I WAS WEARY, but insisted on stopping at a barber’s for a shave in preparation for the banquet. Barak waited for me, then we caught a boat back to the Temple and walked home. I insisted on resting before getting myself ready. I dozed an hour and woke feeling unrefreshed. The sky was as leaden, the air as close, as ever. How I wished the weather would break. I got up, feeling stiff, and for the first time in days did some of Guy’s back exercises. I was bending over, trying to touch my toes and getting nowhere near, when there was a knock at the door and Barak entered. His eyes widened in surprise.
‘That’s a strange way to pray,’ he said.
‘I’m not praying. I’m trying to find some relief for my sore back. And haven’t you the manners to be asked to enter a room before barging in?’
‘Sorry.’ Barak sat down cheerfully on the bed. ‘I came to tell you I’m going out. An old contact of mine has some information on the two we’re after. Pock-face and his big mate. I’m going to meet him, then I’m going to see the earl.’ His expression grew serious. ‘Tell him about Rich. He may want to see you.’
I took a deep breath. ‘Very well. You know where I’ll be. And ask if he can find somewhere safe for the Gristwoods.’
Barak nodded, then gave me a warning look. ‘So far we’ve had more requests for him than information.’
‘I know, but we’re doing all we can.’
‘You’ll have to ride to Lady Honor’s house alone.’
‘It is still light.’
‘Afterwards I’ll find that tavern where Bealknap met my stepfather. It’ll keep me occupied while you’re at the banquet.’
‘Very well.’
‘Are you sure you don’t want to have a crack at that well later? After the banquet?’
I shook my head. ‘I’ll be too tired, I have to get some sleep. I have to pace myself, Barak,’ I added irritably. ‘I’ve more than ten years on you. Just how old are you, by the way?’
‘Twenty-eight in August. Listen, I’ve been trying to puzzle something out. I can understand whoever organized the killing of the Gristwood brothers keeping the formula close, perhaps to sell abroad when things have quietened down. But why try to kill the founder Leighton? Why kill everyone associated with this?’
‘They could have killed Leighton just as a way of getting to the apparatus. We know they’ve no care for life.’
‘And they’re keen to get you. They don’t seem to like you being on the case.’
I frowned. ‘But is that just because I might uncover who is behind this, the person who is paying these rogues? Or is it that they fear I might find something out about Greek Fire? Is that why those books have gone?’
Barak’s eyes widened. ‘You can’t still think it may all be a fraud, surely? Not after what you’ve seen and heard?’
‘There’s something that’s not right. I must go to the Guildhall, find copies of those books.’ I clutched at my head. ‘God’s death, there’s so much to do.’
‘It beats me what you can hope to find from a lot of old books.’ He sighed. ‘Four possible suspects now. Bealknap and Rich. Marchamount. And Lady Honor. Make sure you question her tonight.’
‘Of course I will,’ I snapped.
Barak gave his sardonic smile. ‘You’re sweet on her, you’re still a man of juice under all that learning.’
‘You’ve a coarse tongue. Besides, as you pointed out yourself, she’s out of my league.’ I looked at him. He had mentioned seeing a girl on the first night he came to my house, but beyond that I knew nothing of what women there might have been in his life. Many, I guessed, for all the fears of the French pox these days.
He lay back on the bed.
‘Bealknap and Rich,’ he said again, ‘Marchamount and Lady Honor. One or more of them a murdering rogue. So much for people of rank being honourable, not that I ever believed it.’
I shrugged. ‘The idea of raising oneself up to gentle rank has always seemed a worthy thing to me. But perhaps that ideal will turn to dust, like Erasmus’s hopes of a Christian commonwealth. In these whirling days, who knows?’
‘Some things last,’ he said. He smiled. ‘I said I’d show you this, remember?’
‘What?’
Barak sat up and unbuttoned his shirt. There was something gold on the end of a chain, glittering against his broad chest. It wasn’t a cross, it looked more like a little cylinder. He lifted the chain over his head and proffered it. ‘Take a look.’
I examined the cylinder. The surface had been engraved once but the gold was worn almost smooth with time. ‘It’s been passed down in my father’s family for generations,’ he said. ‘It’s supposed to do with the Jewish religion. My father callled it a mezzah.’ He shrugged. ‘I like to have it by me, to bring me luck.’
‘The workmanship is fine. It looks very old.’