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‘He had a prisoner die from his attentions once,’ I said. ‘Archbishop Cranmer was not pleased with him.’

‘If Broderick died under my care before he talked, the King would have my balls.’ Maleverer looked at me hard. ‘What do you think is the matter with him?’

‘Weakness and exhaustion. From his imprisonment, the poisoning, then being stuck in that carriage for days.’

He grunted. ‘You were supposed to make sure he was in good health.’

‘I did all I could.’

‘Well, I’ll take care of him myself now so he’s in a better state when we get to the Tower. Feed him up. Radwinter won’t dare defy me. Your job there is over.’

‘Archbishop Cranmer-’

‘My orders come from the Privy Council.’

‘I see.’ So that was it. My duties were over. I could wash my hands of Broderick. Like Pontius Pilate.

‘Sir William,’ I ventured. ‘Do you know how long we will be in Hull?’

For answer he nodded at the window. ‘There’s a boat waiting, and as well as Broderick there’s several officials who need to get back to London faster than they can ride. We must wait till the weather clears, though, for we’d be no faster on the roads in this rain, especially with Broderick in a carriage.’ He glowered at the rain-spattered window.

‘May I still go on the boat?’ Now my escort duties were over there was no need for me to return to London quickly, but I desperately wanted to go home, and there were Giles and Barak to think of. I thought he would refuse, and was surprised when he nodded.

‘Yes.’

‘I wonder, sir, when we go, might Master Wrenne go with us?’ I hesitated as I remembered an earlier promise. ‘And Mistress Reedbourne?’

He shrugged. ‘I care not. Talk to the Chamberlain’s office if you want. There are places, but the officials will want paying.’

‘Thank you.’

‘Don’t thank me till you’re safe in London,’ he said. There was something secret and mocking in his look as he went out. He left me feeling uneasy.

Chapter Thirty-seven

THE BAD WEATHER continued. Often it was raining hard and even when it was dry a strong wind blew, sending clouds scudding across the sky, always from the southeast. No boat could set out. We heard the King was visiting the mudflats on the other side of Hull river in pursuit of his idea of fortifying the city. He would be wet and windblown; he cannot command the weather after all, I thought sourly.

We became bored, for all that the inn was comfortable. It was worst for Barak. Still limited in how far he could walk, he was morose and irritable, only cheering up when Tamasin called. Then, from tact, I would leave the room and sit with Giles awhile. Since our talk in Leconfield Tamasin had been cold with me, and with Giles too; she seemed to blame us for Jennet Marlin’s death, murderess though the woman had been. When Giles and I went to the Chamberlain’s office, he had paid a great deal of money to secure places on the boat for Tamasin and Barak as well as ourselves, but although Barak had been effusively grateful, Tamasin had only thanked us in a cold voice.

Giles had taken to going for little walks around the town on the rare occasions when the weather was dry, and one evening as we sat in his room he told me what he had been doing. He had seemed well for some time now; the restful life here was good for him, for all it bored us.

‘I have been getting to know some of the local lawyers,’ he said. ‘They live in a district down by the river. They even have a little library there.’

I looked up with interest. These last few days I had often wished I had something to read.

‘It isn’t up to much,’ Giles continued. ‘But they have a lot of old casebooks. I have been looking through them to pass the time. It is in one of the barrister’s houses, other lawyers may use it for a small fee.’

‘Even the barrister’s opponents?’

‘Ay. They must make such shift as they can up here, far from London. It is strange; I will never practise again and now I can read cases with interest and even amusement at the fumes and scratchings men make between each other.’

‘It is hard,’ I said gently. ‘What you must face.’

He looked at me seriously. ‘Not so hard now. I raged when I first realized what was wrong with me but I have had months to come to terms with what must be. I will be content so long as I can resolve matters in London. Mend that old quarrel with Martin. Ensure that when I die my name and family will not be forgotten, that I can leave a legacy to my kin.’ Unconsciously he clenched a big fist, his emerald ring glinting.

‘We will find Martin Dakin,’ I said soothingly, although I was uncomfortably reminded of what Maleverer had said.

Giles nodded. ‘Thank you.’ He looked out of the window. ‘The rain has stopped. Come, put on your lawyer’s robe and I will take you to the library.’

‘Jesu, I hope the weather will change soon. How I want to leave!’

He looked at me curiously. ‘You will see that prisoner again on the boat? Broderick.’

‘Ay.’ I had told Giles that Maleverer had relieved me of my duties there. ‘I hope he is not in too bad a state.’

‘And then in London, he goes to the Tower.’

‘Ay.’

‘Well, let us not think of that.’

We went outside. It was a relief to smell fresh air. Many others from the Progress had taken advantage of the break in the endless bad weather to take a walk, and I saw a group of the lawyers’ clerks coming towards us, including the fellow who had mocked me at the lodging house. I frowned and averted my face as they passed.

‘Master Shardlake!’ I jerked round at the sound of my name. If they dared to call after me in the street -. But my brow cleared as I saw it was Sergeant Leacon who had addressed me. He was dressed in civilian clothes, a blue doublet and hose. With his blond hair and athletic frame he looked a handsome fellow.

‘Sergeant. How are you? You remember Master Wrenne?’

‘I do, sir.’ He bowed to Giles.

‘You are out of uniform, sergeant?’

‘Ay, I am off duty. I have come out for a walk, since for once it is not pissing with rain.’

‘We too. Walk with us,’ I added, for I saw that he wished to speak to me. ‘Any news on your parents’ case?’

‘Nothing good, sir. My uncle, that was helping my parents with their paperwork, he has had a stroke.’

‘I am sorry to hear it.’

‘Sir, will you still help us, when we return to London? If I can get my parents to come there?’ There was a look of desperate appeal in his blue eyes.

‘I will. Bring them to Lincoln’s Inn.’

‘They fret, for I do not know when we will get back. I have a place on the boat.’

‘Have you?’

‘Ay. To help guard Broderick. But heaven knows when it will leave.’

‘Have you seen him?’ I asked. ‘How is he?’

Leacon shook his head. ‘The castle gaolers have charge of him now. I know he was racked, but they had to stop because he was so weak. Perhaps Radwinter did him a good turn, keeping him locked up and in ill-health in that carriage all the way to Hull.’

‘Ay, maybe.’

We had been walking through the narrow streets leading down to the Hull River. It was tidal and seabirds foraged among the town rubbish on the mudflats, struggling to keep their balance in the wind.

‘I had best get back,’ Sergeant Leacon said.

‘Tell your parents not to despair, I will help them if I can.’ I watched as he turned a corner. ‘I got them into this mess in the first place.’ I said to Giles.

‘How was that?’

I told him.

‘Don’t blame yourself,’ he said. ‘Blame the greedy men of spoil who descended on the monks’ lands like vultures.’

‘The monks could be hard landlords too.’

‘Not up here.’

I did not reply.

‘Come,’ he said. ‘The library is this way.’

He led me to a street of well-kept four-storey houses, and knocked at a door. A servant admitted us into a well-appointed hall, then to a large room filled with shelves where three or four black-robed lawyers sat reading casebooks and making notes at tables. One, a little middle-aged fellow, rose from his place and came to greet us.