Heartstone (Matthew Shardlake #5)(138)



‘You know I cannot answer that, sir. It would be a breach of professional confidentiality.’

‘You’ll have to tell the Sussex coroner when he gets here.’ Buttress’s eyes continued to probe mine a moment longer, then he turned away and made an irritated gesture. ‘I suppose now I must arrange for the remains to be fetched back to Rolfswood. It’s market day tomorrow – this will be a rich piece of gossip for the goodwives. And I must write to the Sussex coroner at Chichester. Though heaven knows when he will be able to get here. Well,’ he continued, looking round the four of us, ‘at least there is no urgency. Master Fettiplace was in that pond nineteen years; it won’t hurt him to wait a little longer.’

‘With respect, sir,’ I said, ‘this is still a newly discovered murder. Sir Quintin Priddis’s old verdict of accidental death was clearly wrong.’

‘Ay.’ Wilf spoke up boldly. ‘I always said that first inquest was not done properly.’

Buttress leaned his heavy body forward, glaring into the old man’s face. ‘Are you accusing one of the region’s leading men of incompetence? Watch your step, old nid-nod.’

‘Goodman Harrydance is upset,’ Seckford said placatingly.

Buttress turned his baleful look on him. ‘I know you and this other old fool like a drink together, Master Curate. More than one. And I hear your services have a papist flavour. Don’t provoke me into making life difficult for either of you.’

‘Sir,’ I said. ‘I protest. You are the magistrate, it is not fitting you should bully witnesses.’

Buttress’s face darkened, but he kept his control. ‘I brought Goodman Harrydance to order for insulting the former coroner. And Master Seckford is no witness to anything. He did not accompany you to the foundry.’

Seckford said quietly, ‘I am, though, a witness to the state of mind of Mistress Fettiplace after the foundry burned down, and to the fact she was hurried away by Master Priddis himself.’

I winced, wishing he had not drawn attention to Ellen’s disappearance. I said, mildly, ‘If she witnessed a murder, that could explain her state of mind.’

‘And what,’ Buttress asked, rounding on me, ‘if the death was suicide? What if Master Fettiplace, for some reason we do not know, set the fire, killed his man, then rowed out to the middle of the pond, tied a lump of iron round his leg, and drowned himself? Such things happen; there was a silly village girl a couple of years ago got herself with child and drowned herself in a local pond.’

I suddenly thought of Michael Calfhill, swinging from that rope in his lodgings. I said, ‘Then surely the empty boat would have been found floating in the pond next morning.’

‘Maybe it went unnoticed; everyone was concerned with the fire.’

‘Why should Master Fettiplace have killed himself?’ I asked.

Buttress shrugged. ‘Who knows? Well, we shall have to bring the witnesses together. Some of the men from the foundry are still alive.’

‘I understand Ellen Fettiplace had spent the day with a young man who was interested in her, Philip West.’

Buttress flicked me an angry look. ‘The Wests are an important local family. Self-important anyway. Master West is now an officer on the King’s ships.’

‘Nonetheless, he, too, will need to be questioned.’ I realized that when all these people were brought together it would come out how thoroughly I had been investigating Ellen’s history. But the important thing was to get them together and questioned properly. And I would be there.

‘It will take time to put these wheels in motion,’ Buttress said. I realized he would do everything he could to delay. But why? To keep a forged conveyance secret?

He said, ‘I expect by the time the Sussex coroner has been able to get all these people together for an inquest, you will be back in London. He will write to you. Unless the French land and we are all so mired in war down here that nothing can be done about anything.’

‘I shall keep in touch with matters through Master Seckford.’ I gave the old man a meaningful glance, and he nodded.

‘Yes, Master Shardlake,’ Buttress said heavily, ‘I imagine you will.’



EVENING FOUND US lodging at Rolfswood inn; Buttress, unsurprisingly, had offered us no hospitality. When we left the house Wilf’s sons were waiting for us a little way up the street. This time their manner towards me was friendly. After all, I had just lied to save their father from a possible charge of poaching.

‘You should have left that body be, Father,’ one brother said chidingly. ‘Let someone else find it. Look at you, you’re half dead.’

‘I couldn’t leave Master Fettiplace there,’ Wilf said. ‘Master Shardlake will keep me safe.’

‘I promise I will see justice done,’ I said. I hoped I would be able to. Buttress might not be clever, but he was cunning and ruthless.

Seckford and Wilf came with us to the inn. The woman who had first introduced me to Wilf, a widow named Mistress Bell, turned out to own it. She agreed to give us a place for the night. When we parted I grasped Seckford’s flabby hand. ‘Sir,’ I said, ‘please protect Wilf so far as you can. A letter will bring me here.’ I had given him the address of Hoyland Priory, and of my chambers in London.

He looked at me with bleary eyes, then smiled sadly. ‘You fear I will be too far gone in my cups to be of use. No, sir, I will control myself. God has given me a task to perform, as once he did with Ellen. I will not fail this time.’

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