As she said it, the bell for Vespers began and Domina Elisabeth said, reaching out to lay a hand over her cousin’s, “I’ve said I’d stay to pray here.”
‘Ah.“ That was hardly something with which Lady Agnes could quarrel but she asked at Frevisse, ”You, too?“
‘If I may,“ Frevisse said toward Domina Elisabeth, who answered, ”Most welcomely.“
‘I’ll see you at supper, then, will I?“ Lady Agnes asked, wrapping her cloak around her.
They agreed she would and she left as Domina Elisabeth took up the breviary from the table and Frevisse moved to sit beside her, that they might share it. There was enough westering sunlight slanted through the high window for them to make out the familiar words—Deus, in adjutorium. God, be my help—but the very familiarity of the prayers worked against Frevisse this tiredly, her thoughts sliding away toward what she had learned from Lady Agnes just now.
That Mistress Champyon had been at school here in her girlhood meant she knew the nunnery well enough to have told either her husband or her son whatever he would have needed to know about the garden and the dorter. Or told both of them. That the murderer might not have worked alone was something she must needs consider, too, she supposed.
But if those stone blocks that Dickon said were half buried in the earth bank did indeed mean there had been a garden wall that had fallen, when had it fallen? If after Mistress Champyon’s time in St. Mary’s, she would not know about it. But the stones were well buried, Dickon had said, so the wall might have gone down that long ago, or longer. No one was in any haste to repair it, that was sure. Who could she ask about it? Not Lady Agnes. Almost the last thing Frevisse wanted was to awaken her curiosity by asking too many questions of her or around her…
“Domine, miserere mei, ” Domina Elisabeth said. Lord, have mercy on me.
“Sana animam meam, quia peccavi tibi,” Frevisse heard herself answering—Heal my soul, for I have sinned against you—and realized how little heed she was paying. With an effort, she let go the tangle of questions and set her mind to Vespers’ prayers and psalms with their reaching toward God that was the mind and soul’s eternal quest, until by Vespers’ end—Fideism animae per mis-pericardium Dei requiescat in pace. May the souls of the faithful rest in peace—she was quieted she would have been content to sit awhile with bowed head and in silence.
But Domina Elisabeth closed the breviary and set it aside with a brisk, “There. We’ll be going now, I think, Ysobel. Your supper will be coming soon and Lady Agnes will be waiting ours.”
Looking sunken and tired again but with a smile, Sister Ysobel held out a hand for Domina Elisabeth to take. “Tomorrow?” she whispered.
‘Tomorrow,“ Domina Elisabeth assured her.
She stood up and Frevisse rose with her, going to wait beside the door while Domina Elisabeth kissed her cousin on the forehead and whispered probably a blessing over her. Then in silence, leaving Sister Ysobel to the shadows until someone would bring an evening light and her supper, they went away, out of the infirmary and into the darkening cloister where there was candlelight through the choir windows of the church and, distant beyond the stones, the rise and fall of the nuns chanting toward their own end to Vespers.
There was no one at the door into the yard but it was not locked yet, only left on the latch, and they let themselves out, Domina Elisabeth waiting while Frevisse took the time to close the door silently and be sure the latch fell into place so that there would be no going in that way tonight by anyone unless someone opened the door from inside. Then, making haste because of both the dark and the cold now swiftly drawing in, they started toward Lady Agnes’s, Frevisse finding the comfort of Vespers was quite gone from her. Instead, she was realizing that if Lady Agnes had not told her about Mistress Champyon, she would have been left with only Stephen and Master Haselden to suspect—and that she would have been very uncomfortable with that, because if she chose whom she liked and whom she disliked in the matter, the Champyons lost out even against Stephen.
That thought made her take hard, half-angry hold on herself. She had no business taking sides in this, especially for no better reason than her dislike of what little she had seen of the Champyons.
She was still confronting that thought as she and Domina Elisabeth passed through the nunnery gateway into the street, with no one among the few people still out and about near enough to hear Domina Elisabeth say suddenly, “You give very little of yourself away, do you, Dame?”
Frevisse came to a startled stop, looked at her, then quickly looked away toward the houses across the street as if intently interested in the thin lines of light around their shut shutters as she answered, “There’s very little of me to be given.”
‘Sister Thomasine is someone with little of herself to give away,“ Domina Elisabeth returned. ”She’s given so much of herself to God there’s little of her left here in the world. You, on the other hand, have a great deal of yourself still here. But you keep it to yourself.“
Still toward the windows, Frevisse said, “It’s never seemed my place…”
‘You wouldn’t know ’your place‘ if it bit you on the ankle, Dame,“ Domina Elisabeth said; then said with quick contrition, ”That isn’t fair. Or true. It’s not that you don’t give. It’s that you don’t take, the way most people do. Whatever it is you’re at now, with your odd questions and long looks at people, I shouldn’t ask about it, should I?“
More startled, unaware until then that she had been so noticed, Frevisse looked back at her before saying softly, “If it please you, my lady.”
‘I think it had better,“ Domina Elisabeth said as quietly. ”Please me, I mean.“ She started forward again. ”Though you understand that I’ll probably have to ask you about it later.“
Humbly following her, Frevisse said, “Yes, my lady.”
Chapter 17
The dawn next morning was a narrow bar of rose behind the black shapes of Goring’s eastern rooftops when Master Gruesby crossed from the guesthall into the churchyard and toward the church, hurrying behind a few late-coming townsfolk through the stone-fretted patterns of candlelight thrown to the path through the high choir windows. Behind him in the hall and beyond it in the stables there was yellow lamplight and busyness and beside the church door a single lantern was hung to show feet the way over the threshold, but once inside the nave everything was shadows, the goodly number of people gathered to hear Mass only dark shapes, shuffle-footed in the cold and crowded in small groups for better warmth.
He was in quest of Dame Frevisse, certain she would be at Mass and therefore here in the nave rather than the choir because one of the guesthall servants had told him that the cloister door would not be unlocked until full light. He thought he saw her but there were too many cloaks and veils and women among the shadows for him to be certain, and since there was anyhow no way to have her out of here before the Mass was done, he patiently sidled into the lee of the pillar nearest the door. Wary as always of what the world and the day might have in store for him, he tried to take his usual comfort in the Mass, in its reminder that just as the candlelight around the altar, distant beyond the rood screen, was promise that all of life was not darkness and cold and uneasy shadows, so the Mass was promise that however far life might seem from holiness, God was as near as the bread and wine that could become His body. But today the comfort did not come. Master Gruesby was too aware of Master Mont-fort’s body laid to its corruption there beyond the altar, his soul gone to a judgment for which Master Gruesby had no doubt it had been unready. Alive, Master Montfort had been a trouble. Dead, he still was, and Master Gruesby was only glad when the Mass was done and he could set to what he had been sent to do.
By the gray light growing through the nave’s windows now he could be certain of Dame Frevisse, tall for a woman, as she moved with her prioress not toward him and the door into the yard but toward the door through the rood screen. He saw they meant to go into the cloister and hastened forward along the wall, sk
irting everyone going the other way, and along the rood screen, overtaking them just before they were beyond his reach.
‘Dame Frevisse.“ he said low-voiced and made them a low, hurried bow as both women turned around. ”Please you, my lady, Mistress Montfort wonders if you could come to her presently.“ He ducked another bow, this time directly to her prioress. ”By your leave, of course, my lady.“
Surprised but not apparently put out, her prioress asked, “Do you want to, Dame Frevisse?”
‘If you please, my lady,“ she said quietly. ”I can join you with Sister Ysobel later, if that would be all right.“
‘And maybe be a comfort to Mistress Montfort in the meanwhile. Yes, go on.“ Her prioress dismissed her with a brisk nod. ”Come and join us when you can.“
As she turned away, Master Gruesby made her another quick bow to her back, then yet another to Dame Frevisse, who said in answer, “Lead on, then.”
She was not, he thought, in the least deceived that it was Mistress Montfort who had asked to see her, and with no wish to answer any questions she might have of him, he hurried away, his head bowed in the hope that he looked merely respectful, his hands tucked deep into the folds of his heavy overgown as if he could tuck away the unease she always made in him. He succeeded at least in not being spoken to while they left the church and churchyard, back into the nunnery yard now busy with horses, servants, and guests preparing to leave. At the guesthall stairs he had to thread his way upward against the outward flow of baggage and people but Dame Frevisse kept close behind him there and through the hall—loud with bustle and talk—to the door to Mistress Montfort’s chamber. There, he knocked in a way Master Christopher would recognize, opened the door, and stood aside, bowing to her to go in ahead of him. She did, and relieved to be quit of her, he followed, nothing more he need do but close the door and take a place beside it while she crossed to Mistress Montfort and Master Christopher waiting for her beside the fire.
The three of them made a dark gathering, Master Gruesby thought—Dame Frevisse in her Benedictine black, Master Christopher and Mistress Montfort in their mourning—and of the three of them, only Mistress Mont-fort’s face was at variance with it. These past days of dealing with Master Montfort’s death and funeral she had held herself in well, nor did Master Gruesby doubt that if she was to go out into the hall or someone else came in here, she would take on her expected widow-look readily enough; but without that need to satisfy others, she was a-glow with gladness, free of any pretense of grief.
It was otherwise with Master Christopher. All that he had had to do and feel these past days was weighing on him, and even though that other inquest had meant he had not been here to keep the vigil beside his father’s body the night before the funeral, young Denys said he had instead kept it in the church where he had been. That had meant little rest that night, and if he had slept well last night the gray shadows under his eyes this morning belied it. Besides that, Master Gruesby was worried for him on account of what more trouble might come of his having asked Dame Frevisse’s help. He doubted Master Christopher understood that she was not a woman easily put aside once she had turned her mind to a thing. She might well have kept aside from dealing in the matter of Master Montfort’s murder, given her dislike of him—and of that dislike Master Gruesby had never had doubt, try though she did to hide it behind seeming respect and womanhood—but now that she had been started on it, she would not let go and what trouble that might draw down on Master Christopher was a worry.
Master Christopher was pouring wine from the silver pitcher into the goblets waiting on the small table close to hand while Mistress Montfort said, “You’ll have some warmed, spiced wine with us, Dame? To take off the morning’s chill?”
‘Yes, thank you,“ Dame Frevisse answered and added in the dry voice that always made Master Gruesby more wary of her than ever, ”I’m pleased to see you’re still doing so well against your grief.“
With a deepened smile, Mistress Montfort acknowledged, “I do what I can.” Master Christopher offered her the first goblet but she nodded it away to Dame Frevisse, going on, “I’ve sent John and Edward and the girls to bid folk farewell and good journey on my behalf and Christopher’s. It’s understood I’m too stricken down to show myself and Christopher is comforting me. I suppose that’s why you’re here, too, if anyone should ask. But in truth it’s Christopher who must needs talk with you. I”—she swept her skirts around to one side and sat down in the chair beside the hearth—“am merely here.”
She took the goblet Master Christopher now offered her, smiled on him and on Dame Frevisse, and turned her head away toward the fire, showing she was leaving them to whatever business there would be between them.
Master Christopher took up the third goblet of wine and brought it to Master Gruesby. Discomfited, Master Gruesby fumbled toward thanking him but Master Christopher said with a smile, “You’re in this with us, sir,” and returned to the table, leaving Master Gruesby in confusion because that was altogether more courtesy and kindness than he could remember ever having from Master Montfort even once in all the years he had served him.
Fortunate for what quiet he had left, no one was heeding him. Instead Master Christopher was pouring wine for himself and saying to Dame Frevisse, “Master Gruesby said you wanted to talk to me.”
‘And you to me, I trust,“ she returned. ”Master Gruesby told you what I gathered from talking with Sister Ysobel?“
‘That whoever was there in the garden, they came purposing to kill my father?“ Christopher turned from the table to face her, wine in hand. ”Yes.“
‘We agreed, too, that someone had to know the nunnery well to have chosen the garden as the place to kill him. That made both Master Haselden and Stephen Langley more likely than Master Champyon or Rowland Englefield.“
‘That was also in my mind.“
‘I’ve since learned that Mistress Champyon was at school here in her girlhood. She’d know the nunnery enough to tell her son or her husband about the garden.“
Christopher’s face darkened. “Damn.”
‘There’s the matter of the fence, though. I had Dickon—he’s one of my…“
‘I remember Dickon.“
‘I had him go to look at the nunnery from outside. He says there seem to be stones half buried in the bank below the garden, almost hidden in the grass. Worked stones, he said.“
‘I saw them, too. They would have served the murderer in climbing the bank, I thought.“
‘Yes. But they’re worked, as from a fallen wall. When did it fall?“
Master Christopher cocked his head, silently asking why that mattered, then straightened with a jerk, understanding, and said, “If it fell after Mistress Champyon was familiar with the garden, then she wouldn’t think of that as a place to lure my father because she wouldn’t think there was an easy way into it.”
‘Even so. So we need to know when the wall, if there was indeed one, fell. I’ll ask about it today. I couldn’t yesterday, there being only so many questions I can ask at a time.“ Without giving away to anyone what she was doing, she meant.
It made Master Gruesby ill at ease how often he understood what she meant even when she did not say it. As always when he was uneasy, he wanted to busy himself with pen and paper but lacking that refuge, he took an incautiously deep drink of wine. There proved to be too much nutmeg among the spices and the effort not to choke on it noticeably occupied him while Dame Frevisse went on to Master Christopher, “Could you find out if Mistress Champyon has gone out walking while here in Goring, that she might have seen the change in the wall? It’s hardly been walking weather nor does she seem to me someone given to pointless wandering along the back ways of places. If she’s gone out, the inn servants will likely remember it.”
‘I’ll have questions asked,“ Master Christopher said.
‘The trouble is that all we know so far are odds and ends and apparent nothings. We lack what would fit them all together into sense. Would you
have questions asked, too, about where everyone most concerned in the Lengley inheritance was that day? All that day but most especially at the hour Master Montfort was killed. Women as well as men.“
Master Christopher nodded in agreement to that.
‘Everyone with a near concern in the Lengley inheritance,“ Dame Frevisse repeated. ”Including Master Gruesby.“
She looked across the room to him as she said it and he froze, the goblet raised for another drink, staring back at her over the rim of it before he hastily lowered it and said, shaken, “I’ve nothing to do with the Lengley inheritance!”
‘Master Montfort was dealing with it, and you as his clerk were therefore dealing with it, too,“ she said back at him. ”Just as any of the Lengleys’ or Champyons’ lawyers and their clerks are.“
‘Following that way of seeing it,“ Master Christopher protested, ”we must needs ask where all their servants and wives and children and maybe distant in-laws were that day.“
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