What had not ended then had been the close scrutiny both Abbot Gilberd and Bishop Lumley turned on the priory. The scandal and the retributions attendant on it that had brought Domina Elisabeth to be their prioress had already scoured the nuns to their souls. Both their faith and the priory’s accounts had been investigated in length and breadth and depth, and although Sister Cecely’s flight had not brought the accounts into question again, the nuns had once more had to undergo strong questioning, with Sister Johane, as the apostate’s cousin, taking the brunt of it. It had been an angry, unhappy time, and yet Frevisse thought that Sister Johane, in having to defend herself, had only then found out how much she truly wanted to be a nun, and surely in the years since then she had grown and deepened in her place here, become Dame Johane and nearly as skilled at healing as Dame Claire was.
As for the servant Alson, Domina Elisabeth, believing her plea that she had not known Sister Cecely meant to flee and seeing no point in dismissing a heretofore good servant from the cloister, had forgiven her for her foolishness and let her stay.
So all the rending caused by Sister Cecely had eventually healed over and been smoothed away by time, and in many ways it was a pity she was here again, not least because of the uneasiness she was making between Frevisse and her prayers, and it was impatiently that Frevisse finally amened, crossed herself, rose, and turned to see what Cecely was doing.
Afterward Frevisse had to wonder if her flare of anger when she saw Sister Cecely in talk with the man was righteous and allowable or a sin in itself. Best might have been a firm regret for Sister Cecely’s sinful weakness, mixed with prayerful hope for her amendment, but at the moment all that Frevisse felt was plain anger that Sister Cecely could not be trusted even so far as the church, not even in her son’s company. Knowing her anger was compounded with irk at having to deal with the woman at all, she did try to curb it, or at least hide it, but knew she failed at both.
Sister Cecely, seeing her, broke off her talk and came away from the man, bringing her son with her. Frevisse waited at the rood screen for them, stopped with a gesture whatever Sister Cecely was opening her mouth to say, and led her and the boy out of the church, into the cloister walk and around to the narrow slype. There they could talk with least disturbance of anyone, and Frevisse turned on Sister Cecely, who was clinging to her son’s hand, her head very humbly bowed in appearance of deep shame, but Frevisse knew for herself and all too well how much a bowed head could hide and she did not soften her demand of, “Well?”
Head still bowed, Sister Cecely said, “It wasn’t my doing. We were simply sitting there just as we did yesterday.” She stroked her son’s hair with her free hand, as if to make clear she had not been alone in the church. “The man was praying there. He started to leave. Then he came aside and spoke to us. As soon as he did, I went away from him. And you came.”
That had not been quite how it looked to Frevisse, but she might be wrong. She might be wrong, too, that there seemed more resentment than penitence under Sister Cecely’s words. Or it might simply be Sister Cecely’s shame making her sound more resentful than contrite or humble. If that was it, Sister Cecely needed to work on her shame; there was still too much of pride about it.
Unfortunately, Frevisse could not help her own too much anger as she answered, “I’ll nonetheless have to tell Domina Elisabeth what I saw. For now, for the while you have left with your son, we’ll return to the church, but now I’ll sit near you.”
“As you will,” Sister Cecely said with stiff mildness, head still bowed.
The boy was looking at the wall beside him, away from Frevisse and his mother both, and he went on looking away as they returned to the nave. There Frevisse pointed Sister Cecely to sit on the stone bench along the wall again, then sat herself a distance away, wishing she had her Lenten book to read but having to settle for folded hands and her thoughts. It surely was not wrong for her to pray and hope so hard that Abbot Gilberd would see fit to send Sister Cecely away to another nunnery. For Sister Cecely’s sake as much as St. Frideswide’s, Frevisse tried to tell herself, but was not fooled. What she wanted was Sister Cecely not here. Where Abbot Gilberd sent her or why made no difference, just so long as she was not left in St. Frideswide’s.
That did not stop Frevisse being sorry for the child, sitting there with his head hanging while Sister Cecely bent over him in whispered talk. He was unfortunate in his mother, Frevisse thought. She could not speak from motherhood herself, of course, but she had been a child and did not think she would have cared to be fawned at, the way Sister Cecely seemed to fawn at him.
Sitting there in the nave’s quiet, she found herself moving from simply irk at Sister Cecely to wondering how much she had been changed by her life and living outside the nunnery. She surely must have been changed. First there had been the giving of herself up to a man despite all the vows she had taken otherwise. Then there had been the pretence of being his wife for all those years. If they had been together all this time, it must have been under the seeming of marriage, to hide she was a nun, because an apostate nun and anyone sheltering her were liable to civil law as well as to the Church. Living in such a lie had to have had some corrosive effect on the soul. And then there were the deaths of her children. Sin-begotten though they were, they had been hers. She had held them, loved them, seen them die, and had to bury them. Frevisse could only imagine what pain there was in that—pain almost beyond bearing, surely. And then her paramour had died, and except for her one last child, everything she had gained by her sinning had been lost to her.
Had it been that that had finally brought her to humility and contrition enough to bring her back here to make good the wrong she had done when she fled from St. Frideswide’s?
Frevisse prayed so, but found that—prayer or no—she doubted it.
More than that, she found she doubted everything else about Sister Cecely, from her claim of contrition to her grief to her…no, not to her love for her son. That was surely true.
And none of it is my business, Frevisse reminded herself. Her duty was to pray for Sister Cecely’s good amendment and to tell Domina Elisabeth that she had seen Sister Cecely in talk with a man in the church. Everything else was Father Henry’s and Domina Elisabeth’s business, thank all the saints.
Later in the day she was likewise thankful when she was able to leave Sister Cecely at work in the kitchen under Dame Amicia’s eye while she made her own end-of-afternoon visit to the guesthall. There she found that no more guests had come and that Ela, as expected, had everything well in hand. That gave Frevisse chance to move among the present guests, speaking briefly to each, both for courtesy’s sake and to be sure all was well with them. She said nothing to Master Breredon about having seen him in talk with Sister Cecely, only asked how his ill servant did, remembered to thank him for his food gifts, and found him a courteous, quiet-spoken man.
She spoke to his servants, too. The woman, who indeed did not look well, claimed she was comfortable, and her husband said he was grateful that Dame Claire had already been to see her.
The parents of the small child glowed with pleasure when she asked how little Powlyn did. With him so much better, they were having a happier Easter than they had dared hope for, they said, and they thanked St. Frideswide for it.
It crossed Frevisse’s mind that the child’s bettering had as much to do with Dame Claire’s and Dame Johane’s skills as saintly care, but her next thought was to wonder who was to say that Dame Claire’s and Dame Johane’s skills were not the saint’s gift? The older she became, the more she found that faith and life’s mysteries twined together, with often neither faith nor life at all understandable.
But then, faith was not something to be “understood.” It was something to be lived.
But—come to it—that seemed to be true of life, too.
The two widows were making merry over a game of tables and dice when she came to them. One of them jestingly offered to let Frevisse take her place at the board for a
while, and Frevisse as jestingly answered that, “If you’re losing so badly you want me to play, I assuredly will not take your place,” making both women laugh.
Frevisse had meant to make particular effort to talk with Mistress Lawsell and her daughter today, too, having done barely more than nod in passing to them since they came. Her intent was only increased by Ela telling her, on the quiet, that they had been to every Office since they came, even to Matins and Lauds. “And then up again for Prime,” Ela said. She did not sound approving, but Ela’s approval or disapproval aside, Frevisse was curious whether that devotion was only Mistress Lawsell’s, with her hope her daughter would become a nun, or whether the girl shared it. Ela could not tell her, was only able to offer, “She’s a quiet thing, the girl. Keeps her head down and her words to herself. It’s the mother does the talking.”
That was warning as much as report, and Frevisse found it to be true enough. Asked by Frevisse how they were, Mistress Lawsell said readily and at length that both she and her daughter were in great good and comfort of both soul and body, that their stay here was all she had hoped for, that they had nothing for which to ask. The daughter only nodded unsmiling agreement to that, not saying a word, her gaze steadily downcast until—at the last moment, when Frevisse was parting from them—she looked suddenly up, such taut misery showing in her eyes that Frevisse almost asked her outright what was the matter. But Mistress Lawsell was saying how much they looked forward to the rest of the Offices today, and Frevisse decided that some other time, without Mistress Lawsell present, would be better to talk with the girl. She realized, though, that she did not even know her name, her mother merely saying, more than once, “My daughter”; and Frevisse cut across Mistress Lawsell’s flow of words to ask the girl, “Please, what’s your name?”
Both mother and daughter looked startled, Mistress Lawsell even breaking off whatever she had been saying, making a pause into which the girl said shyly, “Elianor, if it please you, my lady.”
Frevisse bent her head in a single nod of thanks and left before Mistress Lawsell could begin again, taking with her a doubt that Elianor had any desire whatsoever to be a nun. The best she might have was desire to please her mother, and that was not enough. But Mistress Lawsell meant to stay on into Easter Week. That gave Frevisse time to find chance to talk with Elianor alone, or else suggest to Domina Elisabeth that she should do so.
Vespers came, and then supper. Domina Elisabeth, mindful of the long night of Offices ahead of her nuns, saw to their supper portions being somewhat more than they had been of late and then that they had their full hour of recreation before Compline.
The early evening was warm under a clear sky, the hope of a clear Easter looking likely to be fulfilled after the days of fitful weather. Only Dame Claire and Dame Perpetua, taking their turn in vigil at the altar, and Sister Cecely at her penance with them, did not come out into the garden for the while. In their place, as it were, was Mistress Petham, come slowly, at Dame Claire’s urging and with Domina Elisabeth’s permission, leaning on Sister Margrett’s arm, her other hand resting on the shoulder of Sister Cecely’s son as if to steady herself. She sat on the bench nearest to the gate, openly grateful that she need go no farther, but her smile was full of pleasure as she looked around the garden and at the sky, like a prisoner newly freed.
The boy sat down beside her, but she patted his back and said, “You don’t have to sit with me. Domina Elisabeth will likely give you leave to walk here.”
“Better yet,” said Domina Elisabeth, “Dame Amicia and Sister Helen can take him to the orchard. He can run there if he wants. Or climb the trees.” She smiled at the boy. He stared solemnly back. “Would you like that? Would you like to go to the orchard with Dame Amicia and Sister Helen?”
“If it please you, my lady, yes,” he said. He looked at Mistress Petham. “If I may?”
“If Domina Elisabeth says you may, you may,” Mistress Petham assured him. “She’s lady here.”
His face lighted with the first smile Frevisse had seen on it. “Thank you, my lady,” he said.
Dame Amicia was already going toward the garden’s gate, smiling, too. She held out a hand toward him, and they went out of the garden hand in hand, Sister Helen following them, and not immediately but soon and now and again through the while left until Compline, Frevisse heard him laughing from among the apple trees beyond the garden wall and found herself smiling at it. It was good to know he could be a happy child despite everything. Nor did Mistress Petham look the worse for having his company, so likely he was well-mannered, too. Frevisse supposed there was good chance that before all this came on him he had had a good life, had been well-cared for and well-loved. She hoped so. However wrong his birth had been, God forbid that either blame or punishment for it should fall on him, the one innocent in it all.
The hour ended with the clacking summons, and Frevisse turned her mind toward Compline’s prayers with pleasure. This was the final readying toward tomorrow’s joy, the triumphant glory of Easter with, “Surrexit Dominus vere!”—The Lord is truly risen!—and through Matins and Lauds the glad, oft-repeated, “Alleluia, alleluia, alleluia!” All the deprivations and contemplations and prayers of Lent would come to their fruition then, and Frevisse found she was smiling with forward-looking pleasure, because Multi sunt qui de me dicunt: “Non est salus ei in Deo.”—Many they are who say of me, “Safety for him is not in God.” But, Tu autem, Domine, clipeus meus es, gloria mea…—But you, Lord are my shield, my glory…And Easter was the glory that crowned all.
Chapter 10
In Frevisse’s years in the nunnery there had been sometimes an Easter made difficult by illness among the nuns, or by bitter weather, or by worldly worries that could not be kept at bay. This Easter, for a blessing and despite Sister Cecely, went as beautifully as the best had ever done. During Prime, as they were saying, “Hic est dies quem fecit Dominus; exsultemus et laetemur de eo”—This is the day that the Lord made; we are joyful and glad in it—the rising sun struck through the choir’s eastward window, flooding light—multi-hued scarlet and azure and golden—the choir’s length, over the altar shiningly covered with its white altar cloth now Christ had risen, over the polished wood of the stalls, across the black and white clad nuns in their ordered rows. More than one of them lifted her head and turned her face toward the light, the psalm not faltering, instead taking on new strength, as if fed by the light and all the promises of hope and life that came with it.
Later even Father Henry’s familiar Easter homily—of how, just as each dawn the sky colored with the promise of the coming sun, so they must color their lives with holiness for the Coming of the Son who has been and ever will be—seemed somehow fresh.
Besides that, because the nunnery’s hens had begun to lay again when winter was done, and because Lent’s fast was over, there was a boiled egg for each nun at breakfast, causing many small sounds and sighs of delight along the refectory table.
Just thus, Frevisse thought with an inward smile at her own savoring of her egg, were the soul’s need and the body’s mixed together, inseparable until death.
The one pity of the day was, of course, Sister Cecely. Frevisse had feared her presence would taint everything, but set against the day’s glories, Sister Cecely was such a small thing that she barely mattered. It helped, of course, that Domina Elisabeth took on herself the duty of watching her, sparing Dame Amicia her turn for today at least and thereby removing Sister Cecely as much as might be from their midst.
Domina Elisabeth also took on herself the care of Dame Thomasine, who was gone so far into prayer, was so glorying in the day’s glory, that it seemed her body hardly had existence for her. Except that Domina Elisabeth took her by the arm and led her to meals, she would probably not have left the church at all.
Seeing to both women meant that Domina Elisabeth, rather than being able to give herself up to the pleasure of the day, spent it dealing with the two outermost ways of nunhood—Sister Cecely and Dame Th
omasine—and that was a pity, because surely their prioress was as ready as all the rest of them for the end of Lent. Certainly Frevisse found during the late morning Office that her Lenten-fasted stomach was answering the wafting smells from the kitchen on the far side of the cloister with an ache stronger than her heed of the psalms, but for once she did not care, and the meal, when they at last sat down to it, was everything that could be hoped for. Besides the lamb roasted in a sauce of garlic, rosemary, pepper, eggs, and its own drippings, there were a cheese tart thick with eggs and heavy cream, small, soft rolls of the last of the year’s fine white flour, with butter to go on them, and a fig pudding rich with almonds, raisins, honey, and ginger.
After that it was just as well the afternoon was given over to ease until Vespers, with leave for the nuns to spend the time as they would in the cloister walk and the garden and the orchard. Even Sister Cecely, having been allowed to sit at the far end of the refectory table during dinner and given half-portions of everything, was let off her penance in the church, to spend the time with Domina Elisabeth in the prioress’ parlor. Frevisse thought that probably made the afternoon more a penance than a pleasure for Domina Elisabeth. Then she willingly forgot Sister Cecely altogether, went to walk for a time in the orchard, and afterward—giving way to the satisfaction of a full stomach and her tiredness—sat and drowsed in the garden’s warm sunshine for a while.
The Apostate's Tale Page 8