Authors: Aunt Dimity [14] Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon
135
“This was Calvin’s idea?” I said, gesturing to the work crews.
“He put it to the fellows and they agreed to help,” said Mr.
Malvern.
“No coercion?” I said.
Mr. Malvern gave me a sidelong, disbelieving look. “Coercion
doesn’t work on chaps like these, Lori. If they don’t want to do
something, they don’t do it. If you push them, they move on. No,
Cal just talked to them, got them to see things from his point of
view. He grew up here, remember. Finch means a lot to him. And
he wants to stay on Peggy’s good side. If she went to the press to
complain, it could spell trouble for the fair.”
“He’s looking out for Finch’s interests as well as his own,” I
said.
“Aye,” said Mr. Malvern. “He’s got a good heart, does Cal.”
“So do you,” I said. “In my book, you’re a knight in shining armor.”
“I’m a burgher,” he corrected. “What ever that is. Will we see
you today at the fair, or are you going to boycott it?”
“You’ll see me there,” I said. “I’m going to change into my costume as soon as I get home.”
“I’ll stay here until the men finish,” he said. “But I’ll see you
later.”
“See you later,” I said, and headed for the Range Rover.
After speaking with Mr. Malvern, I was convinced that the
saboteur was trying to kill or injure Calvin Malvern for personal
rather than professional reasons. Calvin might run a tight ship,
but he ran it by using persuasion rather than coercion, because
he had no other choice. Harsh tactics didn’t work with Ren fest
people. If they disliked an employer, they simply moved on to
another gig.
The saboteur, therefore, wasn’t a disgruntled employee. He
was someone who had a private quarrel with the king. Edmond
Deland, a young man seething with jealousy, resentment, and the
136 Nancy Atherton
heartache of unrequited love, fit the profile. He wouldn’t rest until
he’d destroyed his rival.
And I wouldn’t rest until I’d stopped him. Nodding grimly, I
climbed into the Rover and started for home. I couldn’t wait to get
to the fair and start interrogating the food vendors. Thanks to Sir
James le Victorieux and his motley band of heroes, I could pursue
my investigation with a clear conscience.
Fourteen
Ichanged into my wench attire—my disguise, as I now
thought of it—in less than fifteen minutes, but it took me
another twenty to work up the courage to wear it outside of
the cottage. The soft leather flats were a great improvement over
the sandals I’d worn the day before, the muffin cap was adorable,
and the flowing skirts allowed for ample freedom of movement,
but the low-cut, body-shaping bodice gave me pause. Every time I
took a breath, I wished I had a shawl.
I reminded myself forcibly that there was enough cleavage on
display at the fair for mine to go unnoticed, and that Bill had forfeited any right he’d ever had to object to my garb. If my cool medieval dude of a husband opened his mouth to complain about
wifely overexposure, I’d simply point to his clinging tights and remind him of what the pot called the kettle.
Fortified, I hung Harold le Rouge’s splendid knife on my leather
belt, slipped a few small necessities into the belt pouch Sally Pyne
had provided, and stepped out into the sunshine. The weather was
so lovely, and I was so wary of being caught in another traffi
c jam,
that I decided on the spot to leave the Mini at home and walk to the
fair. It would take me less than an hour to reach Bishop’s Wood on
foot, via Mr. Malvern’s pastures, and if I needed a lift home later
on, I could always catch a ride with one of my neighbors. I was certain that most of them would return to the fair, if for no other
reason than to show their gratitude to King Wilfred for helping
Finch in its hour of need.
I closed the cottage’s front door, went around to the back garden, hitched up my skirts, and climbed over the stile. Had it been
earlier in the morning, I would have been worried about disturbing
138 Nancy Atherton
Jinks or intruding on his privacy, but I’d gotten such a late start
that I didn’t expect to find him at home. By midmorning, the royal
jester would no doubt be at work, entertaining fairgoers with his
wit and his amazing tumbling runs.
I’d refrained from poking my nose over the stile ever since
Jinks had moved into Mr. Malvern’s cow pasture. Once I’d climbed
down from the stile, however, it seemed only natural to look
around. Jinks’s camper-van was very small and rather rusty, but
the bright yellow curtains in the windows and the lawn chair sitting beside it gave it a homey look. I would have found it trying to
spend a whole summer in such cramped quarters, but I imagined
that Jinks was used to it by now. If he didn’t love the vagabond life,
I reasoned, he would have found another line of work long ago.
Mr. Malvern’s dairy herd had worn a smooth path along the
hedgerow dividing my property from his. I followed the track,
clambering over a few gates along the way, until I reached the edge
of the fair’s extremely crowded parking lot.
The parking lot was a sign of things to come. I had to wait in one
long line to buy my ticket and a second to pass through the gatehouse. The delay would have been frustrating if I hadn’t put the time
to good use, studying the section of wall that had nearly brought
about the king’s downfall. The parapet had been seamlessly repaired
and it showed no signs of more “accidental” breakage, so I assumed
that the opening ceremonies had taken place without incident. I
hadn’t expected it to be otherwise. The saboteur would have aroused
serious suspicion if he’d pulled the same stunt twice.
When I finally passed through the main entrance, I found myself
adrift in a sea of people. Gate house Square was bursting at the
seams with chattering fairgoers, and the winding lanes leading off of
it appeared to be more congested than they had been the day before.
If, as Aunt Dimity had suggested, the saboteur was trying to scare
people away from King Wilfred’s Faire, he was failing miserably.
By the time I reached Pudding Lane, the food vendors were too
busy catering to the needs of their customers to spend time gossiping
Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon
139
with me. I consoled myself with a honey cake, resolved to return for
another try later in the day, and went in search of the quiet lane in
which I’d first seen the madrigal singers.
I hoped the lane would still be quiet, because I wanted to renew
my brief acquaintance with the crystal-ball vendor. She’d seemed like
a friendly, talkative soul when she’d answered my questions about little Mirabel. If her booth wasn’t swamped by aspiring fortune-tellers, I
was certain that she’d be willing to continue our conversation.
I thought it would be easy to retrace my steps to the crystal-ball
stall, but it wasn’t. The noise, the bustle, and the fair’s infinite distractions made it challenging to plot a steady course though the
labyrinth of crisscrossing lanes. A program book with its handy
map would have helped, but I’d left Saturday’s edition at home and
refused Sunday’s because it was too big to fi t into my belt pouch.
My progress was impeded by the crowds, but it was brought to
a complete halt by a Cyrano de Bergerac clone, who waylaid me at
the junction of Harmony Lane and Broad Street. After presenting
me with a long-stemmed red rose, the flamboyant dandy went
down on one knee to recite a poem in praise of my eyes, while fixing his gaze firmly on my chest. His utterly shameless flirtation attracted a small gathering of amused spectators who seemed to
think I was in on the act. By the time he pressed his lips—and his
oversized nose—to my hand, I was convinced that my disguise was
working. With a little luck, and a little medieval attitude, I’d be
able to infiltrate any part of the fair I chose.
I was still searching for the crystal-ball stall when Peggy Taxman’s unmistakable roar smote my ears.
“Water! Water! Ice-cold water! Get thy water here!”
Her stentorian cry stopped me in my tracks. I shot a furtive
look over my shoulder and saw Peggy standing before a small stall
not twenty feet away from me. My disguise must have fooled her,
because her eyes swept over me without betraying a fl icker of recognition. Relieved, I scurried to hide behind a tree, then peeked
cautiously around the trunk to watch her hawk her wares.
140 Nancy Atherton
“Precious ointment for thy skin!” she bellowed, holding up a
tube of sunblock. “Protect thine epidermis from the orb’s baleful
rays!”
Peggy’s stall was possibly the most popular one at the fair, in
large part because she’d stocked it with items that were useful rather
than decorative. Sun visors, sunblock, lip balm, disposable cameras,
bug spray, packets of tissue, and bottles of hand sanitizer seemed to
fly off the shelves, and she could hardly keep up with the demand
for bottled water.
In addition to meeting her public’s material needs, Peggy gave
them a memorable show. Whether she meant to be or not, she was
a superb performer, a sort of iron-lunged medieval carnival barker.
People lingered after making their purchases, as if they found the
sheer volume of her cries entertaining, though they may have been
impressed by her appearance as well. Peggy filled her yellow-andblue-striped bodice to its furthest extent, but instead of looking ridiculous, she looked majestic. Her statuesque figure, commanding
presence, and practical products attracted a steady stream of buyers
to her stall.
“Don’t know how long those laces will hold,” said a quiet voice
behind me.
I turned to find Sally Pyne peering past me at Peggy.
“They’re made of nylon, but even nylon has its limits,” she went
on. She took a step back and regarded me critically, while making
sure we were still hidden by the tree. “You fill out your top nicely,
Lori—not too much, not too little.”
“Sally,”
I protested, folding my arms across my chest.
“Don’t tell me you haven’t noticed,” she chided. “I saw that chap
with the fake nose giving you the business.”
In hopes of diverting her attention from my more conspicuous
charms, I surveyed her cotton blouse, baggy shorts, and sneakers, and
asked, “Why aren’t you wearing a costume?”
“I’ve been too busy making clothes for other people to make anything for myself,” she replied. “Besides, I’m comfy as I am.” She stuck
Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon
141
her hands in her pockets and rocked back on her heels. “Have you
heard about King Wilfred’s crown?”
My jaw dropped as an earthshaking insight exploded in my brain.
It was so glaringly obvious that I felt like a complete dunderhead for
not seeing it sooner. The good people of Finch were veritable bloodhounds when it came to sniffing out juicy gobbets of information.
They were observant, attentive, relentless, and always eager to pass
along what they’d learned. I didn’t need to interrogate strangers in
order to find out what was going on at the fair. All I had to do was
chat with my neighbors.
“No,” I said, leaning toward Sally. “I haven’t heard about King
Wilfred’s crown.”
Sally leaned toward me and lowered her voice. “He’s wearing a
different one today. Word has it that the pointy one he wore yesterday has gone missing.”
“Missing?” I repeated suggestively.
“Stolen,” she confirmed. “Worth a tidy sum, they say.”
“You’re kidding,” I said. “It looked like a piece of costume jewelry
to me.”
“Most of the stones are paste,” Sally conceded. “But the sapphire
and the diamonds are real. He took ’em from his mother’s engagement ring and put ’em in the crown, in memory of her. So they say.”
“Poor Calvin,” I said, shaking my head sadly. “Has he notified the
police?”
“No,” said Sally. “Calvin doesn’t want the police nosing around
the camp. They might not like some of the things they find there.”
She winked. “Unconventional tobacco, that sort of thing.”
Mr. Barlow appeared at Sally’s elbow. He seemed to materialize
out of nowhere, but he, too, was careful to put the tree between
himself and Peggy Taxman. Like Sally, Mr. Barlow was dressed in
everyday summer clothing, but apparently neither of them needed
to disguise themselves in order to garner gossip.
“I expect you’ve told Lori about the crown,” he said to Sally.
“I was just telling her,” she said.
142 Nancy Atherton
“It’s appalling,” I said. “Absolutely appalling.”
“Wait till you hear about the cannon,” said Mr. Barlow.
“I was getting to that,” Sally said, frowning irritably.
“What happened to the cannon?” I asked.
“Someone tampered with it,” said Mr. Barlow. “That’s why it
didn’t go off this morning.”
“So they say,” Sally put in.
“Good grief,” I said. “How was it tampered with?”
“Someone fiddled with the barrel,” said Mr. Barlow. “If it had
gone off, it would have blown the cannoneers to kingdom come.”
“That’s not what I heard,” Sally objected. “I heard that someone
filled the barrel with cannonballs and aimed it at the gate house.”