‘I don’t see how.’ Rose was defensive.
I didn’t really see how, either, but where murder is involved, I have always worked on the principle that no scrap of information is too trivial for consideration. Ronan Bignell might well have nothing to impart worth the telling, but I knew I couldn’t afford to ignore an opportunity so fortuitously dropped into my lap. But persuading his sister to introduce us was going to take all my charm and tact.
I sat up straight again on our rustic seat, removing the barrier of my arm and thus allowing Rose room enough to nestle close once more if she so wished. She didn’t wish; in fact, she edged in the opposite direction. She no longer trusted me. In her eyes, I had somehow tricked her into revealing a secret about her brother and was now prepared to use it as blackmail. I had to reassure her.
‘Look,’ I said urgently, ‘of course I won’t breathe a word of what you’ve just told me. I give you my solemn promise. It’s just that if I could speak to your brother, I’d be most grateful.’
She hesitated, glancing sideways at me. I assumed my most trustworthy expression with a hint of soulfulness thrown in. Well, that was what I intended, but I probably looked just plain constipated, because Rose burst out laughing.
‘All right,’ she conceded, her faith in me partially restored. ‘Dame Audrea has given me permission to visit my father’s shop in Wells tomorrow morning. Edward will be busy, as I told you, and one of the outdoor servants was going to accompany me. But if you offer to be my escort, I don’t suppose any objection will be raised.’ She eyed my ankle, suddenly doubtful. ‘If you can walk so far, that is.’
‘Oh, a night’s rest will work wonders,’ I answered confidently. ‘And if you’ll be so kind as to moderate your normal fleetness of foot to my stumbling gait, I’ve no doubt we shall do extremely well.’
‘You do sound pompous sometimes,’ she giggled.
So much for trying to impress!
‘In any case, my dog will hold us up,’ I warned her. ‘He’s unable to pass a rabbit hole without investigation. I must take him with us if you don’t mind. At the moment, he’s asleep in the kitchen, worn out after our day’s exertions. But by tomorrow he will have fully recovered and be raring to go.’
‘I like dogs,’ Rose assured me. ‘I’d like one of my own, but Ned won’t let me have one. He says if Dame Audrea lets us have our own cottage, maybe then I can. But at present we just have a room like all the others.’
‘Mistress Micheldever!’ exclaimed a hearty voice behind us, and I turned my head to see Anthony Bellknapp walking across the grass towards us. His eyes twinkled. ‘And my “old” friend, the chapman. I wondered where you’d both got to. You’re a sly dog, Roger, monopolizing the only pretty female for miles around.’ He sat down on Rose’s other side, and I waited for him to make the obvious comment. He did. ‘A rose between two thorns,’ he announced with all the panache of one making an original remark.
I concealed a smile, but I could see Rose was impressed. But she would have been impressed even if he’d said nothing more than ‘good evening’. He was not only a man and passably good looking, he was also surrounded by an aura of romance and mystery; the prodigal son returned out of the blue to claim his inheritance.
‘Oh, Master Bellknapp!’ she breathed ecstatically. My nose was quite put out of joint.
‘Anthony,’ he insisted. ‘You must call me Anthony. After all, you’re my receiver’s wife.’ He raised one of her hands to his lips and gallantly kissed it; but I didn’t need any of my mother’s extraordinary powers of the ‘sight’ to know that, if he had his way, matters weren’t going to rest there. I wondered idly just how long it would take him to coax this particular little rosebud into his bed. And within the next half-hour, I could see the same thought gradually dawning on Edward Micheldever as he watched Anthony’s attentions to his wife.
Anthony had come to inform us that he had, after all, prevailed upon his mother to ask the mummers to sing for their supper, and to preside over the entertainment. I don’t know what pressure he had put on Dame Audrea, or how many harsh words had accompanied the confrontation, but the lady had eventually been recalled to a sense of her obligations as a hostess and agreed to put aside family animosity until after the guests’ departure the following morning. On our return to the hall, Rose and I found the trestles and benches stacked along the walls, and only three chairs remaining on the dais. Four stools had been placed for the two monks, the royal messenger and the Bath merchant, who had been haled back from their beds, but everyone else either had to find a seat on the floor or perch uncomfortably on the sideways-ended trestles. Everyone else, that is, with the exception of Rose, who was swept along by Anthony on to the dais where he ordered Simon to give up his chair to her.
The boy naturally refused, whereupon his brother promptly seized him by the scruff of the neck and sent him sprawling on the floor.
‘Mistress Micheldever shall be our Queen of Revels,’ Anthony announced to the astonished company, while Rose simply looked distressed at the turn events had taken, glancing anxiously towards her husband.
The receiver, glowering furiously, was making for the dais to reclaim his wife when Anthony roared with laughter and imperiously waved him aside.
‘Good God, sir! Can’t you take a bit of fun? I should think any man would be pleased to see his wife so honoured.’ He smiled at Rose. ‘Sit down, my dear, sit down! Steward, tell the servers to bring some wine and beakers, and we’ll all drink to the Queen of Revels’s health. Let the toast be to youth and beauty!’
Simon had by this time picked himself up from the floor and was about to launch himself at his brother when a sharp word from his mother checked him. I wasn’t close enough to hear what she said, but it was obvious that Dame Audrea was not prepared to parade the family disarray in public and could only sit out the hours until bedtime with the best grace she could muster. The same applied to Edward Micheldever, who was forced to look on as Rose, still shaken, but with her confidence beginning to return, spent the evening as the not-so-reluctant object of Anthony’s attentions.
The mummers were better than I had expected, miming the stories of Abraham and Isaac, Cain and Abel with sufficient skill to capture the attention of an audience whose thoughts had every incentive to stray. (Even the Bath merchant and the King’s messenger couldn’t help but be intrigued by that other drama enacted on the dais, and had plainly been as agog with curiosity as the brothers from Glastonbury.) This was followed by a juggler who entertained us with a dexterity that kept at least seven or eight coloured balls in the air at once and drew gasps of admiration from the watchers, and the show concluded with a one-man band on his pipe and tabor while the rest of the company danced a vigorous estampie from eastern France. By which time, the hour was pretty well advanced, the evening shadows lengthening, the candles, cressets and wall torches flickering low in their holders. A few shreds of daylight still vied with the flames, but Dame Audrea stood up, took a determined leave of her visitors, passing them over to the care of her chamberlain and steward, and retired from the hall.
With her departure, there was a concerted movement as George Applegarth and Jonathan Slye ushered the guests to bed. The cook took charge of the mummers and led them away to the kitchen, while Edward Micheldever, with a face like a thunder-cloud, leapt on to the dais to reclaim his wife. At the same moment, Simon Bellknapp surprised his brother by stealing up behind him and locking an arm around Anthony’s neck with such force that the older man’s head cracked loudly against the back of his chair. His grip tightened as Anthony clawed at the strangling arm.
‘You bastard!’ he shouted. ‘I’ll kill you! Just see if I don’t!’
I would have limped to Anthony’s assistance, but was too slow. Several servers and the bailiff were ahead of me, Reginald Kilsby’s burly form well to the fore as he tugged Simon’s arm free of his brother’s throat.