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When Lucie opened the shop door, her face deathly white with fear, Owen cursed himself for coming straight here without first cleaning off the blood. ‘Thank Heaven you’re alive,’ Lucie cried, throwing her arms round Owen. ‘How badly are you hurt?’

He felt her trembling. ‘I am unharmed,’ he lied. But she discovered his bleeding hand soon enough. ‘It is nothing. A struggle with an apple cart. It is Edmund and Alfred who need attention.’

Lucie led them all back to the kitchen, where Tildy was already stoking the fire. ‘Jasper has gone for water.’

‘See to Alfred first,’ Edmund said, sinking down onto a bench. ‘My wounds are less serious and far more deserved.’

Jasper struggled in with a bucket of water. With huge eyes he looked round at the bleeding men and crossed himself.

‘We are not half as bad as we look, lad,’ Owen assured him.

‘Come, Jasper,’ Tildy said. ‘Bring the water, then see to the Captain’s hand.’

Jasper cleaned Owen’s palm with a calendula astringent, then applied an adder’s tongue poultice and wound a clean cloth round his hand.

Owen was amazed by the boy’s gentle assurance. ‘You have learned much from Lucie and Wulfstan.’

Jasper nodded, but did not take his eyes from his work. ‘I think this will heal quickly,’ he said solemnly.

Lucie and Tildy packed Alfred’s deep wound with a blood-stanching paste and bandaged it. But Lucie was not confident. ‘He needs Wulfstan’s care, Owen. We must get him there today.’

‘I can go nowhere until I answer to the bailiff.’ Owen slumped on a bench beside Edmund. ‘We have broken the peace of York. A man is dead — we must answer for it.’ He turned to Edmund. ‘You must answer for it. What possessed you to wander the streets alone this morning? And to fall for that old trick! Did you not recognise your own livery?’

Edmund’s face was as white as Lucie’s. ‘I was not looking for trouble. I was thinking of Stefan, bobbing on the tide.’ He closed his eyes. ‘About myself I care naught.’

‘So Stefan is dead?’ Lucie asked.

‘I have no doubt.’ While Tildy held a hot compress to Edmund’s aching shoulder, he told Owen and Lucie of his resolve after hearing Joanna’s confession.

‘What confession?’ Lucie demanded.

Owen told her what he knew. Edmund added some details.

Lucie rose from Alfred’s side, pressing her fists into the small of her back. ‘Sweet Heaven! And yet there are still so many questions. What of the seal of St Sebastian? Joanna said “we needed but the seal”. Who did she mean by “we”?’

Owen did not like Lucie’s energy. ‘You will stay put while I am with the bailiff?’

But Lucie did not respond, busy tsking over Edmund’s wounds.

Twenty-three

Mary Magdalene

Lucie paced the kitchen, from the open door to the fireplace, while Bess sat at the table, stripping mint branches. Lucie sighed. ‘So many answers, yet still so many questions. If Stefan loved Joanna as Edmund claims, why would he have murdered the brother she loved so much?’

Bess put aside her work and brought a pitcher of ale down from a shelf. ‘You must be in need of this. I am.’ She poured a cup of ale, passed it to Lucie, poured one for herself, drank. Her nose and cheeks flushed with the impact of her husband’s strong brew. ‘Thank the Lord for my Tom.’ She grinned at Lucie. ‘What are you thinking?’

Lucie stood by the window, cup in hand, frowning. ‘Of what did Hugh and Joanna speak when they met? I must know that.’

Bess grunted. ‘’Tis curious, isn’t it? She was so angry with her brother for leaving without a word, still begrudging his deserting her years ago. What were those two up to?’

Lucie slowly lifted the cup to her mouth, but paused, lowered it. ‘And the medal, Bess. Mary Magdalene. Such a curious patron saint for a girl of thirteen. The patron saint of repentant sinners. Of what sin was Hugh thinking when he gave her that medal?’ Lucie began to pace again. ‘I assumed that Matthew Calverley was right, that his wife despaired of Hugh and Joanna because of her family taint. But might it have been something else? Something Hugh and Joanna had done?’

Bess took another long drink, her eyes faraway. She nodded. ‘And they meant to run off together.’

Lucie finally sat down opposite Bess and sipped her ale, staring into her friend’s face, seeing her own questions mirrored in Bess’s shrewd eyes. ‘Why did Stefan kill Hugh and not just capture him? He made enemies, doing that.’ Lucie put the cup down, pressed the heels of her hands into her brows. What else? Something niggled at the back of her mind. ‘Stefan would have spied on Hugh and Joanna before he went into Hugh’s house. What did he see that threw him into a murderous rage?’ Lucie met Bess’s frank look and nodded. ‘“Noli me tangere.” Who said that to Joanna?’

Bess tapped Lucie’s cup with hers. ‘Why did she run away with Stefan and then murder him?’ A knowing nod.

‘Where is Daimon?’

‘He and Sir Robert went to St George’s Field. They will return soon.’

Lucie found it difficult to wait for an escort, but it was no use arriving at St Mary’s before Joanna woke.

Sir Robert returned early from St George’s Field, exhausted, admitting his age. Bess rose from her seat. ‘Come, Sir Robert. Let us go back to the tavern and rest. Lucie has business with Daimon. Some heavy lifting.’ Bess winked at Lucie.

When Bess had led Sir Robert safely away, Lucie asked Daimon to escort her to the abbey. He agreed at once, eager to oblige her in any way.

But for the church bells the city was quieter on Sunday than on other days. People moved about the streets, but they did so in more measured paces. It was midday, the sun warm on Lucie’s back as she crossed the abbey grounds. She noticed little of her surroundings, rehearsing in her head how she would confront Joanna.

Prudentia rose from Joanna’s bedside as Lucie entered and hurried over, her hands outspread, her ruddy face crumpled in distress. ‘God help her, Joanna will take neither food nor drink today, Mistress Wilton. She says she must die now. That it is Our Lady’s wish. You must reason with her.’

Lucie assured the infirmaress that she would try. ‘And you must have some food and rest. Go now. I shall watch over her.’

‘I should stay with her.’

‘God go with you, Dame Prudentia,’ Lucie said firmly. ‘I wish to speak with her alone.’

‘Ah.’ Prudentia was suddenly all smiles. ‘Then I shall of course leave you with her.’ She shuffled off in good cheer.

Joanna lay on the bed with the medal pressed to her heart, her eyes fastened on Lucie. ‘I have confessed my sins. You have heard?’ Her voice was hoarse.

Lucie took a seat beside the bed, dipped a spoon into the cup of wine the infirmarian had poured for Joanna, grabbed Joanna’s jaw with one hand, pressed the spoon to Joanna’s closed mouth. Joanna tried to turn away, but Lucie held her firmly. ‘You shall drink this, Joanna, for we must talk.’

Joanna pressed her lips together.

‘Must I bring in Daimon to pry open your mouth? For I shall, Joanna, so help me God. You should be grateful that I have discovered your secret, the sin you have not confessed. If you died without confessing it, you would die in a state of sin, not of grace.’

Joanna relaxed her jaw, accepted the spoon, coughing as the liquid trickled down her dry throat.

Lucie nodded, sat back. ‘When you wish for more, ask.’

Joanna studied Lucie’s face. ‘What secret?’

‘I speak of that sin of which you repented all those years ago. Of which that medal is a symbol.’