“Witnesses?”
“Everyone! They all saw me. I never left.”
Crispin frowned. “Surely a moment to go to the privy?”
“Perhaps, but not for more than a few moments.”
“That’s all it would take.”
Bonefey’s hands began to tremble.
“What about last night?” he asked.
Bonefey stared at the blade. “I won’t say anymore. You are mad.”
He rose. “I won’t ask a second time.”
Bonefey rolled off the bed to the other side. “Help! Help! Murder! He’s murdering me!”
“Oh be still, you coward!”
But it worked. Soon fists pounded on the door and men rushed into the room. Crispin slammed his blade into its sheath and turned to face Harry Bailey and Edwin Gough, the Miller. “Master Crispin!” cried Bailey. “What goes on here?”
“I am merely interrogating this man.”
“Interrogating?” Bailey and Gough both looked to the disheveled and underdressed Bonefey and to Crispin, his hand resting on his knife hilt.
“A murder inquiry is a serious undertaking, Master Bailey. I will get little out of him now. But see to it that he doesn’t leave his room. I’ll have more to say to him later.”
“You can’t keep me a prisoner here, Guest. And Bailey and Gough had better not threaten me. I shall take you to the courts. I shall own the Tabard Inn when I am through with you, Bailey.”
Bailey looked worried.
“Empty threats,” said Crispin, but he could tell Bonefey’s intimidation was working. Damn the man to the lowest level of hell! “Do what you can,” he muttered to Bailey and pushed past him out the door.
He stopped in the gallery and stared down the stairs. The innkeeper stood at the bottom looking up, a pitchfork in his hands. “A false alarm,” Crispin called down to the man. “All is well.”
The innkeeper sighed and lowered the fork. The man went back to his room but Crispin stood as he was, thinking. All is not well. He looked back at Bonefey’s closed door, heard him argue in a loud voice with Bailey and a drunken Gough, and shook his head. Chaucer’s room was the next door down. He pulled his jacket to straighten it, strode up to the door, and knocked.
Nothing.
It was almost a relief. He knocked again just to be certain and he was greeted by silence. He tested the door and was surprised to find it unlocked. Carefully he pushed it all the way open and quickly glanced around. No Geoffrey.
He stepped in. The room was neat. Geoffrey’s fire was covered with fine ashes and his toiletries were laid in a line. Parchment and quills were set in perfect order on the table: used parchment in an exact pile on one side, unused on another. He remembered Geoffrey being meticulous but he seemed to have become even more so over the years.
He drew close to the chest and exhaled a long breath before he knelt and opened the lid. Inside, his extra coats and gowns all folded; braies rolled alongside rolled stockings. And an extra pair of long-toed poulaines lay atop them all, their exaggerated tips curled up against the wall of the chest. Crispin dug down and found a red, ankle-length gown. His heart burned with a wash of heat when he saw the color. It was close. Very close. He dragged it from the chest and laid it on the bed. His breathing quickened as he carefully folded over each pleat of the hem, going slowly over every inch of it. And then-
His breath caught. A tear. A square hole torn from the fabric. His hands trembled as he reached into his pouch and withdrew the scrap of cloth. He knew it long before he ever laid it over the tear. It fit perfectly.
“What by all the devils are you doing!”
Crispin whirled. Geoffrey stood in the doorway clutching the doorposts. His eyes were dark with menace.
Crispin rose to his full height and faced Geoffrey. He felt as if a leaden ball sat in his stomach while a knife pierced his heart. “Geoffrey Chaucer. You must accompany me to the Lord Sheriff. You are charged with the murder of the monk Wilfrid.”
13
Jack awoke early the next morning with a start and leapt up from his bed. Bells. Constant bells. It was unnerving. He looked at the small window but saw that it was still dark. What the hell?
He went to the bucket and washed his face with the icy water and wiped his nose and cheeks on his sleeve. He remembered now. Monks rose before the sun to pray the Divine Office. He shook himself fully awake and opened the heavy door with a creak. He poked his head out and saw the sleepy monks meander toward the quire.
He joined them, using the same sleepy stride they used. Bunch of sarding sheep. He followed them into the dark church. The only light came from candles set on either end of the quire stalls, where the monks followed their chantry in their books. Jack made his way to Wilfrid’s old chair, feeling a bit guilty for using it thus, and looked up curtly at Cyril who seemed to be dozing. They all stood when the prior took his place at the head and then the chanting began. Jack cringed at it. It echoed all around him. He did not think it possible to fill the space within the hulking cathedral, but it did. Unearthly. Magical. He listened, forgetting he was supposed to be participating, yet he could not have if he tried. The notes followed their own pattern, like a path through a forest, meandering this way and that, finding alternating sunshine and shadow, cool and warm. The beauty of it struck him deeply in his heart. He did not know such feelings were within him. He was glad they were. He felt God’s presence in the music and the words and he understood then, for at least that moment, why a man would wish to become a monk.
By the time the Office was complete, it was time for their meal. Jack wanted to ask more questions of Cyril but he took his cue from the others and did not talk unless they talked first. And now they were going to another silent meal. Frustrated, Jack ate and drank down his beer as if by his hurrying he could hurry along the others. Finally, the silent time was over and they shuffled outside the hall to their separate tasks. Jack got separated from Cyril and tried to spy him among all the identical cassocks. Like a needle in a haystack. He stretched up on his toes to look above the cowled heads when an arm tugged him against the wall.
Jack looked up into the pointed face of Brother Martin. “Don’t I know you?” asked the monk.
Jack shook his head vigorously. “Oh no, Brother. I don’t see how.”
His eyes roved over Jack’s face thoughtfully. “What monastery are you from?”
“Oh … er … do you know Saint Michael’s in Suffolk?”
“Why yes, I do.”
“Well I’m not from there,” he said quickly. “I’m from a very small friary south of there. You wouldn’t know it.”
“Still, you have a familiar look about you.”
He smiled. “I have that kind of face.”
Martin sneered. “I do not know why you stay. Hasn’t anyone told you? If you’ve come to see the martyr’s relics, they are gone.” His expression was far from one Jack expected. He seemed almost … glad.
Jack decided to play his hand. “So I heard. Truth to tell, is it not better for the common folk if such things were not here to tempt them to spend their hard-earned wage?”
Martin raised his chin. A few hairs bristled there where his razor missed. “You have a shrewd head, Friar. But I would not mouth such sentiments”-he looked over his shoulder-“so freely.”
He shrugged. “I am not learned in such things, so maybe I am in error. For it does seem to give them comfort-”
“They should find their comfort in God. His only Son sacrificed Himself for us to offer the comfort of Heaven. Should that not be enough?”
“But so, too, did Thomas à Becket sacrifice himself for the love of the Church, Brother. Is that not a good example? Is that not why we venerate the saints?”
“We venerate, yes. But a saint is not God. And some would place their precious saints before the worship of the Almighty. I have seen it too many times, Brother. It sickens me. And this monastery is the worst of the lot. Thomas à Becket has become little better than a slab of meat hanging in a butcher’s stall. The best cut goes to the richest and therefore the least deserving. I rue the day I chose this place and not some humbler institution. But youth,” he said, eyes glaring at Jack, “is flawed.”