The Medieval Murderers - House of Shadows

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Bermondsey Priory, 1114. A young chaplain succumbs to the temptations of the flesh – and suffers a gruesome punishment. From that moment, the monastery is cursed and over the next five hundred years murder and treachery abound within its hallowed walls. A beautiful young bride found dead two days before her wedding. A ghostly figure that warns of impending doom. A plot to depose King Edward II. Mad monks and errant priests…even the poet Chaucer finds himself drawn into the dark deeds and violent death which pervade this unhappy place.

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‘Which one?’ Hob asked.

It was clear that his question surprised the two men. ‘How many corpses do you have here?’ Simon said.

‘One girl, one man.’

‘The girl is the daughter of a man named Capun?’

‘Yes. Juliet. The lad was a friend of hers. A lad we all knew as Pilgrim.’

‘Why was he called that? He had made a pilgrimage?’

‘He was quite religious,’ Lawrence said earnestly. ‘He once made the journey to Canterbury, and several others to our Lady of-’

‘I apologize, brother, but my time is short. Did you know him quite well?’

Lawrence pursed his lips. It was rare for a man of the cloth to be cut short quite so bluntly. ‘Well enough. I would like to think of myself as a friend of his.’

‘But surely you are a monk. You are enclosed within your walls, are you not? I had thought that the monks of Cluny were dissuaded from conversation. Is it not true that a Cluniac monk should not speak?’

‘It is preferable that we do not. We try to ensure our own passage to heaven by virtue of our prayers, and by our performance of all that is pleasing to God. We know that the perfection of the world demanded that there be peace and silence, so we try to do all we can to keep the world in harmony.’

‘Yet you are here?’ Simon asked.

Lawrence met his gaze with mild reproof. ‘Friend, even a priory has need of men who can discuss the requirements of the brethren. I am the cellarer. If I may not be permitted to walk in the world and purchase all that is needful, our convent and our order must soon collapse!’

‘You knew this “Pilgrim”, then. What was his real name?’ Baldwin asked.

‘His name was William de Monte Acuto, the same as his father. That was why his alias was so commonly used.’

‘How did you know him?’ Simon asked. He was not sure he liked this man. The tone of superiority was common enough among priests and monks, but it still irked him.

‘He and his father used to be wealthy. They were wont to supply us with grain.’

‘How kind,’ Baldwin said drily. ‘Can you tell us where this man William lives?’

‘Naturally,’ Lawrence said, and described the way to the man’s home. It was an easy enough journey: apparently William had a small manor just south of Southwark.

‘You plainly knew him well enough,’ Simon said. ‘Was there anyone who disliked the man enough to kill him?’

Lawrence looked away, and the fingers of his right hand danced over his left sleeve.

Baldwin nodded. ‘There were many?’

‘You understand our language?’

‘Enough of it. So he was a man who could upset many others?’

Lawrence sighed to himself. ‘No, not generally. But his family had a certain enmity with her family, I fear.’

‘Fascinating.’

Hearing a new voice startled Baldwin and Simon, and both spun on their heels to see who had arrived behind them.

With two servants, one holding their horses, stood a knight. He was a full three inches taller than Baldwin, so maybe an inch over six feet. He had shrewd brown eyes that flitted over Baldwin’s frame, noting the scars, the squared shoulders, the over-muscled right arm.

‘Coroner,’ Lawrence said and bent his head respectfully.

Studying him, Baldwin was less than enthusiastic. The coroner was one of those foppish knights who valued fashion more highly than honour. This was one of those modern men who sought position and money rather than accepting a life of service. He was a mercenary.

He wore tight, parti-coloured hosen in red and blue, with a red surcoat trimmed with fur. Fine golden threads were stitched on his breast to create a pattern that glistened in the occasional flares of sunshine. On his head was one of those hats that, to Baldwin’s eye, looked plain ridiculous. It bore a liripipe so long it was wrapped about his head and then dangled behind him. A typical example of a modern warrior, Baldwin thought. More keen on fashions at court than real work.

‘I am Sir Jean de Fouvilles. I am coroner here.’

‘I am glad to meet you,’ Baldwin said untruthfully.

Originally, so he believed, coroners had been installed as a bulwark against the overweening powers of the sheriffs, but more recently the coroners themselves had become symbols of corruption, and Baldwin distrusted them – especially this one. He smelled of courtly intrigue.

‘Where are these bodies, then?’ the coroner demanded.

While Hob marched him away to the first, the cellarer close on their heels, Baldwin and Simon trailed after them.

‘You were not impressed with that monk?’ Simon guessed with a grin.

‘Was it that obvious? Well, I fear not. In my day our order depended on frugal living to keep ourselves in a state of readiness for war. We ate little, drank little and exercised regularly. These Cluniacs eat a great deal.’ He added cynically: ‘That must be why he is always out here dealing with others for more food.’

‘What was that you said about being able to understand his language?’

‘Monks who follow the Cluniac rule are expected to hold their tongues even under great provocation. There was a story I once heard of a monk who watched a felon steal his prior’s horse and would not sound the alarm. So over time they have built up their own language using fingers and signs.’

They had caught up with the other three, and the coroner was peering down at the body with a speculative eye. ‘This is the Capun girl?’

Hob was already at his side. ‘Yes, sir. Juliet Capun.’

‘Really?’ the coroner commented, gazing about him at the view. ‘What was she doing here?’

Simon could see his point. From here, all about them were low, reedy hillocks interspersed with little pools and puddles of brackish water. This land bordered the river, and the marshes all around were proof of the multitude of little streams that passed through this land on the way to the sea.

‘That is the Rosary?’ Simon asked, pointing as he took his bearings.

To the north and west of them stood the new palace that Baldwin and Simon had seen from the river. Massive walls were rising amid a scaffolding of larch boughs lashed together. It made for an apparently disorderly jumble of wood and cordage, although Simon could make out the basic structure. When complete, it would be a manor house, moated and easily defensible, with a short river trip to the safety of the Tower of London. It was easy to see why the king might seek to build on this new location.

‘Aye,’ Hob said. ‘And the master in charge of the works is Master Capun. That is why he was so common over here, and his daughter often came with him.’

‘What of the dead man?’ Baldwin asked.

‘Pilgrim? His father was William de Monte Acuto. He’s a merchant. Rich once – not now.’

‘He lost his treasure? How?’ Baldwin wondered.

I don’t know. I’m only a constable.’

The coroner looked at Baldwin for a moment with mammoth disdain, then turned back to the constable. ‘She was stabbed?’

‘There is a blade in her hand,’ Baldwin observed.

‘It was a fierce wound,’ the coroner commented. ‘Very likely a self-murder. So common with young women.’

Baldwin gave him a long, considering look. ‘You think so? Strange that she should still grip the weapon, then. In my experience, suicides usually drop their weapons as they die. The muscles relax…’

‘Yes, I am sure you are an expert in such matters,’ the coroner said patronizingly.

Simon looked away, but not before he had seen how her tunic had been stained with blood. She lay on her back, a shortish woman, pretty enough, with dark hair and a pleasant, oval face. Her left leg was curled back underneath her, as though she had just slipped on to her back. There was but one stab wound, but it had entered under and beside her left breast, almost at her flank. A long dagger would easily puncture lungs and heart if angled correctly. The dagger in her hand was eight inches or more long.

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