'He's trying to divert attention, sir. There is a long history of smuggling here, finished cloth carried through the marsh and shipped to France in fishing boats. But why would one of those people want to kill the king's commissioner? He had no brief to investigate smuggling. Did he?' I noticed a sudden worried look in his eyes.
'No indeed. And neither have I, unless those activities should be relevant to Master Singleton's death. My feeling is the killer came from inside the monastery.'
He looked relieved. 'If landlords were allowed to enclose more land for sheep, that would bring more profit to the town and people would not turn to smuggling. There are too many small farmers doubling as weavers.'
'Apart from any smuggling there may be, is the town loyal? No trouble with extreme sectarians, for example, no witchcraft hereabouts? You know the monastery was desecrated?'
He shook his head. 'Nothing. I'd know, I've five paid informers. A lot of people don't like the new ways, but they keep their heads down. The biggest complaints have been about the abolition of saints' days, but that's only because they were holidays. And I've never heard of practitioners of the black arts hereabouts.'
'No hot gospellers? No one who has read the Bible and seen some mysterious prophecy only he can fulfil?'
'Like those German Anabaptists who would kill the rich and hold all goods in common? They should be burned. But there's none of that here. There was a moonstruck forgemaster's apprentice last year, preaching the Day of Judgement was come, but we set him in the stocks then cleared him out. He's in gaol now, where he belongs. Preaching in English is one thing, but allowing the Bible to blockish servants and peasants will fill England with makebates.'
I raised an eyebrow. 'You are among those who consider only heads of households should be allowed to read the Bible?'
'There is much to be said for that view, sir.'
'Well, the papists would allow it to nobody. But to return to the subject of the monastery, I read there has been a history of ill-doings there. Sinful acts between the monks.'
Copynger snorted with disgust. 'That still goes on, I'm sure. The sacrist, Brother Gabriel, he was one of them and he's still there.'
'Was anyone from the town involved?'
'No. But there are fornicators at that place as well as sodomites. Women servants from Scarnsea have suffered at their filthy hands. No woman under thirty would work there, not since one young girl went missing altogether.'
'Oh?'
'An orphan from the poorhouse who went to work for the infirmarian. Two years ago. She used to come back and visit the town, then suddenly she stopped coming. When enquiries were made Prior Mortimus said she'd stolen some gold cups and run away. Joan Stumpe, the poorhouse keeper, was convinced something had happened to her. But she's an old busybody, and there was no proof.'
'She worked for the infirmarian?' Mark spoke up, a note of anxiety in his voice.
'Yes. The black goblin we call him. You'd think all Englishmen had work, giving a post to a man like that.'
I reflected a moment. 'Might I talk to this Mistress Stumpe?'
'You have to take what she says with a peck of salt. But she should be at the poorhouse now. There's a dole day at the monastery tomorrow, she'll be getting ready for it.'
'Then let us seize the hour,' I said, rising. Copynger called for a servant to fetch our coats.
'Sir,' Mark said to the magistrate as we were waiting. 'There is a young girl working for the infirmarian now, one Alice Fewterer.'
'Oh yes, I remember.'
'I understand she had to get work because the family's land was enclosed for sheep. I know the Justices have oversight of the enclosure laws; I wondered if it was all done legally? Whether something might be done for her?'
Copynger raised his eyebrows. 'I
I gave Mark a warning look. 'I'm sure you did everything properly, sir,' I said soothingly.
'The thing that would profit the people of this town,' Copynger said, a cold eye on Mark, 'would be to close the monastery, throw out the lot of them and pull down those idol-filled buildings. And if the town has an extra burden of poor relief in the shape of a load of unemployed abbey-lubbers, I'm sure Master Cromwell would agree it was right for some monastery lands to be granted to prominent citizens.'
'Speaking of Lord Cromwell, he has stressed the importance of keeping what has happened quiet for now.'
'I've told no one, sir, and none of the monks has been to town.'
'Good. The abbot has been told not to talk of it too. But some of the monastery servants will have contacts in Scarnsea.'
He shook his head. 'Very few. They keep apart, the townspeople like the abbey-lubbers no more than the monks.'