Heartstone (Matthew Shardlake #5)(112)
To my surprise Barak turned his horse round, blocking my way. It whickered nervously, and Oddleg jerked his head back.
‘What are you doing?’ I asked.
‘Trying to make you listen!’ Barak’s eyes glistened with anger. ‘I can’t believe you just said that. You see Richard Rich and now you try to tangle him in this. The army is here, all the King’s ships are here, nearly everyone important is coming here. Rich is on the Privy Council and Paulet is governor of Portsmouth. Where the hell else would they be? There is nothing to this. Hugh is safe and well and if Mistress Hobbey sees bogles under the bed, who gives a rat’s arse?’
I was surprised by the force of his outburst. I said stiffly, ‘I think Hobbey and Priddis have been creaming the profits off Hugh’s woodland for years.’
Barak grabbed his cap and threw it on the dusty road in frustration. ‘But you can’t prove it, and Hugh doesn’t give a shit anyway! And why in Jesus’s holy name would Richard Rich care twopence about the affairs of a small estate in Hampshire? God’s death, Mistress Hobbey is not the only one seeing bogles everywhere.’
Barak had been angry with me before, but never like this. ‘I only want to ensure Hugh is safe,’ I said quietly. ‘And you have no need to speak to me like that.’
‘You can surely see that he is safe. The little shit.’
‘Why do you call him that?’
‘Didn’t you see him back there, calling that galley thing beautiful. Who were the oarsmen, eh? People picked up off the London streets, like those Corporal Carswell said are brought ashore as corpses. I was on the streets as a child and if I learned anything it was how damned hard it is for any human creature to cling onto this earth. Plenty don’t, they get struck down by disease like Joan, or like my first baby that never even saw the light of day. But people like Hugh just want to bring more blood and death. But he’s safe enough, living in that damned priory, waited on hand and foot.’
‘He would serve in the army if he could!’
‘Damn the army! And damn him! We need to get out of here, get home before the f*cking French come and blow all those ships to fragments!’
I looked at him. My mind had been so concentrated on Hugh and Ellen that I had forgotten what was going on around us. ‘Very well,’ I said quietly. ‘Unless I find some evidence of serious wrongdoing against Hugh, we will leave on Tuesday, after Priddis and his son have visited. Perhaps you are right. But I want to see what Leacon has to say about Coldiron and this man West.’
‘You’d leave Ellen’s matter alone too if you’d any sense. Who knows what you may stir up? But so long as we leave on Tuesday.’
I raised a hand. ‘I said so. Unless I find this monstrous wrong Michael said had been done to Hugh.’
‘You won’t. There isn’t one.’
Barak turned his horse round and we went past the jetty, back into Oyster Street. Two soldiers, unsteady with drink, shoved a labourer aside. He turned and let out a stream of angry curses. Barak pointed at an inn sign, the royal lion of England painted bright red.
‘That’s it,’ he said. ‘Let’s get this done.’
Chapter Twenty-seven
BARAK FOUND an ostler to take the horses, and we entered the inn. The interior was hot, noisy, the floor covered with filthy straw. A group of carters were arguing loudly over whether hops or corn were harder to carry; a circle of Italians in striped woollen jerkins sat dicing at a table. Leacon waved to us from a small alcove by the window, where he sat with Tom Llewellyn and an older man. I asked Barak to fetch half a dozen beers from the hatch, and went over to them. Leacon had removed his half-armour and helmet, which lay on the straw beside him.
‘A useful meeting?’ I asked.
‘Not very. They still haven’t decided whether we are to be posted on the ships or on shore to repel the French.’
‘Pikemen are more use on the shore,’ the older man said.
Leacon clapped Llewellyn on the shoulder. ‘Tom here tried his Welsh with two captains from Swansea.’
‘I’m glad my father was not there to see me stumble,’ the boy said ruefully.
‘Now, Master Shardlake,’ Leacon said, ‘I have found your Philip West. He is assistant purser on the Mary Rose. And the ships’ officers too are meeting this morning. At the Godshouse.’
‘We saw the Godshouse as we rode in.’
‘I will take you there afterwards. But first let me introduce Master John Saddler. He is whiffler to a company of pikemen here.’
I nodded to Saddler. He was short and stocky, with small, hard blue eyes and a lantern jaw framed by a short grey beard. I sat, removing my cap and coif with relief. Barak joined us with the drinks and passed them round.
‘Now, sir,’ Leacon addressed Saddler. ‘Tell my friend what you know of that good man William Coldiron.’
Saddler studied me, his eyes coldly speculative. ‘That’s not his real name, if it’s the man I knew. Though he had good reason to change his name. He was christened William Pile. Captain Leacon here has been asking all the old veterans if they’d heard of him. It was the description I recognized. Tall and thin, around sixty now, an eye out and a scar across his face.’
‘That’s Coldiron.’
‘How do you know him, sir?’ Saddler asked curiously.