Illuminations: A Novel of Hildegard Von Bingen (4 page)

BOOK: Illuminations: A Novel of Hildegard Von Bingen
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Meginhard shrugged and was about to saunter away when he caught me staring. I ducked my head, but it was too late. He closed in, wrapping his bear arms around me.
His sister won’t laugh at his jokes, so he’ll amuse himself with me instead.
I decided I didn’t mind—it was better than being completely ignored.

“Do you know anything about Saint Disibod?” he asked, his beery breath fanning my cheek. “He who gave his name to your monastery?”

“He was from Ireland,” I said, proud to show off my knowledge. Of course, Jutta had already told me the saint’s story. “He came here five hundred years ago. He was a missionary.”

“Clever girl,” Meginhard said, his fingers strumming through my hair. “You want to know something else?”

Ignoring Jutta who sobbed in her mother’s arms, I nodded.

“If it wasn’t for the Irish missionaries, we’d still be heathen,” he said, his voice so fiery that I felt its flames licking me. “Just imagine.”

That he would say something so sacrilegious! I grinned at the forbidden thrill.

“Gutting stallions for Old One-Eye and sacrificing goats to his son, the Thunderer,” Meginhard went on.

He was saying this just to test me, to see if I would burst into tears as Jutta would do, but I wouldn’t give him the satisfaction. I’d prove then and there I wasn’t some weepy wet rag like his sister.

“He’ll pollute Hildegard!” Jutta wailed to her mother.

“Stop filling that child’s head with nonsense!” the countess told Meginhard.

Mother only smiled her blandest smile. I felt ashamed of her then—she wouldn’t dare reprove the likes of Meginhard von Sponheim, no matter what he said or did. He could set the barge on fire and boil his sister in oil, and still my mother would stand there and do nothing.

“And if the Irish missionaries had never come to this country,
you,
” Meginhard said, pinching my cheek, “wouldn’t be sent off to a monastery to be walled in and left to rot.”

Walled in.
Those two words struck me with a greater horror than any yarn he could have spun of heathen gods. But then I burst out laughing, shaking till the tears sprang from my eyes. Meginhard, that joker! To think that for a moment I had nearly believed him. Still giggling, I looked to my mother, but she dipped her head and turned away.

 

At the place where the Nahe and Glan rivers meet, a tall forested hill arose from the mist—Mount Disibod, where the saint once lived. Stout walls and a squat church tower capped the promontory like a crude crown.

At the landing, the Abbot of Disibodenberg stood alongside Archbishop Ruthard of Mainz to welcome the countess and her holy daughter. As joyous as a bride on her wedding day, Jutta glided off that barge, her palms raised heavenward. Behind Jutta came her brother, now forgotten, outshone by the eighty monks who formed a ring behind their abbot. A parade of servants bore the trunks containing her dowry.

Mother took my hand, tugging me in the wake of Jutta’s entourage. Like a sapling in a storm, I swayed, my heart hammering in such panic that I thought it might stop. I was afraid to even look at those monks who now controlled my destiny. Could Mother not see that I wasn’t the least bit pious, that I was just a grimy girl balking like a mule?

“Take me home to Walburga,” I pleaded.

If Mother could not endure the shame of my refusal to take holy orders, I’d go off and live with my nurse. I’d wear the rough, undyed wool of the lowest peasants and toil in the fields if that was what it took to break free of that monastery looming in the mist.

“You’re giddy with excitement,” Mother said, her arm around my shoulder. “Come along, darling. Jutta will look after you. Her mother has been so generous, paying your sisters’ dowries. We remain in her debt.”

Rorich pulled a face, trying to coax a smile from me. I could have scratched out his eyes. Behind him, a servant heaved my single dowry chest off the barge.

The path, snaking steeply uphill, took us through a tunnel of trees, bare autumn branches knit overhead to block out the sky.
Walled in.
Meginhard’s words pricked me. What if he had been telling the truth? Those two words fell like boulders crushing my lungs. Already I felt as though I were trapped inside some tight, close place. The trees fell away, the path curving through a sheep meadow and then a garden flanked by orchards. Fog enclosed everything, obscuring any view of the surrounding countryside. I knew without anyone telling me that this was a remote place, chosen for its very seclusion—no villages or farmsteads for miles. Tomorrow, when it was over, Mother, Rorich, and Jutta’s kin would board the barge and sail back into the land of the living. But I would never be allowed to leave.

When those gates closed behind me with the clang of iron and the thud of oak, my heart plummeted, a bird pierced by an arrow. The monastery was in shambles, half-ruined, its stone walls pocked and cracking, as though foreign armies had sacked it. The crumbling church with its eight-sided tower, chapel, refectory, kitchen, and ramshackle dormitories jostled together within the confines of those walls clinging to the hilltop. Eighty monks made this place their home. How could they squeeze another two bodies inside this place?

Even Mother looked as though she were having second thoughts about abandoning me here. I clung to her hand, silently imploring,
Change your mind!
But before I could put my terror into speech, Abbot Adilhum appeared, his head bowed as if he were offering himself as Mother’s bondsman.

“My lady, as I was telling the countess, this monastery, once the hermitage of holy Disibod, has been in decline for many years. We hope to restore it to give honor to our saint. I offer my thanks to you, noble Mechthild, who have come with God’s blessing to allow us to accomplish this task and make it a home worthy of your daughter.”

I gaped at Rorich, who stared back and shook his head in disgust. Like me, he could see right through the abbot. The man was eager to welcome Jutta and me because our dowries would fill his empty coffers.

 

When we gathered for supper in the guesthouse, my mother seemed so astounded at the glory of sharing a table with the archbishop that I feared she might swoon. Likewise, Jutta seemed enraptured, as though she had just arrived in the holy city of Jerusalem. The archbishop praised her as if she were covered in gold.

“Blessed are the anchorites who live beneath the church eaves,” said Ruthard of Mainz, “for they uphold the entire structure of the church with their blessed prayers and holy lives. For this reason you are called anchorites—you are like an anchor under the Church, which is the ship of faith, and you hold it steady so that all Satan’s huffing and blowing can’t pitch it over.”

Our meal was spare: the river fish Rorich and Meginhard had caught; millet, beans, and carrots from the gardens; the monks’ cheese, made from the milk of their sheep; and cloudy apple wine from their orchards.

Rorich, famished from the journey, wolfed down his portion with a greed that made the prior stare. While she would have indulged him at home, Mother cringed to see Rorich gorging in the presence of the archbishop.

“Son, mind yourself. Gluttony is the mother of all other sins.”

I wished I could offer him the food on my trencher, which I could not bring myself to eat. My stomach was a cauldron of seething bile. If I took one bite, I feared I would spew.

Jutta did not eat a morsel, only sipped well water from an earthenware cup. Such peace shone on her face. She looked as though she were some angelic being who didn’t need food to sustain herself the way ordinary mortals did.

Before me, I saw the floating orbs, which left me faint and fuzzy headed. There they came again, my cursed visions that had left me unmarriageable, cast out, only fit to offer companionship to a mad girl.

After reproving Rorich for his appetite, Mother turned to me, begging me to eat, her eyes moist as though she were fighting tears.

“Please, darling, just a few bites. You’ll need your strength for the ceremony.”

 

At dusk on the Eve of All Souls, the rite began.

In our guesthouse chamber, I froze, bare feet on the cold stone floor, as Jutta tugged my earthly garments over my head and let them tumble to the ground.

“You don’t need these anymore,” she told me.

She wore nothing but a death shroud of sackcloth woven from the coarsest, scratchiest goat hair. As goose pimples rose on my naked flesh, Jutta made me raise my arms so that she could fit an identical shroud over my body. The goat hair dug into me, making me want to claw my skin to relieve the itch.

Jutta then bowed her head as low as it could hang and shuffled out of the room, leaving me to shuffle after her. We processed to the abbatial church, alight with tapers as though a funeral were underway.

At the west end of the church lay a bed of black earth strewn with bare branches and dead leaves. Jutta flung herself belly down in the dirt.
Dust to dust.
I bridled, my stomach lurching. I remembered the story of Saint Ursula, the murdered virgins, the rotting flesh, and then it struck me like a blow, the full weight of what it meant to be an anchorite. The funeral tapers, the bed of earth—this night I was to
die.
To be buried with Christ.

Seeking out Mother, who watched with the rest of the congregation, I mouthed the words
Save me.
Weeping in earnest, she stepped toward me while my heart pounded in hope. But her gaze left me mute. It was as though she had taken a silken thread and sewed my lips shut so I could only mewl, as weak as a kitten, not sob or wail or rage. Taking my hands, Mother guided me downward into that dirt.

“It’s God’s will,” she whispered. “We must
all
obey those who stand above us.”

With trembling hands, she arranged my prone body until at last I lay corpse-still beside Jutta.

Holy water fell on my back like rain, wetting me through the prickly hair shirt. Incense and the stink of dank earth filled my nose. Finally the archbishop commanded Jutta and me to stand. Numb, my head ringing, I staggered to my feet and chanted the words they told me to chant.

Abbot Adilhum gave Jutta and me burning candles to hold in each hand.

“One for your love of God,” he said, as the hot wax dripped down to sear my fingers. “One for your love of your neighbors.”

I felt no love at all, only shuddering emptiness.

The monks sang
Veni creator.
At the abbot’s prompting, I mumbled, “
Suspice me, Domine.

Receive me, Lord.
I placed my candles on the altar before hurling myself back into the grave dirt beside Jutta. My ears burned as the monks chanted what even I recognized as the Office of the Dead.

“Rise, my daughters,” said the archbishop, leading us out of the church and into our tomb, our sepulcher, the narrow cell built onto the edge of the church.

My eyes flooded as he swung his incense thurible round and round. There was only the low doorway and no windows, save for the screen that faced into the church and the revolving hatch where the monks could pass in food to Jutta and me without our even seeing who stood outside. Mother and Rorich were already lost to me in the courtyard, chanting along with the monks.
I’ll never see their faces again.

“Here I will stay forever,” Jutta sang. “This is the home I have chosen.”

I choked and coughed as the archbishop sprinkled ash on us. Every part of my body shriveled as he spoke the Rite of Extreme Unction, reserved for those on their deathbed.

“Obey God,” he told us before leaving our cell.

Tears slid from my eyes as I watched the lay brothers brick up the doorway that Jutta and I had passed through but would never be allowed to exit.
Walled in.
Only Meginhard had been honest about what was to become of me, and I’d just laughed in his face. This was what Walburga couldn’t bring herself to tell me, why she had howled in protest and sobbed over me. As Jutta murmured her prayers, I lay rigid on that cold stone floor as though I were truly a corpse in my crypt.

When the last brick was laid in its place, blocking every hope of escape, Jutta took my hands and pulled me to my feet. In the light of the single taper the monks had left us, I saw her smile.

“My dearest dream has been made real,” she said.

At that, she blew out the taper. Coffin-darkness enclosed us.

3

M
Y FIRST NIGHT
in the anchorage seemed to last forever. At some point I must have fallen asleep, for I awakened with a swallowed scream to disembodied chanting. A faint glow came from the screen looking into the church and that square of light framed a black shape that might have been Jutta, or even a demon straight from the depths of the damned. I quaked, too frightened to move, as the chanting went on and on.

 

When night finally waned, a fragile glimmering beckoned around the edges of a drapery. Scraping the crust of sleep from my eyes, I scrambled to my feet before casting a look at Jutta who slept on, slumped on her knees before the screen looking into the church. When I turned away from her and pushed the curtain aside, the gray half-light seemed strong enough to blind me.

The drapery had concealed a doorway leading into another small chamber graced with a high window, its panes made of polished horn. Glory of glories, beneath that window was a low door. My heart exploded. Had I discovered my escape? Could I flee into the forest, follow the river to find my way back to Rorich and Walburga? A band of robbers might adopt me, teach me how to steal through the woodland, my feet falling as silently as a deer’s. They would teach me to shoot arrows straight into the heart.

With one backward glance at sleeping Jutta, I let the curtain fall back into place and crept to that door. Palms sweating, I undid the wooden latch, tugged it open, and rushed through. Scabby stone walls reared around me, as high as a tall man standing on another man’s shoulders. This was no passage to freedom, only a narrow courtyard with a smelly drain and broken cobblestones. But when I arched my neck as far back as it would go, I saw the pale morning sky, as blue as Walburga’s eyes. As blue as hope.

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