A Maze of Murders
Kathryn Swinbrooke #6
By Paul Dohert as C. L. Grace
Reviewed August 13, 2023
It’s August 1473.
Sir Walter Maltravers of Ingoldby Hall in Canterbury is a man with a violent and troubled past. He was serving in the bodyguard of the Byzantine emperor, Constantine XI Palaeologus, during the Ottoman siege of Constantinople in 1453, barely escaping with his life when the city fell and the emperor was slain, taking with him what treasure he could including a sacred relic, the Lacrima Christi, the tears of blood said to have been shed by Christ that, when they touched the ground, turned into priceless rubies.
Upon returning to England after the fall of Constantinople, Maltravers joins the Yorkist army under Edward of March (or as he’s referred to in this story, Edward of York) and participates in the bloody battle of Towton, where the soldiers under his command massacre a group of prisoners who had surrendered, decapitating them and putting their heads on pikes.
Giving up his martial ways, Sir Walter uses the treasure he brought from Constantinople to help him settle down and become a successful merchant, accumulating more wealth along the way. He buys Ingoldby Hall, marries a beautiful young woman half his age, donates the Lacrima Christi to the chantry chapel of St Michael and All the Angels Church, but still his soul is troubled.
On the grounds of Ingoldby Hall is a maze, in the center of which is a cross called the Weeping Cross. Every Friday, as part of his self-imposed acts of contrition, Sir Walter makes his way on his knees through the maze to the Cross. Then, one Friday, he never returns. His body is later found at the center of the maze, his head struck off and nowhere to be found. Several nights later, part of the maze is set on fire, and in the light of the blaze can be seen Sir Walter’s head, stuck on a pole.
Is this murder an act of revenge against Sir Walter by the legendary Athanatoi, the legendary Byzantine military unit that was said to hunt down those they felt betrayed the Emperor at the fall of Constanople? Is it somehow connected to the massacre of the prisoners at Towton?
More deaths ensue, and the Lacrima Christi disappears. Now it’s up to Kathryn Swinbrooke and Colum Murtaugh, the King’s Man in Canterbury, to get to the root of the matter. This is another well put together story with many different threads woven together as we follow Kathryn and Colum track down the often puzzling clues.