.’
‘What of his age?’
‘Thirty or more, perhaps.’
‘Well-favoured?’
‘And well-dressed in doublet and hose. A proper gentleman.’
‘No gentleman buys poison with intent to murder,’ said Nicholas, tartly. ‘What else can you tell me about the fellow?’
‘Nothing, except that he wore a beard and a jewelled earring.’
‘What colour was the beard?’
‘As fair as yours and neatly trimmed.’
‘A strange customer to come into a shop like yours, then.’