Chapter Two

I rode pillion behind the messenger back to Farleigh and we arrived just after ten o’clock, in time for dinner. Not that I could think about food just then, being led at once towards an upper room to await the Duke.

In both the outer and inner wards of the castle, carts were were being loaded and horses saddled ready for the ducal couple’s midday departure. As one who carried most of his worldly goods upon his back, I never ceased to marvel at the amount of clothes and possessions deemed necessary by our lords and masters for even the shortest stay. As my guide and I passed within view of the south-west tower, its conical roof gleaming in the morning sun, two young pages dragged out a large, iron-bound, leather chest which I presumed belonged to the Duchess, judging by the fine gauze sleeve that trailed from beneath its lid. Behind them a tiring-woman stumbled beneath the weight of a red, velvet-covered jewel box.

It seemed that the Bishop, together with his retinue, had long since gone; as soon as breakfast was over, according to my companion. What business he had had with the Duke had evidently been completed the previous night, and His Grace must by now have been several miles along the road to Wells. I reflected how fortuitous it was that Stillington should have been visiting his diocese just as my lord of Clarence was spending twenty-four hours at Farleigh. There was a whiff of collusion in the air, and I wondered what mischief they had been hatching together. But whatever it was, it would not affect my life, although the Queen’s kinfolk might do well to beware. In the meantime, if my instincts served me aright, God had His own plans for me.

The messenger led me across the inner courtyard and up a short flight of steps to the great hall, where trestle tables were being laid for dinner. A twisting staircase in one corner brought us to a pleasant solar where the casements stood wide, flooding the room with warmth and light. I was almost blinded by the sudden glare, and was still trying to clear my vision when my companion bade me be seated while he went in search of the Duke. I groped my way to a stool and sat with my back to the window until my sight returned to normal, by which time I could hear footsteps on the stairs outside. The next moment my lord of Clarence, booted and spurred for his forthcoming journey, entered the solar accompanied by his wife and followed by a man and a young girl, the very one that I had seen by the chapel of the east gate earlier that same morning. I rose hastily to my feet.

I had never seen the Duchess Isabel close to before, and I was startled by her likeness to her younger sister, the Duchess of Gloucester. There was the same delicate colouring of eyes and skin, the same air of fragility that made me think of harebells blowing in the wind. She wore a loose robe of leaf-green sarsenet which imperfectly concealed the fact that she was pregnant — about five months gone by my reckoning, the dark circles beneath her eyes and the way she sank thankfully into a chair indicating that she was finding her condition trying. She already had children, the daughter Margaret who had been born at Farleigh, and a son called Edward after the King, his uncle. I thought that George of Clarence, had he been concerned for his wife’s health, should have been content with the two he already had, for the Duchess looked a sick woman to me.

The Duke nodded curtly in my direction. ‘I couldn’t place your face when I first saw you yesterday evening,’ he said. ‘But then, when I noticed you again this morning at Mass, I remembered who you are. Our paths crossed last year when you saved my brother Richard from assassination.’

‘I had that privilege,’ I answered, bowing. ‘His Grace the Duke of Gloucester has employed me once or twice on his private affairs, but I am a chapman by trade.’

Clarence seated himself in a carved armchair and pursed his lips. ‘Yes, he told me all about you, how he offered you a place in his household and you refused.’ He laughed mirthlessly. ‘You’re a fool, man! But I suppose you know that.’

‘Perhaps, but I prefer to be my own master.’

The Duke shrugged and his blue eyes surveyed me with indifference. ‘That’s up to you, of course. The important thing at this moment is that I know my brother trusts you, and that I can therefore call upon you with confidence to perform a small service for me.’ He waved a hand dismissively. ‘Oh, nothing of any significance; not at all the kind of thing you’ve done for Dickon. An errand really!’ He turned and beckoned forward the man and the girl. ‘This is William Armstrong, one of my sergeants-at-arms, and this is his daughter Cicely, chamber-maid to the Duchess.’

The man was tall and thickset with closely cropped, curling red hair and a surly expression. The girl was as different from him as she possibly could be, the top of her head not reaching much above his shoulder. She had small, neat hands and feet, and a huge pair of violet-blue eyes beneath well-shaped eyebrows. Her hair was concealed under a linen hood, but from the few stray tendrils that had escaped their confinement and lay damply across her forehead, I guessed it to be a pale golden brown. She was not beautiful — her lips were too thin and there was a slight heaviness of the lower jaw — but when she glanced up and gave me an impish smile I was ready to swear that she was one of the prettiest girls I had ever met.

The Duke continued, ‘Mistress Cicely is leaving us. She is going home to Glastonbury to her aunt…’ He paused, looking to William Armstrong for enlightenment.

‘Mistress Gildersleeve, my sister,’ the Sergeant supplied gruffly. ‘Cicely’s to marry my elder nephew, her cousin Peter,’ he added with pride. ‘He and his brother, Mark, have their own business close to the abbey. They’re parchment makers.’

‘Yes, yes!’ the Duke interrupted testily. He turned again to me. ‘The point is, Chapman, that the said Peter Gildersleeve should have arrived here last night, ready to escort his betrothed back to Glastonbury and his mother’s house this morning. Our being at Farleigh for twenty-four hours seemed the ideal opportunity for conveying Cicely thence with the least possible inconvenience to any member of my household. But Master Gildersleeve has failed to appear.’ His Grace looked annoyed at this setback to his plans. ‘Which is very inconsiderate of him. We must leave here no later than noon. I have to be in London by the middle of the week, and I cannot spare William to go with his daughter. He, on the other hand, is worried for her safety between here and her aunt’s house at Glastonbury. So, Chapman! If this Peter Gildersleeve is still absent at midday, I am putting the girl in your charge, and will rely upon you to accompany her to her destination.’

I had no choice but to express my willingness to comply with the royal wishes. I did, however, raise one objection. ‘Your Grace, I go on foot. I have no horse.’

The Duke frowned and drummed his fingers on the arm of his chair. ‘Can you ride?’ he demanded after a second or two’s deliberation.

I acknowledged that I could, if forced to, adding, ‘But I have not done so for some while.’

‘Once learned, never forgotten,’ Duke George replied shortly, and rose to his feet. ‘I’ll give orders for a mount to be ready for you in the stables. You can take the girl up behind you.’ He moved towards the door. ‘And you may eat your dinner in the great hall with the rest of us in ten minutes’ time.’

The audience was at an end. He left the solar accompanied by the Duchess, who lingered in the doorway just long enough to bid the girl come to see her before quitting Farleigh. Then she followed her husband down the stairs and I found myself alone with William Armstrong and his daughter.

The former regarded me with a certain amount of suspicion. ‘His Grace does right to trust you, I suppose. He seems to know you. I wasn’t in France myself last year, so I can’t vouch for his story. It really was you who saved my lord of Gloucester’s life?’

‘It was. And you may trust me with your daughter’s, if that’s what’s worrying you.’

Armstrong sighed. ‘Well, you look a strong lad, and I daresay you’re handy with your fists if the need arises.’ His eyes narrowed and he moved closer to me, lowering his voice so that Cicely could not hear what he was saying. ‘But you’re a good-looking fellow too, and my daughter’s not long turned sixteen. A susceptible age, when girls grow flighty and don’t necessarily want to do what’s best for them. Cissy’s future is assured with her cousin. She’ll have a decent home and my sister to keep an eye on her. My nephews are fine, upstanding men in possession of a thriving business. Peter, especially, has a healthy respect for making money. My girl will want for nothing. But, as I said just now, she’s at an age when a handsome face can easily turn her head. Do you understand me?’

‘Perfectly,’ I answered coolly. ‘And I can assure you, Sergeant Armstrong, that your daughter’s virtue is as safe in my hands as it would be in your own. Moreover, if we set off as soon as possible, on horseback, even with both of us in the saddle we should reach Glastonbury before dark. At this time of year, daylight still stretches well into the evening. There will be no necessity for us to spend a night on the road.’

He appeared satisfied, nodding in a grudging sort of way, then turned fiercely on his daughter. ‘You behave yourself, mind, Cis! Do as you’re told, and when you get to your aunt’s find out what the devil’s happened to Peter.’

‘He’s probably forgotten all about me,’ Cicely suggested with a toss of her head. ‘I don’t believe he’s any more in favour of this marriage than I am.’

William Armstrong shot out a hand and clouted her around one ear. ‘You watch your tongue, my girl, or you’ll get a beating.’ He breathed heavily. ‘It’s high time you had a husband to tame you. Go on! Go and get your dinner. I’ll see you again before you leave.’

When the door had closed behind her, he sighed. ‘She’s been motherless for the past three years, and that’s why I asked the Duchess to take her into her household, so I could keep her under my eye. But I couldn’t give her a mother’s guiding hand, which is what a girl needs at that age.’

‘Is that why you’ve arranged this marriage for her?’ I enquired, expecting to be told to mind my own business.

But having started to confide in me, the Sergeant seemed unable to stop. ‘It was arranged between my wife and sister when Cis was a baby. Peter was then eight years old and his brother four years younger. Mark would have been a more suitable match for her, being nearer to her in age, but Katherine, my wife — well, she knew that it was Peter who would inherit the parchment-making business when my brother-in-law died — which he did a twelvemonth since — and it gave the two women something to plan for. I was away a great deal, being then in the pay of my lord’s father, the Duke of York. When he was killed at Wakefield, the December after Cis was born, I joined the household of my lord of Warwick; and after his death, His Grace of Clarence took me into his service. So I wasn’t at home to say whether I approved of the match or no. But now I’m all in favour of it. Cicely was too young when Katherine died to marry Peter, and it wouldn’t have been fair on my sister to saddle her with a headstrong child of thirteen. However, three years in Her Grace of Clarence’s household has worked wonders. It’s taught Cis discipline and how to serve others. She’s ready for marriage now.’

A sudden frown creased William Armstrong’s brow. ‘But whatever has happened to Peter? Why hasn’t the damned fellow shown up? I arranged it all by letter with Joan, my sister: the date, the place, the time. The Duke’s chief clerk wrote and dispatched it for me, and both my nephews can read and write.’

‘Some last minute business deal, a lame horse, a sudden indisposition,’ I suggested. ‘Any one of these explanations might be the reason. I’m sure there’s no cause for alarm. Indeed, your nephew could still appear at any moment.’

* * *

But when dinner was over and the Duchess already ensconced in her litter, the Duke impatient to depart, there was still no sign of either of the Gildersleeve brothers. If Peter had been forced to send Mark as his deputy, it seemed that he must have been delayed as well.

Just before noon, therefore, I accompanied William Armstrong and his daughter to the stables in the outer ward of the castle, where a solid, broad-backed brown rouncy was standing patiently, Cicely’s modest possessions already stowed in its two capacious saddle-bags. A groom held the animal’s head while I mounted and then lifted my charge up behind me. Finally my cudgel, without which I refuse to stir a step, was handed to me and laid awkwardly across my knees.

‘What’s his name?’ I asked, referring to the horse.

‘Barnabas.’ The groom watched contemptuously my inexpert fumblings with the reins. ‘And you’re to bring him back here tomorrow. Duke’s orders.’

I doubted very much if His Grace had bothered his head with any such instructions, but did not say so, merely nodding in compliance.

William Armstrong clutched at Cicely’s sleeve. ‘Get your aunt to send word after me to let me know that everything’s all right. We shall be in London for a day or two, and if I’ve heard nothing by the time we move on I’ll leave word of our next destination.’

Cicely bent and kissed his cheek. ‘Yes, Father,’ she answered meekly; but the way she wrapped her arms about my waist and cuddled into my back belied her timidity. I decided I should do well to be wary of Cicely Armstrong. Had Peter Gildersleeve somehow learned that his intended bride was wilder than he had been led to expect, and got cold feet? I thought it improbable, but at least it offered a reasonable explanation for his non-appearance. (I did not know then that reason was not destined to be the most notable feature of what was to follow.)

It took me a while to get used to handling even so docile a horse as the brown cob, but as nothing I did appeared to throw him out of his stride or upset his calm good nature, Barnabas and I soon became friends. He responded in the most gentlemanly fashion to the slightest touch upon the reins, and his thick-crested neck and strong, sloping shoulders imbued me with a confidence which soon had me at ease in the saddle.

We had gone only a few miles before I felt able to strike up a conversation with my passenger and attempt to satisfy her insatiable curiosity as to how I came to be known by the Duke and his brother, my lord of Gloucester. I answered some of her questions and stalled others, eventually telling her bluntly that I had no intention of saying more.

‘Well, it all sounds very exciting to me,’ she said. ‘A lot more exciting than making parchment!’ Her scorn was withering.

‘Making parchment is a very interesting job,’ I reproved her, ‘and requires great skill.’

‘It may require skill,’ she retorted, ‘but it certainly isn’t interesting. I used to watch my uncle doing it when I was a child. Scraping sheep and calf skins for hours on end is very, very boring.’

‘Your cousins make vellum too, do they?’ I asked.

She did not bother to answer, but pressed her little chin between my shoulder blades and worked her lower jaw up and down.

‘Stop that!’ I commanded. ‘It’s extremely irritating.’

Cicely giggled. ‘I’ll tell you something else about Peter,’ she said. ‘He reads a lot. He has a chest full of dull old books and manuscripts that he’s bought at fairs or from pedlars, and one or two that have been given him by the monks at Glastonbury. By the Librarian.’

‘There’s nothing wrong with reading,’ I said sternly. ‘It improves the mind. You’d do well to get Master Gildersleeve or his brother to teach you.’

‘Can you read?’ she inquired.

‘Yes, and write,’ I answered foolishly.

‘Mmm. I thought perhaps you might. You’re the strangest chapman I’ve ever met.’ She cuddled closer. ‘There’s mystery about you, and I like that. You can teach me to read. How would that suit you?’

‘It wouldn’t suit me at all,’ I replied, not mincing matters. ‘In any case, once I’ve delivered you to your aunt, we shan’t be seeing one another again. I shall find a stable for the horse, share his stall for the night, ride him back to Farleigh tomorrow and continue with my journey home to Bristol.’

There was silence for a moment, then, ‘God may dispose matters quite differently,’ was the sententious response.

It made me uneasy. Peter Gildersleeve’s mysterious failure to show up at Farleigh Hungerford, coupled with my opportune presence in the castle, suggested that God did indeed have other plans for me, plans which undoubtedly included some element of personal danger if past experiences were anything to go by. Well, I had felt cheated when I had suspected that God, after all, had no need of me, so it would be hypocritical of me now to complain. Nevertheless, as always, my excitement was tinged with apprehension and resentment at this divine intervention in my affairs.

We stopped mid-afternoon to rest and refresh ourselves, buying milk and honey cakes from a beekeeper’s cottage, and turning Barnabas loose to crop the surrounding grass. The sun was long past its zenith, but it was still extremely warm. On a nearby pond, ducks were swimming. One of the females was chasing another, squawking and quacking, neck arched in fury, water flying from the spread and speckled wings in a spindrift of iridescent drops. The fronded reeds, the colour of ripe barley, rippled as they passed. Cicely laughed and clapped her hands, encouraging the aggressor.

The shadows were beginning to lengthen as, later that afternoon, we made our leisurely way across the lower slopes of the Mendips. Sheep dotted the hills.

‘These animals belong to the Pennards,’ Cicely informed me. ‘Peter and Mark buy some of their skins from Anthony and his sons. That is, I expect they do because my uncle always used to do so. This part of the holding is called the Sticks. I don’t know why. That’s the Pennards’ house in the distance, and that’s their shepherd’s hut, there, in that dip below us.’

As she spoke, both house and hut disappeared from view as we descended into another fold of ground, then reappeared as we mounted the opposite slope. Once more we descended to where the grey stone shelter, with its roof of moss and twigs, stood in the lee of a mound topped by a small, wind-blasted copse, before continuing down the stony track and skirting my home town of Wells.

We had only some five miles to go now, and every step of the route was as familiar to me as my own name: the receding line of the hills, the raised causeway which carried travellers dryshod across the stretches of waterlogged moorland, and the horizon perpetually dominated by the great, brooding hump of of the Tor. There, throughout the ages, contending religions had struggled for predominance. Our Celtic ancestors had thought it to be the home of Gwyn ap Nudd, King of the Underworld, Lord of the Wild Hunt. Even today some people still believed it to be hollow, the haunt of fairies and hobgoblins. But with the coming of Joseph of Arimathea and, later, Saint Augustine, the Church had claimed it for its own and built the chapel of Saint Michael the Archangel on its summit. Yet who was to say for certain that Christianity had triumphed?

Hastily suppressing these heretical thoughts, I urged Barnabas to one last effort As we plodded down through Bove Town, past the chapel of Saint James, I asked Cicely the whereabouts of her aunt’s house and shop.

‘What?’ She had been strangely silent for the last half-mile or so, her former high spirits quenched. ‘Oh! It’s in the High Street, between Saint John’s Church and the pilgrims’ hostelry. The shop and work rooms are on ground level, with the living quarters over. You can’t miss it; it’s opposite the north gatehouse of the abbey.’

Indeed, as soon as I saw it, I remembered the place from six years earlier, when I had been a novice at Glastonbury (although I had not known then that it was a parchment maker’s nor anything of its inhabitants). I drew rein, thankful to be at my journey’s end, and slid from the rouncy’s back, reaching up to lift Cicely from the saddle. Hardly had I done so than the street door flew open and a small, birdlike woman emerged, hands fluttering in agitation and violet eyes, a paler version of her niece’s, brimming with tears. I could see at once which member of her family Cicely favoured, and reflected yet again on the amazing diversity of features and stature between siblings.

‘Oh my child! My dear child! You managed to get here!’ Dame Gildersleeve flung her arms around her niece’s neck and burst out crying. ‘I didn’t know what to do for the best. I thought about sending Mark or one of the men to Farleigh, but they’re all out looking, and Mark flatly refused to give up the search to fetch you.’ All this was punctuated by sobs which made her utterances difficult to understand, but both Cicely and I somehow managed to catch the gist of it.

The girl patted the older woman’s shoulder and made soothing noises. A little colour had crept back into her cheeks and the sparkle to her eyes.

‘Aunt Joan,’ she urged, ‘tell me exactly what has happened!’

Mistress Gildersleeve took a deep breath and attempted to speak more calmly. ‘It’s Peter,’ she sobbed. ‘He’s vanished.’

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