An Instance of the Fingerpost

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An Instance of the Fingerpost Page 14

by Iain Pears


  Sarah arrived a few minutes later and greeted the crone with familiarity: she was welcomed while I was not. ‘She was an army woman,’ she said.

  This, apparently, was meant to be explanation enough; and I asked no more.

  ‘How are you?’ I enquired, as I was anxious to note the effect of the procedure on the donor of the blood as well as the recipient.

  ‘I am tired,’ she said. ‘But that is more than made up for by seeing my mother improve.’

  ‘She is also concerned about you,’ I replied. ‘That is not good for her. You must present a cheerful countenance.’

  ‘I do as I can,’ she said, ‘although sometimes that is not easy. Your generosity, and Dr Lower’s, have been a great boon in recent days.’

  ‘Do you have employment?’

  ‘Some. I am working again for the Wood family most days, and in the evenings there is occasionally some work at a glove maker’s. I stitch well, although it is hard sewing leather.’

  ‘Were you upset about Dr Grove?’

  Instantly I could see the caution come over her face, and I feared was about to be subjected to another one of her outbursts. So I held up my hand to prevent it.

  ‘Please do not think me malicious. I ask for a good reason. I must tell you that there is some cause for concern about his death, and it has been said that you were seen in the college that same evening.’

  She still looked stonily at me, so I continued, half-wondering why I was taking such trouble. ‘It may well be that someone else will ask you the same questions.’

  ‘What do you mean about concern?’

  ‘I mean that there is a small possibility that he died of poison.’

  Her faced turned pale as I spoke, and she looked down in thought for a few seconds before staring blankly into my eyes. ‘Is that so?’

  ‘As I understand it, he had discharged you from his employ recently?’

  ‘True. And for no good reason.’

  ‘And you resented it?’

  ‘Very much. Of course. Who would not? I had worked hard and well for him, and never for a moment deserved any reproach.’

  ‘And you approached him in the coffee house? Why?’

  ‘I thought he would have had a good enough heart to help my mother. I wanted to borrow money from him.’ She looked at me angrily, daring me either to pity or criticise.

  ‘And he turned you away.’

  ‘You saw that for yourself.’

  ‘Did you go to his room the night he died?’

  ‘Does someone say I did?’

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Who says this?’

  ‘I don’t know. Answer the question, please. It is important. Where were you?’

  ‘That is none of your concern.’

  We had reached an impasse, I could see. If I kept on pressing, she would walk out, and yet she was very far from satisfying my curiosity. And what possible reason could she have for not being frank? Nothing was so important that it was worth encouraging suspicion in any form, and she must have known by now that I meant her well. I tried one last time, but again she blocked my enquiry.

  ‘Was there any truth in these stories?’

  ‘I know of no stories. Tell me, Doctor, is someone saying Dr Grove was murdered?’

  I shook my head. ‘I don’t think so. There is no reason to think so at the moment and he is to be buried this evening. Once that has taken place, the matter will be closed. Certainly the warden genuinely believes, I think, that there is nothing suspicious about the occurrence at all.’

  ‘And you? What do you believe?’

  I shrugged again. ‘I have heard of many men of Grove’s age and appetites dying suddenly of a fit, and apart from that it is of little concern to me. My main concern is your mother, and the treatment I have given her. Has she passed any stools?’

  She shook her head.

  ‘Make sure you collect them if she does,’ I continued. ‘They will be of great importance to me. Do not let her up, and make sure she does not wash. Above all, keep her warm. And if her condition changes at all, let me know instantly.’

  Chapter Fourteen

  * * *

  THE FUNERAL SERVICE for Grove was a solemn and dignified affair which began shortly after darkness had fallen. All through the day, I imagined, the preparations had been made: the college gardener excavated a space in the cloister next the chapel, the choir of boys practised, and Woodward prepared the eulogy. I decided to attend once Lower told me he thought there would be no objection; Grove was, after all, one of the few people I had known in the town. But I insisted on his coming as well; there are few things more distressing than being at a religious ceremony and not knowing what to do next.

  He grumbled about it, but eventually agreed. The régime in New College, I gathered, was not greatly to his liking. When it began – the chapel full, the attendant priests in vestments – I could see why, from his point of view. ‘You will have to explain’, I said in a whisper during a lull in the proceedings, ‘what the difference between your Church and mine is. I must say I can discern very little.’

  Lower scowled. ‘There is none here. Why they are not open and pronounce their obedience to the whore of Babylon – apologies, Cola – I do not know. They all want to, the scoundrels.’

  There were, I guessed, about half a dozen or more of Lower’s persuasion, and not all were as well behaved as he. Thomas Ken, the man who had disputed with Grove over dinner, sat ostentatiously through the whole service and talked loudly during the requiem. Dr Wallis, who had been so rude to me, sat cross-armed and with the disapproving quietude of the professional cleric. A few more even laughed at the most solemn moments, earning them ill-tempered looks from others. If the ceremony concluded without degenerating into an open fight, I thought at one stage, then we would be fortunate.

  Somehow, though, it came to an end without scandal, and I thought that I could almost feel the relief in the air as Woodward pronounced the final blessing and led the way, white stick in hand, out of the chapel and around the cloister to the open grave. The body was moved over the gaping hole and held up by four of the Fellows; Woodward was preparing the final prayer when there was a scuffling from the back.

  I looked at Lower: both of us were sure that tempers had finally boiled over and Grove’s last moments above the earth were to be tarnished by doctrinal dispute. A few of the Fellows were scandalised and turned round with angry looks; a murmur ran through the congregation as their numbers were forced aside to let through a portly man with grey whiskers, a thick cloak and a look of acute embarrassment.

  ‘What is this about?’ Woodward said, turning away from the grave to face the interloper.

  ‘This burial must stop,’ the man said. I nudged Lower and whispered in his ear. ‘Who’s that? What’s going on?’ Lower dragged his attention away and whispered, ‘Sir John Fulgrove. Magistrate,’ then bade me keep silent.

  ‘You have no authority in this place,’ Woodward continued.

  ‘In matters of violence, I do.’

  ‘There has been no violence.’

  ‘Perhaps not. But I am obligated by my position to satisfy myself. I have received an official notice that murder may have been done, and I am bound to investigate. You know that as well as I do, Warden.’

  A loud murmur went up once the word murder was mentioned. Woodward stood stock still in front of the grave, as though protecting the body from the magistrate. In fact, he was protecting his college.

  ‘There is no question of murder. I am quite satisfied.’

  The magistrate was uncomfortable, but determined to stand his ground. ‘You know that once a complaint is received, then it must be properly investigated. The fact that this death occurred inside the college is of no importance. Your privileges do not extend that far. You cannot exclude me on such a matter, nor can you dispute my writ. I order that this funeral cease until I am satisfied.’

  With the eyes of the college, and a good part of the university, upon him, Woodward
swayed to and fro as he considered how best to respond to this open challenge. He was not, ordinarily, a man to hesitate for a moment but on this occasion he took his time.

  ‘I will not cede to your authority, sir,’ he said eventually. ‘I do not accept you have any right to enter this place without my consent, nor to interfere with college business. I am satisfied there is no cause for your presence, and that I could in law order you out.’

  The audience looked pleased at this statement, and Sir John bridled with indignation. Having thus satisfied the proprieties and made sure he conceded no ground on matters of principle, Woodward submitted, after a fashion. ‘Yet perhaps you have testimony which I do not know. If violence has been done, it is the duty of the college to know the truth. I will hear what you have to say and postpone the interment until I have done so. If I find your complaint to be without justification, it will continue, whether you agree or not.’

  There was a murmur of appreciation at what Lower later told me was a masterly defensive retreat from an untenable position and, while it continued, Woodward ordered the body to be taken back to the chapel. Then he escorted the magistrate out of the cloisters and to his lodgings.

  ‘Well, well,’ Lower said softly as the two men vanished through the narrow archway which led to the main quadrangle beyond. ‘I wonder who is behind this.’

  ‘What do you mean?’

  ‘A magistrate can only act if someone complains to him that a crime has been committed. Then he must investigate to see whether the complaint is justified. So, who went to see him? It cannot have been Woodward, and who else had an interest? As far as I know the man had no family.’

  I shivered. ‘We are not going to find out standing here,’ I pointed out.

  ‘You are right. How about a bottle in my rooms at Christ Church? Then we can see if we can figure it out?’

  We made little progress; despite much talk and more wine, the question of who went to see the magistrate was as unresolved when we awoke the next morning as it was when we left New College. The only thing I learnt was that the Canary wine the English prefer leaves a wicked remembrance the next morning.

  I slept with Lower, being too shaky to return to my own bed by the end of the conversation – which soon left the topic of Grove and ranged widely over the whole field of curiosity. In particular he returned again to the idea of spirit and whether it was susceptible to investigation – a notion which was of importance for the theory underlying my blood transfusion.

  ‘I suppose’, he said reflectively, ‘we may posit the existence of your life spirit in the blood from the existence of ghosts, for what are they but the spirit released from the body? And I cannot bring myself to doubt these manifestations, for I have myself seen one.’

  ‘Really? When?’ I replied.

  ‘Only a few months ago,’ he said. ‘I was in this very room, and heard a noise outside the door. I opened it up, as I was expecting a visitor, and there was this young man. Very curiously dressed, in velvet, with long, fair hair, and carrying a silken rope. I said hello, and he turned and looked at me. He didn’t reply, but smiled sadly, then walked down the stairs. I didn’t think much of it, but went back inside. My guest arrived a minute or so later. I asked him whether he had seen the strange youth – he could hardly have failed to do so – but he said no, there had been no one on the stairs at all. Later, the dean told me that a young man had killed himself in 1560. He’d left his room on my staircase, walked to a cellar on the other side of the college and hanged himself with a silken rope.’

  ‘Hmm.’

  ‘Hmm, indeed. I merely point out that this is one of the rare occasions when the best theories of science and practical observation coincide very well. It is why I do not dismiss your a priori notions out of hand. Although I do not rule out the possibility that another explanation might account for Widow Blundy’s improvement.’

  ‘To dismiss an explanation you have in favour of one you do not have seems foolish,’ I said. ‘But I must point out that you are assuming that the spirit which maintains life is the same as that which survives it.’

  He sighed. ‘I suppose I am. Although even Boyle has not yet thought up an experiment to discover what that spirit is, assuming it has some physical existence.’

  ‘It would get him into a great deal of trouble with the theologians,’ I said. ‘And he seems concerned to maintain the best relations with them.’

  ‘Sooner or later that will come,’ my friend replied. ‘Unless we scientists are to confine ourselves solely to material things, and what would be the point of that? But you are right; Boyle is unlikely to take such a risk. I cannot but think it a fault in him. But then your Mr Galileo has shown the risks of annoying men of the Church. What do you think of him?’

  Of course, Lower had heard of this celebrated case, and it was much discussed at Padua when I was there, for Galileo had been in the pay of Venice until tempted away to the court of Florence by Medici pomp; he made many enemies thereby, which stood him in no good stead when he came into trouble for saying the earth went round the sun. Even though his fall had occurred almost before I was born, it had frightened many of the curious, and made them think carefully before they spoke. But it annoyed me that Lower should refer to it, for I knew what his opinion would be and that he would twist the facts to attack my Church.

  ‘I have the highest respect for him, of course,’ I said, ‘and the episode grieves me. I am a man of science, and count myself a true son of the Church. I believe firmly with Mr Boyle that science can never contradict true religion, and that if they seem at variance, then that is due to our faulty understanding of one or the other. God gave us the Bible and He gave us nature to show His creation; it is absurd to think He might contradict Himself. It is man who fails.’

  ‘Someone is wrong in this case, then,’ Lower said.

  ‘Clearly,’ I replied, ‘and no one seriously believes the pope’s advisers were anything but misguided. But Signor Galileo was at fault at well, possibly more than they. He was a difficult and arrogant man and erred greatly in neglecting to show how his ideas were in conformity with doctrine. In truth I do not believe there was any contradiction. There was a failure to understand, and that had the direst consequences.’

  ‘Not the intolerance of your Church, then?’

  ‘I think not, and would say it is proved that the Catholic Church is more open to science than the Protestant. Every significant man of science yet has been raised in the Catholic church. Think of Copernicus, Vesalius, Torricelli, Pascal, Descartes . . .’

  ‘Our Mr Harvey was a good Anglican,’ Lower objected, a little stiffly, I thought.

  ‘He was. But he had to come to Padua for his training, and there formulated his ideas.’

  Lower grunted, and raised his glass in salute at my reply. ‘You’ll make cardinal yet,’ he said. ‘A judicious and political response. You believe science is obliged to prove itself?’

  ‘I do. Otherwise it sets itself up as an equal to religion, not its servant, and the consequences of that are too awful to contemplate.’

  ‘You are beginning to sound like Dr Grove.’

  ‘No. He thought us frauds and doubted the usefulness of experiment. I fear its power and ambition, and concern myself lest its power should make men arrogant.’

  I could have grown angry at his remarks, but I felt disinclined to argue and Lower himself was not really trying to provoke. ‘Anyway,’ he continued, ‘with men like Grove in our Church, who are we to condemn? They have less power to cause trouble than your cardinals, but they would do so if they could.’ He waved his hand to dismiss a topic he had tired of. ‘Tell me, how is your patient? Is she truly living up to the theories you have heaped upon her shoulders?’

  I smiled contentedly. ‘She is bearing them marvellously well,’ I said. ‘There are very distinct signs of improvement in her, and she tells me she feels better than she has since she fell.’

  ‘In that case, I drink to Monsieur Descartes,’ Lower said, raisin
g his glass, ‘and to his disciple, the eminent Dr da Cola.’

  ‘Thank you,’ I said. ‘And I must say that I suspect you of having more regard for his notions than you say.’

  Lower raised his finger to his lips. ‘Shh!’ he said. ‘I have read him with interest and profit. But I would as soon own to being a papist as a Cartesian.’

  An odd way of finishing a conversation, but that was how it ended; without even a yawn Lower rolled over – taking the one thin blanket with him and leaving me shivering – and fell fast asleep. I thought aimlessly for some time, and did not even notice when I similarly succumbed to the embrace of Lethe.

  Neither of us had woken when the messenger came from Stahl to say that his preparations were complete and if we wished to attend on him at our earliest convenience we could witness his experiment. I cannot say that I felt up to a meeting with the irascible German in my drugged and shaky state, but Lower reluctantly concluded that it was our duty to do our best.

  ‘God knows I don’t feel like it,’ he said as he washed his mouth out and straightened his clothes before attacking a piece of bread and a glass of wine for his breakfast. ‘But if this has become a magistrate’s matter, then we will need to present our findings properly. Not that he is likely to pay us much attention.’

  ‘Why not?’ I asked with some curiosity. ‘In Venice physicians are regularly called to give their opinion.’

  ‘In England as well. “Your honour, in my opinion this man is dead. The presence of a knife in his back indicates an unnatural death.” As long as it is kept simple, there is no problem. Shall we go?’ He stuffed more bread in his coat pocket and held open the door. ‘I’m sure you do not really want to miss it.’

 

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