Chapter Thirteen


‘Come on, cretins!’ Esmon was feeling the excitement thrilling in his veins as he led the party on. He caught a glimpse of a shapely pair of buttocks bent over in a field as he passed, and wondered whose they might be, but he had no time to stop now. Whoever she was, the slut would have to wait until later. He had business to attend to first, but when he was done, aye, he’d be coming back this way and would look out for her.

Putting all thoughts of women from his mind, he slapped his mount’s backside with his switch, urging the great stallion onwards. The beast was as black as coal, with one white star on his forehead and a single white sock on his front offside, and in this light he gleamed like oiled leather. He was a weapon, a trained and powerful warhorse.

He shouldn’t be needed today, Esmon told himself. That was what he’d told his father earlier when they had spoken about this attack.

Sir Ralph had been disturbed, almost confused, as though there was a blasted great weight on his mind. Old fool! He had been like that since the girl Mary had died and that shit-head priest had bolted. It was a bastard to have lost the priest – that must be what Sir Ralph must be thinking: that it was shameful to allow a killer to escape. Esmon couldn’t care less. Life was too short for regrets – especially on a day like today.

He had sixteen men with him, fifteen men-at-arms under Brian of Doncaster, all of whom had remained with him after fighting for the King and the Despensers. Afterwards Esmon had regretted coming back down here to Devonshire. The battles, the charges, all those available women in the taverns, the hand-to-hand combat had made life worth living. It was what a man was created for.

Even this was exhilarating. The chance of a good ride, rich wagons, gold. All the things that a soldier needed. Perhaps there might be a woman, too. There often were with these little troupes of merchants and farmers. At least there would be Wylkyn, as he told himself. It was a shame that the attack on him the day before yesterday had failed. The fool of a miner had run off into the middle of Raybarrow Pool, the filthy mire near the commons, and he’d drowned there. All Esmon had wanted to know from him was, where was that whoreson brother of his: Wylkyn – the man who knew all about Sir Richard Prouse’s murder. Esmon had to kill Wylkyn. He couldn’t get away again. He’d escaped Esmon before and run to the moors, but today he’d have him. Esmon had heard that Wylkyn was here, with this party, and Esmon was going to put an end to the matter once and for all.

When they came to the hill that led from Throwleigh to the open moors, Esmon slowed to a trot. Foolish to make too much noise, he thought. It would only alarm and forewarn the folk whom he wanted to meet.

There was a slight sense of superstition, a faint feeling that he had been here before, but that of course was different. That was the day that Mary had died.

He hadn’t ever intended her any harm. To him, killing a girl who was so attractive was an appalling waste of beauty. Far better to learn what it was that she craved, and then provide it in return for her body. There was never any need to worry, because the only thing he would never promise was his hand in marriage. That would have been stupid. Poor Mary. She was so pretty, so lively and God, she was sexy!

But he hadn’t gone past her that day intending to hurt her. That day he’d been riding up here to go and waylay Wylkyn again. He had been told that the miner was going back up to his mine again after spending a little time in South Zeal, and Esmon had ridden up along the roadway that straggled along the side of Cosdon Beacon, up to the open moors, but he found the wrong man. It was Wylkyn’s brother, not Wylkyn. The fool had refused to give them information, or to plead for his life, and instead he ran away, straight into the great bog. A foul, repellent death.

It hadn’t put him in a good mood when he rode back along the roadway. If he had been in a better mood, perhaps he would have been more polite to the girl.

At the top of the hill, the track became less muddy, more a grassed path. Here there were many cart-tracks and hoofprints marring the turf. Pools of water lay all about on either side. Esmon held up a hand to halt the men and listened carefully. Vaguely in the distance he could hear the squeaking and rattling of many carts, and he grinned at Brian and his men. Brian gave him a short nod. It seemed he was out of sorts this morning, but Esmon didn’t care. The rest of his men were fine. For the most part, they were busy patting their mounts, watching the sky, checking swords and knives, easing the blades in their sheaths, one testing his knife on the ball of his thumb, dragging the corners of his mouth down and nodding to himself.

Esmon led them into the shadow of a thick stand of trees and waited.

It was his father who’d always led these raids previously. Esmon was the eager lieutenant, the boy, but never again. He’d as much experience as his old man – more, probably. There was no need for elderly fools to lead men – no need and no place. It was work for a younger man, a man with fire in his bowels and courage. A man like Esmon.

Sir Ralph had lost his sense of priorities. Wylkyn had to die, and Sir Ralph should have been here to make sure of it, but instead he was at home mourning that girl. There were plenty more. Perhaps, Esmon wondered idly, he should tell his father to go and see young Margery… But no! Sir Ralph was probably too frail now.

Esmon conveniently forgot that his father had yanked him from his horse only the day before, all but dislocating his shoulder and dropping him in the mud, because right now, with the feel of the wind in his face, the noise of his horse’s hooves, the sense of power conveyed by leading a warrior band, he felt invincible. His father was too old for this kind of excitement. He had remained sitting in his hall, chin cupped in his palm, and waved his free hand dismissively as soon as the boy arrived to say that the convoy was leaving South Zeal along the Throwleigh Road. Pathetic old woman. Sir Ralph was losing his edge.

It was as he was thinking this that Esmon realised they were passing the place where he had chased Flora. The memory of his shame at being dragged from his horse returned to him, but so did the rage; it was a wild anger, all the worse for the fact that he couldn’t satisfy his desire for revenge. Petty treason against his father was unthinkable. All this was because of the girl, Flora. The old man was trying to protect her, and Esmon wondered why. Sir Ralph had known of enough other girls his son had taken: half the villeins’ daughters were fair game to him.

The noise was closer and Esmon found his thoughts leaping forward to the coming action. He could hear the distinctive squeak of one cart which was plainly in need of maintenance. Almost there, Esmon gloated. So close. And then he saw a horse appear, walking stolidly, dragging a well-laden cart behind it.

Esmon pulled his sword free and crouched expectantly in his saddle. This was the critical moment. Before him, the land rose gently to a flat plateau, which was concealed from here by the trees, but Esmon could visualise it with ease; he’d lived here much of his life, and he knew every field.

On the right flank of the travellers the land rose towards the moors; although it wasn’t steep, it was scattered with moorstone so that a cart would find the way hard. To their left was a long stone wall that effectively cut them off, their only means of escape was forward, through Esmon’s men, or back. That was hard to achieve for a man on a cart. Turning it took time, and before they could manage, Esmon’s men would have cut off their retreat. That gave Esmon and his men free rein. When they charged out from their concealment, if they were swift, they could cut off any escape. Some might evade them and try to bolt up the hill towards the moors, but even if they managed to do so, it shouldn’t be too hard to catch them. There wasn’t much chance of a heavy cart outrunning a horseman, but it would be irritating to have to waste time herding them together again. He didn’t need that sort of grief, so he waited, the blood humming in his brain, the soft, seductive tingle of sudden action thrilling every nerve and fibre in his body. War: it was what he had been trained for from birth.

The first carter sat hunched on the boards, his head jolting with the cart’s motion. Gradually more carts and men came into view, trailing behind the first, spread over the grass so as not to follow the tracks of previous wheels and break the surface too badly. That could mean a cart getting mired, perhaps damaging a wheel or axle.

They were so close Esmon could all but feel the breath of the leading horse. Nearly time, nearly… When the first two carters had passed, that would be the perfect time to spring the trap, he thought – and then he saw the carter snort, hawk, throw back his head to spit, and suddenly catch sight of the men watching him from the still darkness of the trees. The carter choked, the phlegm catching in his throat, and Esmon knew that he had only a moment to retain the benefit of surprise. ‘Now!’ he roared, and spurred his charger on, waving his sword about his head.

The horse exploded into life. Esmon felt the cantle of his saddle pound into the small of his back and then he was flying forward at a tremendous pace, and he was shrieking, and his men were howling and bellowing, while the carters grabbed reins, trying to move from their path and escape. One was stuck when his horse reared and the traces snapped, another tried to turn his mount up the hill, but that was a vain hope. The heather and furze there were thick enough to clog the wheels of a cart.

Further back were the packhorses. These were Esmon’s target. His plan had been simple: his men would ride out a little further up the hill than their quarry, and then they would drop down on the carters’ flank. Total surprise should work in their favour, for they had never attacked this far from Gidleigh. Usually they sprang their assaults nearer to Gidleigh or Chagford, and that was why so many merchants had changed their route to the market. An attack so far from help was a terrifying experience for travellers.

Towards the rear of the line he found what he sought. He wheeled and glanced back. As he had ordered, his men were strung out behind him, and when he pointed, they all rode down, using their momentum to panic the men and their animals still more.

It worked. The packhorses whinnied and tried to bolt. Their owners were stuck for a choice: protect their property by drawing a knife and see their packhorses disappear into the distance, or fight to control their mounts and hope to see to their attackers later. In the event, some saw fit to draw steel, and their horses were herded away by the three men Esmon had ordered to catch them. The others were soon forced back, swords from the back of a horse being more effective weapons than knives in the hands of merchants and tranters. The carts were forced to halt.

Only one man stood his ground against the raiders. He was walking beside a pair of heavily laden ponies, their broad backs weighted down with leather satchels bound securely to strong cross frames. As soon as the men burst from their cover, Esmon saw him pull his ponies swiftly down towards the stone wall. There he tried to scramble up and over, but the wall was mossy and slick with rainwater, and he couldn’t manage it while holding onto his ponies’ reins. In the end, he slithered to the ground and drew a long-bladed knife.

He was a sturdy fellow, was Wylkyn, thick-shouldered and with the wild hair of a moorman. His eyes flitted over the men of the ambush and at last rested on Esmon as though recognising he was the leader. ‘So, felon! You’re still in charge of this rabble, are you?’

‘Hold your tongue, Wylkyn!’ Esmon shouted. ‘Get back up here and sheath that knife, little man or, by Christ, I’ll take your hand off. Bring your ponies.’

‘You have the look of a knight, but the behaviour of an outlaw. I’ll not bring my ponies to a robber! You want them, you’ll have to take them from me. But it’s not them you’re after, is it? It’s me, you shite!’

The man glanced over his shoulder at the wall as though guessing whether he could leap it in a bound, but then he stepped in front of his ponies, set his shoulders and gripped his knife more firmly. ‘No. You want me, you’ll have to take me.’

‘You miserable bastard son of a poxed whore!’ Esmon screamed. His blood was still up, his anger easily ignited after the recollection of his father’s treatment of him, and he was in front of his men, too. He had to show them that he wasn’t fearful of a peasant, no matter how grim his features with those narrowed eyes and thin line of a mouth, all but hidden behind the pepper and salt beard.

He spurred his horse and aimed at the man, intending to run him down, but the fellow darted aside at the last minute. Esmon wheeled his horse and Wylkyn sprang out of the way again, but Esmon laughed and rode on past him, scaring his ponies. They whinnied and bolted, running up the hill. Esmon saw Brian leaving the main body of travellers and haring after them, whooping with excitement.

Esmon shot a look up the hill to make sure that they were caught, and then smiled coldly at the miner. ‘So much for your defiance, peasant!’

‘At least I behave like a man of honour, better that and penniless than a mere thief who sports the outer livery of a man of chivalry while his soul is blacker than night in a mine!’ Wylkyn spat. ‘You are dishonoured and a coward! I name you felon and outlaw! Come, fight me fairly, if you dare. You’ve already killed my brother.’

‘It should have been you!’

‘I know. You thought it was me, didn’t you? Just because I was in town.’

‘And now he’s gone to Hell in your place, Wylkyn.’

‘He won’t be there when you arrive, murderer! He’ll be in Heaven,’ Wylkyn cried hoarsely.

Esmon looked at the sun. There was no time to prolong this. Luckily Wylkyn was inexperienced as a fighter, for all his bluster. Dispassionately Esmon watched to make sure that the travellers were being led away, and once they and his men were out of sight, he ran his horse once more at the man. This time, although the miner slipped to one side, Esmon didn’t give him the opportunity of escape. He swept his sword around in a great arc and Wylkyn coughed and stared down as though in disbelief at his knife. It lay on the ground a short distance from his arm, still gripped in his hand, the fingers twitching, while the blood pumped brightly from his wrist where it had been severed.

He looked up at Esmon with cold contempt. ‘You fucking coward!’

That was enough. The bloodlust washed over him. ‘Die, you prickle!’ Esmon shrieked and urged his horse forward. He swung again, and his blade sank deeply into Wylkyn’s shoulder. He grunted, a deep, pained noise that snorted in his nose like a final snore, and Esmon had to kick at his horse and use the leverage of his mount’s movement to free his blade.

Later, when he was riding back to the castle at the head of the travellers, he felt a crust on his upper lip. Scraping at it with a tooth, he realised it was Wylkyn’s blood, and he smiled. It felt good to have killed again – and now, once he had dumped this lot at the castle, he could go and find the owner of those buttocks. He could do with a tumble on a woman now.


It was the next day, late in the forenoon, that Simon received his second messenger. He had suffered an interminably lengthy explanation of a dispute between two angry miners, neither of whom had bothered to mark their claims with the customary turves piled at the edges. They had simply started digging, and soon thereafter fighting. He fined them both when he grew bored with their whining and arguing.

As he reached his home, desperate for a bowl of thick stew to warm him after the draughts and cold of the castle, Simon saw his wife appear in the doorway. Tall, slim and elegant, with her long blonde hair coiled under her wimple, he adored her even after many years of marriage. When she smiled, he was unaware of the passage of time; it was as though he was seeing her, once more, as she had been when he first met her. As she drew nearer him, all he was aware of was the calmness which she radiated, and his first impression was that he could rest here.

She said, ‘A boy has just arrived. There’s a problem over at Gidleigh.’

Simon scowled and swore. ‘God’s belly! What do they want of me? I’ve already said that I won’t go there. Where’s the messenger?’

‘In the buttery. I sent him there to refresh himself. I wasn’t sure if you wanted him to take back a message.’

‘The only message I’m likely to send is one that tells them to stop wasting my time,’ Simon said bitterly. ‘I’ll speak to him later.’

‘Good, Husband.’

There was a jarring tone in her voice that rankled, but Simon swallowed his irritation and tried to sound conciliatory. ‘I am sorry to have spoken so grimly, my love, but I have had a sorely trying morning.’

‘I understand. Your work is important.’

‘Meg, please! It’s not as important to me as you are.’

She turned to face him. ‘It hardly feels like it, Husband.’

‘Why do you say that?’

She wouldn’t meet his eyes. ‘Simon, our daughter is very unhappy to be going away.’

‘I know, but what would you have me do – leave her here on her own? You know we can’t do that.’

‘I could stay here with her… Simon, don’t pull away like that! Please, we have to talk about this. I know you have no choice about the work…’

‘Do you? It sounds as though you blame me for accepting what was never mine to choose,’ he said bitterly.

‘No man is free of a master,’ she agreed sadly. ‘But we should still take account of Edith’s position. She is in love, she thinks.’

‘Thinks!’ Simon expostulated. ‘And how often have we heard that in the last few years?’

‘No matter. She is firm in her belief and…’

Simon gazed at her. There was a hesitancy about her that made him listen intently. ‘And?’

‘And she says she has given her word to marry him.’

‘Christ’s blood!’ Simon roared. ‘I’ll teach her to–’

‘Simon, please!’ Margaret said, putting a hand on his arm. ‘Be still for once and listen.’

‘I always listen,’ he glowered. ‘I am more patient than many.’

‘Then listen now, and stop shouting. She hasn’t given her pledge in terms of present intent.’

He felt his heart’s pounding slow a little at that. If she had given her words in present terms, she was legally married, and there was nothing Simon or even the Church could do about it. Well, not if she’d done it in front of witnesses, anyway. But if she’d sworn to marry in the future, that was different. It was a far less binding covenant. ‘Then what?’

‘She won’t marry, she says, without your approval.’

‘Who is this wastrel cutpurse who would filch my daughter, then?’ Simon asked uncharitably. He was already unhappy about his move to Dartmouth, and the effect it was having on his wife and his daughter. The thought that young Edith could have gone ahead and offered herself in marriage without speaking to him first rankled.

‘He is a good boy, Simon. A freeman.’

‘What sort of a freeman?’ Simon asked suspiciously.

‘Apprentice to a merchant,’ she said, but quietly, as though slightly reluctant to admit it.

‘Merchant?’ he repeated blankly. ‘But there’s only one merchant here. I… Oh, Christ’s cods, not him!’

‘Now don’t be like that, Husband,’ she entreated. ‘He is a perfectly well-meaning lad, and I don’t think he–’

‘He’s as gormless as a newborn mastiff,’ he said bluntly. ‘Dim and vapid. All he ever thinks about is the tightness of his hose! Spends as much time staring at his own ankles as at hers, I expect. Damned pansy! All these modern trends for fashion and high-living, furs and silks and other fripperies! Christ’s blood, what can she see in him?’

Margaret took a deep breath. ‘Simon, if you speak to Edith like that, she will run away with him tonight. She loves him and wants to be with him, but she won’t dishonour you by disobeying you unless you force her to.’

‘Me? I wouldn’t force her to disobey me!’

‘If you rant at her like that, you’ll make her run away with him,’ she said with calm, knowing serenity. She had moved to a turf bench, and was sitting on the grass with her hands crossed in her lap.

‘What do you recommend?’

She patted the grass at her side and remained silent until he accepted her invitation and sat. ‘Try to imagine how she feels. She thinks she is in love – in the same way that I was with you when we met.’

‘That’s completely different,’ he said hotly.

‘Perhaps. And perhaps she doesn’t feel so.’

‘And what then?’

‘Then you can suggest that she may continue to see her swain, but that you would wish her to join us when we go to Dartmouth,’ she said emotionlessly.

He put his hand on her thigh. ‘I know you don’t want to go, but I have to.’

‘I know that. We have to serve. I just don’t want to lose our daughter when we go.’

‘Would she be satisfied with being able to see him?’

‘If you tell her that you will allow him to visit us in our new home so that they can woo in comfort, she might.’

‘I shall consider it,’ he promised.

It was difficult, he told himself as he entered his hall. No sooner had a child been born than she was ready to leave home and begin to raise her own children. ‘She’s too damned young!’ he murmured.

‘Sir?’

Looking up, Simon noticed at last that there was a tired-looking young man standing near the fire. ‘Who are you?’

‘Sir, I’m Osbert. I’ve been sent from Gidleigh by Reeve Piers to speak to the Bailiff.’

‘Osbert, eh?’ Simon said musingly. ‘And you are here to tell me about this dead girl, are you? I’ve already told Sir Baldwin and the Dean of Crediton that I can’t come right now. Tell your Reeve that he’s already had the Coroner and that there’s nothing I can do to help now. I don’t understand why he wants me there anyway. It’s not my place to deal with a murder when it’s nothing to do with the Stannary.’

‘It’s not Mary, sir. It’s the murdered tinner.’

Simon blinked. ‘What?’

‘A man has been found dead, sir, and someone has suggested that he might be a tin miner. He was on his way to the market at Chagford, but never arrived. We thought you should know.’

‘Bugger!’ Simon spat, then roared, ‘Hugh!’ making the messenger quail. ‘Pack clothes and tell the grooms to saddle our horses. We’re going to Gidleigh.’

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