Выбрать главу

"You're coming as I'm going," she said, waving a hand toward her saddled mare and waiting companions. "We need to work on our timing, for certes." She smiled up at him, her eyes sparkling in the sunlight, flirtatious and fond and carefree, the most innocent of spies.

Holding out her hand for his kiss, she asked, "Are headaches contagious? You look as if you caught mine!"

"I had too much ale last night."

"You mean you went off to drown your sorrows after taking me back here? That is very flattering, love."

"You think so?"

"Of course. What woman would not want to believe she could drive a man to drink?"

"Well, you need not worry. That, Claudine, you definitely can do."

She laughed, then said regretfully, "I have to go. But I owe you for last night, and I ll not be forgetting."

"Nor will I," he said softly. "Nor will I…"

~~

Eleanor looked intently into Justin's face and then rose abruptly. "Follow me," she said, and led the way across the hall toward the privacy of her great chamber. But even that did not satisfy her, and with Justin in tow, she swept through the doorway of St John's Chapel. "Leave us," she commanded the startled priest, and as soon as the door closed behind him, she beckoned Justin forward.

"You found out something."

"How did you know?"

"Yours is an easy face to read, at least to me. Tell me what you've learned, Justin. Hold nothing back."

"I found out," he said, "why Gervase Fitz Randolph died."

"Was it the letter?"

"No, my lady, it was not. He was slain by mischance, mistaken for another man. He died believing that they were after your letter, but it was not so."

Eleanor's eyes searched his face. "Are you sure of that?"

When he said yes, she moved away from him. Crossing to the altar, she leaned forward, resting her hands, palms out, on the embroidered altar cloth. Justin was taken aback; this was the first time that he'd seen her emotions surging so close to the surface. Did the French king pose so great a danger as that?

But then Eleanor turned around. Her face was so radiant with relief that Justin caught his breath sharply, in belated understanding. It was not the French king's involvement she'd feared, it was John's! It had been John all along. She'd been afraid that he'd been forewarned by Philip and hired assassins to make sure the letter never reached her.

Why had he not seen the truth ere this? It was all too plausible. If the Archbishop of Rouen had spies at the French court, why would Philip not have spies of his own? What had Eleanor said about the French king? Ah, yes, that he had more spies than scruples.

This explained so much. Mayhap it was not meant that the truth come out. Even that cryptic comment of hers made sense now — she could not prove that John was innocent, she'd have to settle for keeping his guilt secret. Remembering his own unsettling encounters with John, Justin felt sure that Eleanor's youngest son was quite capable of murder if it served his own interests. The queen's fear had been well founded. Realizing how much had been at stake, he was suddenly very glad that he'd remained in ignorance of that. Had he known how much this mattered to Eleanor, would he have been tempted to tell her what she needed to hear?

"You've brought me welcome news, Justin. Now tell me the rest of it, why the goldsmith died and how you learned the truth."

Justin did, leaving nothing out. The interrogation in Newgate Gaol. The crooked dice game. The embittered gambler out for vengeance. Two horses, one grey and one roan. The outlaws lying in wait, so careless in their killing. "Fulk de Chesney's good luck was lethal for Fitz Randolph," he concluded somberly. "I was outraged at first, that it was so arbitrary, so meaningless a death. But I think his family will care only that they've been cleared of suspicion. At least his widow will be spared any more grieving."

"It is remarkable," Eleanor said, "that you were able to solve this murder with so little to go upon. You've more than justified my faith in you. Now… I imagine you incurred expenses in the course of your investigation, no? I'll instruct Peter to reimburse you for whatever you spent on my behalf."

"Thank you, madame." Justin waited expectantly, sure that she would offer extra compensation, a reward for services rendered so successfully.

"I suppose we ought to decide upon an amount," Eleanor said with a smile. "I had two shillings in mind. I think that seems fair."

"Two shillings…" Justin had hoped for more, much more than that. Now that he was on his own again, money mattered. But he bit back any words of disappointment or dissatisfaction. Complaints were not made to queens.

His chagrin was so obvious, though, that Eleanor's smile chilled. "Surely you were not expecting more than that? Good Lord, Justin, I pay the knights of my household two shillings a day!"

"A day? Madame… you meant wages?"

"Of course," she said impatiently. "What did you think I meant?"

"You want me to remain in your service?"

"Yes, I do. Does that surprise you so much? You've proved yourself to be resourceful and daring and trustworthy." Her smile came back. "I'd be a fool to let you go!"

"What… what would I do for you, madame?"

"Whatever I wanted done." Her earlier irritation had fled and her eyes were shimmering with suppressed laughter. "But nothing illegal, lad, at least not blatantly so!"

"Madame, I was not implying that!" Justin said hastily.

"Of course you were." Eleanor was laughing openly now. "But I took no offense. I've always admired the way cats look ere they leap. So… what say you? Is my offer agreeable to you?"

He nodded mutely, still at a loss for words.

"You need not look so bedazzled, Justin, for there will be plenty of hard work involved. I can promise you long hours in the saddle and sleepless nights in my service more often than not."

Eleanor's moods had always been mercurial. As Justin watched, her laughter stilled and those hazel eyes met his with compelling candor. "I can admit now that I feared John might be involved in the goldsmith's murder. You guessed that, I suspect."

Startled, he could only nod again. Her gaze was mesmerizing; he had the eerie sense that she could see right into his soul.

"John was blameless… this time. But I know where he has gone and I know what he intends to do. I'd wager the surety of salvation that he is at the French court even as we speak, plotting with Philip to make certain that Richard never sees the light of day again. Troubled times lie ahead for England, for us all. I am going to need men I can trust, utterly and wholeheartedly. Men like you, Justin de Quincy."

"I will not fail you, my lady." But the words rang hollow in his ears, for he was failing her by his silence. He'd meant to tell her of his suspicions, to warn her that Claudine was her son's spy. She needed to know that her kinswoman could not be trusted. And if she dismissed Claudine in disgrace — or worse — it was no more than Claudine deserved. But now that the moment had come, the words caught in his throat.

"Justin?" Eleanor was regarding him quizzically. "You seemed about to speak. Have you more to tell me?"

He swallowed, no longer meeting her eyes. "No, madame," he said, "nothing more…"

20

WINCHESTER

March 1193

Winchester had built its gallows beyond the city walls, out on the Andover Road. A crowd had already gathered by the time Justin and his companions arrived. He was not surprised by the throngs of spectators, for public hangings usually drew a large audience, offering both grisly entertainment and reassuring proof that there is always a reckoning