‘Francis Lovell is also at Baynard’s Castle?’
‘He’s there to support the duke. My lord is very sensibly gathering his closest friends around him.’
‘Sweet Virgin!’ I said. ‘That place must be crammed to the doors. Has Duchess Cicely arrived yet?’
‘Yes. That’s why my lord went to stay there. He’s a devoted son, as you know. But now that Duchess Anne is settled at Crosby’s Place, he’ll naturally join her.’
‘Very well, so tell me some more about this murder in a locked room. Locked from the inside, you say?’
‘Bolted,’ Timothy amended. ‘The top bolt only. There was one lower down but that was still open.’
‘You must realize,’ I pointed out, ‘that murder in a locked room is impossible. You are quite sure about this, aren’t you?’
The spymaster took a deep breath, his chest swelled and his eyes threatened to pop out of his head, like a frog’s. ‘I told you, they had to break the fucking door down to get in there!’ he shouted, once again doing damage to his knuckles by pounding the window seat. This time I winced for him, but, for the moment, he seemed oblivious to the pain. That, I reflected with inward satisfaction, would come later.
‘You’re certain the door wasn’t just stuck?’ He made a gobbling sound as if he were about to choke and I began to be seriously concerned for his sanity, ‘All right! All right!’ I murmured soothingly. ‘I’ll accept your word for it that the door was bolted. At least,’ I couldn’t resist adding, ‘that was how it seemed.’ I settled more comfortably in my chair. ‘So tell me everything you know,’ I invited.
FOUR
This time, I thought he might have a seizure.
‘What do you mean?’ he demanded furiously. ‘I’ve told you! Young Fitzalan has disappeared — vanished into thin air — and Gregory Machin’s been found dead — stabbed — in a locked room. What more do you need to know?’
It was my turn to sigh and look superior. ‘I need to know when both were last seen and by whom. Were they sighted together or separately? How long was it before either of them was missed? Had the tutor made any enemies among the other members of Francis Lovell’s household? Had he any enemies at Baynard’s Castle?’
Timothy jerked forward on the window seat. ‘Look!’ he exclaimed angrily. ‘My brief is to take you back safely to London, not try to reply to a lot of foolish questions to which I’ve not been told the answers. You can make all these enquiries when you reach the castle. And good luck to you! The place is fairly seething with people, as you surmised, what with Duchess Cicely in residence with all her retinue, my lord of Gloucester with his — until he joins the duchess — and the Lovell entourage, as well. Because, of course, none of the latter can move on until this business is resolved. Moreover,’ he added gloomily, ‘the city itself is bursting at the seams what with the coronation nearly upon us and a session of Parliament in the offing. And don’t say you know, because things have got very much worse in the past four weeks since you so cravenly crept away.’
‘I did not creep away,’ I retorted, nettled. ‘I told you in my letter all that I knew. If we’d met face to face, I couldn’t have added anything to it. Besides,’ I continued in a burst of honesty, ‘I had no desire to get mixed up yet again in the duke’s affairs. I’d a bellyful of that last year. I’ve a life and family of my own, in case His Grace doesn’t realize it.’
‘Oh, he realizes it, all right. For one thing, you’re always moaning on about it.’ Timothy grinned nastily. ‘It’s just that you’ve made yourself so indispensable to him, that he doesn’t trust anyone else to deal with these sort of delicate situations.’
‘Crap!’ I snorted, but I was flattered all the same, as my companion had known I would be.
‘I suppose I can answer one of your questions,’ he admitted after a moment’s charged silence. ‘Did this Gregory Machin have any enemies in Baynard’s Castle? The simple reply is, he couldn’t possibly have done so. He wasn’t there long enough. He and young Gideon and Mistress Copley were only in residence one night before the tragedy happened.’
‘Which was when?’
‘Sometime late Friday night or Saturday morning as far as I know. As soon as the duke was apprised of it, and as soon as he learned from me that you were no longer in London, I was sent pelting off to this godforsaken city to bring you back again. I rode all the rest of Saturday, all day yesterday and most of today practically without stopping, except to change horses and snatch a few hours’ slumber.’ His tone was aggrieved. ‘I’m exhausted, I can tell you. I’m looking forward to a good night’s rest.’
He smiled ingratiatingly, but I hardened my heart. I wasn’t prepared to have Elizabeth sleep with Adela and me tonight — if, that was, Adela was in a forgiving mood — so that Timothy could have her bed.
‘And I’m sure you won’t be disappointed,’ I said. ‘Bristol has many excellent inns and alehouses.’ His face fell, but I went inexorably on: ‘However, don’t lie on too long in the morning. We must leave by first light if, as I want to do, we ride first to Minster Lovell.’
‘M-Minster Lovell?’ spluttered Timothy. ‘Why in the Virgin’s name do you want to ride to Minster Lovell? It’s fifty miles or so north-east of here, well out of our way. It will add miles to our journey, and the duke has stipulated that we’re in London by Friday at the latest. He wants this business cleared up before the coronation.’
‘All the more reason for us to start as early as possible tomorrow,’ I pointed out smugly.
‘But why do you need to go there at all?’
‘You said Gideon Fitzalan had been living in the Lovell household until the Duchess of Gloucester fetched him away to London last. . Wednesday, was it?’
‘Yes. They spent a night on the road, arriving in London on Thursday. But you still haven’t said why you want to go there. Nothing happened at Minster Lovell.’
‘We don’t know that,’ I argued. ‘Something could have occurred there that might prove to be a useful clue.’
I was unable satisfactorily to explain this very strong urge, even to myself. It had come upon me without prior warning, and I suspected that it could have burgeoned partly from a desire to irritate Timothy and to make things as difficult and complicated for him as possible.
He continued to stare at me for a few seconds longer, his lower lip protruding belligerently, and I thought he was going to refuse. But he finally shrugged and gave way. ‘Oh, very well.’ Then he added, ‘If you think you can stand the extra journey! You know you aren’t a good horseman. In fact, if you’re honest, you’ll admit that you’re no more at ease on horseback than if you were astride a cow. So don’t start whining and wanting frequent rests. I’ve told you. We have to be in London by Friday, and today’s Monday, so we have some hard riding ahead of us.’ He rose reluctantly to his feet. ‘I suppose now I’d better go and find lodgings at one of your excellent inns — ’ he managed to make it sound like a sneer — ‘and leave you to your fond farewells. I’ll see you at sun-up, then, at the livery stables in Bell Lane. Don’t be late.’
I lay beside Adela, listening to her gentle breathing and looking up at the moon-splashed ceiling. We had made love and now she was curled into my side, one arm thrown across my chest, one of my arms holding her close. I loved her very much and wished to take a vow never to deceive her again. But, by this time, I knew myself too well and refused to make God a promise that I was aware I might be unable to keep.
And the thought of God reawakened the uneasiness I had been feeling all evening, ever since I had known the overriding urge to visit Minster Lovell.
‘I know it’s You, Lord,’ I told Him severely. ‘Don’t think You’re deceiving me for a single moment. You’re interfering in my life again, snatching me away from home and family because there’s some villain — or perhaps in this case more than one villain — that You want brought to book. I’m not a fool. I recognize the signs by now.’