Authors: Aunt Dimity [14] Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon
patently clear that they hadn’t. Contrary to popular opinion, King
Wilfred wasn’t universally beloved. He had at least one mortal enemy. The entire gate house may have been a jury-rigged mess, but
only one parapet had fallen. Edmond could have sawn through
the temporary struts holding it in place, just as he could have altered
the appearance of the rope before presenting it for inspection—the
clean cut I’d seen had been made by a knife, not a nail.
I glanced at Jinks, then looked at the sparkling water streaming
over the mossy rocks. I simply couldn’t bring myself to ask him
about Edmond and Mirabel. If I added a love triangle to the regicide plot, he’d patronize me again, and I would have to kill him. I
took a calming breath and reminded myself firmly that I wanted to
prevent
a murder, not
commit
one.
“Strawberry for your thoughts,” Jinks said, holding one out to me.
156 Nancy Atherton
“You’ve heard enough of my thoughts for one afternoon,” I
told him.
“Take it anyway.” He placed the strawberry in my hand. “As a
peace offering. You’re looking very stormy.”
“It’s just . . .” I shrugged helplessly. “There’s a lot to take in, at
a Ren fest.”
A sweet smile curved Jinks’s crooked lips. He stretched out on
his back, crossed his legs, cupped his head in his clasped hands, and
gazed up at the trees.
“You mentioned earlier that the fair reminded you of Finch,” he
said. “In many ways, a Ren fest is a small village. Granted, there’s a
heightened sense of drama among the people in my village, but what
would you expect? We’re actors. We live by our emotions. We have
our petty squabbles and our long-running feuds, but we also have a
strong sense of camaraderie and a deep awareness of how lucky we
are to be able to practice our crafts in such a congenial setting. If
there’s a pretender to the throne, he doesn’t kill the king. He auditions for the role at another Ren fest. Or he starts his own.” Jinks
chuckled quietly, then turned his head to look at me. “We take our
work seriously, Lori, but we’re well aware that it’s make-believe.”
Jinks seemed to be telling me, in the nicest possible way, that
I’d gotten so caught up in the fair that I could no longer tell the difference between fantasy and reality. It was exactly the same thing
Edmond had told Mirabel, but my reaction was quite different
from hers. I didn’t fire cutting phrases into Jinks’s well-meaning
brain. I decided instead to prove that he was wrong.
“Thanks.” I swept a hand through the air. “For all of this. I’ve
really enjoyed your lunch break.”
“I hope you’re enjoying the fair as well,” he said.
“I’d enjoy it more if I could get the recipe for those honey
cakes,” I said, batting my eyelashes at him.
“Consider it done.” He moaned softly as he pushed himself into
a sitting position. “You have no idea how much I hate to say it, Lori,
but I have to go back to work.”
Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon
157
“I should get back, too,” I said. “I don’t know how I’m going to
explain to my sons why I wasn’t on hand to watch them in the
arena.”
“Tell them you were investigating an attempted regicide,” he
suggested, his eyes twinkling. “They’ll be impressed.”
“Good idea,” I said. After all, I thought, with an inward smile,
mothers should always tell their children the truth.
Sixteen
J inks and I parted ways at the nearly invisible gate. He went
off to the Great Hall, where the king was conferring
knighthoods on pretty much anyone who wanted one, including women, children, and small dogs, while I made my way
back to the crystal-ball vendor’s stall. I had no trouble fi nding it. I
simply followed the sound of Peggy Taxman’s voice and darted up
the lane next to hers.
The vendor was delighted to see me again, possibly because she
had no other customers. Her Rennie name, I discovered, was Mistress Farseeing, and she was every bit as talkative as I’d hoped
she’d be. In no time at all I learned that she lived on Feversham
Lane in Glastonbury with her husband, Hubert, and their cocker
spaniel, Mr. Wink; that she ran a fortune-telling supply business
from her home; that her three grown children—Hubert, Jr., Gwen,
and Lance—were mortified by her fascination with the occult;
and that Edmond Deland’s tent was one of the smallest in the encampment.
“No bigger than a peasant’s pocket,” she said, chuckling merrily, “but neat as Lord Belvedere’s beard. You won’t find rubbish
strewn about dear Edmond’s dwelling place.”
“You’re fond of him, then,” I said, recalling the friendly greetings Edmond had received from other vendors as he’d crossed the
fairground.
“That I am,” she agreed. “Poor lad. His affl
ictions are grievous,
but he bears them nobly.”
“Affl
ictions?” I prompted.
“Matters of the heart.” Mistress Farseeing folded her arms and
bent her muffin cap close to mine. “His ladylove scorns him and
Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon
159
bestows her favor on another. ’Tis a tale as old as time, with a sting
is as sharp as an adder’s.”
I would have pursued the topic further, but Mistress Farseeing
transferred her attention to a black-clad young woman sporting an
eye-popping array of tattoos and so many body piercings that, by
rights, she should have leaked. Since I’d shown no inclination to
spend money at the stall, the vendor’s defection was understandable and I bade her adieu with a cordial nod.
The time for talk was over anyway. I was ready to take action.
Aunt Dimity had urged me to find tangible proof to support my
claims, and after speaking with Jinks, I had a good notion of where
to look for it. My next stop would be the encampment.
The cannon seemed like a dead end—I wasn’t interested in
teenagers’ pranks—but the missing crown presented definite possibilities. Jinks doubted that the crown had been stolen, believing
instead that it had been “borrowed” by a cast member who planned
to return it in a humorous manner—on a pony’s head, for
example.
I thought it far more likely that Edmond had stolen the crown.
After his first two assassination attempts had failed, he would have
found it enormously satisfying to dethrone his rival symbolically.
Since the king’s motor home hadn’t been burgled, however, I suspected that Edmond had acted on impulse instead of with cool
calculation.
It wasn’t hard to imagine the scenario. I could picture King
Wilfred weaving tipsily from the banquet table to his motor home
after a long eve ning spent quaffi
ng with the lads. He’d bent to adjust a garter, perhaps, and the crown had tumbled from his head.
Although the king had been too far gone to notice its absence, the
young man who’d been tailing him was cold sober.
Edmond had seized the opportunity to deal the king another
blow—not a physical blow this time, but a blow to the mind and
the spirit—by retrieving the fallen crown and fading back into the
shadows. He’d returned with it to his tent and stashed it among his
160 Nancy Atherton
belongings, where it would remain until a clever person came
along and found it.
I would be that clever person. I would make Aunt Dimity proud
of me by proving that Edmond had stolen King Wilfred’s crown. I
would slip into the encampment, locate his tent, and search it from
top to bottom. I’d lost the rope, but I was determined to find the
crown.
When the town crier informed those within earshot that it was
half past three of the clock, I lifted my skirts and quickened my pace.
In ninety short minutes, the fair would close and the workers would
return to the camp. I had to reach Edmond’s tent before he did.
I scurried through the picnic area, past the arena and the royal
gallery, which had been taken over by a knot of giggling wenches
who were, I assumed, lying in wait for a soldier, a squire, a knight,
or any male who looked reasonably attractive in tights. I gave them
a withering glance, then jogged around to the far end of the white
marquee, where I paused to scan the stabling area and the pasture.
Angelus, Lucifer, Thunder, Storm, Pegasus, and the McLaughlin ponies were grazing peacefully in the pasture, but their owners
were nowhere to be seen. I wondered fleetingly where the Anscombe
Manor team had gone, then ran for the row of poplars.
The tall, slender trees stood on a small rise overlooking a vast
field that had once held Mr. Malvern’s largest herd of cattle. The
cows had been moved to the slightly smaller fi eld on the other side
of an imposing hedgerow and their old stomping ground had been
turned into a veritable metropolis.
My heart sank as I beheld the most complex campground I’d
ever seen. It seemed to contain tents of every imaginable size, shape,
and color. Most were the freestanding nylon variety used by outdoorsmen the world over, but scattered among them were teepees,
yurts, geodesic domes, old-fashioned pup tents, tarpaulins strung
between poles, elegant pavilions that looked as though they’d sprung
from the pages of
The Arabian Nights,
and cavernous canvas behemoths with vinyl windows and covered patios.
Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon
161
Recreational vehicles sat in an orderly row a short distance
away from the tent jungle. The RVs were arranged according to
size, from the smallest, which were similar to Jinks’s camper-van,
to the largest, which was so gargantuan that only a madman would
have attempted to drive it down an English country lane. I decided
that the last one had to be Calvin’s, both because of its regal proportions and because it was the only RV with a cannon parked in
front of it.
Since my chances of finding Edmond’s tent in less than ninety
minutes ranged from slim to nonexis tent, I elected to check out the
cannon. Although I knew absolutely nothing about field artillery
I felt compelled to investigate
something,
and the cannon was the
most obvious choice. I was about ten steps away from it when a gruff
voice ordered me to stop.
I turned to fi nd myself looking up at the gray-bearded face of a
glowering Lord Belvedere. He was about a foot taller than me and
his right hand was resting on the hilt of a sword that looked terrifyingly sharp and shiny. For a moment I was afraid he’d either run me
through or challenge me to a duel.
He surveyed me with a hawklike gaze, then barked, “Who are
you and what are you doing here?”
There was no question of lying to such a fierce-looking authority figure, so I told most of the truth as quickly as I could.
“My name is Lori Shepherd and I live next door to Horace
Malvern—well, not next door, exactly, but my property runs alongside his,” I babbled in a half-panicked squeak.
“You don’t sound English to me,” he growled, eyeing me suspiciously.
“That’s because I’m not English,” I told him. “I’m from the States
originally, but I’ve lived near Finch for years and years. My husband
and I are raising our sons in a cottage not far from here. Perhaps
you’ve met them? My husband is Bill Willis—I didn’t change my
name when we got
married—and our sons are Will and Rob.
They’re riding in the—”
162 Nancy Atherton
“—pro cession and in the arena,” he finished for me. He seemed
to thaw ever so slightly, but he didn’t remove his hand from his
sword hilt. “What are you doing here, near the cannon?”
I gulped. “I heard that it misfired this morning—”
“It didn’t misfire,” Lord Belvedere interjected irritably. “It
didn’t fire at all.”
“Why not?” I asked, and when his lordship’s scowl darkened, I
added hurriedly, “It’s just that I’ve heard all sorts of rumors and I
want to be able to tell people what really happened so they won’t
be afraid to come to the fair next weekend.”
“You can tell the rumormongers that the cannon is in perfect
working order,” said Lord Belvedere. “It wasn’t used this morning
because some blithering idiot put projectiles in the barrel.”
“Aren’t there usually projectiles in the barrel?” I asked.
“Certainly not,” said Lord Belvedere, looking offended. “This
cannon isn’t used as an offensive weapon. Its purpose is to create an
impressive sound. If the barrel hadn’t been cleared, it would in all
likelihood have exploded, killing or severely injuring the cannoneers.”
“Good lord,” I said, casting a nervous glance at the barrel.
“Thankfully, our men are well trained,” Lord Belvedere continued. “They follow a strict routine before every firing. The prank
was discovered as soon as the men sponged the bore. Once the
projectiles were removed, the cannon could have been employed,
but Mr. Malvern was so upset by the incident that we decided not
to use it.”
“It sounds as though the blithering idiot didn’t know much
about proper artillery procedures and practices,” I commented. “If
he had, he would have known that his prank would be found out
before it ever got off the ground . . . so to speak.”
“Very true,” said Lord Belvedere.
“What kind of projectiles did he use?” I asked.