К Сэнсом - Tombland

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Spring, 1549. Two years after the death of Henry VIII, England is sliding into chaos... The nominal king, Edward VI, is eleven years old. His uncle Edward Seymour, Lord Hertford, rules as Protector. The extirpation of the old religion by radical Protestants is stirring discontent among the populace while the Protector's prolonged war with Scotland is proving a disastrous failure and threatens to involve France. Worst of all, the economy is in collapse, inflation rages and rebellion is stirring among the peasantry. Since the old King's death, Matthew Shardlake has been working as a lawyer in the service of Henry's younger daughter, the Lady Elizabeth. The gruesome murder of the wife of a distant Norfolk relation of Elizabeth's mother, John Boleyn - which could have political implications for Elizabeth - brings Shardlake and his assistant Nicholas Overton to the summer assizes at Norwich. There they are reunited with Shardlake's former assistant Jack Barak. The three find layers of mystery and danger surrounding the death of Edith Boleyn, as a second murder is committed. And then East Anglia explodes, as peasant rebellion breaks out across the country. The yeoman Robert Kett leads a force of thousands in overthrowing the landlords and establishing a vast camp outside Norwich. Soon the rebels have taken over the city, England's second largest. Barak throws in his lot with the rebels; Nicholas, opposed to them, becomes a prisoner in Norwich Castle; while Shardlake has to decide where his ultimate loyalties lie, as government forces in London prepare to march north and destroy the rebels. Meanwhile he discovers that the murder of Edith Boleyn may have connections reaching into both the heart of the rebel camp and of the Norfolk gentry...

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‘Change is sometimes hard,’ I said quietly.

‘Did you have business with the vicar, sir?’ He looked anxious now, afraid he had said too much.

‘No, I am just a traveller who wandered in.’

He nodded, relieved. ‘I must lock up now, for the night.’

I left the church. When I closed the door it made a hollow, echoing noise.

* * *

I DID NOT FEEL like returning to the inn; there was a wooden bench beside the church and I sat down, watching the sun set. I reflected that old King Henry himself would not have approved of what was happening, but power rested now with the Duke of Somerset and with Cranmer, who were taking England halfway to the continental radicals like Zwingli and Calvin. Though there were, of course, plenty who did approve, especially in London where some churches had even replaced the altar with a bare Communion table. Yet it had all been imposed from above, like every religious change these last sixteen years, whether people liked it or not. I recalled the sudden fear in the painter’s eyes after he spoke to me about the candle holder. I remembered Jack Barak’s total cynicism, his disrespect for both sides of the religious divide. ‘Balls to it all,’ he had said when we last met for a drink a couple of weeks before, in a tavern near the Tower where we were unlikely to see anyone who knew his wife Tamasin.

Tamasin. I shook my head sorrowfully. I had been present the day she met her husband, and for years we had been good friends; I had shared her sorrow at the death of her first child, her joy at the birth of the second. But for three years now she had been my open enemy. I recalled the terrible night when she learned Barak had been maimed, and might die, after I had got him, behind her back, to help me in a dangerous enterprise. I remembered her balled fists, the fury in her face as she cried out, ‘You will leave us alone, never come near us again!’ She blamed me for what had happened, as I partly blamed myself, though Barak stoutly insisted he was responsible for his own actions.

When Barak had recovered sufficiently Guy had worked to find a suitable prosthesis for his missing right hand. They had settled on a device, strapped to his arm above the elbow, with a little metal stump at the end, from which a short knife protruded. Underneath it was a curved half-circle of metal, with which Barak could carry things and even, after practice, ride, while the knife could be used at table, to manipulate latches and open boxes, and in the last resort, in the dangerous London streets, serve as a weapon. It was a clumsy-looking thing, but he had learned to use it with dexterity. And, to my amazement, he had taught himself to write with his left hand. It was a scrawl, but perfectly readable.

As Tamasin had forbidden him to work for me again, Barak had looked for work among the solicitors – some respectable and others less so – who found work for the barristers around the Inns of Court. He found employment easily, for he had gained a high reputation as my assistant. He now worked for various solicitors; finding witnesses, taking depositions, rooting out evidence, no doubt with a little bribery and perhaps threats along the way. He had also gained a place as a junior assistant to the judges when, twice a year, they made their circuits of the localities, trying civil and criminal cases, and ensuring the magistrates were carrying out the Protector’s instructions. Barak’s work was in assessing jurors, rooting out reluctant witnesses, helping with the paperwork, and sniffing out the local mood in the taverns. He worked on the two nearest circuits to London, the Home Counties and the Norfolk circuit, which travelled from Buckinghamshire to East Anglia. Each circuit lasted a month, and though it paid well, he had refused work on the more distant circuits as Tamasin did not like him spending too much time away from her and the children. I suspected, too, that with his disability riding to the longer circuits would be tiring. Though he never mentioned it, when we met I could sometimes tell that his arm was painful.

I remembered him telling me, at our recent meeting, that he was coming to dislike circuit work. People in the localities feared the judges, arriving in the towns in their robes red as blood, with pomp and ceremony. ‘It’s the way the criminal trials are going,’ he said. ‘The judges don’t encourage jurors to give the accused the benefit of the doubt on capital charges the way they did. There are more hangings every time. And that comes from orders at the top.’

‘From Chancellor Rich?’ I asked him.

‘I think from the Protector and those around him. The Calvinists, who want to root out and punish sin.’

‘So much for the Protector’s promise of milder times when he abolished the old Treasons Act.’

Barak spat in the sawdust on the tavern floor. ‘Milder climes for radical Protestants. Bishop Gardiner’s in gaol, and all unlicensed preaching’s forbidden. Funny sort of mildness.’

‘Who are the judges on the Norfolk circuit this summer?’

‘Reynberd and Gatchet.’

‘Watch Reynberd,’ I said. ‘He has the air of an easy-going, sleepy old fellow but he’s sharp and watchful as a cat.’

‘I’ve been on circuit with Gatchet before,’ Barak said. ‘He’s clever, but cold and hard as a stone. He’s one of Calvin’s followers. The hangman will be busy.’

* * *

THE SUN WAS ALMOST below the horizon now; I stood up, wincing at the stiffness in my back and legs. There was barely enough light now to see my way down the church path. I thought that if I saw Barak in Norfolk, and Tamasin learned of it, she would consider it a betrayal on his part. And then, with a burst of anger, I reflected that chance had taken us to the same Assizes, which was hardly uncommon in the small legal world, and we could not just ignore each other. And why should I not seek his help in gathering information? There was nobody better at keeping his ear to the ground.

I stumbled over a projecting oak root, and cursed. Watching my way carefully, I went through the lychgate and headed up the street, the flickering candlelight from the inn windows guiding me back.

Chapter Five

Though we left Whetstone village early the following morning, we did not enter London till after midday, for a couple of miles out of the City we found ourselves stuck behind a row of gigantic carts, each drawn by eight heavy horses and laden with new-cast bricks. The drivers wore the Protector’s red and yellow coat of arms and we followed at a snail’s pace as the carts lumbered on, making deep ruts in the road.

‘More bricks for Somerset House,’ Nicholas observed sourly.

‘Ay, Edward Seymour’s palace will eat up half of London before he’s done.’ Since becoming Protector, the Duke of Somerset had begun work on a vast new palace on the Strand, clearing away rows of old tenements and even digging up part of the ancient St Paul’s Cathedral charnel house, sending cartloads of bones of ancient distinguished Londoners to be buried with the rubbish out in Finsbury Fields.

Nicholas said, ‘I hear he’s ordered two million bricks for rebuilding that crumbling old family place of his in Wiltshire – what’s it called, Wolf’s Hole?’

‘Wolf Hall. All paid for by the public purse, empty though it is.’

We had to halt outside the Moorgate, for there was scarce enough space for the carts to enter. I saw a new proclamation in the King’s name posted outside: from now on the gates were to be closed during the hours of darkness, and a good night watch to be appointed in each ward.

‘Are they expecting trouble after the new service on Sunday?’ Nicholas asked. ‘Even though most of London is Protestant.’

‘Not everyone,’ I replied. The atmosphere in the city that spring had been tense, pamphlets against the Pope and the Mass everywhere. The performance of plays and interludes was already prohibited, and servants and youths required to keep off the streets after dark. The May disturbances in the countryside, and the unruly behaviour of soldiers from the encampments outside the city waiting to go up to the Scottish war, had added to the authorities’ concerns.

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