Valley of Dry Bones

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Valley of Dry Bones Page 16

by Priscilla Royal


  “If the land was profitable enough to bring joy to his lord’s heart, Father Eliduc might grow fearful should the baron change his mind and offer the same land to another.”

  Fulke tore a handful of bread in half. “Methinks you have heard more than I about this matter.” Taking a bite, he lifted his cup, then smiled at Ralf. “As we both learned from watching our Odo, a religious calling is no deterrent to avarice or violence.”

  “So Father Eliduc might have a motive for making sure Otes never changed his will.” He scowled. “I do not like matters involving a struggle of authority between the Church and the king’s justice. As sheriff, neither should you.”

  “Then we must pray he is as innocent as a priest should be, although I confess I neither like nor trust the man. He’s as slippery as a trout, but I have no proof of any guilt.”

  “What of Lady Avelina and her son?”

  “If they have deep secrets concealed, I have heard nothing of them. What more could be hidden? Their story is known well-enough. There can be little worse than being the widow and son of a dead traitor.”

  “Not all followers of de Montfort lost favor with our new king,” Ralf said thoughtfully. “King Edward also knows the dangers involved should he seek retribution against them when so many claim miracles have been wrought at the earl’s gravesite. He himself smiled on the man at one time, and there are many of all ranks that continue to believe the earl served the interests of every man while King Henry served only his own.”

  Fulke put his palm against his brother’s mouth. “Do not speak treason!”

  Ralf shoved the hand aside. “I report what I hear. As for treason, I am as loyal to this king as I was to the last. All I suggest is that Lady Avelina might have cause to hope her son’s inheritance will be restored. Or did Baron Otes know something that would prevent that from happening?”

  “Others may be returned to favor. Not this particular family. The father loudly and foolishly proclaimed that de Montfort should be king, not just an honored counselor. Some call it blasphemy that the earl raised a sword against God’s anointed. Of those who stay silent, many shiver in fear. None dare speak up for declared traitors and few for their get. King Edward might forgive any who changed course, as he himself did. He will never pardon anyone who stubbornly fought against the very kingship he now owns. And Simon is much like his sire, imprudent in his ways and blinded by his passions. I do not think the boy is likely to breed trust in a king’s heart, no matter how sweetly the mother begs.”

  Ralf stabbed at a hunk of cheese. “That matches what little I have seen of Simon. The boy troubles me, Fulke. He is now staying with Brother Thomas, a monk who is living as a hermit in the forest hut near the priory mill. Although I might believe the lad opened his eyes one morning, saw the horror of his sins, and fled to a man of God for guidance, I find it strange that he should run away at the very sight of me after Otes’ corpse was found.” He gnawed in silence. “Is there nothing more you can tell me about Simon and his mother?”

  “Staying with a hermit nearby, you say?”

  The crowner nodded. “Aye. Just above the pond where the baron was killed.”

  The sheriff thought for a moment, then shrugged. “I know nothing about the young fool other than the usual boyish swinking and maternal outrage when he can’t keep his pintle in his braes. I heard rumor that he tried to breach the wrong girl recently, then struck her with his fists for refusing him. That news was silenced as well as might be.”

  “None of this explains why Simon hid from me when Brother Thomas and I spoke. Maybe Simon has another secret, apart from tearing maidenheads. I had best pay a visit to our good hermit and his recent guest.” He rose.

  Fulke glanced through the crowd, eager to catch the eye of his favored wench.

  The crowner slammed his hand down on the sheriff’s shoulder. “In the meantime, brother, take my advice and keep your own tarse strapped down tonight. If Signy discovers you riding one of her women in the stable, she might mistake you for a bull that needs some trimming.”

  Grinning with wicked delight at his horrified brother, Ralf walked away.

  Chapter Twenty-eight

  Thomas stared at the black sky above his hut. How vast it seemed and how insignificant he felt in comparison with God’s heavens. He wanted to weep. His eyes remained dry and gritty as desert sand.

  Glancing back inside, he could see the boy’s dark shape, curled peacefully on the straw pallet. If he held his breath, he could hear a light snoring above the chirping of crickets in the night heat. Did he ever sleep so deeply at Simon’s age? He must have. He could no longer recall.

  As for his own rest, all sleep had fled. Tonight he had wrestled with the Prince of Darkness and survived. As he gazed into the infinite darkness of the sky, dotted with the flickering lights of candles carried by angels, he wondered which of them had truly won the bout. His body was weary beyond measure, and his spirit ached too much to admit any peace. Now melancholy ruled. Even if he could claim one victory, perhaps another if he was fortunate, he suspected Satan had bested him in some way he did not fully understand.

  He had come to this hut for solitude, longing to hear God’s direction in that silence. Tyndal’s anchoress had discovered this behind the walls of her cell. All he ever heard was the roar of worldly praise from men who concluded he was possessed of greater holiness because of his choice. Although he denied the assumption, his words only fed the fire of their error. And in this way he had deceived, even though he had never so intended. He had befouled truth and himself with the delusion of sanctity.

  After this night in particular, he knew he must leave the hermitage. He had lost all confidence in his ability to live without the comfort and support of his fellow religious. Perhaps that was what God had wanted him to learn despite knowing Thomas lacked a monk’s faith and suffered his torturous longing for a man’s love.

  Had he learned anything else in this place? If so, he was blind to it. The only certainty was the realization that he must ask Prioress Eleanor for permission to return and perform whatever task she had for him. With patience, humility, and time, he might see more wisdom revealed with greater clarity.

  Reaching down, he picked up the jug of ale he had brought outside. There was some left, and he inhaled the sharp scent before draining it all. He sighed and rubbed his face. At least he had not succumbed to lust when Simon embraced him and, in tears, begged for kisses. Thomas knew that was his clear victory. The rest remained questionable.

  “Simon ached only for a miracle,” Thomas muttered, “that his dead father would return to praise and advise him. He may own the features of a man, but his soul has a child’s fat cheeks.” So the monk had given soft words and chaste caresses. What he feared he had not done was give the lad wise direction. Indeed, he worried whether he himself had become complicit in treason.

  What else could he have done except listen? He had heard the lad’s tale as a priest hears confession. The lad may have longed to turn traitor against God’s anointed king, but he had truly done little. Hadn’t his mother suffered enough with her own husband’s death? Must she lose her only son as well because he was more foolish than wicked?

  And thus he had wrestled with the Devil a second time this night and tried to drag Simon from a sure and horrendous death as a traitor to a safer path. “Have I truly saved him or have I sent him along a road that may lead nowhere near God?”

  “Are you talking to yourself, Brother?” a voice asked.

  Thomas grew cold, despite the warm air, then realized the shadow standing a few feet away had the comfortable outline of a familiar crowner, not an imp.

  “I did not mean to startle you,” Ralf said, coming closer. “I brought a fresh pitcher of ale from the inn.”

  “My own company has grown tiresome. To enliven the hours, I have taken to arguing with myself, only to find I lose both sides of any debate.”

  “You’re not meant for this hut. Go back to caring for the sick. They miss y
our soothing words.”

  Thomas smiled, grateful that the darkness kept his friend from reading anything more in his expression than humor.

  “Have some ale.” Ralf tilted his head toward the hut. “Where is Simon?”

  Again, despite the heat, Thomas shivered and quickly drank from the jug. “He sleeps. Deeply, I think.”

  “When did he first come to you?”

  The monk knew the question was not based in mere curiosity. “Just after the corpse was found, identified, and examined on site.” His spirit instantly grew more cheerful, not with prayer but with the promise of a murder inquiry. Since he felt no guilt over this, he suspected the influence of evil and then wondered if God instead was actually pleased.

  “You know he is the son of Lady Avelina and part of the group that traveled here on Queen Eleanor’s behalf?”

  “Aye, and he has also told me of his father’s death at Evesham, the allegiance with de Montfort, and the loss of his inheritance.”

  The crowner chuckled, his white teeth a flash of brightness in the greying light that promised dawn. “To save time in this matter, I should have come to you first. What is your opinion of the boy?”

  “He longs to be a man but has little understanding of what that means. For him, battles are full of glorious deeds, not cleaved skulls and festering wounds that send soldiers to Hell, screaming from their own agony and stench. Whether he will become worthy or a man with greater fondness for indulgence than charity is beyond my ability to foresee.”

  “Words like these make me suspect again you were something more than a soft-fingered clerk before you took vows, Brother.”

  The monk retreated into silence.

  “Simon ran from me when I met you at the stream. Why?”

  “He said he came here to seek God’s wisdom. You and your brother remind him too much of the world. For this reason, he fled.”

  “Do you believe that tale?”

  “A boy who thinks a knight’s life is like some story from the adventures of Lancelot might well conclude that God’s direction comes from another sinful mortal who lives alone in a whore’s cottage. And it is possible such a lad would resent the intrusion of the world when he longed to escape any reminder of it.” Catching the bitterness in his tone, he laughed as if he had intended to jest. “Let me reply to what I think you meant by asking such a question. I do not believe he killed the baron.”

  “Why?”

  “As we both have described him, Simon is a boy. If he had slit the man’s throat, his nostrils would no longer quiver as if the gates to Eden had just slammed shut and he still held the scent of the garden within him. Murder brands a man with the especial mark of Cain. That is not to say he might not have committed lesser sins, but I smell his mother’s milk on him, even though I do not like the lad.”

  “Have you learned where he was when the baron was killed?”

  “First he spent much time in conversation with Father Eliduc who counseled him on God’s mercy and compassion. This moved him to attend his mother, a duty he admits neglecting often. The lady suffers dizziness and nausea, especially if she is fatigued, and she was unwell after the tiring journey here. When his mother fell asleep, his still troubled spirit drove him to the chapel, where he spent the remainder of the night in prayer. He claims it was there God showed him the path he must start to follow.”

  “I should have known that you would have questioned him.”

  The monk paused to take breath. “Although there were no witnesses to his actions after he left his mother, Ralf, I am inclined to believe his story for the reasons I have given.”

  “Like your prioress, Brother, I learned early after we first met to respect your conclusions.”

  “I, too, was troubled by his quick retreat when you appeared at the pond. As God knows well enough, I’m a flawed monk and sometimes doubt loud protestations of ardor in faith. Thus I question the depth of Simon’s piety, even though I think he believes he is sincere. The latter may prove him innocent of killing Baron Otes. I do not think he has yet learned to cover insincerity with the tapestry of delusion.”

  “Was all of this learned in confession?”

  “What I have just told you was not. Anything I did hear in formal confession must remain only in God’s ears now.”

  “Would you tell me if he confessed to murder?”

  “Had he admitted to killing the baron, I would have urged him to seek you out immediately.”

  Ralf took the jug and swallowed several deep draughts of cool ale.

  “And if he refused to honor my plea, he would not be sleeping in my hut.”

  Laughing, the crowner handed over the jug. “Thank you, Brother. I may not quite dismiss him as a suspect, although I hear his snores and believe he would not be in your bed if you thought him a killer.”

  “Might it help if I told you more about what he and I discussed after his arrival?”

  Ralf nodded.

  “I told Simon he could find adventure enough serving God if he cannot win wealth and a knighthood with a borrowed lance and his mother fails to regain the lands taken from his dead sire. Tonight he grew more eager for God’s service. This might suggest he feels greater inclination toward peace than violence.”

  “Indeed? Have you told him tales of your exploits in the service of Prioress Eleanor?”

  Thomas shrugged. “He thinks little of Eve ruling Adam, and so our Order will not find him begging to serve it. Before he fell asleep, he did say that God had opened his eyes, and he could now see how glorious deeds were possible in the service of other Orders.”

  Ralf stood and stretched. “His high birth merits a horse. Maybe Father Eliduc will find the money to help the lad become a Hospitaller, Templar, or member of some other military Order. Considering the heritage of treason he got from his father, I fear that only his mother will weep if he goes to Outremer.”

  “Have you any other suspects besides Simon?” The monk held the nearly empty pitcher out to his friend.

  Taking the proffered jug, the crowner drank before answering. “Although I bear little enough love for my eldest brother, he was elsewhere at the time of the killing.”

  “Risking his wrath, you confirmed this?” The monk grinned as he imagined the scene between the two men.

  “And greatly enjoyed his discomfiture.” Ralf lowered the pitcher. “Nor have I found any reason to suspect any of the armed escort, a sudden spate of outlaws in our area, or revengeful village folk. As for others, I doubt the Lady Avelina slit the man’s throat. Women may kill, which we both have learned, and yet her age and ill health argue most strongly for her innocence. The deed required more strength than she possesses.” He folded his arms as if bracing for a struggle. “Were I to point the finger of distrust at anyone else, it might be at Father Eliduc.”

  “I have a little knowledge of the man,” Thomas said with care. “He is clever, and I think it unlikely he would commit rank violence if he could achieve the same ends by other means.”

  “Might he kill if he could only get what he wanted by so doing?”

  Thomas shook his head. “I could not say for cert.”

  “Then I shall place him a step higher than Simon on my ladder of possible killers. And I am grateful you did not argue that no priest would murder.”

  “Just as there are king’s men who are more lawless than those who hide in the forest out of fear they shall hang for their crimes, there are imps dressed as men of God.”

  “I know that well, Brother, for enough imps have called me kin.” He groaned. “This should have been a simple murder. Sadly, my only success so far has been in finding the innocent.”

  “You have conferred with Prioress Eleanor?” Thomas decided to say nothing about Prior Andrew and his past history with the baron. By now, the prior had surely spoken with the prioress, and it would be her decision how best to handle the knowledge.

  Ralf chuckled. “I have, and she did mention a possible connection between one of her religious and Baro
n Otes. She swore there was nothing in that tale which might lead to murder. Although I honor her authority within Tyndal, I confess curiosity. I don’t suppose you know anything about the matter?”

  “If I did, I would be bound by her decision, and that appears to be silence.”

  “I have kept you from honest rest long enough. Sleep, Brother! If God listens to the prayers of wicked crowners, He will send saints to appear in your dreams and order you back to the priory.”

  Reaching out, Thomas grasped his friend’s shoulder. “Methinks God has already sent them,” he said. “And I shall pray that He guide you soon to the discovery of the killer.”

  As the monk watched the crowner walk down the road until he was swallowed up by fading shadows, he wondered if Simon was truly guiltless of murder, as the lad had claimed. Although his heart insisted the youth had been truthful, his mind warily argued against the assumption. Dare anyone conclude that a man, dreaming of a king’s murder, was too innocent to steal another’s life?

  Chapter Twenty-nine

  Sitting in the nun’s gallery that overlooked the nave of the church, Eleanor leaned forward to see who stood below, waiting for the drama to begin.

  Father Eliduc was in conversation with Brother John. The priest was animated, chopping the air with his fist as if wielding a hammer. Although only an occasional word drifted upward, there was little doubt he was determined his opinion must be triumphant.

  In contrast, the choir master’s tonsured head remained bowed and, except for an infrequent nod, quite motionless.

  If she could control her flaring temper in the presence of Father Eliduc and emulate the humility of Brother John, Eleanor suspected she might lull her adversary into complacency. In this way, she could possibly thwart him with far greater success than she had achieved so far. Considering how the priest had abused her trust, such force of will would be difficult. With clenched teeth, she vowed to practice that diffidence both monks and all women are taught. She was determined to win her battles with this man.

 

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