Read The Death Ship of Dartmouth: (Knights Templar 21) Online

Authors: Michael Jecks

Tags: #blt, #General, #_MARKED, #Fiction

The Death Ship of Dartmouth: (Knights Templar 21) (24 page)

BOOK: The Death Ship of Dartmouth: (Knights Templar 21)
5.2Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Baldwin watched as Hawley crossed the floor, stood at his sideboard, drained his goblet, and refilled it. He was a strangely precise man, Baldwin thought. His movements were definite. In all he did he looked a very
exact
man. He had an economy of movement, a fluidity, that Baldwin had only ever observed in warriors of the highest quality before. And his eyes were not dim-witted like so many fighters and sailors. They were intelligent and thoughtful as he turned to face the three again.

‘Would you care to explain that?’ the Coroner rumbled.

‘The ship was attacked, wasn’t it? And taken. The crew would have defended themselves, and many, if not all, fought hard. Some would have died. So where were they? Where were their limbs? All were gathered and thrown overboard, surely. As would this man have been, were he alive when the ship was taken.’

‘That would make sense,’ Sir Richard commented. His brows dropped as his eyes narrowed intimidatingly. ‘Do you know anything of this?’

‘No.’ Hawley waved his drink towards Baldwin. ‘In truth, I am not completely sure that this was something to do with Lyme. Why should they burn Pyckard’s vessel? The
Saint John
was worth good money, as was her cargo. If they’d taken her, they’d have thieved all they could. Instead, they tried to fire her and left her burning.’

Baldwin nodded. ‘Your conclusion?’

‘Obviously, they didn’t mean to destroy the cog. It wasn’t a seamanlike effort. If they’d really wanted her sunk, they’d
have made a better job of it. And no pirate or privateer would have done that. So, if it wasn’t someone after a ship and her cargo: what else could they have wanted?’

‘Well?’ the Coroner rasped.

‘I think they attacked the ship to stop her arriving in port.
And that was because there was a man they wanted on board.

And Baldwin felt those unsettlingly shrewd eyes on him again.

Chapter Seventeen

Cynegils was feeling terrible. His head seemed swollen, and his mouth hardly worked. There was a dryness when he tried to speak, and the wrong words would keep coming out. If only these bastards wouldn’t hurry so much. He needed a moment to pause and take his breath, but already they were hurrying him up the hill towards Higher Street. Even when he stumbled, the men didn’t seem to care. They continued hustling him along with his knees scraping the cobbles until he found his pace again and could march with them.

‘Where are you taking me?’ he gasped.

‘Shut it. You’ll learn soon enough.’

‘Oh come, now. What am I supposed to have done? Who wants me? I’ve told all I can to the Coroner and his friends. Can’t do more … tell more.’

If the sergeant wanted someone brought to him, he’d order the nearest watchmen to go and grab him, but these two weren’t watchmen. In fact, Cynegils didn’t think he’d seen either of them before. They were too well fed and well clothed to be locals, and they didn’t look like seamen, either. They had more the appearance of henchmen to a wealthy lord. Suddenly Cynegils felt sick. The nausea seemed to permeate his entire body.

The inn appeared, and to his astonishment, he was bustled through the narrow doorway and allowed to drop to the floor just over the threshold. When he remained on all fours, he was kicked roughly up the backside, and he fell forward onto his face, where he lay panting, trying to keep the vomit at bay.

‘Oh, good. I’ve heard so much about you,’ said a voice.

At a bench there sat an amiable-looking man, perhaps ten years younger than him, who held a large horn of ale and slab of meat skewered on a long dagger, from which he alternately gulped or took a sharp bite.

‘Master?’

‘You may call me that,’ the man said affably. ‘And now I should like to know all you can tell me about the night when you tried to follow a man in here.’

Baldwin took more wine and listened as the Coroner questioned Hawley again about all he had seen on the day he found the cog, but there was little he could add to what they already knew.

‘The convoy never happened, really. Pyckard’s ship went off first, and then Beauley’s, and we were third.’ He sat and frowned as he relived that day. ‘There was a thin mist all over the sea when we set off, and I ordered the men to reef the sails to slow her. Didn’t want to run straight into another ship. I wasn’t too bothered, because my ship is much faster than either of the others’, and I thought that I’d catch them in one good day’s sailing.’

‘You set sail in the early morning?’ Simon asked.

‘Yes. The other two had left the day before – Pyckard’s ship in the early morning, Beauley’s late morning. We
missed the wind and had to wait. When the fog cleared, we put up all the canvas and ran as fast as we could. Late in the afternoon we saw one ship, which must have been Beauley’s. Only a little later, close on evening, we saw the smoke on the horizon and ran Pyckard’s ship down.’

‘So Beauley could have been responsible for this?’ Baldwin mused.

‘Why would he do this? The ship was left with cargo and ship intact. It makes no sense! And if you’re worried, you can check his ship for the crew. I’d bet you’d find no sign of bodies or blood.’

‘He is a seamanlike fellow,’ Simon agreed. ‘Did you see no other ship at all?’

‘No, I saw no sign of another out there. All we saw was the smoke, then the cog came into view.’

‘If there was another ship in the area, wouldn’t you have missed it anyway?’ Baldwin asked reasonably. ‘I would imagine all eyes would be on the stricken cog.’

‘You imagine wrong, then,’ Hawley said sharply. ‘What, if you find a woman screaming, tied to a tree, do you go straight to her? No! You stand back and watch to see where is the man who bound her there. Otherwise you’d be walking into a trap. It’s the same at sea. If you find a ship like the
Saint John
which has been attacked, you look all about the horizon with care before approaching her. And my men are good. No, there was no ship in the area when we caught her.’

‘So the assumption that the attacking ship fled before they could steal the cargo …?’ Baldwin said.

‘Is so much garbage. They may have seen another ship, but not mine.’

‘Which means that the ship was boarded and attacked earlier.’

‘Maybe, but not much earlier. That part of the sea is quite busy. There are plenty of fishermen who ply their trade about there, and many ships make the crossing to Normandy or Guyenne. If she’d been there for more than a few hours, she’d have been seen. No, I think she was boarded and attacked late in the afternoon, and drifted a while until we found her.’

‘If these shipping lanes are so well used,’ the Coroner said slowly, ‘the men who left her must have known that there was a good chance she’d be found, and didn’t care whether she was or not.’

He shot a look at Baldwin as he spoke, and Baldwin found himself nodding. This Coroner was no fool. ‘Yes. Which means that they didn’t care whether the
crime
was discovered or not.’

‘No. Because they consider themselves safe from the law,’ Hawley said. ‘And that is not a happy conclusion.’

Sir Andrew de Limpsfield smiled affably down at Cynegils. He could afford to be affable, for he was sure that this little sailor-peasant was going to make him a moderate sum of money. ‘So you know nothing more from the moment that you were knocked down until you found yourself with a drenching to waken you?’

‘Yes, sir. Someone threw a bucket of water over me, and that brought me round.’

‘But by then, both men were gone,’ Sir Andrew said. ‘And one was dead that we know of. Where did the one go who owed you money?’

‘I haven’t seen him again.’

‘Did you see the body they found in the town? It is said he might be the man who you watched or who told you to watch.’

‘I didn’t see him.’

‘Even though he could be the man who hit you, or the man who caused you to be struck, and owed you money?’ Sir Andrew enquired silkily. ‘What restraint!’

‘It’s the truth, sir.’

‘No. It is utter ox-shit. You are incapable of telling the truth even when it is in your interests to do so. I think that I shall have you arrested and held until you confess the truth to me.’

Cynegils had already suffered enough from Sir Baldwin and the Coroner, and now he bent his head again. ‘Sir, I did see him, I think … but he owed me money.’

‘Tell me all, man, if you don’t want to feel the point of my sword at your throat.’

‘Have we learned anything from that man that we didn’t know already?’ Coroner Richard muttered as they left Hawley’s house and began to wander homewards to Simon’s lodgings.

‘I am comfortable that Hawley himself is probably innocent. I think he fears another attack.’

‘If he had piratically attacked Pyckard’s ship, he would declare himself innocent like that, wouldn’t he?’ the Coroner said.

‘Yes, but Hawley was talking of asking the King to become more involved in the protection of ships. A man who depends
for his livelihood on the freedom to behave exactly as he wants at all times is the last who would express those views.’

‘But even if he is not guilty of attacking the ship at sea, he could be the man who killed Danny before the ship sailed – if you are right,’ Simon put in.

‘Why should he kill a sailor?’ Baldwin said.

‘Jealous of a woman? Or Danny was jealous of his money and attacked him?’ the Coroner suggested.

‘Possibly, but I should prefer to have a little evidence to suggest those motives,’ Baldwin said.

‘At least we’ve learned how the body was thrown into the pit,’ Simon said musingly.

Sir Richard gave a grunt. ‘Yes. There is not much I would trust from the mouth of that tatty drunkard Cynegils, but I believed his fear at confessing to finding a body and robbing it of four shillings.’ He sniggered. ‘Astonishing that he should bend to taking one extra shilling as payment.’

Baldwin grinned too. ‘In a way, it was only fair. If he hadn’t been following the Frenchman as instructed, he wouldn’t have received that blow. If he was less honest, he would have taken the whole purse.’

‘More fool him,’ Sir Richard scoffed. ‘I would have taken it, and without shame. It was insane to leave the purse there for any other man to take.’

‘But no one did,’ Baldwin pointed out. ‘Which proves that the man who killed him did not do so for personal gain.’

‘At least we know his identity now. Stapledon’s nephew,’ Sir Richard said. He looked up at the twilight. ‘And now, gentles, I think it is time that we considered the work of the day to be past. There are taverns in this little town which
would grace a much larger place. Master Bailiff, have you ever been to the Crossed Keys up on the road to the gallows? It used to be an exciting little haunt, with some of the best ale in the area … not that the alewife would still be alive, I expect. Good women with a talent for brewing tend to die young, sadly.’

‘I think an ale would be an excellent idea, Sir Richard,’ Baldwin said cruelly, then, seeing the expression on his old friend’s face, he relented. ‘But I fear that I am very fatigued after my journey. If you do not mind, I would ask Simon to walk me back to his house.’

‘If you must, you must. It’s a shame, though. When I was younger, men were better able to hold their drink. Aha, but Bailiff, you can come and join me when this fellow’s resting his bones, can’t you?’

It was plain enough that the man was drunk, but Pierre would not normally have concerned himself with that. Everyone occasionally drank too much. No, it was the expression in his eyes as he took in the sight of Pierre, as though something clicked in his mind. There was recognition there.
Merde!
His description must be all over the town by now!

‘Master, you’ll go with these two men,’ Moses was saying, but Pierre was struck by a chilly concern.

‘Who are they?’

‘This is Gilbert, one of my dead master’s best shipmen. You can trust your life to him.’

‘And this?’

‘I am called Hamund. I too am travelling to France,’ Hamund managed, and belched.

‘He is to help sail the vessel,’ Moses explained. ‘There are not enough men in the town, and since the last ship was taken and burned, many fear pirates.’

‘You do not?’

Moses smiled thinly. ‘I do not sail. It is better that you go with these men. They can tell you all you need to know. In the meantime, I wish you well. Go with God, master.’

‘Why must I leave now? Is the boat ready to leave?’

‘The
Saint Denis
is a
ship
,’ Gil said testily. ‘She will be ready soon, but just now it seems you’ll be safer hidden away on board than out here in the town where someone could clap eyes on you at any moment. If you come with us now, we can hide you.’

‘Men still seek me?’

‘Is it true you raped a woman?’ Hamund burst out.

There was a ringing sound, and Hamund felt his bowels turn to water as a grey steel flash ended with a cold, deadly sensation at his throat. He scarcely dared look down the length of the sword’s blade to the man’s staring, furious eyes.

‘Who accuses me of this?’ the Frenchman hissed.

‘It was s-said at the inn,’ Hamund stuttered.

‘He’s telling the truth,’ Gil said. ‘A man, a tall fair knight called Sir Andrew de Limpsfield, came in and said he sought a Frenchmen who’d raped a gentlewoman.’

‘He lies,’ Pierre said through clenched teeth. ‘He accuses me of this? This
Andrew
dares to say that I,
I
, would do such a thing, when his master …’

‘Who is his master?’ Gil asked.

Pierre gave him a look that was a mixture of dread, and pure, ferocious hatred. He seemed to be about to answer, but
then he snapped his mouth closed as he reconsidered. Then he withdrew his sword and sheathed it again. ‘My apologies. I thought you sought to insult me, my friend. It is not you who is responsible for this.’

Hamund said nothing. It was enough that he dared breathe again. He was grateful for the sensation of blood pounding in his veins.

‘You’ll be safer aboard with us,’ Gil said.

‘Very well. Good. Farewell,’ Pierre said, bowing to Moses, but keeping his eyes on Hamund. As the other two left, he followed them out along the passage to the garden behind the house, and thence to a gate in the wall which led out to the shoreline.

BOOK: The Death Ship of Dartmouth: (Knights Templar 21)
5.2Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Sugar Rush by Rachel Astor
The Wharf Butcher by Michael K Foster
Blooming: Veronica by Louisa Trent
The Leopard by Giuseppe Di Lampedusa
Timesurfers by Rhonda Sermon
The Astro Outlaw by David A. Kelly
Dreaming for Freud by Sheila Kohler