Authors: Mel Starr
Tags: #Fiction, #Christian, #Historical, #Mystery & Detective
“Will the babe live?”
“The Lord Christ only knows,” I replied. “Mistress Pecham believes him sound, if weak. She is practiced in such matters.”
“But Jane is gone, for the babe to live?”
“Aye. When Mistress Pecham saw that Jane was dead she called for me to take the babe.”
“Then for this, much thanks. Does he live, we may remember the mother by the son.”
The carpenter’s lips drew tightly together. He turned to his wife: “Sent her to an early grave, the wretch!”
I thought it was of the lad who had lain with his daughter that he spoke. “Who is that?” I asked.
“You’ll get no leirwite for Lord Gilbert from the knave.”
“Will you not name the lad?”
“Oh, I’ll name the rogue. Won’t do you nor me nor Jane any good.”
“Who, then?”
“Thomas atte Bridge… him as hanged hisself. An’ well he did, too.”
“Jane named him as the father of her child?” I said, somewhat incredulously. I searched my mind for some memory of Thomas atte Bridge and could summon no feature of the man likely to appeal to a comely maid.
“’E come on her sudden, like, last summer. She were in the forest beyond the Weald, pickin’ blackberries. She tried to cry out, but ’e beat her an’ throttled her an’ had ’is way with her. Knew somethin’ was amiss when she come home… eyes goin’ to black an’ weepin’ an’ no berries.”
“Jane told you what happened?”
“Aye.”
“Why did you not seek me and charge the scoundrel?”
“Jane begged me not. Atte Bridge said to her if she told, ’e’d do worse to her, an’ take revenge upon her family, too.”
I had experience enough of Thomas atte Bridge to know his words no idle threat.
“But when you saw Jane was with child, why then did you not seek justice?”
“Bah. What justice is there for a maid when such befalls her? An’ even did hallmote find against Thomas, ’e’d soon seek us to take vengeance.”
Peter spoke true. Atte Bridge nursed his grudges well. And the carpenter knew also of the prescript, which Galen wrote many centuries past, that a woman will not conceive except she be a willing partner. A lass who is with child cannot therefore accuse a man of rape, and if she does not bear a child any accusation is but the maid’s word against the man’s. Who would believe her but perhaps her father? I wonder if Galen might have been wrong about this. Surely Jane Carpenter did not willingly lie with Thomas atte Bridge.
The carpenter is a large man, his movements ever slow and measured. I had never seen the man hurried in walk or work. His temperament matched his manner. A frown seemed never to cross his face, until this day.
I am a peaceful man. How might I change, sixteen years hence, does Kate bear me a daughter and the lass be set upon by some miscreant like Thomas atte Bridge? Because Jane conceived no court would indict atte Bridge for rape. Galen had said it could not be so. The carpenter’s shop would have many planks of proper size to deliver a blow across a man’s skull. And Peter is strong enough that a stroke from him might render a man senseless. Senseless long enough to haul his body from the Weald to Cow-Leys Corner?
Did Peter’s wife assist, or his lad? Perhaps she or he carried atte Bridge’s feet, and briefly dropped them in the muddy road when the burden grew heavy.
Peter Carpenter, like Hubert Shillside, is a friend. What if I were to discover that one of these indeed murdered Thomas atte Bridge? The mournful thought occupied my mind as Kate and I walked Church View Street to Galen House. On our way we met Martyn the cobbler and Eleanor hurrying from the church. Eleanor carried a pale bundle in her arms. The babe was properly baptized and the outcome now in God’s hands.
Not entirely. How would the babe’s life be altered did I discover that his grandfather had slain his father? I did not wish to think longer of the matter. But it is sure that when a man tries to dismiss a thought it will fix itself in his mind.
The day was far gone when Kate and I returned to Galen House. We ate a cold supper of capon and barley loaf and went silently to our bed. I found no rest, and heard Kate’s steady breathing for much of the night before I fell to sleep some time shortly before Kate’s rooster announced the new day.
Neither Kate nor I had appetite to break our fast. She set ale and a wheaten loaf before me. But I could manage only a small portion of the loaf. I am not usually so afflicted. Hunger can overwhelm my darkest moods, most of the time.
“Will you seek the carpenter’s house this day,” she asked, “to learn if the babe lives?”
“Aye.”
“What fine must they pay?”
“Six pence for leirwite, another six for childwite is common.”
“Common? You say so, but your manner says other.”
I motioned Kate to our bench, placed more wood upon the fire, for it was a chill morn, then sat beside her and told her of Peter Carpenter’s disclosure.
Kate’s lips grew thin as I related the tale, and although the blaze upon our hearth grew warm I sensed a chill come over Kate.
“So a bailiff would make Peter Carpenter pay for the injury done his daughter?”
“Some would, to keep their position. Great lords are always in want. Most would have a shilling from even a pauper could they get it.”
“Is Lord Gilbert Talbot such a man?”
“He will not turn profit away, but I think he would see unfairness in this matter.”
“Think you so?” Kate replied with raised brows.
“He will not return from Pembroke ’til Lammastide. Perhaps he need not know.”
“Or by Lammastide we may know the truth of Thomas atte Bridge’s death.”
She said “we” again. I wished no discord this day, so did not contest the word. I was not long practiced at being a husband, but I am a ready scholar.
N
ext day I found Peter sitting upon the same bench where I had left him. I asked for news of the babe.
“He lives,” he replied, “but cries weakly and does not take the breast of the wet nurse strongly.”
As he spoke a curate and four others darkened the door of the carpenter’s house. They had come to bear Jane to the churchyard.
Jane had been already wrapped in her burial shroud and placed in a coffin. Peter would not see his daughter await the return of the Lord Christ in only a black winding sheet. The curate’s companions carried the coffin from house to street, and I joined the procession which made its way up Church View Street. Kate heard the wailing as we approached and followed as the mourners passed Galen House.
The bearers set Jane down in the lych gate, where Father Thomas awaited the procession. Before the sixth hour mass was said, the grave diggers had completed their work, and Jane Carpenter was awaiting the resurrection of the dead in St Beornwald’s churchyard.
I had little stomach for business in what remained of the day, but busied myself at the castle so as to escape thoughts of recent black events. Next morn, after a loaf and ale, I bid Kate “Good day,” and set out again for the castle. I came upon Peter Carpenter as I passed Rosemary Lane. He had a bag of tools slung over a shoulder and was evidently called to exercise his carpentry skills. Some lives must continue even when others cease.
“A fine day for labor,” I remarked, finding any other subject of conversation uncomfortable.
“Aye. If I keep me hands busy I can keep me thoughts from Jane an’ what befell her. Father Thomas says hate is an evil thing. We are to love others. How can a man love one who ravished his daughter, her but a maid, an’ sent her to her death?”
Choosing a contrary subject for conversation with one who is single-minded is not readily done.
“The Lord Christ commands us to love our enemies,” I replied. “Even those who use us badly.”
“Aye, so the priests say. Don’t say ’ow to do it, though, an’ they don’t have daughters to be despoiled… Well, there be some as do, I suppose.”
“Where does your work take you this day? I will walk with you if it be toward the castle.”
“In the Weald. Some man did hamsoken there while all were thought to be at mass. Broke down the door, an’ I’ve got to place a new door-post an’ set the hinges right.”
“Who was attacked?”
“Philip Mannyng.”
“He is an aged man, is he not?”
“Aye. Keeps to ’is bed most days. Amabil went off to church, an’ come home to find ’im beaten. Senseless, he was.”
“Who did such a thing?”
“Couldn’t say. Amabil asked, of course. He couldn’t remember. Whoso done it took a club to ’is head while ’e was sleepin’. Amabil said as ’e had great lumps on ’is skull an’ ’is nose broke.”
“Did they complain to the vicars?”
“Oh, aye. Father Simon come to see the damage an’ what could be done. Philip could recall nothing.”
“Do Philip and Amabil have enemies in the Weald? They are the bishop’s tenants, so I know little of doings there.”
“Don’t know much of what ’appens in the Weald meself, but never heard anything against ’em. Arnulf is wrathful an’ seeks whoso did it.”
“Arnulf?”
“Arnulf Mannyng, Philip’s son. Has a yardland of the bishop, an’ works ’is father’s lands.”
I tried to fit a face to the name, but could not. Arnulf Mannyng had evidently done nothing to draw the attention of Lord Gilbert Talbot’s bailiff. Probably, like most men, he is content to live a quiet life with wife and children. A man much like Peter Carpenter, perhaps. An attack upon an aged and infirm parent might cause even a placid man to do injury to the assailant. Who would be most angry, I wondered – a man whose daughter was violated to her death, or one whose parent was attacked? I resolved to learn more.
“I will walk with you to the Weald. Keeping the peace there is the vicars’ business, but I would know more of the matter.”
Peter said no more, but a man would not need to be clairvoyant to guess my interest. Together we crossed the bridge over Shill Brook and turned to the lane leading to the Weald. Philip Mannyng’s house stood near the end of the narrow road. To reach it we passed the dwellings of Maud and Emma atte Bridge, two widows who now lived without beatings if also without a husband’s labor at field and hearth. I wondered what they thought of the exchange.
A small, dirty face peered out of the open door of Emma’s hut, but otherwise the houses were silent. That is, until Peter and I had walked twenty paces or so past. Then, of a sudden, we heard feminine voices. Father Thomas, deaf as he is, might have heard them. Indeed, he might have heard them from Mill Street.
The words were indistinct, but the shrieking came from behind the atte Bridge hovels. Peter peered at me from under questioning brows and we halted to better discover the source and meaning of the screeching. Across the lane I saw a woman look out from her open door, shake her head in disgust, then disappear about her work. Her reaction seemed token that such din was not uncommon in the Weald.
Emma and Maud appeared in the space between their tofts to the rear of their houses as we watched. Maud was in retreat, Emma shaking an angry fist in her face. Emma’s oldest son, a strapping lad of fourteen years or so, advanced behind his mother to support her cause in the dispute. She appeared capable of defending her position unaided.
Tenants and villeins in the Weald are the Bishop of Exeter’s concern. I had no wish to place myself between two angry women, especially as the dispute was not my bailiwick. Peter seemed to think likewise. He looked at me, shrugged, and we set off again for Philip Mannyng’s house. We could yet hear Maud and Emma when we stood before Mannyng’s broken door.
Amabil Mannyng opened the fractured door to Peter’s call. The old woman was bent with age, an affliction of her sex common to those who have seen many years pass. She had expected Peter, but was surprised to see me.
“You’ve come to mend me door, then?” she asked, speaking to Peter, but examining me.
“Aye, an’ do you know Master Hugh? ’E’s bailiff to Lord Gilbert.”
“Seen ’im about. Heard ’e patched Gerard’s head.”
Gerard is Lord Gilbert’s verderer. Two years past he had the misfortune to stand where an oak his sons were felling might swat him with a plunging limb. His skull was badly cracked. I repaired the injury, but he walks now with a limp, which I suspect will always be so.
“Your man lies ill in his bed, I am told.”
“Aye. Since Candlemas ’e’s been low.”
“And near a fortnight past someone beset him in his bed?” I added.
“They did.”
“Perhaps I might see him. I have herbs which can comfort afflicted folk.”
“Was going to call for you when I found ’im, but Philip wouldn’t have it. Said he’d heal well enough, an’ if not was ready to see God. ‘No use payin’ the surgeon,’ he said. My Philip’s always been tight with a penny.”
I left Peter to inspect the splintered door and followed Amabil into the dim interior of the house. The woman’s aged husband lay upon his bed, his form so shrunken with age and illness and abuse, he seemed but an assemblage of coppiced poles beneath the bed coverings. I found myself in agreement with the old man’s prophecy: he was near to seeing the Lord Christ.
Philip heard our conversation and approach and turned in his bed to see who disturbed his slumber. A purple bruise, beginning to turn green and yellow, stretched from his forehead to cheek. A gash across his scalp, which I might have closed with needle and silk thread, bore a thick scab. Philip would, did he live, bear a wide scar where the blow caught him. His nose was swollen, purple, and bent.
A bench sat near the bed. I drew it to Philip’s side and introduced myself.
“Know who you are,” he wheezed. “Seen you about the town.”
“I am told you lay abed a Sunday and were attacked while your wife was at mass.”
“Aye. My time is short… know that well enough.”
“Who was it tried to hasten your passing?”
“Dunno. Kicked in the door. That’s what woke me. I don’t see so well any more. All I remember is a fellow raisin’ a club over me. Next I knew, ’twas Sunday eve an’ Amabil and Arnulf was bendin’ over me.”
“Door was barred,” Amabil added. “Arnulf thought it best. Philip can rise from ’is bed when needful, an’ could unbar the door when I returned.”
“Have you been in dispute with any man that you must bar the door?”
“Nay,” Philip managed a chuckle. “I’m near seventy years old. Too old to quarrel with any man.”
“Why, then, would a man wait ’til you were alone, then attack you?”
Philip shook his head weakly, and sighed. The effort seemed to pain him, for he closed his eyes and grimaced.
“Most folk in the Weald know Philip is afflicted,” Amabil said. “It’s no secret ’e’s seldom from ’is bed.”
“And none holds a grudge against him?”
“Nay. My Philip was always a peaceful man.”
Then why, I wondered, bar the door while Philip was abed alone?
“I have preparations which will ease his pain. I will return at the sixth hour. ’Tis too late to mend the cut on his scalp, or do aught for his nose, but I can allay his hurt.”
I left Peter Carpenter at work on the broken door and jamb and sought Kate and my dinner. When I returned to Philip Mannyng’s house Peter was near finished repairing the splintered door. I had with me a pouch of herbs: pounded lettuce seeds to help the man sleep, and hemp seeds and leaves to reduce the pain of his broken nose. I brought also the crushed root and leaves of comfrey, to make a poultice for Philip’s bruised face. Such a preparation should have been applied straight away after the injury was discovered, but perhaps the comfrey might do the man some good even yet.
I instructed Amabil to measure a portion of the herbs into a cup of ale three times each day for her husband to drink, and was ready to depart when Arnulf Mannyng entered the house. He did not notice my presence at first. The house was dim and the man was intent upon his injured father. He strode to Philip’s bed and sat upon the bench I had recently vacated.
Arnulf Mannyng was as sturdy as his father was frail. In shadow against the window he appeared much like Arthur; not so tall as me but weighing thirteen stone or more. Arnulf is a prosperous tenant of the Bishop of Exeter. Since the plague much land lies waste for want of men to plow and seed and harvest. Mannyng had added a yardland to the property of his father which he had assumed a year past when the old man was no longer able to work. Rumor had it that Arnulf had paid but six shillings gersom for the vacant holding, which included a tumble-down hut the man now used as a barn for his three cows and two oxen.
I stood silent in a corner while Amabil tended the fire and Arnulf spoke to his father. It was not my intent to pry into family business, but I was there and could not avoid the conversation.
Arnulf began by asking his father how he did, which needed no reply, for any man could see he was likely to soon see the Lord Christ, unless there be a purgatory, which I am come to doubt. Perhaps I should not write so, but I think it unlikely a bishop will ever read these words of mine, or trouble himself with a heretical surgeon should he do so.
The son’s next words brought me to quick attention. “I told you last week you’ll need worry no more of bein’ attacked again,” he assured the old man. “Not as Thomas atte Bridge was found hangin’ from a tree at Cow-Leys Corner.”
“Amabil told me also,” Philip whispered. “Little good his death’ll do me now.”
While his father spoke Arnulf shifted on his bench to observe his mother. She had placed a pot upon the coals. Arnulf had but to raise his eyes from the pot to see me standing between door and window.
“You have a guest,” he said harshly.
“’Tis Master Hugh, him as is Lord Gilbert’s bailiff. He has brought herbs to ease your father’s suffering.”
“Ah… well then,” his voice softened, “we are in your debt.”
“Mixed with ale, the herbs will bring some release from pain and aid your father’s sleep. And comfrey made into a paste will speed healing of his bruised face.”
“What is owed for this?”
“Tuppence.”
Arnulf fished about in his pouch and brought forth the coins. He stood and delivered them to my hand without another word. It was I who spoke.
“Did Thomas atte Bridge deal the blows to your father?”
“Aye, so I believe.”
“Why would he do so?”
“Because he was too much the coward to attack me.”
“He had reason to dislike you?”
“So he thought.”
“Was his thinking flawed?”
“Nay… I suppose not.”
“You did harm to Thomas?”
“In a way. We both sought a yardland of the bishop. I offered a better price. ’Twas land vacant near two years since John Rugg died with all his family when plague returned.”
“Thomas resented losing the property?”
“Aye. He offered but three shillings gersom to Father Thomas.”
“I’m surprised he could afford even that.”
“Said as how I’d enough land an’ was takin’ food from ’is table.”
“But all this was near two years in the past, was it not?”
“Aye, ’bout that.”
“Atte Bridge waited two years to vent his anger?”
“Nay, ’e’s been at me since, but nothin’ I could prove to the vicars. Lost two lambs last year. Seen ’em born an’ two days later they was gone.”
“Perhaps some beast carried them off?”
“Perhaps. But no fox will take a lamb, be there an angry ewe about. An’ someone breaks into me barn at night. Things go missin’: harness for the oxen, an iron spade, such like.”
“Is it possible some other did these thefts?”
“It is, but I’m thinkin’ there will be no more, now Thomas atte Bridge lies in a grave at Cow-Leys Corner.”
I agreed that cessation of these misfortunes would point to Thomas atte Bridge as the source, bid farewell to Philip and Amabil, and set out for Galen House. I had found another man pleased that Thomas atte Bridge lay in his grave. But did he put him there?