Tuesday 24 October 2017

CHAPTER 3: JOURNEY INTO JEOPARDY

CHAPTER 3: JOURNEY INTO JEOPARDY

Copyright: Thomas Hoskyns Leonard, Edinburgh, October 2017


                                                                        


When Friar Francis took Sir Richard and Cedric their bread and ale early the next morning, he discovered his guests nestled cosily together with their heads resting against Xanthos's protective right foreleg.
While Cedric was taking a bite of his bread, his pony Augustus stirred, and opened his deep purple eyes.
I must apologize for the Saint Agatha nurse's rude behaviour last night,” said the congenial friar. “She'd eaten a few too many of her Hebridean mushrooms. When we found the weird bizzom dancing the Tarantella with the sheep, we had to muzzle her and put her to bed in the cowshed.”
Your nurse is particularly well-educated for a woman,” Sir Richard tactfully replied. “Dancing the Tarantella is a superb therapy for victims of bites.”
Perchance the vixen had been bitten by a fox,” replied Friar Francis, with a sly look.
I also ate too many mushrooms,” said Cedric, bleary eyed, “and I saw a frightening apparition leaping out of the Cupidian Well. But I've since dreamt wonderful dreams during the night, as if I were the Archangel Gabriel in love with a poltergeist. And now the pleasantest of all feelings consumes my entire body.”
Sir Richard raised his knightly eyebrows. “You're lucky the mushrooms didn't give you the Herod's Revenge. I feel a touch queasy in the gut myself.”

                                                                                         


Forsooth!” exclaimed Friar Francis. “If the apparition emerging from the well resembled the Grim Reaper, it could have been a monk on a sleepwalk, or perchance one of our creepy guests from Rannoch Moor. Since many of our visitors partake of spices and potions, all manner of crass and cranky things can happen in this isolated place.”
Sir Richard gave Cedric a bird-like peck on his lips before replying. “All's well that wends well, as Saint Christopher is ever ready to remind us. After bidding our fond farewells to Lady Fiona, we'll aways to sweet Edinburgh, where my loving wife Ingibiorg is arising early to prepare our favourite, cordon bleu pot roast.”
Tu est magnifique, but there's nought like a dame!” exclaimed Cedric, wiping the saliva off his sloppy chops.
You taste like une belle fille to me,” retorted Sir Richard, with a smirk.
The worthy friar chuckled like a court jester. “God speed, fine gentlemen! You are goodness itself.”
Take care, kind friends,” squealed wholesome Kate, flourishing her sweet smelling hands as she came through the door. “You may be embarking upon a journey towards jeopardy.”
If so then Christ Jesus will take care of us,” replied Sir Richard, with a wholesome grin.

Sir Richard's hair stood on end when he and Cedric set off from the Soutra astride Xanthos and Augustus. He feared that the journey might become iconic in his memory for some reason or other, and he dreaded that the apparition's terrible death prophecy of the night before might have some rhyme or reason about it.
The riders were approaching Fala along the Via Regia when a tiny bird fluttered down from a weeping willow tree, landed on Xanthos's tousled mane, and performed a merry dance. The Goddess Asherah, who was treading water on the Sea of Yam, realised that it was a golden speckled crowned kinglet, a very rare breed of wren which nested on the Isle of May.




It may be of small stature, mused Sir Richard, but the bird that can fly to the highest loftiness will be made king, according to some ancient Teutonic fable methinks,
A black and white mottled bird with massively long wings suddenly appeared from out of a dense pine forest, and circled overhead.
Is it a sparrowhawk or an osprey,” wondered Sir Richard, peering upwards, “or the legendary falcon of Fólkvangr sent by Freya herself? Perchance the double-headed eagle of Valhalla will follow in its wake.”
Begone, sinister Raptor of Infernal Hades!” howled Cedric.
Caw, baaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!” shrieked the bird, as if out of the bowels of Hell.
I beseech thee to leave us,” roared Sir Richard, drawing Vindicta from its scabbard.
The eyes of the winged beast turned fiery red, emitting two silver beams which struck Vindicta's blade in full swing, causing Sir Richard to shudder and shake like a goblin on Rannoch Moor.
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaarg!” shrieked the noble knight as his sword fell to the ground, hitting a granite stone and causing multitudinous sparks to fly into the undergrowth.
Without further ado, the bird dived at Xanthos, picked up the wren in its beak, and soared towards the heavens.
It took Sir Richard and Cedric several minutes to recover from that totally bizarre assault from above.
Maybe the strange bird and the wren will fly higher than the eagles, pondered Sir Richard, but which of them will be king?

When they reached Gala, a mischievous-looking minstrel was sitting on a bench outside the Church, plucking the strings of his lute. He took a sniff of Cedric's scent while the squire was dismounting from his pony.
The wiry fellow coughed.“I can smell a Frenchman from six furlongs off.”
Cedric snorted. “What stinking bog did you leap out of?”
The impudent minstrel laughed at that. “I hope that all fares well with thee, Cedric de Porthos.”
Declare yourself in the King's name!” snorted Sir Richard.
Me?” chortled the somewhat sinister lute-fiddler, fingering his blonde locks. “I'm the Troubadour of Arbroath, though my mother came from fair Aquitaine to marry the master blacksmith who she loved.”
I find that hard to believe,” said Cedric, peering down his handsome nose. “How do you know my name?”
But forsooth, I am a soothsayer, snotty laddie,” said the troubadour, with a snigger. “Prithee! I take thee for a smellfungus. But let me ask thee three questions, and I will sing thy life in song to thee.”
What questions?” Cedric brusquely replied.
Have you ever sowed the corn and gathered the wheat?”
Aye. In Pau when I was a child. The stones blistered my feet.”
When did thee last a fair lass haul into the hay?”
Last week, when the wine went to our heads.”
Have you ever walked on eggs?”
Yes. I stamped on grapes and raw eggs while we were manufacturing Cardinal Santiago's Advocaat in Lourdes.”
The troubadour fiddled with his lute and gulped like a Natterjack toad. Just then, Sir Richard noticed a chubby, long-nosed fellow dressed in wolfskins tying his horse to the branch of an elm tree at the far end of the rose garden.
That's one of the shady rapscallions I saw in Evensong last night, deliberated Sir Richard, rubbing his jaw, but where's his fair-haired accomplice? I suspected them of theft on the Canongate. I wonder whether this ragamuffin has been trailing me from the Soutra for some daft reason or other? He's heading for a whipping with the harlots in the stocks on Calton Hill.
Music heals the disorders of the mind,” proclaimed the troubadour, plucking his lute, “as can the sound of water rippling, the shrill of sparrows chirping, and the echoes of dragonflies buzzing, and crickets hopping. Such has been known since the beginning of time.”
How profound for a vagrant, thought Sir Richard. He has some qualities about him.

                                                                              



Without further ado, the Troubadour of Arbroath strummed a fine tune and began to sing:
I declare to ye, my fellow men,
Kind Cedric is so sweet
And he ties his gown so neat;
He sows the corn and gathers the wheat
But beware, fair Cedric when you next bed a bizzom
Or you may end in God's prison.
Do not walk on eggs or you will lose your legs.
I forewarn thee of the mug from which you sup;
Do not drink witch's potions from your cup.
And close to your pony cuddle
And protect yourself in your manly huddle;
Beware sad deaths in a putrid puddle!
Cedric extracted a coin from his purse. “Here's a copper groat for your efforts, paltry heidbanger from Arbroath, though I can fit no logique to your paroles folles.”
Why, merci monsieur,” the troubadour dryly replied. “If you watch the curious colour of your skin when you next haul a besom o'er a bed, then you may see some wit in the manner of my crassness.”
Away with thee, feeble soothsayer!” raged Sir Richard. “We're aways from thee to retrieve our sanity in dear auld reeking Embro, the city of the knights of Loth and Arthur bold.”
When Sir Richard and Cedric resumed their journey, the chubby, long-nosed man in wolfskins leapt onto his horse, threw the happy go lucky troubadour a silver piece, and headed north at a pace which was undoubtedly fit for his grand purposes and schemes.

                                                                               

The village of Pathhead consisted of about thirty hovels and thatched cottages stretching either side of the Via Regia as it headed downhill towards the shaky wooden bridge over the Tyne Water. The last time Sir Richard had passed through the drab village he'd been pelted with eggs and tomatoes at the Alpin well by a pair of scruffy wizards from Athelstaneford. It was therefore with some trepidation that the travellers stopped at the well to refresh their proud steeds Xanthos and Augustus. They also needed to take a pish, a task they endeavoured to accomplish, side-saddle, without taking the trouble to even dismount.
Cedric's stomach churned inside when he saw two slovenly fellows emerging from the blacksmithy with pursed expressions on their ugly faces. They were the retainers who'd ridden out of Dalhousie Castle on his way down from Edinburgh, no less. They'd gotten him into trouble with his dear Richard by calling him a snoop, before rudely demanding his presence in the Grassmarket on Saturday next.
What in the name of Beelzebub is my cousin Leofric up to now? wondered Sir Richard, re-buttoning his codpiece. I'll give these fishy miscreants short shrift.
The retainer with almond-shaped eyes cleared his nostrils. “Greetings, unholy Knight of the Sacred Orb. Your worthy cousin of Dalhousie wishes you to detour to his castle, so that he may discuss with you matters of consequence affecting James, our King.”
Sir Richard grasped his sword Vindicta by its hilt. “I recognise you for the gaping holes in your teeth, and I am no plotter or infamous traitor. How did you know I was coming?”
The chubby man in wolfskins who'd accosted Sir Richard in Gala scurried up with his fair-haired garçon rouet, who'd spilt something green and ugly down his yellow tunic.
That's because I told them,” explained the chubby man, “Rim and I have been tracking you to and from the Soutra, with the help of the wandering minstrel from Arbroath of course.”
Traitors!” howled Sir Richard, brandishing his hefty fist. “The troubadour too! Logger-headed Judas's, all five of you.”
I'm no traitor,” moaned Rim Spit. “I'm for King Harry.”
That half-bred dolt's King of England,” retorted Sir Richard, “tripe-visaged idiot-worshipper that you are!”
The retainer with the strange Northern accent leapt onto his white donkey.
You do not seem to fully understand, Sir Richard,” he announced, with a flourish of his hefty mace. “Should you fail to parley with Sir Leofric today, evil forces will involve you in a plot that could, after much agony and gnashing of teeth, leave your festering body impaled on a spike on Calton Hill.”
Cedric de Porthos drew his dagger from its leather pouch and waved it around his head.
How dare you thus threaten my Lord and Master!” he shrieked. “Your face is veritably as ugly as an ape's rump. Go forth and die in the stinking Tranent sewer, foul usurper of the peace!”
The man in wolfskins peered down his very long nose. “It is you who will die first, tight-limbed garçon. Does Sir Richard know that you are paid ten silver pieces each month as a secret agent for the Lord of the Isles, double dealing delinquent that you are?”
I'm no Viking's lackey and no Judas either!” howled Cedric, leaping from his pony. “I'll flay the skin off your arm for a new Janus mask, yes I will!”
Cedric landed flat on his backside during the intense brouhaha that ensued, but leapt stridently to his feet and eventually succeeded in throwing the scroundrel in wolfskins headlong into a horse's trough. Thereupon the retainer with dirty teeth seized Cedric around his throat and attempted to strangle him.
Sir Richard promptly jumped to the ground wielding Vindicta, and cut off the evil-smelling assailant's left hand with an exquisite flourish. That accomplished, the bold knight pulled the mace-wielding retainer off his donkey by the scruff of his pimply neck and sent him squelching into the mud.

                                                                                 


All praise to thee, St. Peter the Rock,” exclaimed Cedric, struggling clumsily to his feet, “and to all pious Bishops of Rome.”
Sir Richard performed the Sign of the Cross. “God bless Eugenius Quartus, God's Vicar on Earth!”
I'm not an enemy agent, I'm really not,” howled Cedric. “They must be confusing me with the rakish clerk for the queen, even if he has a longer nose and a bunion, and shorter legs than myself.”
You're no spy for the Norse Demon of Cara, sweet Cedric,” replied Sir Richard, blowing the lad a kiss, “and I can make neither head nor tail of the plot these oafs have contrived to invent.”
Cedric grinned like an algolagniacal tiger and stuck in the boot, and the lazy villagers and the serfs from the fields roundly applauded knight and squire together.
Let us away to your fair lady in sweet Edwin's Burgh, gentle Sire,” said Cedric, as his three swag-bellied victims writhed yowling on the ground.
Rot in shit!” wailed Rim Spit, hiding his head in a bucket.
Sir Richard grinned at Cedric like a Manx cat. “Do remember to re-lace your codpiece, fair squire. You would not wish to take a chill in it.”
And moments later, the partners in love were away across the bridge over the Tyne Water and heading for the comforts of home.

                                                                           

When the two horsemen arrived, in full jollity, at Óengus House, the de Liddell mansion on Edinburgh's Queen Maud Walk, Cedric imagined that the archaic gargoyle on the parapet was smiling at him and then thought that it was scowling.
Home sweet home,” exclaimed Sir Richard. “What pleasures will the rest of the day bring?”
In the flash of an eyelid, Lady Ingibiorg appeared at the ornate window above the doorway and merrily waved her fists, one at each of the horsemen.
How thought provoking, mused Cedric, feeling unusually defensive.
No rolling pin waiting for us then, enthused Sir Richard, as he and Cedric ran up the smoothly carpeted stairs, and we've arrived in time for lunch.
Saturnic kisses from and for one and all? wondered Lady Ingibiorg, with her hand on a delightful thigh. That would make twelve altogether, methinks.
What a wonderful display of emotion, mused the Goddess Asherah in the Heavens, as Yahweh swam towards her with a red rose between his teeth.
When the brave companions entered the good lady's boudoir, Sir Richard was surprised to see his good wife lounging nestled on the Angevin chaise-longue with a curvaceous lass who was wearing nought but a familiar looking lace petticoat around her neck, and an Orcadian spider brooch pinned to her loins.
It's the delightful Adaira, observed Cedric. The lass I frolicked with in the Hermitage of Braid during our journey to the Soutra. Methinks her mother's a drowned witch and her father a burnt wizard.
The bizzom may not be the giglet she appears, mused Sir Richard. She may have some mysterious talents about her.
Don't look at me,” said Lady Ingibiorg, twirling her pearl necklace. “I deserve my morsel of fun too.”
How delightful, darling,” replied Sir Richard, showing due tact. “I am sure that you and this kindly lass have been reading The Dream of Aengus together.”
I found her sleeping in the doorway. She was a stranger, and so I took her in.”
Balderdash! I sent her to show herself off to you because of her excellent talents in poetry and the arts.”
Adaira McTaggart glanced fleetingly at Cedric. While her body movements were not particularly subtle, they sent him sublime messages.
I'm not interested in legend, and there are no singing birds in my head,” she cooed, “but I'd love to be part of your cosy family.”
That made Cedric feel as concupiscible as an archbishop on heat, indeed almost to the point of incontinence. “I'll toast to that! Why don't we all take lunch together in the Saint Margaret Glaschambre, and eat elderberries for dessert? A glass of parsley wine would not go amiss.”
Perchance I should ask the hawk-nosed Bishop of Edinburgh to celebrate my marriage to three wives at once, deliberated Sir Richard, somewhat frivolously, though that arrogant doubting Thomas might want to be betrothed to me too!
Adaira smiled strangely. “Parsley wine is good for my head. It makes it ache.”
Lady Ingibiorg blinked. “Unfortunately, we've run out of partridge.”
Perhaps we should open the malmsey-butt later,” suggested Sir Richard. “The old vintage is good for the digestion.”
While they were devouring the roast duck and rabbit, Sir Richard took his eyes off the delightful Adaira and peered through the quarter-pane window and across the meadow beyond.
Firkins! he agonized. I do believe that I recognize the minstrel who fiddles beneath that oak tree. It's the wandering Troubadour from Arbroath who we recently encountered in Fala, and he's said to be part of my traitorous cousin Leofric's desperate ring of spies. How did the knotty-pated jack-a-nape spirit himself here so quickly?
Cedric smirked. At least something's distracted Richard from the immediate desires of my burning heart, he mused. I'll plan to splice the knot with Adaira in the roof of the dovecot later.
Sir Richard glanced towards his absolutely riveting wife. “What else have you been doing while we've been away, darling? Have you been mixing with our good neighbours in the Church rectory?”
Those heathen creatures are up to absolutely no good, dearest,” replied Lady Ingibiorg, with a wry smile. “Indeed, the priest with the two vertical scars and a knob for a nose knocked on our door only this morning, and invited me to attend Father Kelp Haggart's Saturnic orgy in the rectory at midnight. I told the ugly inebriate that he was the Devil Incarnate.”
An apt riposte!”
Since then, I'll been knitting you a new pair of sheeps wool pantaloons. I'm already halfway down the second leg, though I will need to knit a generous pouch for the rest.”
Cedric choked, sniggered, and touched himself in jest.
You have a wondrous sense of humour, dearest,” replied Sir Richard, “With that in mind, let us now drink a toast to Aphrodite, the Goddess of Love.”
Yes let's!” replied Cedric, his eyes rolling avec nerversement in all directions at once.
And here's to us!” announced Sir Richard, in true Scottish style.
Who's like us?” asked Adaira, gulping her wine.
Very few,” replied Lady Ingibiorg, “and they're all dead.”
Sir Richard grinned. “Let us, this afternoon, a walk across the meadow partake.”
Methinks we'll play a game,” said Cedric, relaxing his eyes. “You three are the foxes, and I'll be the snake.”
The four companions spent a wonderful time on the meadow. They played Ring around the Mulberry Bush and Lasses and Knaves together. After much moaning and groaning, Cedric got his wish, and pursued the three 'foxes' through a rhododendron bush, wriggling like a crocodile. When he got his face heartily slapped, they repaired to the lily pond and all fell asleep while the faeries and goblins snipped at their feet.

                                                                    

Since Xanthos and Augustus were well bedded in the barn, Sir Richard decided, after eating a lightly poached egg for supper, to take a stroll to Edinburgh's High Street. This elegant thoroughfare stretched from the lofty forecourt of the Castle down the ridge of the escarpment to the Netherbow Port, the fabulously designed eastern gateway where the wall separated the city from the Royal Burgh of Canongate (which sprawled over the foot of the escarpment).
                                                 
The purpose of Sir Richard's trip was a previously arranged appointment with the indomitable Sheriff-Depute Brodie Crichton-Cruikshank in the Pretorium, a well-turreted building of several storeys on the High Street which housed the burghal offices of Edinburgh together with the municipal torture chambers and an extremely smelly prison in the dungeons below.
Sir Richard knew that the Cruikshank-Crichtons of the haunted Castle Trilloch in Dingwall practised Druidic sorcery and child sacrifices on the nearby barrows, while exploiting all good Scots with their self-aggrandising skulduggery. But he assumed that the Crichton-Cruikshanks were a different kettle of fish.
Sir Richard well-realised that Sir Brodie deputised for his cousin the fearsome Sheriff of Edinburgh. Sir Richard was as scared of the canny Sir William Crichton as he was of Sir Brodie.
Soon after setting off, Sir Richard fell into a zombie-like trance during which he imagined harpy eagles flying through his mansion from the rectory next door. When he emerged from his trance, he'd already turned off Queen Maud Walk onto Myrddin Wynd, a narrow cobbled lane between drab buildings, apparently with no windows, which took him ever downwards until he emerged onto the Cowgate, a prosperous street on a lower level of Edinburgh where visiting pimps and prostitutes thrived amongst the wealthy householders and their inquisitive international guests and which ran parallel to the High Street way above on the other side.
Sir Richard took a few moments on the Cowgate to take a puff of opium with a mousey-haired and remarkably slender, scruffy lassie from Penicuik, before throwing her a coin and heading for Mungo Wynd. He speedily ascended the dank and very narrow passageway to the High Street on the volcanic escarpment above, and emerged outside the much celebrated Stag and Hornet Inn, just as a widow threw a bucketful of shit from an attic window onto the merry-makers below.
Sir Richard wiped his face with his silk handkerchief and gagged. After puking into the gutter, he hurried up the High Street in the direction of the Castle, dodging along his way between a myriad of townspeople as they scurried in and out of the town-houses and hostelries. As he approached St. Giles Cathedral he saw two bodies with their throats cut, stinking in the stanks.
And lo and behold! When Sir Richard reached the market place, he saw a familiar face peering at him from behind a fruit stall. It was Rim Spit, the fair-haired vagabond he'd recently encountered on the Soutra and in Pathhead, but now wearing a filthy brown tunic. Spit was the friend of the fat miscreant in wolfskins whose hand Sir Richard had so brutally severed during the brouhaha with Cedric.
Spit backed away, shaking in fright, fell over a sack of turnips, picked himself up, and fled down Constantine the Second's Close towards the Nor Loch.
I must be caught up in some outrageously broad plot, mused Sir Richard. I will need to keep a calm head on my shoulders when I talk to the sheriff-depute. I wonder whether the slick lute-player from Arbroath is still skulking around too?
Sir Richard paused for a few minutes to recall what he knew about Sir Brodie Crichton-Cruikshank. The sheriff-depute had worked as a young man as a physician in St. Leonard's Hospital in St. Andrews where he'd experimented at leisure on some of his less fortunate patients. He'd written several learned manuscripts concerning disorders of the mind and advocated trepanning as an excellent way of releasing the evil spirits from inside his patients' heads.
                                                                                  


Unfortunately, the burr holes which Sir Brodie drilled into their skulls usually brought about an agonising death, recalled Sir Richard, and often sooner rather than later. What a brute of a monster! And Crichton-Cruikshank lost his accreditation as a physician following his several valiant attempts to silence the voices inside Lady Pamela Carstairs' wrinkled noddle. His fall from grace occurred after she leapt, sans ses culottes and with blood pouring from her ears, onto the high altar of St. Athernase Church in Leuchars. What a tragic joke!
Sir Richard was appalled to think that as one of Edinburgh's top law officials, Crichton-Cruikshank was able to use his previous knowledge as a physician and his expertise on 'disorders of the mind' to good effect when questioning and torturing criminals and potential witnesses.
A combination of trepanning and Lackland's Revenge is the best way of putting paid to traitors to the king,” Sir Brodie would say. “The fools are left bereft of their balls as well as their senses.”

                                                                                

The Pretorium, sometimes referred to as the Tollbooth, was attached to the north-west corner of St. Giles Cathedral, to give easy access for the Holy Inquisitors wishing to observe the frolics in the Crimsonwood Chamber below.
Grimwald 'Grimy' Grunwald, one of the Sheriff-Depute's heftiest retainers, ushered Sir Richard straight up the marble staircase to Crichton-Cruikshank's third floor office.
I still have fond memories of the time we met in Cracow, Sire,” said Grimy, wiping the sweat off his forehead. “After partaking of the enormously strong Polish ale, we fell head over heels into a drunken heap.”
I don't know how the Polaks manage to keep their heads straight,” replied Sir Richard, with a gracious smile. “I'm glad that I persuaded you to become a Scottish one.”
And all the better for it,” replied Grimy, squeezing his crucifix.
Sheriff-Depute Brodie Crichton-Cruikshank was a clean-shaven, pink-skinned, portly, pate-headed man in his early fifties whose lips seemed fixated in a permanent sneer. Visitors could be forgiven for wondering whether he possessed the mind of a pig, since his snout bore a passing resemblance to the tail of one of the sweaty beasts.
Sir Richard thought that the sheriff-depute was a parody of the politicians and oligarchs of that foul nature who had abused the more sensitive throughout the ages.
His personality is so gushing, recalled the kindly knight, that the mannies veer away and keep their backs to the wall in fear of a squall.

When Sir Richard entered Sir Brodie's spartan 'Orchard of Eden Room,' he did so with a feeling of distaste, because of all the scandalous events which had reportedly occurred there.
Crichton-Cruikshank's sneer turned briefly into a frosty smile.
Why it's the Knight of the Hospice at Soutra,” spieled the loquacious sheriff-depute, cutting a chunk off his stuffed lamprey. “Give me the names of ten more evil fugitives from justice, and I'll ask the king to appoint you to the Order of the Mighty Doom. But methinks you may be one of the doomed yourself.”
What's the sly bugger getting at? wondered Sir Richard, with a twitch of his ears. He thinks in terms of rings within rings and plots within plots.
You jest, I would hope, Sir,” replied the courteous knight. “I remain a faithful servant to the king, and may God protect the right. However, only slender pickings during my most recent trip to the House of the Holy Trinity, I'm afraid. A shady, long-nosed gulsh wearing stinking wolfskins and his ugly, fair-haired sidekick. They trailed me and my good squire back as far as Pathhead. The gulsh is now bereft of his left hand.”
The Lord be praised,” responded the sheriff-depute, somewhat surlily. “The gulsh is the Roller of Shotts and his sidekick is Rim Spit of Lanark. They're spies for the foul Burgundians, and we're still waiting for their foolish plot to broaden.”
I'm sure that they will be drawn and quartered in the Grassmarket before the fall of the Autumn leaves.”
The portly sheriff-depute spat an eye of the lamprey out onto the barren boards of the floor and took a munch of a rosy River Eden apple. “I will devour their offal myself. But did you and your fancy squire discover anything else of interest while you were frolicking with the nuns at Soutra? I would have enjoyed watching your sturdy Cedric de Porthos getting his cod-pouch twisted around his neck by the raven-headed mother superior.”
Scant else,” replied Sir Richard, “though I was honoured by the company of the fair Lady Fiona McLachlan. Her noble husband is bestricken with St. Cornelius's Lurge, and I promised to represent her interests to you on her behalf.”
Crichton-Cruikshank's cruel eyes narrowed. “That evil bizzom poisoned her husband's boiled goose with a spider and snail potion. The Lord of Comely Brae is a faithful Knight of the Royal Bedchamber, and our gracious King James sits and pines for his grovelling Schlosshund's fast fading life. Lady Fiona will burn at the stake for her abominations after her own guts have been packed with lice!”
I'm sure there has been a mistake. She's a wondrous lady.”
She associates with your evil, scheming cousin Sir Leofric de Liddell at Dalhousie Castle. I'll throw all of your confounded relatives to rot in a cesspit as soon as I can set my hands on them.”
Sir Richard gulped, and almost choked. “Methinks the worthy lord caught his malady from the tarts in the Cowgate, with whom he did to my knowledge frequently frequent.”
Beware stupid knight lest we fill you with slugs and worms, for all the plots and intrigue that besmirch your unholy life!”
How dare you, Sir! My only loyalties are to Almighty God, the King, and to Scotland, a proud nation before God and of the Sang Royale itself.”
Perchance I spoke too fast and should not too quickly associate you with the guilt of your treasonous relatives,” Crichton-Cruikshank ponderously conceded, unslitting his eyes. “I will send a Sergeant-at-Arms to arrest Lady Fiona on the Soutra. She will be pinned to the back of the camel Saladin and paraded along the High Street from the Canongate for all to deride and deface.”
Prithee! Mercy, I beg you.”
I am merciless to the core, a trait which our good Lord honours me with. The evil temptress will be interrogated in the Crimsonwood Chamber forthwith, and tried by ordeal on the Nor Loch as a witch.”
May I attend her interrogation? I'm sure that the truth will become evident as soon as she opens her sweet-smelling mouth.”
The sheriff-depute frowned, fleetingly, and snarled. “If you are still in one piece yourself.”
Sir Richard scowled. “On that note, I bid you guten Nacht, König Schweinehund. I am away to my mistress the Lady Ingibiorg whose munificence is that of La Vièrge Marie herself.”
Crichton-Cruikshank, who did not fully comprehend the Deutsch language and thought that schwein translated to princely, grinned sneeringly.
Await one moment, noble knight. I am about to descend my secret spiral staircase to the Crimsonwood Chamber to interrogate a felon who impaled a worthy citizen on the spiked railings which protect the Grey Friary. Would you, perchance, care to accompany me? You might be able to suggest a question of benefit to the prosecution of this case.”
Sir Richard sighed, heavily. “Perchance I would, but I beg you to ask your questions with all speediness and to spare us the red-hot poker of Pontefract.”
That English relic will be kept chained to the fireplace,” promised the sheriff-depute, with a throat-warbling chuckle. “Queen Isabella's Revenge and blood-eagling are for regal assassins, not common or garden murderers however felonious they may be.”
You are a highly educated man,” Sir Richard sardonically replied.
I attended the High School of Dundee, where Wallace was a pupil before he shafted the English. I am of a pedigree of the highest order.”

                                                                  

The hefty Polak Grimy Grunwald kicked away the rats as Sir Richard and the sheriff-depute descended the damp, limestone hewn spiral staircase which had been part of Loth's Tower before the Pretorium replaced it.
When they arrived in the well-lit Crimsonwood Chamber, once the very deep Dungeon of Aed, a couple of plump sheriff's officers with painted faces and dressed as Pictish priestesses were lazily poking a hairy, pear-shaped prisoner of otherwise non-descript appearance with their pikes. The outrageously noisy fellow was writhing in a pool of his own blood inside a huge, circular, green porcelain-tiled bowl, and there were two gaping burr holes in his forehead.
The sheriff-depute prodded the prisoner with his mahogany walking stick. “Why did you murder the elderly pawnbroker with such nastiness, cretin that you are? It wasn't his fault that he was rich and mean-hearted.”
He'd kept my pot of pomade,” groaned the prisoner, his nose spewing mucus and his burr holes emitting a thick yellow post-surgical flux.
Why didn't you pay him his pound and his interest for it?”
Nought in plate,” gurgled the prisoner
Sizzling frying pan, Grimy!”
Here she comes, Sir Brodie, right on the nail,” replied Grimy, waving Robert the Bruce's favourite frying pan around his gargantuan head.
My best friends call me Chick,” mithered Sir Brodie.
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaarg!” shrieked the prisoner, when the pan smacked against his now sizzling belly with a loud clap. .
Why in Heaven's name was it worth killing one of God's people for the price of a pot of pomade?” inquired Sir Richard, quite sympathetically.
Sard!” shrieked the prisoner, now nearing the end of his tether.
Sir Brodie licked his chops. “Let's rid one more confounded priest of his misery.”
And after further horrific indignities, the Holy Father died from shock.
The physicians of the Pharaohs couldn't have done it better, Chick,” exclaimed Grimy, looking most impressed.

Sir Richard borrowed a Hebridean lantern from Grimy to light his way home more clearly. The dark nooks and crannies were alarmingly frightening during the wee small hours when the bog serpents came out to play, and that nicht was no exception.
When the doughty knight emerged onto the largely empty Queen Maud Walk, he began to feel more at ease with the world. But as he approached Kitty Corner, he saw two heads sticking out from behind a large, noxious rubbish box. They were the ubiquitous Troubadour from Arbroath, no less, and Rim Spit, the fair haired, good-for-nothing hempie who Sir Richard had last spotted in the Market Place by St. Giles Cathedral.
Even though I walk through the Vale of Death, I will not be afraid of the ghouls,” chanted Sir Richard, as the motley duo fled into the shadows of the night, “for you are with me and comfort me with your rod and staff, Lord Jesus.”
Goddam it! he agonized. If only they would translate the Old Testament from the Hebrew. Even Gaelic would be preferable.
When Sir Richard approached his mansion, a party-goer dressed as a Hebridean storm hag ran out of the rectory next door.
                                                                                  


Come savour the thrills within here, handsome knight,” snarled the hag. “Better to your innards than the chills within there.”
Begone, devilish besom!” roared Sir Richard, but as he approached his front door, the mysterious lass Adaira McTaggart burst out, hair awry and face white in trance. She ran, totally mute, across the road and away through the dark-outlined trees by the meadow.
Sir Richard hurriedly entered his house, only to hear his good wife groaning in anguish from up the stairs. The bold knight promptly drew his sword Vindicta and ran frantically to the higher floor. When he entered Lady Ingibiorg's boudoir, she was lying on her huge, white feather four-poster bed, her face mottled green and black. On the floor lay an upturned goblet, its spilt contents still tearing holes into the rug, is odour mixing the scent of claret with a much more fearsome smell.
Lady Ingibiorg's fair body was concealed by the sprawling body of Cedric de Porthos, his skin stained with black blotches and red spots from his neck down to his sturdy thighs.
The sea-monster poisoned poor me,” moaned Lady Ingibiorg, with a flick of her yellowy-brown eyelids.
Who, dearest one?” wailed Sir Richard, in utter shock.
Cedric bestirred himself from his coma, and raised his head slightly.
Twas the heathen in the cloak,” he whimpered.
Please do not die, my precious ones,” howled Sir Richard, dropping his sword. “You are all that there is in the world to me.”
Cedric sobbed, and puckered his now ghoulish, dark green lips. “Kiss me, dearest Zeus.”
Sir Richard twisted Cedric's head in his direction, yelped, “Yes, Aphrodite!” and thrust his tongue into his much-loved squire's poisonous mouth and towards his gaping Aquitanian tonsils.
Cedric quivered, but after a few seconds his throat began to rattle like a timber snake. His body quaked several times in the throes of death, and, all of a sudden, he went limp in his good knight's arms as his soul sped to Elysium.
Aaaaaarg!” howled Sir Richard, extricating his tongue.
He's still within me,” moaned Lady Ingibiorg.
Away with ye, ghoulish prophecies!” howled Sir Richard, tearing his hair.
Come to me,” begged Lady Ingibiorg.
Sir Richard spewed over the fluffy bolster before standing up and seizing Cedric by his bulging, seriously swollen, crimson ankles. He contrived, with some difficulty, to pull the muscular Frenchman's once beautiful torso back a foot or so, and succeeded in rolling it off his struggling wife until it was beside her, like a sea-demon, on the bed. The smell was excruciating rare.
Take me,” whispered Lady Ingibiorg, “to Eternity.”
The forbearing knight coughed and spluttered as he ungirded his loins. “I am here for you, my darling.”
Lady Ingibiorg simpered as the juices flowed. But when she screeched in ecstasy, her entire body began to flutter like a butterfly as her husband pressed ever forwards from within.
What is this darkness?” she groaned, going limp as a stuffed goose, and she was gone to meet Freya in her palace in Fólkvangr.
Zounds!” screamed Sir Richard.
Where art thou, triangle of love? he lamented.

                                                                       



                                                          BACK TO CONTENTS
                                                  CHAPTER 4



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Reborn on Soutra: CONTENTS, FEATURES, AND REVIEWS

                                                                  REBORN ON SOUTRA                                                        ...