Alys rose from the table and followed him from the room. She saw David’s acute glance at the whiteness of her face and the slope of her shoulders.
“Does it fare merrily with you, Alys?” he asked. “Merrily, merrily?”
She looked at him without bothering to conceal her dislike. “I thank you for your wishes,” she said. “I hope they come back to you threefold.”
The dwarf scowled. He clenched his hand into the fist with thumb between second and third fingers, the old protection against witchcraft, crossed himself with the fist, and kissed his thumb.
Alys laughed in his glowering face. “Mind Father Stephen does not see you,” she said. “He would accuse you of popish practices!”
The dwarf muttered something behind her as Alys, with her head high, followed the old lord down the stairs and into the great hall.
Hugo and Stephen were placed either side of Lord Hugh, Stephen on his right in honor of his return to the castle and to mark the old lord’s favor. And the power of the new church, Alys thought sourly. Alys was seated on the other side of Stephen.
She said nothing while the servers brought the silver ewers and bowls and Lord Hugh and then all of them washed their hands and dried them on the napkins. David watched over the pouring of the wine and then the pottage was served.
“Are you well, Mistress Alys?” Stephen asked her courteously.
“I thank you, yes,” Alys replied. “A little weary. My lord has made me work hard this morning. He had to reply to the king’s letters and we have the sheriff’s court here this afternoon.”
“Hugo and I have added to the burdens of the court,” Stephen said. “We took up a witch today.”
The tables nearest to the high table fell silent, the diners strained forward to listen. Most people crossed themselves. Alys felt her throat tighten.
“My lord!” she exclaimed. She glanced down the table at Hugo. “God keep you both safe and well!”
“That is my prayer,” Stephen said. “And it is my duty to preserve myself and my bishop’s diocese from these evil creatures.” He glanced around him and raised his voice so that they could all hear him. “There is no defense against witchcraft except fasting, penitence, and prayer,” he said. “No subscribing to another witch to protect you. That way you fall deeper and deeper into the hands of the one who is their master, who stalks this earth seeking for souls. The true church of England will protect you by seeking out all witches and destroying them, root and branch, even down to the smallest, least twig.”
There was silence. Stephen was impressive.
“Yes,” Alys said. “We must all be glad of your vigilance.”
He turned his head to her. “I have not forgotten the injustice of your ordeal,” he said softly so that no one else could hear. “I carry it with me in my heart, to remind me to avoid popish practices like the ordeal and to keep my own conscience in these matters. I never use the ordeal in my work. I question—question with sight of the rack, and then with torture only where necessary—but I never test a witch with an ordeal any more. I made a mistake that day in giving way to Lord Hugh and Lady Catherine. I have never made that mistake again.”
“But you torture?” Alys asked. Her voice trembled slightly. She sipped her wine.
“Only as it is ordered, for those suspected of felonies,” Stephen replied gently. “The law is strict in this matter. First comes questioning, then showing the rack to the prisoner and questioning again, and then, and only then, is questioning under torture allowed. When I know I am doing God’s work in this godless world, and obeying the law in this lawless world, I can do my duty without anger or malice; or fear that I am doing wrong through my own blindness.”
Alys stretched her hand to her wine again. She saw it was shaking. She hid both her hands in her lap, out of sight under the damask tablecloth.
“And who is this witch you took up today?” she asked.
“The old woman you accused,” Stephen said. “The old woman who lives by the river on the moor. We were riding out that way hunting and we met with the soldiers who were taking her over the border to Westmorland—as you desired.”
“There must be some mistake,” Alys said breathlessly. “I never accused her of being a witch. She frightened me. She came on me alone in the wood. She called me by another name. But she was a harmless old woman. No witch.” Alys could hardly speak over the noise of her pulse in her head. She had no breath for anything more than short sentences.
Stephen shook his head. “When we stopped to see that they handled her gently—soldiers like a game, you know—she asked who we were and when we told her Hugo’s name, she cursed him.”
“She would not!” Alys exclaimed.
Stephen nodded. “She named him as the destroyer of the nunnery and of the holy places. She said that he would die without an heir because he had done blasphemy and sacrilege and that the vengeance of her god was upon him. She called on him to repent before more women voided the devil’s slime, which is all that he can father. And she begged him to release a woman named Ann. That was the last thing she said—let her go!”
“This is awful,” Alys said. “But just the ravings of a madwoman.”
Stephen shook his head. “I have been appointed by my bishop to search out these witches,” he said. “There is one in every village, there are dozens in every town. We must root them out. People are frail, they run to these wizards in times of trouble instead of fasting and praying. The devil is everywhere and these are troubled times. We have to fight against the devil, we have to fight against witches.”
Alys gave a trembling little laugh. “You are frightening me!” she protested.
Stephen broke off. “Forgive me,” he said. “I did not mean to. I am hot in the pursuit of evil, I forgot your condition and the delicacy of your sex.”
There was a little pause.
“And this mad old woman,” Alys said lightly. “Won’t you let her go? I should be sorry if my complaint against her brought her to this charge.”
Stephen shook his head. “You misunderstand the seriousness of her crime,” he said. “When she speaks of her god it is clear she is speaking of the devil, for we know that the Holy God does not curse men. He sends misfortune to try them, for love of them. When she speaks of Hugo as a destroyer of the popish false church, it is the devil crying out against our glorious crusade. We are snatching souls from the devil every day. He enjoyed an easy time with the Romish priests feeding people with lies and fears and superstitions and magic of all kinds. Now we are pushing the light of God across the country and casting the devil—and his followers like this old woman—into the fiery furnace.”
The brightness of the sunlight through the high east windows dazzled Alys, the room was spinning around her as Stephen spoke. “Oh don’t!” she said, in sudden agony. “Stephen, remember how it was for me when you gave me the ordeal. Remember my terror! Spare this poor old woman and send her away, send her to Scotland! Send her to France! Spare the foolish old thing. She did not know what she was saying, she is mad. I saw it when I met her. She is mad.”
“Then how did she know of Catherine’s illness, if not through sorcery?” Stephen asked. “It has been kept most quiet. Only you and Catherine’s ladies and Hugo knew of it. Not even my Lord Hugh knew of her scouring white slime.”
“These things are talked of,” Alys said rapidly. “Gossip is everywhere. She is probably one of those horrible old women who sit in the chimney seat and chatter all day. I sent her a gown and some food, she probably gossiped with the messenger. Don’t burn her for being a foolish, ugly, old woman, Stephen!”
“We won’t burn her,” Stephen said.
Alys looked up into his pale, determined face. “You won’t?” she asked. “I thought you said you would cast her into the fire.”
“I meant that when she dies she must face the flames of hell, the fire of the afterlife,” Stephen said.
“Oh,” Alys said. “I misunderstood you.” She breathed out on a li
ttle laugh. “I am so relieved,” she said. She put her hand to her throat and felt her hammering pulse quieten beneath her touch. “You won’t burn her,” Alys said again. “You won’t burn her.” She laughed uneasily. “Here I was, trembling with fear that I had brought an old lady to the stake!” she said. “I was fearful for her. But you won’t burn her, even if she should be charged. Even if she were found guilty. You won’t have her burned.”
“No,” Stephen replied. “We hang witches.”
When Alys came to her senses she was lying in her bed, the dark green tester she so loved above her, the curtains half drawn around her to shade her face from the bright sunlight pouring in the arrow-slit window. For a moment she could not remember the time, nor the day. She smiled like a child at the richness of the fabric all around her, and stretched. Then she heard the soft crackle of a fire in her grate, and was aware of the warmth of the setting sun on her whitewashed walls. Then she remembered the quiet terror of Stephen’s promise, and Mother Hildebrande facing a charge of witchcraft that afternoon, and she cried out and sat upright in bed.
Mary was at her side. “My lady,” she said anxiously. “My lady.”
“What time is it?” Alys asked urgently.
“I don’t know,” Mary said, surprised. “About five o’clock, I suppose. The people are just leaving from the trials. It is not suppertime.”
“The trials are over?” Alys asked.
Mary nodded. “Yes, my lady.” She looked anxiously at Alys. “Will you tell me what I can fetch you?” she asked. “Should you not have something from your chest of herbs? You are very pale, my lady. You fainted at dinner and they carried you up here like a dead woman. You have lain still all this long time. The old lord himself came up to see you. Have you nothing I may fetch you?”
“What happened at the trials?” Alys asked.
Mary frowned. “I have been up here with you,” she said, with a trace of resentment. “So I couldn’t see nor hear them. But Mistress Herring told me that they branded one man for thieving and Farmer Silter was warned for moving his boundary posts. Peter Marwick’s son was summoned—”
“Not them,” Alys interrupted. “The old woman charged with witchcraft.”
“They didn’t try her,” Mary said. “They questioned her under torture and she is not a witch. They released her from the charge of witchcraft.”
Alys felt a sense of ease flow through her whole body, from her aching jaw, through her clenched fists, to the soles of her feet. Her skin glowed as if she had just stepped, tinglingly clean, from a bath. She felt the blood rise up in her veins and warm her clammy skin.
“They released her,” she said, tasting hope, as sweet as new desire.
“They changed the charge,” Mary said. “She is to face a charge of heresy. She will be tried tomorrow in a second day of the court’s sessions.”
Alys felt the room heave and yaw like a sailing ship out of control. She clung to the fine linen sheets as if they were safety lines in a storm-rolling sea.
“I can’t hear,” she said pitifully. “I did not hear you, Mary. Say it again.”
“I said she is to be tried tomorrow for heresy,” Mary said loudly in her rounded country accent, like one talking to an old deaf woman. “They say she is no witch, but a heretic. A papist. They will try her tomorrow after dinner.”
Alys lay back against the pillows, her eyes shut. The child in her belly stirred and kicked against the pounding of Alys’s rapid pulse. Alys felt her sins massing against her. Her stomach churned in terror, her heart fluttered.
“Get a bowl,” she said thickly to Mary. “I am going to be sick.”
Mary held the bowl while Alys vomited a stream of undigested pottage from dinner and then her breakfast of bread and meat and ale, and then yellow bile, until she was retching and retching on an empty belly and bringing up nothing but clear saliva.
Mary whipped the bowl out of the room and came back with a ewer and a napkin moistened with cold water. She sponged Alys’s face and her neck—hot and sweaty under the heavy weight of her hair. She held a glass of water to her lips.
“Is it the sweating sickness?” she asked Alys anxiously. “Or is the child pressing against your belly too hard? The old lord should not make you work so! Can I fetch you something to eat?”
Alys leaned forward. “Help me up,” she said.
Mary protested but Alys threw back the covers and held out her hands. “Help me,” she ordered.
They had laid her on her bed in her blue gown and put covers over her. The gown was hot and creased. “Take this off,” Alys said.
Mary unfastened the gown and shook it out, laying it in the chest.
“I will wear my green gown,” Alys said.
Mary slipped it on over Alys’s head. Alys stood still and let Mary dress her, like an old pagan stone on the moors, dressed with scarves.
Her legs were trembling and Mary helped her across the gallery and down the stairs to the great hall. The servants were pulling the tables and benches back into their usual places after the disruption of the trial. She let Mary help her to the door to the garden and then she waved her away. She stepped out of the shade of the hall on to the cobblestones of the yard and out into the garden to find the old lord. He was sitting in the arbor, enjoying the evening sunshine. Eliza Herring and Margery were sitting beside him. Eliza was playing her lute.
Alys paused for a moment, watching them. The old lord’s white hair shone in the sunshine, Eliza’s and Margery’s dresses were bright—yellow and blue, summertime colors. Behind Lord Hugh’s head an espaliered peach tree was showing fat fruits. Before them were half a dozen formal flower-beds with twisting gravel paths around them edged with box. And on the left, in the far corner of the castle wall, was the tower with the staircase to the second story and a doorway only on the second story. The lower story had neither windows nor door. It was a blind tower of solid stone. It was the prison tower and the only way into it was through a trapdoor in the guardroom floor down rough steps. And the only way out (they said as a joke) was in a coffin.
Alys walked across the grass, her green gown hushing around her legs, through the maze of paths, a couple of hens and a cock scattering before her, until she came before Lord Hugh.
“Alys,” he said with pleasure. “Are you better already? You gave us a fright. I’ve never seen so deep a swoon. Sit down! Sit down!”
He brushed Eliza and Margery off the seat and waved them away. They curtsied and wandered off, their heads together. Alys sat on the sun-warmed bench beside Lord Hugh.
“How sweet the air smells,” she said idly. “And how well the garden is doing.”
“It’s not big enough,” Lord Hugh said. “My wife always wanted me to lay a formal pleasure garden. But I never had the time, nor the desire to throw money away for a posy of flowers.” He flapped his hand irritably at the hens which were picking at the flower-beds. “They’d eat them all,” he said. “Where’s the kitchen-lad? They should not be out here!”
Alys smiled. “What was she like, your wife?” she asked.
Lord Hugh thought. “Oh, good,” he said vaguely. “Well born, religious. Dull.” He racked his brains. “She read a good deal,” he said. “Lives of the saints, church books, that sort of thing. She had very black hair—that was her best feature. Long, thick, black hair. Hugo has her hair.”
“Did she die young?” Alys asked.
The old lord shook his head. “Middling,” he said. “She was forty or thereabouts—a good life for a woman. She was ill with all her childbirths. And miscarriages. Lord! She must have had a dozen. And at the end all we had to show for it was two worthless daughters and Hugo.”
A companionable silence fell between them, Lord Hugh smiling at some old memory, Alys sitting beside him, composed.
“That old woman,” she said casually. “What became of her?”
“The suspected witch?” Hugh roused himself. “Oh, she was no witch. They put her to question under torture and she said not
hing that could be called witchcraft. Even Stephen accepted that, and he sees a warlock in every doorway.”
Alys chuckled, a strained, unconvincing sound. “He’s very enthusiastic,” she said.
Lord Hugh cocked an eyebrow at her. “Everything to gain,” he said. “It’s the king’s church now. Progress upward and there is the king’s court at the top and God’s heaven beyond that. A tempting enough prospect, I should think.”
Alys smiled and nodded.
“I don’t know where it will all end,” he said. “I shan’t see the end of it, that’s for sure. I used to think they would go back to the old ways but I can’t see how anymore. The abbeys are half destroyed, the priests have all taken the oath to honor the king. Still, it is Hugo’s inheritance. And he’s all for the new ways. He will have to find his path through them. I don’t doubt he has the skill. As Stephen ascends, Hugo rises too. They have hitched their stars together.”
Alys nodded again. “The old woman…” she started.
“A papist,” the old lord said. “Accused of heresy and treason. When they got her off the rack and drenched her with cold water until she could speak again, she denounced them all, and said she was ready to die for her faith. We’ll try her tomorrow. I doubt she’ll recant. She’s a powerful woman.”
“Can’t she be released?” Alys asked. “Shipped off somewhere? She’s such an old lady and she will die soon anyway. She’s no danger to anyone.”
Lord Hugh shook his head. “Not now she’s arrested,” he said pedantically. “She’s in the court records, Stephen knows of her. His report goes to his bishop, mine goes to the council. She can’t just disappear. She has to be tried and found innocent or guilty.”
“But on what you say, she’s bound to be guilty!” Alys exclaimed. “Unless she recants, she’s bound to be found guilty.”
The old lord shrugged. “Yes,” he said simply. He leaned his head back against the sun-warmed stones. “You could bake bread on this wall,” he said. “It holds the heat like an oven.”
Novels 03 The Wise Woman Page 51