7 The Prioress' Tale

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by Frazer, Margaret


  “There are ways around a thing like this,” Sir Reynold said dismissively. “Money does it. Your crowner in these parts is fond of it and probably your sheriff is, too.”

  “Do you have money?” Domina Alys demanded. “I’d be pleased to hear it if you do, because I surely don’t!”

  “If you’re so set on thieving,” Master Porter put in, “why don’t you thieve me some stone? Likely folk will part with that readier than food. As it is, this tower of yours is going no higher, that’s sure.”

  Sir Reynold looked at him with sudden interest. “There’s building going on in Banbury. We could maybe—”

  “No!” Domina Alys cut him off. “No more thieving! No more killing! There’s going to be trouble enough without more.”

  From where he still knelt with Godard’s head in his lap, Sir Hugh said low-voiced, angry and showing it, “Take it outside if you can’t keep it down!”

  Godard groaned. Only the men’s grip on him kept him from writhing away from Dame Claire. Domina Alys cringed and drew slightly back, looking away, then, as Godard subsided, she snarled at Sir Reynold, “There’s no good my being here. I’ve things to see to elsewhere. Tonight, when this is done…” She looked sideways at Godard as if she were caught somewhere between resentment and being sickened—or maybe she was resenting the sickened feeling, Frevisse disconcertingly thought; disliking weakness in others, maybe she hated it in herself. “… you come see me. We have to talk.”

  “Alys, my girl,” Sir Reynold started, not pleased.

  “You come,” Domina Alys said and left no space for him to answer by turning sharply around and shoving her way out among the men, giving them no chance to move aside.

  Godard seemed only partly conscious now. There was blood at the corner of his mouth, and Dame Claire leaned back from him, holding up her reddened hands. In the white encircling of her wimple, her face was set with the tight-mouthed anger and grief she always had when someone in her care was beyond her help, when someone was going to die and she could not stop it. “Where’s Father Henry?” she asked tersely. “We need him.”

  “Here, Dame,” the priest gasped, short-breathed with hurry, his black robe tucked up into his belt to clear his hosened legs, and the curls around his tonsure in more disarray even than usual as he pushed in among the men. They pulled aside to make way for him, going down on their knees, one after another, as they realized he was carrying cradled against his breast in his large hands the small gilt box that held the pax and other things needful for the safeguarding of the soul of a man closing in on the death. “We were out hunting, Benet and I,” he explained as he came. “We’re only just back.” He was not listening to what he said, too intent on reaching Godard to care whether anyone heard. Frevisse glimpsed Benet behind him, rough-dressed for hunting afoot, with a bulging game bag still slung over his shoulder. He stopped at the inner edge of the gathered men, carried that far in Father Henry’s wake but able to see now there was nothing for him to do except kneel with everyone else. Someone must have found him and Father Henry as they were coming in, and Father Henry had turned aside only long enough to fetch the pax from his room.

  Already on her knees, Dame Claire was turned aside, washing her hands in one of the waiting basins as Father Henry joined her beside Godard. He looked at the torn hopelessness of the wound and drew in his breath. Dame Claire made a small gesture of helplessness and rose to her feet, saying, “There’s nothing else I can do except mix something for the pain.” She looked at Frevisse, who understood and rose to her feet to go and give the necessary order to Ela.

  When that was done, there seemed no more purpose to her staying in the guest hall; she slipped away behind the servants and out.

  Evening had come far on while she was inside. The yard was shadowed and far colder than it had been. A rich smell of distant fresh-turned earth told that the winter plowing had been started in the priory’s harvested fields, and she breathed it in deeply, trying to find comfort in the thought of harvest, of the year’s end and quiet turning of the seasons, each one bound around and through by work and prayers as ordered and unending as God himself. That was the right way of things. That was how a life should be lived and ended, with simple inevitability.

  Not in anger and on a sword’s blade.

  She bent her head in prayer. Not for Godard yet. What could be done for his soul was being done, and Dame Claire was readying what small ease there could be for his body. For him, beyond that, there was only the waiting. It was the other man who needed prayers, the man Sir Reynold had killed, the man who had died with all his sins still on him and no chance of priest or prayers.

  Someone went past her, down the stairs, and she looked to see it was Master Porter, headed back to his men, she supposed. Without thinking, she called quietly after him as he reached the foot of the steps, “Why did you goad Sir Reynold and Domina Alys like that just now? You did it of a purpose, didn’t you?”

  He faced around to her. They were alone in the yard; everyone else was in the hall, but he glanced around to be sure of it, then came two steps back up toward her and said quietly, “You’d be Dame Frevisse then, wouldn’t you?”

  She nodded.

  “Master Joliffe said you were too clever to be comfortable with and out-of-ordinary to be trusted.”

  How very like Joliffe to make what could have been a compliment sound like something else, Frevisse thought.

  “He says you’d no thought we’d not been paid this while.”

  “No, none of us knew,” she said.

  Master Porter nodded grimly. “That sounds like what I know of her. And that cousin of hers. I was goading them, right enough, hoping one of them would turn angry enough to order me gone. If she ends the contract, it looks better for me than if I have to do it.” He lifted his heavy shoulders in a resigned shrug. “But it didn’t work and I’m not waiting around for the trouble that’s coming next, that’s sure. We’ll be out of here tomorrow if we can.”

  “Sir Reynold may try to stop you,” Frevisse warned.

  “Aye. He might,” Master Porter agreed with a solidity that suggested it would be better for Sir Reynold if he did not, and with a bow went on his way.

  Thoughtful about a man who seemed to see Sir Reynold more as an inconvenience than a threat, Frevisse went on across to the cloister. She could hear that Vespers was not yet over, but rather than go in to it, she chose to sit on the low wall between walk and garth, waiting for Dame Claire, who came soon, carrying her box of medicines, and did not question Frevisse being there but crossed the walk to set her box on the garth wall beside her. Because there seemed nothing useful to be said about Godard, Frevisse asked instead, “How was it with the madman? Was he badly hurt?”

  “Only a bare scratch that bled too much, in the way of head wounds. If it doesn’t infect, he’ll not have trouble with it.”

  “And his madness? How clear of it does he seem to be?”

  Dame Claire made a weary movement of her head that meant nothing. “I didn’t see him before. I don’t know how he was.”

  “He was mute and near to completely witless.”

  “He speaks now and has at least some wits.” Dame Claire slowly drew in and let out a deep breath. “Domina Alys thinks it’s Sister Thomasine’s doing, that she’s made a miracle.”

  Frevisse did not want to hear that. To have to deal with the abbot, even the bishop, if it went that far, over a possible miracle as well as with everything else now so wrong… It was more than she wanted to think about just now. She could see why a miracle would well suit their prioress at present, but it would mean questionings, investigations, doubts, and—from the readily satisfied— passions and even hysteria—all of it turning on Sister Thomasine, and how would she, unworldly and forever lost in prayers as she was, endure all that?

  “It’s Sister Thomasine I don’t understand,” Dame Claire said, paralleling Frevisse’s thought.

  “She’s frightened?” Frevisse asked.

  “Not
even slightly, so far as I can tell. But when Domina Alys told her to pray for the madman, she said she wouldn’t.”

  “Sister Thomasine refused to pray?” Sister Thomasine was always praying. For her to refuse to… Frevisse found nowhere to follow that thought.

  “Well”—Dame Claire sighed—“that’s probably the least of our troubles at present. Prayers or no prayers, miracle or no miracle, we’ll have the sheriff here before we have the abbot.”

  Frevisse shut her eyes and, in trying to avoid that thought, said aloud what she had only meant to think. “Besides that—or maybe it’s part of it—she’s lied to us about the tower.”

  “Lied? Who’s lied? Domina Alys?”

  “There isn’t enough money to finish it. There was maybe never enough money to finish it. The masons are planning to leave because they haven’t been paid in weeks.”

  “She wouldn’t lie,” Dame Claire said.

  Frevisse opened her eyes and looked at her in unconcealed disbelief. “She wouldn’t lie? Why not, with everything else she’s done?”

  “Lying is a sin. She wouldn’t do it.”

  “She wouldn’t sin?” Frevisse said sharply. “Wrath and pride are sins and she indulges in them readily enough, you’ve surely noticed.”

  “She doesn’t see wrath as wrath. For her, I think it’s rightful anger against our failings, the way God is angry at our sins.”

  Shying away from equating Domina Alys with God, Frevisse asked, “And her pride? What’s that if it isn’t pride?”

  “Love,” Dame Claire said simply.

  “Love?” Frevisse stood up, her voice rising in protest. “Love?”

  Dame Claire made a hushing motion at her. “You never try to see her without loathing anymore, but I do, if only for my soul’s sake. I’ve tried to see her as she sees herself and she loves St. Frideswide’s, she truly does. I think everything she does, she thinks she’s doing for the priory.”

  “Sir Reynold is done for the priory?” Frevisse mocked savagely.

  “She doesn’t willfully sin,” Dame Claire insisted. “She doesn’t knowingly sin.”

  “And therefore she hasn’t lied to us over the tower because lying is a sin and she wouldn’t do that,” Frevisse said bitterly. “So let’s just say instead that she’s managed to leave a great deal of the truth out of what she’s told us!”

  Before Dame Claire could answer, silence fell from inside the church, telling Vespers was ended, and with a shake of her head because there was no time for saying more, she took up her box of medicines and went away toward the infirmary, leaving Frevisse to go resignedly the other way and lie down, aching, beside the church door.

  Chapter 17

  Alys paced her parlor lengthwise, door to far wall to door to far wall. Katerin had lighted the fire because it was time to light the fire and now was standing beside it, shifting uneasily from foot to foot because it was time for Alys to sit and Alys was not and Katerin did not know what to do about it.

  In a corner of her thoughts, Alys was sorry for that. Katerin’s expectations were so few, it went hard with her when one of them failed. But she could not sit. She had to move, to force some kind of sense into her mind by making her body go somewhere, if only from door to far wall to door to…

  What had Reynold been thinking of? He had to know he couldn’t go thieving through the countryside and not be called to account for it. And killing a man. That was not something that would go by. He had been angry over Godard when he did it and she understood anger, but Reynold’s had been wrong. When she was angry over a thing, then she was sure she was right, and her anger made others sure with her and saved her the need to argue a matter out with folks too slow to see it the way she did. But killing a man…

  Reynold was supposed to help her. He had promised. She had believed him. Now she could not even use what he had brought, knowing it was stolen. Why had Godard been fool enough to be killed? Except for that, she would have gone on knowing nothing and everything would still be well.

  No. Everything would still be ill, but she would be ignorant of it while it went on to worse before she learned of it too late. If it was not too late already. No. She refused that possibility. It was not too late. She would not let it be too late. There were still ways to make it right.

  To begin with, Reynold had to go and take his men with him. Now. Tonight. As soon as Godard was dead. That’s what she had to tell him when he came.

  But that was not what she wanted him to do. She wanted him to stay. She wanted him to undo what he had done, explain it to her and make it right.

  And she doubted that he could.

  She swung aside from her pacing to slam her open hands down on the tabletop. She rarely had trouble with uncertainty. She despised it as a weakness, a thing only weaklings had, but she had it now, like a heavy headache, thickening her thoughts, so they would not go the way she wanted them to go. She slammed her hands down on the table again and shoved away from it to pace to the window back to the table back to the window and finally stand staring out.

  Below her the yard was lost in darkness. At this hour folk were expected to be settled for the night, no need for light where no one was supposed to be. The thin trace of light along the guest-hall shutters, and under the guest-hall door, showed nothing except their shapes. Was Godard dead yet?

  The guest-hall door jerked open and broom-yellow light spilled out, down the steps and into the darkness of the yard. Alys stiffened as Reynold came out, no more than a dark shape against the light, but she knew him. Knew him by the way he held himself, by the turn of his head as he looked behind him. Knew him as surely as he would know her if he looked up and saw her there, another dark shape, against the low glow of her firelight.

  They had always been that near in knowing, in understanding each other. From the time they had been children, they had been that near. He had to make this thing right before it went worse between them.

  He did not look up to see her but back over his shoulder. Hugh joined him and they started down the steps together, into the darkness.

  So Godard was dead and Reynold was coming but bringing Hugh with him rather than face her alone.

  More wearied than she could remember ever being, Alys turned from the window and the dark toward her firelight, crossed heavy-footed to her chair, and sat. Beside the fire, Katerin sighed and was content.

  “Sir Reynold and Sir Hugh are coming to the cloister door,” Alys told her, saying the words slowly to be sure she understood. “Go and let them in and bring them here.”

  Katerin watched her speak, then gave an eager head bob to show she understood, bobbed a curtsy, and scurried away.

  Alys shoved up out of her chair, about to pace again, then dropped back into it. Better to face him with all her dignity. But she could not. Sitting still was beyond her and she stood up again, facing the door as Katerin opened it and stood aside for Reynold and Hugh to enter.

  “Godard is dead,” Reynold said without other greeting.

  “You’re still armed,” Alys said back to him. All the men always wore their daggers but not their swords and particularly not in the nunnery, most particularly not in the cloister. Hugh was without his; Alys had a vague thought of him unbuckling it, handing it off to a squire to make it easier to kneel with Godard. Why did Reynold have to do yet another thing wrongly?

  Reynold looked down at his hand, resting on his sword hilt against his hip as if surprised it was there, but kept on toward her, saying, “Given one thing and another, it’s probably best for now.” He held out his hands to take hers.

  She turned away from him and circled her chair, putting it between them. “It’s not best here,” she said. “Katerin, light the lamps. All of them.” She suddenly wanted more light, much more light. There were too many shadows. She wanted to see Reynold’s face.

  Katerin scurried to light a taper at the fire. While she carried it, carefully shielded in her hand, from lamp to lamp around the room, Reynold watched Alys a little, then sat
down in her other chair and said, “It’s been a hell of a day. Godard was a good man.”

  “So maybe was the man you killed,” Alys said back. But that was not to the point in this, and because there was no easy way to come to it, she went on bluntly, “You and your men have to be out of St. Frideswide’s before Tierce tomorrow unless you can find me a good reason why you shouldn’t be.”

  Reynold looked at Hugh, who had gone aside to sit on a corner of the table, one leg swinging, his expression as grim as Alys felt. To Reynold’s look he only shrugged, as if he did not have an answer. Reynold shrugged back, looked back at Alys, and leaned forward, hands clasped in front of his knees, to say earnestly, “If I go, Master Porter will have your masons out of here within the hour. I’m all that’s keeping them here.”

  “You said you’d worked the matter out with him, that you’d persuaded him it was best he stay.”

  “And when I’m not here to go on ‘persuading’ him”— Reynold gave the word a different twist, broad with threat behind it—“he won’t stay, let me promise you.”

  “You’ve promised me much, including help in paying him!”

  “If I go, you still won’t have the money for it and he’ll be gone and you won’t persuade him back or any other masons to come instead and where’s your tower then?”

  “Where is it now?”

  Reynold spread his hands. “Say the word and you’ll have stone here in a day or so.”

  “Stolen!” Alys accused. “You’d steal it in Banbury!”

  “And why not?” Hugh asked. “He’s stolen everything else he’s brought you.”

  Reynold slid him a hard sideways look. “Be quiet.”

  Alys found her chest too tight for breath, had to fight for it before she could force out, “What?”

 

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