‘My father. But he sleeps heavily. Yet ask him, who knows but he may have heard or seen something. Next to him my brother and his wife. Daniel is away to Frankwell, but Margery you’ll find in the garden with my father. And then my grandmother has the nearest chamber. She keeps her room today, she’s old and has had some trying seizures, perilous at her age. But she’ll be pleased if you care to visit her,’ said Susanna, with a brief, flashing smile, ‘for all the rest of us grow very tedious to her, she’s worn us out long ago, we no longer amuse her. I doubt if she can tell you anything that will help you, my lord, but the change would do marvels for her.’
She had wide eyes at once distant and brilliant, fringed with lashes russet as her coil of lustrous hair. A pity there should be grey strands in the russet, and fine wrinkles, whether of laughter or long-sighted pain, at the corners of the grey eyes, and drawn lines, like cobweb, about her full, firm mouth. She was, Hugh judged, at least six or seven years older than he, and seemed more. A fine thing spoiled for want of a little spending. Hugh had come by what was his as an only child, but he did not think a sister of his would have been left thus used and unprovided, to furnish a brother richly forth.
‘I’ll gladly present myself to Dame Juliana,’ he said, ‘when I have spoken with Master Walter and Mistress Margery.’
‘That would be kind,’ she said. ‘And I could bring you wine, and that would give me the chance to bring her, with it, a dose she might otherwise refuse to take, even though Brother Cadfael comes tomorrow and she minds him more than any of us. Go down this way, then, my lord. I’ll look for you returning.’
Either the goldsmith had nothing to tell, or else could not bring himself to spend even words. The one thing that haunted him day and night was his lost treasury, of which he had rendered an inventory piece by piece, almost coin by coin, in loving and grieving detail. The coins in particular were notable. He had silver pieces from before Duke William ever became King William, fine mintage not to be matched now. His father and grandfather, and perhaps one progenitor more, must have been of the same mind as himself, and lived for their fine-struck wealth. Walter’s head might be healed now without, but his loss might well have done untold harm to the mind within.
Hugh stood patiently under the apple and pear trees of the orchard, pressing his few questions concerning the vanishing of Baldwin Peche. Almost it seemed to him that the name no longer struck any spark, that Walter had to blink and shake himself and think hard before he could recall the name or the face of his dead tenant. He could not see the one or remember the other for brooding on his voided coffer.
One thing was certain, if he knew of anything that could help to recover his goods, he would pour it out in a hurry. Another man’s death, by comparison, meant little to him. Nor did it seem that he had yet hit upon one possibility that was hovering in Hugh’s mind. If there was indeed a connection between the robbery and this death, need it be the one to which the town had jumped so nimbly? Robbers can also be robbed, and may even be killed in the robbing. Baldwin Peche had been a guest at the wedding, he had made the locks and keys for the strong-box, and who knew the house and shop better than he?
Margery had been feeding the fowls that scratched in an arrow run under the town wall, at the bottom of the garden. Until a year previously Walter had even kept his two horses here within the town, but recently he had acquired a pasture and an old stable across the river, westward from Frankwell, where Iestyn was regularly sent to see that they were fed and watered and groomed, and exercise them if they were short of work. The girl was coming up the slope of the garden with the morning’s eggs in a basket, the bulk of the wall in shadow behind her, and the narrow door in it closed. A short, rounded, insignificant young person to the view, with an untidy mass of fair hair. She made Hugh a wary reverence, and raised to him a pair of round, unwavering eyes.
‘My husband is out on an errand, sir, I’m sorry. In half an hour or so he may be back.’
‘No matter,’ said Hugh truly, ‘I can speak with him later. And you may well be able to speak for both, and save the time. You know on what business I’m engaged. Master Peche’s death seems likely to prove no accident, and though he was missing most of the day, yet the night is the most favourable time for villainies such as murder. We need to know what every man was doing two nights ago, and whether he saw or heard anything that may help us lay hands on the culprit. I understand your chamber is the second one, back from the street, yet you may have looked out and seen someone lurking in the alley between the houses, or heard some sound that may have meant little to you then. Did you so?’
She said at once: ‘No. It was a quiet night, like any other.’
‘And your husband made no mention of noticing anything out of the way? No one out and about on the roads when law-abiding people are fast at home? Had he occasion to be in the shop late? Or any errand outside?’
Her rose and white countenance flushed very slowly a deeper rose, but her eyes did not waver, and she found a ready excuse for her colour. ‘No, we retired in good time.
Your lordship will understand?we are only a few days married.’
‘I understand very well!’ said Hugh heartily. ‘Then I need hardly ask you if your husband so much as left your side.’
‘Never for a moment,’ she agreed, and voice and flush were eloquent, whether they told truth or no.
‘The idea would never have entered my mind,’ Hugh assured her urbanely, ‘if we had not the testimony of a witness who says he saw your husband creeping out of the house and making off in haste about an hour after Compline that night. But of course, more’s the unwisdom, not all witnesses tell the truth.’
He made her a civil bow, and turned and left her then, neither lingering nor hurrying, and strolled back up the garden path to the house. Margery stood staring after him with her underlip caught between her teeth, and the basket of eggs dangling forgotten from her hand.
She was waiting and watching for Daniel when he came back from Frankwell. She drew him aside into a corner of the yard, where they could not be overheard, and the set of her chin and brows stopped his mouth when he began to blurt out loud, incautious wonder at being thus waylaid. Instead, he questioned in an uneasy undertone, impressed by her evident gravity: ‘What is it? What’s the matter with you?’
‘The sheriff’s deputy has been here asking questions. Of all of us!’
‘Well, so he must, what is there in that? And what, of all people, could you tell him?’ The implied scorn did not escape her; that would change, and soon.
‘I could have told what he asked me,’ she spat, bitter and low, ‘where you were all night on Monday. But could I? Do I even know? I know what I believed then, but why should I go on believing it? A man who was out of his bed and loose in the town that night may not have been bustling to another woman’s bed after all?he could have been battering Baldwin Peche over the head and throwing him into the river! That’s what they are thinking. And now what am I to believe? Bad enough if you left me to go to that woman while her husband’s away?oh, yes, I was there, do you remember when she told you, all nods and winks, the shameless whore!?that he was bound away for several days! But how do I know now that that’s what you were about?’