The Complete Kingdom Trilogy (35 page)

BOOK: The Complete Kingdom Trilogy
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Kirkpatrick saw the bleakness and shrugged.

‘Mak' siccar, the Auld Templar said. So I did.'

Make sure. Hal glanced at the dagger hanging at Kirkpatrick's waist; fluted, thin and sharp.

‘I took that ring from him,' Kirkpatrick went on, his stropped razor of a face pale. ‘Took it back to the Auld Templar as proof the deed was done. He asked for such proof in particular.'

Hal glanced to where Kirkpatrick looked. The ring round his neck was Gozelo's own, plucked from his dead finger and returned to Roslin. An auld sin …

‘Now you ken my interest in it,' Kirkpatrick added wryly. ‘Rather than your dubious charms.'

‘The mason is to be regretted,' Bruce broke in, frowning. ‘He was never meant to be found either, yet up he popped, like a fart at a feast, on a day's hunting at Douglas.'

And there was the Curse of Saint Malachy at work, he added to himself, tangling my sin up with my own reins, to be hauled out for the world to witness.

Hal saw the Earl's face and wanted to believe the shame and regret he saw there. Regretted only because he did not stay decently hidden, Hal thought bitterly, rather than because you had to red murder him. Hal remembered the hunt where Gozelo had surfaced – recalled, too, where the body had been taken and marvelled anew at the width and breadth of Bruce.

‘You persuaded Wallace to attack Scone, so you could go there and destroy the evidence,' he said, half in a breathy hiss of wonder. ‘That's what Kirkpatrick was up to in Ormsby's room – but how will you persuade folk that the Stone you have hidden is the real one?'

Bruce nodded, as if he had expected the question.

‘It does not matter – folk will believe it when the time comes. Will want to believe it – it only remains to ensure the secret of it is kept until that moment comes.'

Until you need to sit on it, Hal thought. To be crowned.

‘Burning Ormsby's investigations should have been the end of it,' Bruce added bitterly. ‘Save for the Savoyard stone carver we forgot about, because he was of no account.'

‘And Wallace,' Hal added pointedly, ‘who did not trust you. Does not still.'

Bruce shrugged.

‘That is of no matter. Wallace is a brigand, for all his elevation. If he finds out, he will approve, in the end.'

Which might have been true enough once, Hal thought coldly, though while Wallace has changed the Kingdom, it has changed him, too. Wee Bisset and a Savoyard were two deaths that might not sit well with the new knight that was Sir William Wallace growing into his estate as Guardian. He said as much and saw Bruce stroke his chin and admit it grudgingly.

‘Bisset was no work of mine,' Kirkpatrick growled. ‘That was yon ugly bastard Malise, seeking answers for the Earl of Buchan, who is no yin's fool.'

He broke off and looked sadly at Hal.

‘You were too noisome in pursuing the Savoyard, too careless with yer use of Bisset, so that it did not take much for Buchan to latch on to matters. Particularly Bisset – Malise spoored after him from the moment he left your care. I came on it too late to prevent it.'

He paused, his eyes bleak.

‘It was a charnel hoose,' he added, half to himself, and Hal was chilled at what the man must have seen to make such a wasteland behind his eyes. The stone of it sank into Hal's bowels; he had left a trail a blind man could follow, let alone the sharp-eyed, cunning Malise Bellejambe. He had killed Bartholomew Bisset as surely as if he had stuck the knife in himself.

Bruce saw some of that in Hal's face and laid the comfort of a hand on his arm, though the smile on his face did not reach beyond his too-tight cheekbones.

‘This is an old quarrel of great families of this kingdom,' he said. ‘It is always to be expected that, whatever I do, I will have a Comyn breathing on me to find out the why and where of it.'

‘Now they have the Savoyard,' Hal said, seeing matters for the first time. ‘Using him to lure you to them. And you need the Savoyard stone carver dead, of course, to preserve your secret.'

‘Almost,' Bruce declared grimly. ‘They have the Savoyard, for sure, but I do not wish him dead. I want him alive. He is the only one who possibly knows where the Stone now lies. Unless you do.'

Hal blinked – then saw it, as if a curtain had been raised. The Auld Templar and John Fenton had taken charge of the Stone in Roslin and had hidden it – now both were dead and the secret with them.

Bruce saw the look and sighed wearily, passing a hand over his face.

‘I see that the Auld Templar handed you the ring and no more,' he declared. ‘So, unless the secret is with this stone carver, then all we have done is for naught – the Stone is hidden in Roslin and no-one knows where.'

He broke off and laughed bitterly.

‘A stone lost among stones. There is some message from Heaven in this, is there not?'

From St Malachy, Kirkpatrick almost said, but clicked his teeth.

‘We must get to the leper house,' he said instead and Hal felt a sudden thrill of fear.

‘To a trap?' he said. ‘Where the Earl of Carrick is faced with his enemies? We can scarcely ride the whole entourage into the town – the English still hold the castle of it – so we will be alone …'

Bruce smiled, suddenly, warmed, Hal saw, by this burst of concern. He reached out and clapped a hand on Hal's shoulder.

‘Now you know the truth of matters,' he declared, ‘yet you still, it seems, esteem me well enough to be concerned by my fate. I am glad of that for I would have you as a friend, young Hal. The Sientclers are noted for protecting kings, after all – did not one take an arrow for King Stephen?'

‘Sir Hubert,' muttered Hal, remembering the family history dinned into him by his father. Young Hal – God's Bones, he had five, even six years on the Bruce and the man pats me like a new pup. He glared back at him and then at Kirkpatrick.

‘I am no shield and ye are no king,' he replied and saw Bruce scowl at that.

‘I esteem you well enough as a belted earl of the kingdom, my lord. Even if you were a poor cottar, I would not want you walked into the teeth of your enemies. I cannot wish the same for your henchman, all the same.'

Kirkpatrick growled, but Bruce laughed, as mirthless as a wolf howl and both their gazes turned on him.

‘It is not me they want,' he said and leaned a little into Hal's uncomprehending frown.

‘They have the wrong Sir Henry Sientcler,' he declared and sent Kirkpatrick off to fetch horses while the haar of that settled like a raven on Hal's soul and a name thundered in his head like a great bell.

Malise Bellejambe.

Berwick

Feast of St Opportuna, Mother of Nuns, April 1298

They had the wrong Henry Sientcler. Malise would have split the little pardoner in two, save that he thought the foul little turd might still have a use. Now he and the thugs he had hired had to huddle in the leper house, holding to ransom monks already frightened by the deaths of Sir Henry's two escorts. For ease of guarding, Sir Henry had been put in the same room as the gasping Savoyard, the priest who was caring for him and the bewildered uncle.

‘This is idiocy,' Henry Sientcler had puffed, when matters had become clearer to him. ‘You will have the young Bruce down on you, not to mention Fitzwarin. Christ's Bones, man, if you do not let me go free, you will have the English and Scots lords both coming at you. Your head is already on a spike, though you do not know it yet.'

Malise, gnawing his knuckles, could believe it – the Red Comyn, entrusted by the Earl of Buchan with this mission, had sent Malise into Berwick to seek out a certain Robert de Malenfaunt and hand over the ransom for the Countess Isabel. He would not do it himself, for he feared capture by the English, being Lord of Badenoch in all but name, but he had curled a lip when Malise expressed the same concern.

‘You are of no account to them,' he declared with cutting assurance. ‘Take the Templar writ, hand it to Malenfaunt, take the Countess and return to me. This is a task a trained mastiff could carry out.'

Malise remembered the Red Comyn's sneer, smeared on his freckled, red-haired face. Like all the Comyn, he was short, barrel-bodied, with the sort of fiery red hair that would turn, like his kin the Earl of Buchan, to wheat-straw with age. Like all the Comyn he was full of himself.

The Earl was another problem, Malise thought moodily. Unknown to the Red Comyn, who had been waiting a while and would fret for longer, the Earl had given further, private instructions to Malise regarding the Herdmanston lord who had been escorting the Countess all over Scotland until he had lost her at Stirling.

‘It is inconcievable, of course,' the Earl declared silkily, ‘but even the rumour of a liaison is damaging to the honour of Buchan. Bad enough to have her linked to the young Bruce – but a ragged
gentilhomme
of no account? The Countess must be returned and shown the error of her ways. It is important that the lord of Herdmanston understand his own. Forcibly. And that the young Bruce, who is clearly this Herdmanston lord's patron, receives a message he cannot fail to understand.'

Berwick was, ostensibly, controlled by the English, but they huddled in the castle, the town going about its business with little hindrance,
couvre-feu
or even law. Malise had tracked the Savoyard to it and thought, at last, to put the stupid little chiseller to the question – only to find him sicker than Pestilence on his Plague Horse. The idea of using the man to trap Hal of Herdmanston here had been too good to pass up … save that an idiot pardoner could not tell one Henry Sientcler from another.

A shape slid into the seat opposite and offered a brown smile. Lamprecht; Malise regarded the little man with a mixture of awe and distaste, not knowing whether he really did have Christian relics of power, not liking him because he was a snail who left a trail behind him as he moved.

‘My ripeness, my mouse,' Lamprecht lisped in what he fondly believed was the way of the court in France. ‘I have my bargain fulfilled.
D'argent,
certes.
Bezzef d'argent, tu donnara.'

It had been God's Own Hand, Malise had thought, that brought him to the side of Lamprecht, a man he had used in small ways once or twice before. Useful, he had thought at the time – now he looked at the pardoner with distaste, seeing how he might have been handsome once, though all his years had played hop-frog with each other and landed on an ugly heap on his face, which was venal and pouched. He had once had long, clean hair, but it had been too fine to last and was now plastered in a few greasy wisps on his skull, which he covered, when he was not wringing it in his hands, with a soft, broad-brimmed hat lauded with a pilgrim's shell.

‘I know what you want,' Malise spat moodily, ‘and you are as far from it as always. Sir Henry Sientcler of Herdmanston, I said. You bring me Sir Henry Sientcler of
Roslin.'

Lamprecht's eyes never warmed to the smile he gave.

Non andar bonu,'
he began, then laboriously turned out the thick-accented English of it. ‘It is not going well. This is no fault of mine. Henry Sientcler you demand. Henry Sientcler you receive. Please to pay me, as agreed.'

He saw the aloes look he had back and realised he was not going to get his money. It was not, he thought to himself crossly, his fault that he had been sent to fetch a named man from a place where all the people, it seemed, were called the same. Now this man with a face like a kicked arse was scowling at him and denying him fair payment; not for the first time, he wished he had never met Malise Bellejambe.

He was no stranger to abuse, all the same; everyone seemed to believe they could gull, con or spit upon the likes of him, for all his pilgrim's badge. You would think folk would honour someone wearing the shell that told of a trip all the way to the Holy Land and, to be fair, most of the simple folk did. The ones with some money and a little power always assumed he was a liar and had never been to the Holy Land at all, but had stolen the shell badge.

Which was not true, he thought indignantly to himself. He had traded for it – a tooth of the Serpent from Eden, no less, only slightly chipped but a fine specimen. Not as fine as the other three he had, admittedly, but a fair exchange for the shell of a pilgrim. And, if he had not been to the Holy Land exactly, he had been to the Sicilies – which still had paynim influences everywhere – and to Leon in Spain, which was the next room to the heathen Moors.

‘Dio
grande,
he said with weary bitterness to Malise. ‘God is great. I carry out my task and this is my reward.
A esas palabras respondieron los ignorantos con decirle infinitas injurias como ellos acostumbran, llamdndole perro, cane, judio, cornudo, y otros semejantes …'

‘Speak English,' Malise finally spat, irritated beyond measure, and Lamprecht shrugged, as if the man was a fool for not comprehending either the Lingua, or decent Castilian, tongues understood by every traveller around the eastern Middle Sea.

‘The ignorant,' he said haughtily, ‘reply by uttering numerous insults as they are accustomed to do, calling me hound, dog, Jew, cuckold, and similar epithets.
Mundo cosi
– such is the world.'

‘Give me no airs, you purveyor of St Pintle the Apostle's ball hairs,' snarled Malise, angry now. ‘I have known you for a time – long enough to know that you would steal the contents of a dog's arse and put it in a pie if you had found someone with a taste for such a thing and had a handy bag.'

He glared at Lamprecht.

‘You would sell the stolen skull of an infant and claim it to be Jesus when he was a baby,' he added viciously and saw that he had stung Lamprecht, who did not like his wares denigrated.

‘Questo non star vero,'
he protested, then shook his head with exasperation and translated it into English. ‘That is not true.
Que servir tutto questo?
You should not say such things, even in anger, for God is watching.
Dio grande.
Besides,
se mi star al logo de ti, mi cunciar … bastardo.
If I was in your place, I would wait. The other Sir Henry will come, certes, to see after his
amico,
and here you hold him.
Dunque bisogno il Henri querir pace. Se non querir morir.
So the Henry will want peace. If he does not wish to die.
CapirY

Malise understood and Lamprecht saw it. He yawned ostentatiously.

‘
Mi tenir premura,'
he said. ‘I am in a hurry. Let me dip my beak a little, then I go.
Mi andar in casa Pauperes Commilitones.'

Lamprecht did not need to translate the latter, for he saw Malise had understood perfectly. The
Pauperes Commilitones -
the Poor Brother-Knights – was a name he calculated would make Malise think twice about keeping him here.

Malise knew what Lamprecht was up to, knew also that the pardoner was headed to Balantrodoch purely in the hope of persuading the Order knights there to add their seal to the provenancies of the relics he carried; the Templars made part of their fabled wealth from selling relics.

Malise glanced to where his scrip sat carelessly on a bench, the Templar writ snugged in it. He marvelled at how a piece of parchment with some seals and words could be worth the astonishing amount of 150 merks of silver.

The money, he knew, had been deposited at Balantrodoch and Malise wrestled dimly with the concept of how you could take the parchment to any Templar Commanderie, present it – and be given the money, as if it had magically transported itself there while folk slept. He shivered; from what he had heard of the Templars, such a thing was not beyond them.

No matter – if Lamprecht had the divine favour and miracles of the Pope himself, it would serve him no better.

‘You remain,' Malise declared curtly and Lamprecht managed an insouciant shrug and a smile, while inwardly seething. He had been doing well recently in a land turmoiled by war and the rumour of it, for people were eager for
quatrefoil
amulets of St Thomas and St Anthony, the former proof against just about everything, the latter particular to ague and fever.

These were just enough to afford him vittles, but not enough for the finer things. Lamprecht had a box filled with plenary indulgences, pinches of the ashes of Saints Martin and Eulalia of Barcelona, Emilianus The Deacon and Jeremiah The Martyr. He still had a tooth of the Serpent – actually, he had several such teeth – a portion of the robe of Saint Batholomew The Apostle, a pinch of the earth on which the Lord Himself had stood, plus many others.

He had his finest cache, which he hoped the Templars would buy – three fingernails of St Elizabeth of Thuringia, only raised to sainthood thirty-odd years ago, so her relics were powerfully potent.

He was no fool, as Malise had declared – though Lamprecht had to admit that trying to sell the likes of Malise the thong of Moses' sandal had been a bad error – but no-one who could afford it wanted plenary indulgences, or a thorn from Christ's Crown these days. They preferred earthly necessities, like food and fuel for fires. As usual, the poorest were the ones who sickened first and they could barely afford the lead
quatrefoil
amulets.

So he smiled, though the purse he had been promised seemed to fade slowly away and he knew that his best chance of salvaging anything from this was to remove himself, in secret, far from the coming wrath of this wrong Sir Henry's friends.

Outside, it rained on the dark of a Berwick glazed with a few pallid worms of light, the rat-eyed red wink of the castle braziers squirming through the rain as the garrison kept watch. It wasn't the Scots they feared so much as the wrath of Longshanks if they lost the fortress.

For all the rain and dark, Hal thought, you could find Berwick easily enough by the smell, a heady mix of smoke, clot and rot that sifted out a long way, like the snake-hair of Medusa, barely shifted by a wind that was little more than a damp nudge.

They splashed across the ford with the old ruins of the bridge to their right, troll shadows in the dark. No-one challenged them and they came up through the repaired defences of wooden stockade, ditch and wall, under a gate that should have been guarded but was not – Bruce had predicted as much and garnered silent admiration from the others in the small cavalcade.

They climbed off the wet, mud-spattered garrons and led them up the sliding cobbles, ankle deep in fishbones and the old spill of dogs, pressed closer and closer by the leaning walls of the poorer houses, where the strewn rushes were never cleared and stank with the humours that brought on liver-rot, worms, palsy, abscess, wheezing lung and every other filthy ague.

Fitting, then, that this street, bordered by lurching houses that drifted like timber-rotted ships in a slow wind of alley, should puke them out at the leper house of St Bartholomew, a shrouded ghost of stone in the shadows – save for one area, spilling butter-yellow glow out through the cracks of great double doors that led to a garth and then under an archway to the street.

The dripping band stopped and Bruce offered a grin to the Dog Boy. Dressed like the rest of them in plain tunic and rough cloak fastened with an iron pin, with no blazoned jupon or blaring heraldic shield, the Earl of Carrick looked like the Dog Boy's da and was clearly enjoying the entire event.

Unlike Kirkpatrick, who did not like the idea of the heir to Annandale and the rightful throne of Scotland dressed like a peasant and putting his life in such danger.

He had said as much at length, about the foolishness of an earl of the kingdom plootering about, risking his neck in a foolhardy adventure with a band of scum. The band of scum had growled back at him for that – Bangtail Hob, Lang Tam, Sim and Will Elliott, all scowling angry. Even Hal had curled his lip, seeing he was included in the insult until Bruce had told Kirkpatrick, in a voice like the flat slap of a blade, to keep his teeth together.

Now they handed the reins of their stolid, dripping garrons to Will and slithered wetly away to their assigned tasks. Sim and Hal took up positions on either side of the great doors; no-one spoke and the Dog Boy, a loop of rough cloth over his head as a hood, took a deep breath and moved forward.

Hal felt his throat constrict at the sight of the lad, looking smaller than ever against the great double door, heavy with beams and thick with studded nails. Beyond it was the cookhouse, the yellow-red glare of it unable to be contained even by a door like this, because it was the one part of the spital that never slept.

From somewhere in the town, faintly pressured by the limp wind, came the drifting sound of instrument and motet voice –
ahi, amours, com dure departie.
It spoke to Kirkpatrick, achingly, of ale and wine and warmth and fug – more than that, it spoke of Oc and what he had done with the Cathars there, so that he almost grunted with the kick of it. Suddenly, this unknown little pardoner Lamprecht seemed to have conjured up all the smoke-blackened memories Kirkpatrick had thought long since nailed up behind the door in his head.

BOOK: The Complete Kingdom Trilogy
9.1Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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