The street was unpaved, dusty from all the traffic, the air full of the heavy, cloying smell of brewing. We rode past tired-looking labourers, sunburnt sailors in woollen smocks with bare feet, soldiers in their round helmets who must have obtained passes into the town. A well-dressed merchant, a fine lace collar on his shirt, rode along with a pomander held to his nose, a clerk riding alongside calling out figures from a list. Like many others the merchant kept a hand on the purse at his belt.
People were haggling loudly at the open shopfronts. I heard a remarkable babel of tongues among the passers-by: Welsh, Spanish, Flemish. At every corner a little group of soldiers, in half-armour and carrying halberds, stood watching all who passed. I remembered the corner boys. The town crier, resplendent in his red uniform, passed up and down ringing a bell, shouting, ‘All women who cannot prove residence by tomorrow will be removed as prostitutes!’ A drunk staggered into the road, swigging from a pigskin gourd. ‘Join King Harry’s navy!’ he shouted. ‘Six and sixpence a month and all the beer you can drink!’ He tottered towards Feaveryear, who pulled his horse aside. ‘Godless creature,’ he muttered angrily.
‘Don’t you like a drink now and then, Feaveryear?’ Barak asked teasingly.
‘My vicar says to keep out of taverns.’
‘Sounds like my wife.’
‘Hugh and David put up a remarkable show back there,’ I said to Feaveryear.
‘I envy Master Hugh his prowess.’ The little clerk sighed.
‘I would not envy him too much. I think his life is no bed of roses.’
Feaveryear stared at me. ‘No, sir. You are wrong. Hugh has been brought up well. He is strong, skilled and learned. A true gentleman. It is as my master says; you have no cause against this family.’ He spurred his horse and pulled ahead.
THE GUILDHALL was a large, brightly painted wooden building of three storeys. An ostler took our horses to some stables behind. Hobbey told David to wait outside with the servants until we returned, warning them sternly to stay out of the taverns.
‘I suppose you want Barak with you,’ Dyrick said.
‘Yes, Brother, I do.’
Dyrick shrugged. ‘Come then, Sam.’
We stepped into a large central hall. A wooden staircase rose to an upper floor. People passed busily to and fro, royal officials and townsmen in their guild uniforms. Hobbey accosted a harassed looking clerk and asked for Sir Quintin Priddis.
‘He’s upstairs, sir. In the room facing the staircase. Are you the gentlemen come to see him? I fear you are a little late.’
Hobbey rounded on Hugh. ‘That business at the butts! Gentlemen do not keep each other waiting.’ Hugh shrugged.
We walked upstairs. Barak looked round disparagingly. ‘A wooden Guildhall?’
‘There can’t be more than a few hundred living here normally. The townsfolk must feel swamped.’
We knocked on the door the clerk had indicated. A cultivated voice bade us enter. Inside was a meeting room, sparsely decorated and dominated by a large oaken table at which two men sat, a neat stack of papers before them. The younger wore a lawyer’s robe; he was a little over forty, his dark hair worn long, his square face coldly handsome. The elder was in his sixties; grey-haired, wearing a brown robe. He sat crouched, one shoulder much higher than the other, and for a moment I thought Sir Quintin Priddis was another hunchback. Then I saw that one side of his face was frozen and that his left hand, which lay on the table, was a desiccated claw, bone white. He must have had a paralytic seizure. As coroner of Sussex, this was the man who had ordered Ellen to be forced screaming into a coach. Reverend Seckford had described him as a busy, bustling little fellow. Not any more.
We bowed and raised our heads to find two identical pairs of sharp, bright blue eyes examining us across the table.
‘Well, this is quite a deputation,’ the older man said. His voice was slurred, lisping. ‘I had not thought to see so many. And a serjeant, no less. You must be Master Shardlake?’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘Sir Quintin Priddis, feodary of Hampshire. This is my son Edward, my assistant.’ He glanced at the younger man, without affection I thought. ‘Now, Master Hobbey I know, and this well-set-up young fellow must be Hugh.’ He studied the boy closely. Hugh put up a hand to cover his scars. ‘You have grown much, lad, since last I saw you. But why do you keep your hair polled so close? A good head of hair suits a young gentleman.’
‘I am an archer, sir,’ Hugh answered unemotionally. ‘It is the way among us.’
A sardonic smile briefly distorted the right half of Sir Quintin’s face. Hobbey said, ‘This is Master Vincent Dyrick, my legal representative. The other two are the lawyers’ clerks.’
‘I am afraid there is a shortage of chairs in this poor place,’ Priddis said. ‘I cannot ask you to sit. But we shall not be here long; I have a meeting at eleven that cannot wait. Well, Master Shardlake, what questions have you for me?’ He gave me a cold smile.
‘You will know this case well, sir—’