dwellings of fair proportions, home to the well-to-do, but nothing like as opulent as the nobles’ mansions in the neighbouring Strand.
‘It was here,’ my companion said eagerly, darting ahead of me as we approached the turning to Faitour – or Fetter, as my London friend pronounced it – Lane. ‘Between here and Saint Dunstan’s Church. According to Master Plummer, the man had been felled with a blow to the back of his head and then finished off with several more. He’d been robbed of everything of value.’
I reflected that this was hardly surprising. A number of the faitours – or beggars, vagrants, vagabonds, scroungers, whatever you prefer to call them – after whom the lane was named, were even now skulking around in doorways, rattling their tin cups or displaying their war wounds (ha!), waiting for the largesse they felt to be their due to rain down upon their undeserving heads.
‘I assume this murder happened at night,’ I said, provoking an incredulous glance from Bertram.
‘Yes, of course! Didn’t Master Plummer tell you
anything
? I thought you’d know more than I do.’
‘Master Plummer has left me in your more than capable hands,’ I answered smoothly, but feeling a fool just the same. I determined to have a few well-chosen words with Timothy the next time I saw him. Nevertheless, I acknowledged that my ignorance was partly my own fault: I should have asked more questions, instead of wallowing in the ease and luxury of a journey undertaken in the company of a royal earl.
I surveyed the scene of the crime. The church of Saint Dunstan-in-the-West stood maybe fifty yards or so from the entrance to Faitour Lane, at a point where there was a small dog-leg turning in the road. On the walls of at least two of the houses, and on a wall of the church itself, were cresset holders which, judging by the smoke-blackened stonework and plaster behind them, were frequently used. But I reckoned the flames of the cressets might cast more shadows than light under certain conditions, as well as being put out altogether in rain or high wind. Besides, there was plenty of protection to be had by a would-be killer in the narrow doorways of the houses, and a way of escape up Faitour Lane itself to the village of Holborn. All in all, I didn’t think a murderer would have had much difficulty in getting away unnoticed and undetected.
I wondered if the local brotherhood of beggars had been questioned as to anything any one of them might have seen or heard that night, but guessed that, even if they had, the interrogation would have yielded nothing. Communities, particularly those that live by their wits or by preying on other people, stick together. They live by a code of which the cardinal – probably the only – sin is betrayal.
I knew from Timothy that there had been an enquiry of sorts, but the Sheriff’s officers had been needed elsewhere to root out those Frenchmen thought to be lurking around every corner of every London street, just waiting to disrupt the Dowager Duchess’s visit. I had tried to persuade Timothy, during one of our convivial drinking sessions on the journey from Bristol, that such fears were probably unjustified. I pointed out that King Louis was already master of the situation on account of the seventy-five thousand crowns he paid yearly to King Edward. Surely, I argued, that was a sufficient inducement to preclude any serious English assistance to Burgundy against the French, particularly as the King had a very expensive wife and, in the Woodvilles, as rapacious a set of in-laws as any ruler in Christendom.
But Timothy had remained unconvinced. He had reminded me sharply that it was
my
job to discover the identity of Fulk Quantrell’s murderer while he and every other officer of the law busied themselves about the safety of the realm. In the face of such blinkered obstinacy I had given in gracefully, but I should have questioned him more closely about the crime.
So here I was with