Other measures to quell the spread of the scourge were enacted as well. Families were now responsible for burying their own dead. Public gatherings were prohibited—save official town meetings and church services. Worship was henceforth to be held at Cucklett Delf, in the outdoors, to minimize risk of communicable infection. Lastly, the schoolhouse was closed, and would remain so until the quarantine was lifted. The quarantine was, in no uncertain terms, a communal suicide pact. Eyam would sacrifice itself for the rest of the Derbyshire. The Plague had come, but it would not be allowed to leave.
Mompesson extended his hands to the crowd and addressed them.
“The pact each of you has made today is the most courageous, selfless, and Godlike act I’ve had the privilege to witness in my lifetime. By honoring the tenets of this quarantine, we not only protect and safeguard our neighbors, but also our countrymen at large, from the evil pestilence that has taken hold of our fair town. It is the responsible decision, the moral decision, and the same decision Christ made sixteen-hundred and sixty-six years ago: That we may die, so others can live. May God bless you and your families for all of eternity. Amen.”
“Amen,” said the crowd in somber unison.
He watched as friends and neighbors stood and began to take their leave. He nodded reverently whenever he happened to make eye contact. He felt the distinct weight of someone’s gaze upon him, and then spied Henry Foster staring at him. Henry had been one of the few who had not raised his hand in support of the quarantine. Mompesson didn’t blame him; he was aware of the situation at the Foster homestead. Kathryn Foster had given birth to a baby boy only three weeks ago, and even though the family had insulated itself from infection to date, Mompesson could read the fear in the man’s face. He was certain that Henry Foster’s plan had been to drive the young family back to Chesterfield as soon as both mother and child were strong enough to make the journey. With the quarantine in effect, that was no longer an option. The child would have to test fate with the rest of the townspeople and hope that Death’s gaze passed him by. Unfortunately, the Eyam plague was getting worse, instead of better.
What Henry Foster did not realize, nor anyone else in Eyam for that matter, was that Mompesson abhorred the idea of the quarantine. In his mind, the quarantine was a death sentence and he the executioner. His actions today had, in all probability, guaranteed his own demise, and he was not immune to fear. There were two Mompessons: William Mompesson, devoted husband and doting father; and Rector Mompesson, clergyman and de facto town leader.
In the eyes of the town, Rector Mompesson was an enlightened disciple of God, a virtuous man with an unwavering sense of duty. He was a lone oak in a forest of saplings. Behind closed doors, however, he operated according to a different set of principles. No matter the cost, he would safeguard the family he loved. Which is why, under the cover of darkness, he had loaded his two daughters into a carriage bound for Sheffield, two nights ago. He had begged his wife to accompany them, but she was as stubborn as a mule, and she refused to abandon her husband. Now, they could do nothing but pray their respective decisions would not make orphans of their daughters.
Mompesson crossed himself and nodded at Henry. Henry glared back for a long second, stepped up into the saddle of his grey mare, and trotted off in the direction of the Foster farm. Mompesson watched until horse and rider had faded from view, and he began the short walk back to the church. He was not worried about the Fosters breaking quarantine, even though the family had ample reason to. Henry Foster was as virtuous and stalwart as a man could hope to be. More than Mompesson knew himself to be.
• • •
HENRY CURSED AS he rode. Everything was going wrong. Terribly, terribly wrong. During the previous fall, the scourge had claimed over ten percent of the village population. He and Alice had been convinced that if they could ride out the fall epidemic, the Plague would be snuffed out over the winter months. The winter had indeed been cold and harsh, and their theory seemed prescient. Only a handful of villagers died from November to April, but instead of disappearing in the spring, the Plague returned with a vengeance. Over fifty people had died in April and May, and additional deaths were expected in households with family members who had recently fallen ill. Isolating themselves at the farm had been a short-term strategy, designed to carry the family only into spring. They were running out of food and supplies at the farm; it would be impossible to sustain the family without future trade. He had planned to trade in Chesterfield, but the quarantine killed that plan.
He had all of the puzzle pieces laid out; the problem was that every time he tried to fit one in place, fate shook the puzzle board. If only the vote had been delayed a couple of weeks, his plan would have worked. Or, if Kathryn hadn’t had such a difficult labor, she would have been healed and able to travel before the vote. Or, if she hadn’t dilated early and been ordered on bed rest, then he could have driven the kids to Chesterfield to birth baby George there. Now, it was too late. The vote was taken. He had voted in the minority. Quarantine was in effect, and he had sworn an oath to uphold the decision. For the first time since last August, Henry Foster felt helpless. Hopeless.
Thanks to Rector Mompesson, his family was locked inside the cage with the beast … where it would devour them … one at a time.
CHAPTER 8
_________________
Eyam, England
August 1666
KATHRYN CLOSED HER diary and held it tight against her bosom. Tears streamed down her face. She had just finished what she knew would be her final diary entry. Instead of writing about death and fear—the two demons waging war for control of her mind— she had written about life and love. Like her father before her, she had mustered the courage to memorialize her final goodbye to her only child in a letter. The only difference was that she chose to compose her letter as a diary entry. The concentration required to overcome the pain she was suffering had taken every fiber of her being. She was exhausted—so close to Death—and drifting in and out of consciousnesses.
For the first and only time her life, her body did not feel like her own. The communion between her flesh and her mind was disconnected. This body was a foreign, alien thing—sweating, wheezing, leaking, bleeding, and bulging—servant to some sadistic master. She was powerless to resist; the pain was all consuming. She was beginning to think that Death would be a pleasant relief. She heard the door squeak open downstairs and the sound of heavy footsteps. The men were back.
Paul pushed open the door to the their bedroom and walked to her bedside. His eyes were bloodshot and wet, and he had smudges of dirt on his trousers, hands, and cheeks. He sat on the bed and took her hand. He said nothing … just stared at her with forlorn eyes.
“Did you bury him?” she mumbled.
“Yes.”
“Your brother has found peace then.”
He nodded.
The sound of breaking glass echoed from downstairs. A moment later, she heard Henry Foster sobbing in deep, woeful bellows.
She tried to talk but instead coughed and wheezed until she hacked up a bloody mouthful of phlegm. She spat the vile glob into a bedpan that Paul had positioned under her chin. He set the bedpan down on the bedside table and wiped his bride’s forehead with a blood-stained cloth.
“You should stay away from me. I’m going to be the death of you, my love,” she managed in gasps.
He shook his head stoically. “I won’t get sick. I cared for my mother, my brother, and now you. The scourge does not hold sway over me. Father seems to be immune to it as well. It’s always been that way. Mother used to joke that father and I were such hearty stock that we have sap from an English Oak for blood.”
Her eyes rolled back in her sockets and she began to moan. He squeezed her hand and said her name repeatedly, panicking, but he could not snap her out of her fit. After what seemed like an eternity, her breathing steadied and she was able to focus on him again with glassy eyes.
“Paul. I want to see my baby. Bring him to
me. Bring me my little George.”
He swallowed hard and wiped his eyes. “I can’t, Kathryn. Don’t you remember?” After Paul’s mother died, and Kathryn and his brother, Hector, began to show symptoms, Henry had ordered Paul’s sister, Penny, and remaining brother, Martin, to take baby George to Chesterfield. They had broken quarantine. “Don’t worry. Martin returned last night with the news. George is safe; my sister will care for him at Uncle’s house.”
She wailed with such anguish that he thought his heart would rip in two. It was the forlorn sound of a mother who just realized she would never see her child again. He stroked her sweaty, matted hair until she calmed. She sat quietly for a few minutes and then fixed her worried gaze on him.
“Where is my son? I want to hold my baby, Paul. I want to see my baby,” she begged.
He looked into her eyes. She was delirious. It was pointless to explain again. “I know you do, sweetheart. I know. Soon. I promise.”
Two hours later, her fever returned and she shook so violently that he was afraid her bones would rattle loose from the sockets. He piled every blanket and piece of clothing they owned on top of her until the tremors subsided.
“Open the shutters, please,” she asked him.
He did as she requested and a golden beam of sunshine emblazoned the room. She smiled.
“Paul, I don’t want to die here.”
“I know, sweetheart. I don’t want you to die either.”
“No,” she coughed. “I don’t want to die here.”
“Then where do you want to go?”
“Take me to Cucklett Delf. To our spot under the old elm tree.”
“When the time comes, I will. I promise.”
“Take me there now, Paul.”
• • •
PAUL LIFTED HIS dying wife gingerly out of the open-air carriage, and carried her in his arms across the meadow of Cucklett Delf. He did not stop to rest until they reached the shade of the majestic English elm. Gently, he lowered her to the ground and helped her recline, with her back resting against his chest, and his back propped against the trunk of the tree. They sat in silence, together as one, listening to the birds and breeze. They watched the sun inch closer to the horizon. He kissed the top of her head again and again, telling her how much he loved her each time. At sunset, he picked a wildflower and stripped the leaves off. He bent the stem into a loop, and wove the remainder around itself. At the top of the impromptu ring sat a violet flower. Then, taking his wife’s trembling hand, he slipped the wildflower ring onto her ring finger, just as he had done nearly a year before.
In silence, and in peace, they watched the fire-red sun retire below the horizon, and he held her in his arms until the eternal night claimed her.
CHAPTER 9
_________________
Cucklett Delf,
Eyam, England
August 1672
PAUL FOSTER CHASED his six-year-old son through the knee-high summer grass of Cucklett Delf. George howled with delight every time his father caught him by the waist, swept him off his feet, and spun him around. As soon as Paul set George on the ground, the boy would scamper away, and the game would begin anew. When Paul was winded, he beseeched his son to join him for a rest under the shade of the English elm on the hill. George whined in protest until at last he took a seat next to his father.
“What are you doing?” George asked.
“I’m making a ring.”
“A ring of flowers?”
“Yes.”
“Who are you making it for? Auntie Penny?”
“No. I’m making this for your mother.”
“But Father, Mama is in heaven. How are you going to give it to her?”
Paul smiled. “I’m going to leave it here, at our special place. Then, after we leave, she can come get it.”
George nodded. It was an entirely satisfactory plan to his six-year-old mind.
“What was Mama like?”
Paul turned to his son, surprised. It was the first time George had asked this question. Paul smiled and retrieved Kathryn’s leather-bound diary from his back pocket. It was time.
“Your mother was a beautiful person, not only on the outside, but especially on the inside.”
George liked this answer and hugged his father’s arm. He watched intently as his father paged through the diary.
“This was your mother’s diary. Before she went to heaven, she gave it to me, as a present.”
“Will you give it to me as a present?” “Yes. Someday, a long time from now, when it’s time for me to go to heaven, then I will.”
George nodded.
Finding the right spot in the diary, Paul draped the silk bookmark into the crease between pages. “George, would you like me to read the letter that your mother wrote to you, just before she went to heaven?”
The boy looked at his father with wonder. “Mama wrote me a letter?”
“Yes, a very special letter. Do you want me to read it?”
“Oh, yes,” George exclaimed, with high-pitched bravado.
August 14, 1666
To my dearest son,
It will be many years before you are old enough to read this, but when the day comes, I pray that you have room in your heart enough to love a mother you have never known. For my heart is so full of love, and swollen with pride, to have birthed a son as strong and fair as you. The three months since your birth have passed so quickly, and I am left aching for more time. My tears flow at the melancholy idea. But know this, I have cherished every moment with you, and you will occupy my every thought till my last waking breath.
From the first moment I felt you growing inside me, I have pondered your future. What nature of man will you be? Will you be caring and passionate like your father? Will you be proud and obstinate like your grandfather Henry, or will you be congenial and temperate like your grandmother Alice? Will you be strong like the Fosters or softer like the Vicars clan? Will you be devoted and humble like my father, your namesake, or will you be carefree and enchanting like my mother, Mary? No doubt you will possess little pieces of all the people I love, which brings me peace. I am left only wondering now what traits you will have received from me.
It is an impossible task to write in verse all the lessons of love and happiness that a mother would share with her only son, over the days, months, and years of a lifetime. So instead, I will pen only the most important:
Patience. Be patient with others, but especially with yourself. Life will try to rush you, but do not let it. An extra minute spent to watch the sun set, or to play with a rain drop as it trickles down the windowpane, or to hug your father before you’re off on your next adventure, is the very minute that makes life worth living.
Laughter. Laugh everyday, and as much as you can. Never at the expense of others, but rather, in communion with them. Life should never become so serious and dreadful that you cannot find it in your heart to laugh and to smile. Good people laugh. Loving people laugh. Happy people laugh.
Kindness. Be kind. Kindness seems an effort because it is in our nature sometimes to be lazy. So I beseech you my son, don’t be lazy and don’t discriminate when it comes to kindness. What is kindness? Kindness is please and thank you. Kindness is offering a hand when another cannot carry a burden. Kindness is never being cruel to animals. Kindness is unsolicited encouragement. Kindness is paying a compliment when you know someone needs it. Kindness is giving hope instead of advice.
Love. Love is the most important lesson of all. When you love, be sure to love unconditionally. What does that mean? It means … Love, without doling out judgment. Love, without levying constraints. Love, without expectation. Love, without fear of heartbreak. Love, without self-interest. Love, even when you’re angry. Love, like your father loves you. Love, like I love you now, with all my heart and soul. Know that it was your father’s and my love for one another that brought you into this world and our combined love for you that will see you through even your darkest of days. You will never be
alone because you carry our love inside you.
Know that you had a mother named Kathryn, who carried you inside her. Know that you had a mother named Kathryn who birthed you and that she was the first person to kiss you, and hold you, and welcome you into this world. Know that you had a mother named Kathryn who named you after her father George Vicars, and that he would have been so proud to have had a grandson like you. Know that you had a mother named Kathryn with the same blue eyes as you. Know that you had a mother named Kathryn who married your father on a fine summer day, under an elm tree in Cucklett Delf, with a ring of flowers. Know that you have a mother named Kathryn who is watching over you right now, and who will be with you in spirit for all of eternity.
Love,
Your Mama,
Kathryn Vicars Foster
AUTHOR'S NOTE
Thank you for reading Ring of Flowers. If you downloaded this novella as a stand alone eBook, please consider continuing the adventure by reading the full length twenty-first-century thriller The Calypso Directive, available at your favorite bookstore or online retailer.
Learn more at: www.calypsodirective.com
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Table of Contents
Titlepage
Copyright
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
AUTHOR’S NOTE
Ring of Flowers Page 4