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  HOUSE OF SHADOWS

  Also by The Medieval Murderers

  The Tainted Relic

  Sword of Shame

  First published in Great Britain by Simon & Schuster UK Ltd, 2007

  A CBS Company

  Copyright © The Medieval Murderers, 2007

  This book is copyright under the Berne Convention.

  No reproduction without permission.

  All rights reserved.

  The right of The Medieval Murderers to be identified as authors of this work has been asserted in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988.

  Simon & Schuster UK Ltd

  Africa House

  64–78 Kingsway

  London WC2B 6AH

  www.simonsays.co.uk

  Simon & Schuster Australia

  Sydney

  A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

  ISBN-10:1-84739-487-6

  ISBN-13: 978-1-84739-487-3

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either a product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  CONTENTS

  ‘THE MEDIEVAL MURDERERS’

  THE PROGRAMME

  HISTORICAL NOTE

  PROLOGUE

  ACT ONE

  ACT TWO

  ACT THREE

  ACT FOUR

  ACT FIVE

  EPILOGUE

  ‘THE MEDIEVAL MURDERERS’

  A small group of historical mystery writers, all members of the Crime Writers’ Association, who promote their work by giving informal talks and discussions at libraries, bookshops and literary festivals.

  Bernard Knight is a former Home Office pathologist and professor of forensic medicine who has been publishing novels, non-fiction, radio and television drama and documentaries for more than forty years. He currently writes the highly regarded Crowner John series of historical mysteries, based on the first coroner for Devon in the twelfth century; the eleventh novel of the series, The Noble Outlaw, has recently been published by Simon & Schuster.

  Ian Morson is the author of an acclaimed series of historical mysteries featuring the thirteenth-century Oxford-based detective William Falconer.

  Michael Jecks was a computer salesman before turning to writing. His immensely popular Templar series, set during the confusion and terror of the reign of Edward II, is translated into most continental languages and is published in America. The most recent novels in the series are The Death Ship of Dartmouth and The Malice of Unnatural Death. Michael was chairman of the Crime Writers’ Association in 2004–5.

  Philip Gooden is the author of the Nick Revill series, a sequence of historical mysteries set in Elizabethan and Jacobean London, during the time of Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre. The latest titles are Mask of Night and An Honourable Murder. He also produces reference books on language, most recently Faux Pas and Name Dropping.

  Susanna Gregory is the author of the Matthew Bartholomew series of mystery novels, set in fourteenth-century Cambridge, and a brand-new series featuring Thomas Chaloner, a reluctant spy in Restoration London, the second volume of which, Blood on the Strand, has recently been published. She also writes historical mysteries under the name Simon Beaufort.

  THE PROGRAMME

  Prologue – In which Bernard Knight lays the foundation for the ghoulish tales that follow.

  Act One – In which Bernard Knight tells how Crowner John arrives at the priory of Bermondsey to investigate murder most foul.

  Act Two – In which Ian Morson’s William Falconer uncovers dark deeds during an eclipse of the moon.

  Act Three – In which Michael Jecks’ Keeper Sir Baldwin and Bailiff Puttock uncovers a treasonous plot.

  Act Four – In which Philip Gooden relates how the poet Chaucer becomes embroiled in the priory’s dark history.

  Act Five – In which Susanna Gregory’s Thomas Chaloner, spy for the Lord Chancellor of England, avenges a violent death.

  Epilogue – In which Bernard Knight exposes the final secret.

  HISTORICAL NOTE

  Bermondsey lies on the south bank of the Thames, near where Tower Bridge now stands. A priory was established there as early as 1089 and became one of the richest in England due to numerous gifts of land and money. Originally founded by four Cluniac monks from France, who built on ground donated by a rich London merchant, the priory became a Benedictine abbey in 1399, surviving until Henry VIII dissolved all monasteries in the sixteenth century. It was then built over repeatedly, though the gatehouse survived until the nineteenth century.

  Though this famous monastery had a very real existence for hundreds of years, the stories in this book are works of fiction. In the early years of the twenty-first century, extensive excavations were carried out by archaeologists, prior to a huge commerical complex being built over the site. The events described in the Epilogue are similarly fictitious.

  PROLOGUE

  December 1114

  Grey mist, like wet smoke, slowly rolled over the wall of the priory, seeping in from across the marshes that lined the Thames. Together with the winter twilight, the fog made it almost dark, though the bell for vespers was only now sounding, its doleful tone muffled in the moist air.

  A small procession was slowly crossing the outer courtyard towards the west front of the church, the black Cluniac habits adding to the already sombre atmosphere. Of the dozen hooded figures walking in pairs, three were openly sobbing, and the expressions on the remaining grim faces were set in barely contained emotion. Behind them in the inner courtyard was a closed door, which until today had been merely the entrance to the cellarer’s storeroom but which now concealed a dreadful secret.

  As their sandalled feet padded across the damp earth towards the steps of the new church of St Saviour’s, the monks’ faces were lit by the flickering yellow light of two pitch-brands set in iron rings on each side of the west door. The light fell first on the prior, Peter de Charité, who at fifty was a strong, hard-faced disciplinarian. The monk alongside him and the two immediately behind were Richard, Osbert and Umbold, who had accompanied him from France fifteen years before, sent to establish a new daughter house of Cluny in this fog-ridden swamp that was Bermondsey.

  Since then, eight more monks had joined them as the priory flourished, nurtured by gifts of land from various benefactors. There had been nine, and therein lay the cause of their present misery.

  ‘King Henry must never hear the truth of this,’ murmured Osbert, his teeth chattering from fright rather than the cold.

  ‘But how are we going to keep it from him?’ keened Richard, who was too old to have teeth to chatter.

  ‘Be quiet, brothers!’ snapped Peter. ‘In fact, keeping very quiet is what we must all do.’

  The four founders were sitting around the fireplace in the prior’s chamber, the other monks having been left in the church to pray for absolution until it was time for the evening meal. Umbold, a fat man of middle age, had no tonsure like the others, as he was completely bald.

  ‘Count Eustace will be here after Epiphany to confirm the grant,’ he moaned. ‘What are we to tell him?’

  There was silence as they all considered this yet again. The problem had dominated their minds ever since the catastrophe had fallen on them three days ago. Earlier that year, Mary, the wife of Eustace, Count of Boulogne, and sister of Queen Maud, had granted the manor and advowson of Kingweston to the priory. Recently, Eustace had declared his intention of visiting them personally to confirm the grant. Six months earlier, his wife had sent her junior chaplain, Brother Francis, to join them – ostensibly as a gesture of goodwill, though Prior Peter suspected that it was really to make sur
e that the proceeds of her gift were being spent wisely in the extension of the building.

  ‘We tell the count what we shall tell everyone else, including the king,’ growled the prior. ‘That they both ran away and now we know nothing of their whereabouts!’

  ‘That will satisfy no one, least of all King Henry,’ whimpered Osbert. ‘The girl was placed here in our safekeeping.’

  This was a greater problem than even that of Count Eustace, as a month after the arrival of Brother Francis the king had sent them Lady Alice, his most recent ward. She was the orphaned daughter of Drogo de Peverel, dispatched to live at the priory until she could be found a suitable husband. Her father had been killed in a skirmish in Normandy and, with her mother already dead, his lands had escheated to the Crown and his daughter became the king’s responsibility. At eighteen, Alice had already shown herself to be a wilful girl of independent spirit, and Queen Maud, familiar with the task of dealing with her husband’s wards and cast-off mistresses, decided that the isolated location and stern discipline of Bermondsey would be a suitable place in which to keep the girl until she could be used for some political and financial advantage.

  Unfortunately, the inevitable happened. Within a month of her arrival, Lady Alice’s seductive wiles easily overcame the vows of the immature young chaplain and soon she found herself with child. Even worse, the priest’s remorse at the discovery sent him out of his mind, into an explosion of violence.

  When the awful results of this secret liaison burst on the small community a few days ago, Peter’s authoritarian character, nurtured in the rigid discipline of the Cluniacs’ strict interpretation of the Rule of Saint Benedict, overcame his common sense. Instead of admitting their failure to foresee such a catastrophe and delivering the problem to the king and Count Eustace, the prior decided to deal with the matter himself. Partly from a stubborn desire to regulate the affairs of his own priory, but even more from the fear of losing the lavish patronage of those who offered support to Bermondsey, Peter decided to act as he thought God and the Pope would require and wreaked terrible retribution on the errant chaplain.

  Now they were burdened with the consequences of that decision and could do nothing but bow their heads and hope to weather the storm that soon would inevitably burst over them.

  ACT ONE

  February 1196

  ‘We’ll get no further, Sir John,’ called the shipmaster from his place at the steering oar. ‘There’s not a breath of wind left and the fog’s thickening.’

  Straining his eyes, John de Wolfe could just make out a low shore a few hundred yards away on the larboard side of the little cog Saint Radegund, but even that view came and went as greyish-yellow fog rolled in intermittent patches up the estuary of the Thames.

  ‘Where in God’s name are we, William?’ he shouted back to the bandy-legged sailor who commanded the vessel from the high stern.

  ‘Just off Woolwich, Crowner! As far as we’ll get on this flood tide with no wind. Unless I anchor now, we’ll drift back down with the ebb.’

  John’s two companions heard the news with mixed feelings. Thomas de Peyne, the small priest who was the coroner’s clerk, was murmuring thanks to the Almighty for the flat calm that came with the fog, for this was the first day he had not been trying to turn his stomach inside out on the four-day voyage from Devon.

  However, the coroner’s officer, Gwyn of Polruan, was irritated by their lack of progress, especially as until now they had had an exceptionally swift passage from Dawlish, a small port not far from Exeter. A brisk westerly wind had raced the ship along the south coast in record time, and when it conveniently changed to a north-easterly after they had rounded the butt end of Kent it pushed them up the estuary as far as Greenwich. Only then had it failed them, as the wind dropped and the fog rolled in. The tide carried them a few more miles, but now even that had deserted them.

  Gwyn, a giant of a man with wild red hair and long moustaches of the same hue, looked up at the single sail, hanging damp and motionless from the yardarm.

  ‘If we want to get to Bermondsey by river, we’ll have to swim the rest of the bloody way!’ he growled. A former fisherman from Polruan in Cornwall, he claimed to be an authority on all things maritime, and he watched critically as one of the four-man crew, a lad of about fourteen, heaved the anchor over the bow – a stone weighing a hundredweight with a hole chiselled through it to take the cable.

  Annoyed, his master, John de Wolfe, slapped the wooden rail that ran around the bulwarks. ‘We made such good time, compared with flogging up from Exeter by horse,’ he complained. ‘The justiciar said that time was of the essence and here we are, stuck only a few miles from the priory.’

  Thomas stared through the murk at the dimly seen shore. ‘Is there no way we can continue by land, Crowner?’ he asked hesitantly.

  Gwyn turned to look at the curragh lashed upside down on top of the vessel’s single hatch. It was a fragile cockleshell of tarred hide stretched over a light wooden frame, like an elongated coracle.

  ‘They could put us ashore in that, I suppose,’ he said rather dubiously.

  The coroner shrugged and shouted at the master, William Watts. ‘How far is it to Bermondsey from here?’

  ‘About six or seven miles, Sir John, as the crow flies.’

  ‘We’re not bloody crows!’ grumbled Gwyn. ‘But I suppose we could get horses in that miserable-looking hamlet over there.’ He pointed to where a couple of shacks were fleetingly visible between the walls of yellow fog, then watched his master lope away across the deck to arrange their disembarkation.

  The coroner was a forbidding figure in the wreathing mist, dressed in his habitual black and grey. As tall as Gwyn, he was lean and spare, with a slight stoop that gave him the appearance of a large bird of prey, especially with his hooked nose and jet-black hair that was swept back to his collar, unlike the close crops of most Norman knights. Gwyn had been his squire, companion and bodyguard for twenty years, in campaigns from Ireland to the Holy Land, where the Crowner’s taste in clothing and the stubble on his lean cheeks had earned him the nickname ‘Black John’.

  Half an hour later, after a short but perilous voyage in the flimsy curragh, they were landed on a muddy beach and shouted farewell to the shipman who had paddled them ashore. As soon as he had returned to the Saint Radegund, the vessel up-anchored and drifted down on the tide to begin its journey to Flanders with a cargo of wool. John had used the voyage to get to London as quickly as possible, as on horseback it would have taken the better part of a week.

  As their last link with home vanished into the fog, the three men trudged up the muddy foreshore, thankfully narrow at this state of the tide. At the top, they followed a track to the straggle of huts and a few larger dwellings that was Woolwich, looking even more dismal than usual in the moist gloom of a winter’s morning. The largest building was a single-storeyed erection of wattle and daub, the thatched roof tattered and moss-infested. However, over the doorway hung a withered bush, the universal sign of an inn, and after a quart of ale each the coroner negotiated the hire of three horses. Though the tavern-keeper was reluctant to allow his nags to leave the parish, the coroner waved a parchment scroll in front of him. None of them could read it, apart from Thomas de Peyne, but the royal seal dangling from it impressed the man sufficiently to agree to let them have the beasts.

  They set off on the underfed rounseys, following a lad on a pony, who would show them the way to Bermondsey and bring the horses back again.

  What they could see of the countryside, which was very little in the mist, looked bleak and barren, mudflats giving way to scrub-covered heath, rather than the forested dales they were used to in the West Country. As they plodded along, at half the speed of a decent horse, de Wolfe asked his clerk what kind of a place they were bound for. Thomas, always eager to share his vast store of knowledge about things religious and historical, was pleased to oblige.

  ‘The priory was founded over a century ago, master. It’s a daught
er house of a Cluniac abbey, St Mary’s at La Charité-sur-Loire. Four monks came over from France to take advantage of a gift of land from a rich London merchant.’

  Gwyn, whose blunt views on religion were well known to his companions, said that he didn’t give a damn who founded the place, as long as they kept a good kitchen and a comfortable guesthouse. For once, Thomas agreed with him in respect of their accommodation.

  ‘Thank God for a bed that won’t roll around for four hellish nights!’ he said fervently, crossing himself several times, in recollection of the misery he had suffered on the Saint Radegund.

  They rode in silence for a while, the coroner contemplating the circumstances which had brought him so far from his home, wife and mistress. A week ago he was minding his own business as coroner in Exeter, dividing his time as usual between his chilly chamber in the gatehouse of Rougemont Castle, his house in Martin’s Lane and the taproom of the Bush Inn, where he enjoyed the company of his pretty mistress, Nesta.

  Then one freezing morning a herald with the king’s insignia on his tabard arrived, guarded by two men-at-arms. He bore a parchment with the impressive seal of Hubert Walter, virtual regent of England now that Richard de Lionheart was permanently in France. As de Wolfe could read little more than his own name, Thomas de Peyne rapidly translated the Latin text, his eyes growing wider as they scanned the lines of manuscript.

  ‘The chief justiciar wants you to go to London, master!’ gabbled the little priest. Hubert Walter was not only Archbishop of Canterbury but was also the head of England’s legal system and effectively of its government. Impatiently, John de Wolfe waited for his clerk to deliver the rest of the message, with Gwyn peering over Thomas’s shoulder as if he could decipher the words himself.