was well, if she liked Geneva, if David’s family was kind to her. He closed his eyes, prayed for her, and then walked on, earning a muttered curse from the disappointed cloth merchant. And another curse when he reversed direction and passed by the stall again without stopping. He’d been so unnerved by the girl, he’d hardly registered the snowy sugar sparkling on a stall beyond the love apples.
He chose two large cone-shaped loaves and paid for them with Jouvancy’s coins. As the grocer wrapped them, the tower clock chimed from the old Conciergerie palace. If he kept his mind on business, he still had enough time to look for the street porter with the broken nose. He stowed the sugar in Jouvancy’s leather bag and started down the quay that bordered the market, heading west toward the tip of the island. He soon found the sort of scene he wanted. Heavily wrapped bolts of cloth, rounds of cheese, and boxes smelling of cinnamon were being unloaded from a barge and a small boat, and a dozen or so porters were securing bundles to the tall carrying frames they wore on their backs. Charles walked slowly among them, but none had the nose he was looking for. He reached the quay’s end without finding the man and retraced his steps toward the Petit Pont, still looking, but with no success. As he came to the bridge, the tower clock struck the quarter before ten, sending him at a trot across the river, where he went down the slope and along the left bank, seeing plenty of porters, but never the one he sought. He was below the Quay des Augustins, passing small fishing boats with planks laid so that customers could come from the bank and buy, when he collided with a woman stepping off a plank bridge with a basket of eels. The eels went flying and the woman rained abuse on him as he helped her gather their tangled slipperiness back into the basket. He straightened and nearly upended the basket again as he came face-to-face with the man who was trying to step around him.
“Monsieur, thank God!” He pulled the startled and protesting porter to the side of the quay. “Please, monsieur, I must talk with you. About the accident you saw on the rue des Poirees, the little boy-”
“No!” Breathing heavily through his mouth, the porter wrenched his arm away. “Leave me alone!” His long bony face had gone the color of a fish belly. “I told the other one. You’ve no call to hound me!”
His fingers twisted in the old sign to ward off evil and he tore himself out of Charles’s grip and ran, the empty frame bouncing on his long back. Charles started after him, but someone jerked him back by his cassock and spun him around.
“Leave him alone, priest!” His captor had a voice like gravel caught in a sieve, and the face that went with the voice was as expressionless as a wall. He was big in every direction and his four confreres were built like the squat, sturdy pillars in a Norman church. The five men closed around Charles.
“I swear by the Virgin, messieurs, I mean him no harm,” Charles said. “I only want-”
“Are you deaf?” Gravel Voice said, shaking him. “I said leave off. If we cut away the flapping part of your ears, maybe you’d hear better. But there’s no sport with your kind. No fight.”
The others laughed and Charles breathed onion, garlic, and the stink of sweat. “No, not now,” he said evenly, “I swore off fighting a long time ago.”
“What would you know of fighting?”
“Enough, after two years in the king’s army.”
“Where?” the shortest man said skeptically.
“The Spanish Netherlands in ’77, for one place. St. Omer.”
“You, too?” The short man’s eyes lit with interest and he stepped closer and peered up at Charles. “Me, I was there, too, I carried a pike.”
“I was a mousquetaire,” Charles said.
Gravel Voice spat close to Charles’s feet. “Why the skirt, then?”
“I was wounded. I had a lot of time to think and decided I didn’t like killing people.”
“Me, I was wounded, too.” The ex-soldier pulled up his patched jacket and showed a jagged scar running the length of his forearm. “But I never thought of being a cleric.”
“That randy woman of yours would beat you into a pate if you did,” someone laughed.
“What do you want with Pierre, then, mon pere?” the ex-soldier said.
“I teach at the college of Louis le Grand, and a few days ago, he saw a little boy from our school ridden down on the rue des Poirees. I just want to hear from him what happened. Only that. He was in no way to blame, he is in no trouble. I would be very grateful and will certainly reward him for telling me what he saw.”
The man’s eyes narrowed suspiciously. “Why?”
“The boy’s father is anxious to know all he can about what happened.”
Most of the men grunted, understanding that.
“Would you tell your friend Pierre what I say? And tell him, too”-Charles hesitated, unsure how to put it-“tell him I am not a friend of the other priest who talked to him.”
“Good enough for me,” the ex-soldier said, ignoring Gravel Voice’s protest. “Come back here first thing tomorrow.” He pointed across the Seine at the Louvre palace. “You sound foreign, there’s your landmark, if you need it. If Pierre wants to talk, he’ll be here.”
“Thank you, mon camarade. Until tomorrow, then.”
Slowly, the men stepped back and let Charles through. He spoiled his attempt at a dignified exit by tripping over the bare feet of a fisherman who was sitting against a barrel beside his pole, so sound asleep beneath his hat that he never stirred. Charles was too excited at having found his man to mind the porters’ jibes and laughter.
On the way back to the college, he barely noticed the raucous street life going on around him. If Pierre had seen a knife in the rider’s hand as he reached toward Antoine, then the accident was indeed no accident. And if the man confirmed that Guise had paid him for silence, then Charles had a weapon against Guise and his cronies, and Guise had an unpleasant amount of explaining to do.
Charles was reaching for the bell rope beside the college postern when furious female voices reached him from beyond the chapel’s west door. Marie-Ange ran out of the bakery with her mother on her heels.
“You will never go up there again!” Mme LeClerc shouted. “Never, do you hear me? Do you want to get us turned out? Now be off with you. And come back the moment you’ve finished. Not like yesterday. I know how long delivering bread should take, Marie-Ange.”
“But, Maman! It wasn’t me that-”
“Go!”
Marie-Ange hefted her loaded basket and her mother went back into the shop. When the little girl was past the chapel, she set the basket down and wiped her wet face on her skirt.
“My lady Jeanne?” Charles squatted down on his heels in front of her. “What has happened, ma petite? Are the English winning again?”
Marie-Ange hiccupped indignantly. “I was only trying to help. But grown-ups never think of that, do they, the pigs?”
Charles considered gravely. “No, sometimes we don’t.”
“Well, it’s not fair!”
“I agree. How were you trying to help?”
“We were just-”
“Marie-Ange, go! Now!”
Mme LeClerc was coming toward them, brandishing a bread paddle that could have flattened a horse. With an expressive look at Charles, Marie-Ange picked up her basket and went. Her mother raised the bread paddle to heaven.
“Some days, maitre, she makes me wish I’d been a nun!”
“Celibacy has its rewards, madame,” Charles said dryly. Though lately, he was finding them hard to remember.
“Come in here for a little moment, maitre, if you please.”
She retreated into the shop and Charles followed her. The scent of baking wafted from the ovens and he took a deep, hungry breath.
“Your shop smells so good, madame, a man could eat the air.”
“A man may have to, if Roger lets that omelette brain of an apprentice burn my brioches.” She bit her lip and her rosy face grew pinched with apology. “Maitre, this morning Marie-Ange went up your stairs. I am so sorry! I would never have allowed it, but what could I do, I didn’t know!”
“What stairs, madame?”
“There.” She pointed to a low, arched door in the shop’s side wall. “They lead to two rooms above us. In