deep breath. âIf I might suggest, sir, thatâs not good for discipline. Women are like soldiers, they need to obey their superiors.â
âGet out,â I said irritably. âIâve enough to attend to here.â
Coldironâs single eye widened for a moment with anger, but he obeyed and followed his daughter back to the kitchen. The boys, who had been grinning, fled before him. I turned back to Tamasin. âAre you all right?â
âOf course. There was no need for him to speak to her like that. Poor girl.â
Guy appeared, walking slowly down the stairs, drying his hands on a towel. âAre you feeling better, Tamasin?â he asked.
âAll well now.â Tamasin struggled to her feet, Barak hastening to help.
âTell her, Dr Malton,â Barak appealed. âTell her she was stupid to walk here unaccompanied.â
Guy leaned down and felt her brow. âYou are very overheated, Tamasin. That is no good thing when you are with child.â
âAll right, I wonât walk out alone again.â She looked at Barak. âI promise.â
âMay I examine Tamasin in your study, Matthew?â Guy asked.
âOf course. Jack, I would like a word with you,â I added quickly as he made to follow Guy and his wife. Tamasin shot me a grateful smile over her shoulder. Reluctantly, he followed me into the parlour.
I shut the door, bade him sit, and took a stool facing him.
âWeâve some urgent work,â I said.
âThe Queen?â
âYes.â
His eyes lit up with interest as I told him of my meeting with the Queen and Bess. âThe Lady Elizabeth was there when I arrived,â I added.
âWhat is she like?â
âAstonishingly clever. The Queen and she are like mother and daughter.â I smiled, then frowned. âAfterwards I met two old acquaintances. Rich and Thomas Seymour. I think they knew I was there,â I concluded. âI think they were waiting for me to come out, to taunt me.â
âIt was just ill chance. They were probably talking about war business when you appeared. If you go to a cesspit, youâre bound to see some maggots.â
âYouâre right. But Rich has obviously been following my career.â
âItâs no secret youâve acted in cases for the Queen. He probably heard you were coming and decided to have a bit of sport with you.â
âYes. Iâm not important enough for him to take any real interest.â
âIâd heard Rich was a little out of favour.â
âI heard that too. But he is still on the Privy Council. His talents are valued by the King,â I added bitterly.
âPolitics is like dice: the better the player, the worse the man.â
âJack, we need to move fast. This hearing is on Monday.â
âWeâve never dealt with the Court of Wards before.â
âMany of its functions are not those of a court at all. You know the principle of wardship?â
He quoted slowly, a passage remembered from a law book. âIf a man holds land under knight service, and dies leaving minor heirs, the property passes in trust to the King till the ward comes of age or marries.â
âThatâs right.â
âAnd the King has the right to manage the lands, and arrange the marriage of the ward. But in fact he sells the wardships to the highest bidder. Through the Court of Wards.â
âWell remembered. Knight service is an ancient form of tenure which was dying out before the present Kingâs reign. But then the Dissolution of the Monasteries came. And all the seized monastic lands that have been sold have been on terms of knight service. It generated so much wardship business they abolished the old Office of Wards and set up the court. Its main job is money. They check the value of lands subject to wardship through the feodaries, the local officials. Then they negotiate with applicants for the wardship of minor