I just happened to read two medieval mysteries, by different authors, back-to-back. They had several similarities: they took place within 17 years of each other (although under different reigns of Kings of England,) both "detectives" suffered an arrow wound and neither mystery was satisfactorily resolved!
In this one, the pace was slower, but somehow more in keeping with the times than the other, "Serpent in the Thorns," which tried to update the middle ages into a more modern setting. Here we are confronted with the beating death of a "chapman," or "peddlar," as we would call him, who lives just long enough to utter some last words about his assailants "not getting his coin." The detective in this series, is Hugh de Singleton, who has at least two major responsibilities to his employer, Sir Gilbert Talbot: that of Bailiff, (the highest position on a manor,) and personal surgeon; in addition, Hugh also serves as investigator when dead bodies appear, not only on his lord's manor, but anywhere in the environs!
After many frustrating failed attempts to capture the known miscreants, Hugh & his assistants find other people to rescue, such as a kidnapped damsel, a battered old crone and a hapless villein who wants to run away long enough to become a freedman.
Despite their best efforts, they never do bring the murderers to trial or find the source of the ancient coins that the chapman gave his life for, but Hugh performs an interesting surgery and sets up Osbert, the would-be freedman, with a convenient widow!
The emphasis on the food of the times was good, at first, but then it seemed that the author was just trying to show-off his knowledge of esoteric dishes as well as other medieval terms which often jarred in the otherwise smooth flow of the narrative.
A mildly entertaining book with some flaws.