The Anger of God
something. He then listened attentively as Athelstan described his visit to the Minoresses.
‘What can we do?’ Athelstan asked softly.
Cranston drowned his face in his tankard. ‘Well, first, we have no proof that Walter or Eleanor Hobden committed any crime so under the law we have no right to question them. However, I am the King’s Coroner in the city. I do have the authority to exhume a corpse. Hobden said his first wife is buried at St James Garlickhythe?’
Athelstan nodded.
‘Right, we’ll begin there.’
‘Can we do that, Sir John? What will it prove?’
‘First, I can do anything. And, second, who knows what we’ll find?’ Cranston stared out of the window. ‘We’ll have to wait until early evening. Part of the cemetery there is used as a market.’
Athelstan closed his eyes and sighed in exasperation. There was so much to do at St Erconwald’s but, as Sir John would say, ‘ Alea jacta ’, the die was cast.
‘Well, aren’t you pleased?’ Cranston asked, a tankard half-way to his lips.
‘There’s something else, Sir John.’ And Athelstan briefly described the message left by Ira Dei the previous evening, trying to ignore Benedicta’s gasps of annoyance at not being told of the danger.
Cranston wiped his lips on the back of his hand, it makes no difference,’ he said. ‘Gaunt was stupid. Ira Dei would scarcely trust you.’
‘Yes, but why reply so quickly?’ Athelstan replied. ‘Who knew about the Ira Dei message?’
‘Gaunt and the Guildmasters. They told us at the same time as they did about the attack on Clifford.’
The conversation stopped as the taverner’s wife brought across a bowl of sugared plums for Sir John. Athelstan absent-mindedly picked one up and popped it into his mouth. He was about to speculate further when he realized the plums were so heavily coated with honey and sugar they stuck to his teeth and gums. He excused himself as he walked to the door and tried to prise the cloying morsels free. Suddenly he stopped and stared down at his fingers.
‘When did I do that last?’ he murmured to himself.
He looked back over his shoulder at Benedicta and Cranston , heads together, whispering, the Coroner undoubtedly explaining what had happened at the Guildhall. Athelstan walked to the lavarium in the far corner of the tavern, dipped his hands in the rose water and wiped them on a napkin. He felt slightly elated; for the first time since these dreadful murders had started, he began to see a flicker of light in the darkness. He stared at a cured ham hanging from the rafters of the tavern and recalled the words of his mentor, Father Paul.
‘Always remember, Athelstan,’ the old man had boomed, ‘every problem has its weakness. Find it, prise it open and a solution will soon follow.’
‘What’s the matter with you, Friar?’ Cranston bellowed.
Athelstan sat down again. ‘Sir John, are you busy today?’
‘Of course, I am! I’m not some bloody priest!’
Athelstan smiled. ‘Sir John, let us retrace the steps of our murderer. Let me go back to the Guildhall, to the garden where Mountjoy died and the banqueting chamber where Fitzroy was poisoned. Benedicta, do you wish to come?’
The woman nodded.
‘What’s the matter, Friar?’ Cranston asked curiously.
Athelstan grinned. ‘Nothing much, Sir John, but a sugared plum could hang a murderer!’
He refused to be drawn further as a grumbling Cranston led them across Cheapside , into the Guildhall, down passageways and across courtyards until they had reached the small garden where Mountjoy had been stabbed. A pompous official tried to stop them but turned and fled when Cranston growled at him. Benedicta stared around, admiring the bronze falcon on top of the fountain, the clear water pouring from leopards’ mouths into a small channel lined with lilies and other wild flowers. She slipped down the tunnel arbour, made of coppice poles tied with willow cords, and openly admired the grape vines and roses which had wound themselves around these. She came out, her face flushed with excitement.
‘This is beautiful,’ she cried.
Athelstan pointed to the small enclosed arbour. ‘The seat of murder,’ he said flatly. ‘That’s where Mountjoy was killed.’
They all stood by the fence. Once again Athelstan wondered how any murderer could approach Sir Gerard and get past those fierce hounds.
‘Look, Sir John, let’s play a mummer’s game.’
Athelstan tugged at the Coroner’s sleeve,
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