Heartstone (Matthew Shardlake #5)(90)
I nodded and smiled. ‘Thank you. Fetch us two more beers, will you?’
I took them over to the old man. He nodded thanks as I set a mug before him, and studied me with interest. He was well drawn in years, wearing an old smock and bald save for a few straggling grey hairs. His tanned face was wrinkled but his blue eyes were intelligent, eager with curiosity. The dog wagged its tail, no doubt looking for scraps.
‘You want to hear the Fettiplace story, sir?’ He waved a hand. ‘I heard all you told Goodwife Bell. I may be old but my ears are good.’
‘If you would. My name is Master Shardlake. You worked at the foundry?’
‘I’d been with Master Fettiplace ten years when the fire happened. He wasn’t a bad master.’ He was silent a moment, remembering. ‘It was hard work. Loading the ore and the charcoal into the furnace, checking the progress of the melt through the flue – by Mary, when you looked in there the heat near melted your eyeballs. Then scraping the bloom of melted iron out into the hearth – ’
I heard Ellen’s voice again. The poor man! He was all on fire! Wilf had paused and frowned, noting my inattention. ‘I am sorry,’ I said. ‘Please go on. What sort of foundry was it? Was it what they call a bloomery?’
He nodded. ‘A small one, though the bellows were water powered. Master Fettiplace came to Rolfswood as a young man, he had already made some money in the iron trade over in East Sussex. There’s an outcrop of iron ore here, a small one, we’re on the western fringes of the Weald. Master Fettiplace bought some woodland that he could use for making charcoal. The river goes through there too, so he put his money into damming the river to make the mill pond, and built the furnace. The flow of water turns the wheel that powers the bellows, you see?’
‘Yes.’
‘The iron ore gets brought in, in our case from a little further upriver where the ironstone outcrop lay, and you put it in the furnace with the charcoal. The iron melts out of the ore and falls to the bottom. You see?’ he repeated, in a schoolmasterly manner.
‘I think so. Another beer?’
He nodded gravely. ‘Thank you.’
I fetched two more beers and set them on the table. ‘What was Master Fettiplace like?’
Wilf shook his head sadly. ‘William Fettiplace wasn’t a lucky man. Rolfswood furnace never did very well, the quality of the ironstone was low, and with the competition from the new blast furnaces the price of charcoal kept going up. Then his wife that he was devoted to died young, leaving him with a young daughter. And he died in the fire, with my friend Peter Gratwyck. That mysterious fire.’ Wilf was looking at me keenly now.
‘Mysterious? I would have thought there was always a risk of fire in such places.’
He shook his head. ‘It was summer, the furnace wasn’t even working.’ He leaned forward. ‘This is how it was. The furnace was an enclosed area, a courtyard inside a wooden wall. The enclosure was mostly roofed over, except for the centre – it got very hot when the furnace was working. Inside the enclosure was the main building with the furnace at one end, and the big bellows connected to the water wheel. The rest of the enclosure was storage space – ore and coke and building materials. It was a small, old-fashioned foundry. Master Fettiplace hadn’t the money to build a blast furnace. There were only a few workers. We worked our lands during the summer, and in the winter did the casting. See?’
‘Yes.’
‘Someone always had to be there during the summer, to take deliveries of coke and ore ready for the winter, and keep an eye on the mill pond and the wheel. Peter usually did that, he lived very close by. But that summer – it was 1526, the year before the great dearth when the crops failed through the rains. That August I remember was cold and windy, like October—’
‘And the fire – ’ I prompted.
He leaned in very close, so I felt his warm beery breath. ‘That summer Peter was living at the furnace. His wife, who was a vicious old shrew, had thrown him out, saying he drank too much. I suppose he did, but never mind that. Peter asked Master Fettiplace if he could stay at the furnace for a while, and he agreed. There was a little straw bed there, people often stayed overnight during the winter campaigns, but he was the only one there that night.’ Wilf took another draught of beer and sat back. ‘Ah, sir. It hurts me still to remember.’ He sighed. The dog looked up at him and gave a little whine.
‘Towards nine that night I was at home here in the town. A neighbour came banging at my door, saying the furnace was on fire. I ran out. Lots of people were heading for the woods. As you came close to the furnace you could see the flames through the trees, the mill pond all red, reflecting the fire. It was dreadful, the whole enclosure was ablaze from end to end when I got there. It was built of wood, you see. Ellen Fettiplace blamed Peter afterwards, said he had lit a fire in the foundry building to warm himself and started the blaze.’
‘Ellen? The daughter?’ I had to pretend not to know.
‘That’s right. She was the only witness. She and Master Fettiplace had gone for an evening walk to the furnace – Master Fettiplace wanted to check that an ore delivery had come – and found Peter drunk by the fire. Master Fettiplace shouted at him, he jumped up and somehow his clothes caught light. He fell over on the straw bed and that caught light too. There was a lot of coke dust about and the whole place went up. Peter and Master Fettiplace were burnt to death; only young Ellen got out, and it drove her mad. Too mad to appear at the inquest, a statement from her was read out.’ I remembered Ellen screaming. I saw his skin melt, turn black and crack! He tried to get up but he fell!