Much Ado About Murder (Shakespeare & Smythe 3) - Page 31

“I know,” she replied. “And I know you ask from motives that are good and well intended. But I promise you that I am in no danger, Tuck. I have nothing to fear from Moll Cutpurse. Truly. What we have between us is a private matter, as I said. And I do not wish to discuss it further. As you are my friend, I ask your word that you shall not pursue it or discuss it with any of the others.”

“Molly, I merely-”

“Your word, Tuck.”

He sighed. “Very well. You have my word.”

She smiled. “Thank you. And now you should try and get some sleep. Granny Meg said that you would need your rest to heal. And for that matter, I should get some sleep, myself. Master Stackpole has been kind enough to let me have a bed for the night. If you feel poorly and need anything tonight, call out. I am a light sleeper and shall hear.” She leaned forward and kissed him on the forehead. “You can barely keep your eyes open. Go to sleep now. I shall look in on you tomorrow.”

It was true. It was all that he could do to keep his eyes open. His head ached terribly, he felt dizzy and queasy, but most of all, he felt so tired that all he wanted to do was close his eyes and sleep. It seemed like a most excellent suggestion. He could not recall for certain later if he even said good night to her. He could not even recall seeing her leave. He seemed to recall hearing the door to his room close softly and that was the last thing he remembered. He slept a long, deep, and dreamless sleep. In fact, he slept all through the next day and the next night. And when he finally awoke, it was to discover that while he had slept, Master Leonardo had been murdered.

7

TUCK FOUND OUT WHAT HAD happened over breakfast downstairs in the tavern. Or at least, once he got past all the speculation, he found out as much as anybody knew, which was not a very great deal. When he came down in the morning, after sleeping fitfully through most of an entire day, everyone solicitously asked him how he felt. He replied with gratitude that he still hurt in at least a dozen places, yet in the main, he was very much improved. But despite their genuine concern about his welfare, it was nevertheless obvious that what had happened to him was no longer the primary topic of interest. Everyone seemed anxious to move on quickly past the question of how he felt in order to discuss the news of Master Leonardo’s murder.

It did not take Smythe very long to piece together the details. From the general conversation in the tavern, he learned that sometime during the previous afternoon or evening, Master Leonardo, the wealthy Genoan merchant whom they had all met briefly only a day earlier, had been viciously murdered at his residence. His young and beautiful daughter, Hera, had not been at home, fortunately, but was away visiting her new friend, Elizabeth Darcie, who had taken the shy foreign girl under her wing and was helping her become acclimated to her new life in London. Regrettably, it had been Hera who had discovered her

own father’s body when she arrived back home that night.

“Dear God! The poor girl!” Smythe said. “How terrible for her!”

“Terrible is not the word,” George Bryan replied. “Horrible would be more like. They say the man was sliced to ribbons. Slashed more deeply than a fop’s silk shirt.”

“Aye, there was blood everywhere,” added Tom Pope, one of the newest members of their company, as he busily ladled porridge into his mouth.

“There is going to be porridge everywhere if you persist in trying to speak and gorge at the same time, you odiferous hog,” said Kemp with contempt. “S’trewth, watching you eat is enough to put a starving beggar off his food. I know it puts me off mine.”

“Well then, since I have put you off your food, ‘tis only meet that I should put some food on you,” retorted Pope, and with that, he flipped a generous ladleful of hot porridge right into Will Kemp’s face.

“Aaarghh! You misbegotten Philistine!” roared Kemp, leaping to his feet as he wiped the porridge from his eyes. “How dare you!”

“Never say I gave you naught, Kemp,” Pope replied with a grin, “for I daresay you have just had breakfast on me.”

“Well then, allow me to return the kindness!” Kemp said through gritted teeth, and with that, he picked up his own bowl of steaming porridge and upended it over Pope’s head.

“Gentlemen! Gentlemen! We were speaking of murder, for God’s sake!” said Smythe.

“Aye, and that is just what I am going to do to that miserable, mincing old goat!” snarled Pope, wiping the dripping gobs of porridge from his face and shaking his hands off. The flung-off gobs of porridge made wet, smacking sounds as they landed on the wood-planked floor. Pope reached for the clay pitcher in the center of the table.

“Oh, no, Tom!” Speed cried out. “Not the beer!”

Too late.

Pope dashed the beer into Kemp’s face, neatly rinsing off the porridge Kemp had not fully succeeded in wiping away.

Smythe rolled his eyes and gave up on them. He turned to Phillips. “The devil with those two. Tell me, what happened after Hera found her father?”

“Well, from what I hear, she very nearly lost her mind,” Gus Phillips replied, as Kemp grabbed his ladle and launched himself at Pope, knocking him off his bench. They both fell backwards in a tangled, flailing heap. “I mean,” continued Phillips, “can you imagine, walking into your own home and finding your own father sliced up like an Easter ham and lying on the floor in a spreading pool of his own blood?”

“You need not be quite so lurid,” Smythe replied dryly, as Kemp shrieked and hammered away at Pope with his wooden ladle, while the latter desperately tried to dislodge the smaller man, who had clamped his legs around him like an octopus and hung on like grim death. “What about the servants?” Smythe continued.

“What about them?” Speed asked. “You do not think they did it, do you? You think they did the foreigner in for all his gold?”

“I honestly do not know,” Smythe said, as Pope finally succeeded in dislodging Kemp, throwing him off, and then rolling over on top of him with his not inconsiderable bulk, squeezing the wind right out of him. “But I very much doubt that a canny merchant would have been careless enough to keep all of his gold inside his house,” Smythe went on, ignoring the combatants. “ ‘Twas not what I intended to suggest, though I suppose ‘tis possible. I meant to ask if Master Leonardo’s servents had not heard anything amiss? After all, does it not seem odd to have a man killed in his own house, and in so violent a manner as you describe, and yet none of the servents knew of it, so that the body was not even found until the daughter arrived home that night?”

Phillips frowned. “Hmm. I must admit that thought never even occurred to me. An excellent question, Tuck. However, I must confess ‘tis one I cannot answer.”

“There were servants in the house, surely?” Smythe said.

Tags: Simon Hawke Shakespeare & Smythe Mystery
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