upstairs to look at my commonplace books, notes on cases and aspects of the law going back to my student days. I needed to refresh my mind on the rules and procedures of the Court of Wards. First, though, I thought about Coldiron. I half-wished I had dismissed him in the garden, but it occurred to me that if I did and then had to go to Hampshire, there would be nobody left in charge of the house and the two boys except Guy, and it would be unfair to leave that responsibility with him. Better to set enquiries about possible stewards in motion round Lincolnâs Inn tomorrow, and make sure I had someone to take his place before dismissing him. Yet Josephine worried me; I did not want to cast her out into the world with nobody but Coldiron. I cursed the day I had taken him on.
I spent the rest of the evening making notes, calling down to Coldiron to bring a candle as the light faded. I heard Josephineâs footsteps pattering up the stairs: she brought in a candle, set it on my desk, and left with a quick curtsey. Her steps descended again, pitter, pitter, pitter.
At length I stopped writing and sat back to think. Master Hobbey had begun by purchasing a portion of this tract of woodland plus the monastic buildings, which he had converted into a house, then he had bought the childrenâs wardship. The capital outlay for all these transactions would have been large, even for a prosperous merchant. It would be interesting to find out the sums involved. Emma, Bess Calfhill said, had not liked young David Hobbey; but my reading had made clear that only in the most exceptional circumstances would the court consider an appeal by a ward against a proposed marriage. The marriage partner would have to be far below her in social class, or a criminal, or diseased or deformed-I noted wryly that a hunchback counted - for the Court of Wards to disallow the marriage on the basis of âdisparagementâ.
But Emma had died, and if that was Hobbeyâs plan it had come to naught. Her inheritance would have passed to Hugh and though by one of the lawâs oddities a girl, if unmarried, could apply to have her wardship ended at fourteen, a boy could not âsue out his liveryâ until the age of twenty-one. According to Bess, seven years ago Hugh had been eleven; he would be eighteen now - three years till he could come into his lands.
I got up and paced the floor. Until Hugh was twenty-one Hobbey would be entitled only to the normal income his lands brought in, and if it was woodland there would be no income from rents. Yet, as I had told Barak, the owners of wardships were notorious for âwastingâ the lands of their wards, selling and profiting from assets like woodland and mining rights.
A book on my shelf caught my eye: Roderick Morsâs Lamentation of a Christian Against the City of London , a diatribe against the cityâs social evils that had belonged to my friend Roger. I opened it, remembering there was a passage about wardship: âGod confound that wicked custom; for it is too abominable, and stinks from the earth to heaven, it is so vile.â
I closed the book and looked out over my garden. It was nearly dark; the window was open and the scent of lavender came up to me. I heard the bark of a fox, a flutter of wings somewhere. I thought, I could almost be in the countryside, back on the farm where I grew up. At that moment it was hard to believe the country was embroiled in crisis; armed men marching, armies forming, ships gathering in the Channel.
NEXT MORNING I walked down Chancery Lane to catch a boat to Westminster Stairs. Crossing Fleet Street, I saw someone had placed handwritten posters all over the Temple Bar, calling on the mayor to beware âpriests and strangersâ that would set fire to London. The weather was even stickier this morning; the sky had taken on a yellow, sulphurous look. I turned into Middle Temple Lane and followed the narrow passageway downhill between the