of free love, professional beggars living on their wits as well as the charity of others.â Edward rubbed his hands together. âLook, Corbett, Scrope acted sine auctoritate â without authority. I want to warn him that that must never happen again, and under my authority, we must have those corpses buried, secretly but properly.â
âAnd the others?â Corbett asked. âAnyone of note?â
âHenry Claypole, the mayor. A true firebrand. Some say heâs Scropeâs illegitimate son, a by-blow, the result of his dalliance with a certain Mistress Alice de Tuddenham. Claypole believes he is the legitimate heir to Scrope, whom he served as a squire in Outremer. A bustling, fiery man, Claypole is used to the cut and thrust of politics, though I think heâs an empty vessel that makes a great deal of sound. The parish priest is Father Thomas. He served with us in Wales as chaplain. I promoted him to many benefices but then he converted and took true religion, claiming he wanted to serve Godâs poor. He resigned all his benefices and
sinecures. His family hails from Mistleham, so I appointed him to the church there, or at least,â Edward grinned, âScrope and I persuaded the bishop to do so. Then thereâs Lady Hawisa. I suspect she has no real love for her husband, but she is faithful enough, vivacious, intelligent and comely, though a little tart of tongue. Finally, thereâs Scropeâs sister Marguerite.â Edward stretched and smiled. âMarguerite Scrope,â he repeated. âFourteen years ago, Corbett â though perhaps you donât remember her â she was one of the leading beauties of the court: a singular sort of beauty, different from the type of woman who sits in her window bower and makes calfâs eyes at any knight who passes by. No, Marguerite loved life, dancing, hunting and hawking. I often teased her that she should have been born a man. She thanked me courteously then roundly informed me she was happy with the way she was. By the time her brother came home from Outremer, something had happened to Marguerite; she became withdrawn and reflective. She entered the Benedictine order as a nun, her qualities were soon noted and, with a little help from friends at home and court, she was appointed Abbess of St Frideswide, which lies in its own grounds just outside Mistleham. I doubt if she has really changed. I had a letter recently signed by both her and Father Thomas, protesting at her brotherâs destruction of the Free Brethren and demanding that I exercise my authority to ensure their honourable burial. Never mind them, Corbett! Essex is vital, a shire that straddles all the great roads to and from London and the eastern ports. I donât want any disturbance there. I want this settled. Iâll be visiting Colchester soon. I want Scrope brought to book before the Sagittarius or Bowman does it for me.â
âSagittarius?â
âThe Bowman,â Edward explained. âA mysterious killer who appeared in Mistleham without warning just after the New Year, as if that town didnât have enough problems. An archer, a skilled one, armed with a longbow, the type we brought from Wales. He announces his coming only by the blast of a hunting horn. Some people claim heâs Satan, or a ghost or one of the Free Brethren come back to haunt them. When the horn blows, somewhere in Mistleham, or on the roads outside, a person always dies: a wellplaced arrow to the throat, face or chest. So far five or six people have been killed in this way. Most of them young, cut down like running deer.â
âAttempts have been made to capture him?â
âOf course.â Edward laughed drily. âHugh, youâve served in Wales; think of the power of those longbows. Yew staffs, the ash arrow whistling through the air. A master bowman, a skilled archer, can be a silent, deadly killer. Shafts can be loosed in a matter of