have lectures toprepare; I cannot spend all day stalking innocent men with you.’
‘Harysone is not innocent,’ said Michael with grim determination, watching with narrowed eyes as the man wrestled with the
awkward latch on the church door. ‘I can feel it in my bones.’
‘That is the cold weather,’ said Bartholomew practically. He broke away from Michael and headed for St Michael’s Lane. ‘I
am going home. It is too chilly for this kind of thing.’
‘Come with me to speak to him,’ ordered Michael peremptorily. ‘I shall only leave when we have assured ourselves that he has
no sinister purpose in daring to set foot in St Michael’s. For all you know, he may be planning to steal our silver.’
‘He would be hard pressed to do that. We only use it on special occasions, and the rest of the time – like now – it is safely
locked away. And anyway, he does not look like a man who needs to steal from churches. He is well dressed and appears to be
wealthy.’
‘I was at the Trumpington Gate when he arrived,’ said Michael, watching Harysone give the door a vigorous shake in an attempt
to open it. He was not successful. ‘He had a cart with him, loaded down with what he claimed were philosophical texts written
by himself. He said he was going to sell them here.’ The monk turned to Bartholomew and raised a sceptical eyebrow. ‘Have
you ever heard a less convincing story?’
Bartholomew had heard a good many less convincing stories, and he told the monk so. It seemed to him that Harysone’s reason
for being in Cambridge was a perfectly valid one: if anyone wanted to sell academic texts, then Cambridge and Oxford were
good places to be. They were full of scholars hungry for new knowledge and ideas, and Harysone could expect not only that
copies would be purchased, but that they would be read and discussed by clever minds. Harysone might even learn ways to improve
on his work.
‘Well, I do not believe him,’ declared Michael. ‘I know his type. He is one of those men who makes his living by preying on
the weak and the trusting. He will cheat widows, orphans and the weak-witted out of their inheritances, and will have every
scrap of silver out of our churches before he melts away into the night.’
Bartholomew gave a startled laugh, astonished by the list of crimes Michael was blithely laying at the door of a man he did
not know. ‘Really, Brother! Do you have any evidence to suggest that he is a trickster?’
‘Not yet,’ admitted Michael. ‘But I will. I have been watching him for the best part of a week now, and he will make a mistake
before long. And then he can enjoy his Yuletide celebrations inside the proctors’ prison!’
Bartholomew was nonplussed. ‘I do not understand this at all. It is not like you to take a rabid dislike to visitors to our
town without cause.’
‘I have cause. Harysone disturbs me. I feel with every fibre in my body that there is something sinister about him.’
‘That does not sound like you, either,’ said Bartholomew doubtfully. ‘You do not usually give credence to something as insubstantial
as a “feeling”. You usually demand solid evidence before judging a man.’
‘I cannot explain it,’ replied Michael impatiently. ‘But I have been Senior Proctor for five years now, and I know a rotten
apple when I see one. That man is a prince among villains, and I do not want him in my town.’
Bartholomew could think of nothing to say, but accepted that the Benedictine had gained enough experience to be able to identify
potential troublemakers. Still, Michael was not immune to making mistakes, and the physician did not condone persecuting a
man on the basis of a mere ‘feeling’.
Harysone was still tussling with the sticky church door when Tom Meadowman, Michael’s chief beadle, approached them, red faced
and slightly breathless. The beadles were the proctors’ private army, a stalwart band of men employed