Unhallowed Ground

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Unhallowed Ground Page 7

by Mel Starr


  A look of understanding washed the frown from Father Simon’s brow. “Was it the cord Thomas atte Bridge used to hang himself?”

  “As you say, one hempen cord is much like another, but it may be so. What length was the missing cord?”

  Father Simon peered at his servant, brows again furrowed. It was the servant who answered. “Near twenty paces long after I cut a length for the well, I think.”

  I did not at the moment think to ask when and from whom the cord was purchased. I should have.

  Chapter 6

  I was uneasy for the remainder of that day. Had I learned a thing important to Thomas atte Bridge’s death? Or was Father Simon’s missing rope but a minor theft, or simply misplaced? The latter explanation seemed quite unlikely. Would Father Simon and his servant both forget where a length of hempen cord was coiled?

  Days grew long, so after supper Kate and I sat upon a bench in the toft behind Galen House and enjoyed the warmth of the slanting sun as it settled over Lord Gilbert’s forest west of the town. I was silent, considering John Kellet and the missing rope. Kate noted my pensive mood and held her tongue for a time, but eventually curiosity overcame her – Kate does not do battle well against curiosity – and she asked of my thoughts. I told her what I had learned of Kellet, his visit to Father Simon, and the missing cord. When I was done it was Kate’s turn to sink deep into thought.

  While I told her of these things the servant’s estimate of the rope’s length returned to me. Kate followed as I left the bench, found the cord which suspended Thomas atte Bridge at Cow-Leys Corner, and uncoiled it upon the street before Galen House. It was near ten paces long. The remnant Kate discovered tossed aside at Cow-Leys Corner would add little to the length. If this was Father Simon’s stolen cord, some eight paces or so, considering what had been cut for his belt, was missing.

  The absent cord was found five days later. The day before Rogation Sunday, Father Simon’s servant was gathering eggs and found the remnant of his master’s rope coiled in the shed in its proper place. Where it had been since Hocktide no man could say. Well, some man knew, but that man was hid in the cloud of unknowing.

  I learned of this discovery as Kate and I walked in the procession about the boundaries of the parish. Father Thomas, Father Simon, and Father Ralph led the marchers. I was a few paces behind the vicars when Father Simon’s servant sought me out and told of his discovery. I confess my mind wandered from the prayers beseeching the Lord Christ for a bountiful harvest.

  Kate and I had brought with us this day a pouch of coins, as did other more prosperous inhabitants of the town. These were distributed to the needy as we walked the parish boundary. Maud atte Bridge and her children were among those who stood beside the path with arms outstretched and palms raised.

  When mass was done I sought Father Simon and while Kate returned to Galen House to prepare our dinner, I asked him about the new-found cord.

  “Aye, as you were told, Robert found it coiled upon the tree nail when he gathered eggs yesterday morn.”

  “It was not there when he sought eggs Friday?”

  “He thinks not.”

  “It would be well if this matter could be discussed with Father Thomas and Father Ralph,” I said.

  “A bit of stolen rope, now returned?”

  “If you stretch it out in your toft you will find it shorter by half than when you hung it upon the tree nail at Hocktide.”

  The vicar squinted at me from under lowered brows. He understood my meaning. “The missing length Thomas atte Bridge used to hang himself at Cow-Leys Corner? But who then returned what was unused, and why would they do so? Did Thomas require assistance to take his own life? Hempen cord is common stuff. Perhaps this is all mere happenstance.”

  “Perhaps. But I would like to tell the tale to Father Thomas and Father Ralph. They may have insight we have missed.”

  Father Simon agreed, somewhat reluctantly, and directed me to seek his vicarage at the ninth hour. He would send Robert to summon the other Bampton vicars.

  Kate had prepared a Lombard stew for our dinner. This dish is a favorite of mine. Of course, I have many favorite dishes. When came the ninth hour I was better suited for a nap in the sun of the toft than disputing stolen rope, but I had a duty and would perform it.

  I found the vicars seated before cups of Father Simon’s wine at his table. The three priests eyed the cord I had brought with me as if they expected it to strike out at them like a snake.

  “I have explained your wish to speak,” Father Simon began, then fell silent. How much he had explained I knew not, so I began by telling of my unease regarding Thomas atte Bridge’s death. I recounted the evidence, and, when I fell silent Father Thomas spoke:

  “What is it you seek of us?”

  “All know that Thomas atte Bridge was a disagreeable fellow,” I said. “I can name many he has harmed who might have wished to do him ill.”

  “Murder him?” Father Thomas asked.

  “Even that.”

  “Which of these injured folk do you suspect of having a hand in atte Bridge’s death… was he not a suicide?”

  “I have a theory,” I confessed.

  “We would hear of it,” Father Thomas encouraged.

  “John Kellet visited Bampton at St George’s Day, quietly, and departed for Exeter the morn of the day Thomas atte Bridge was found at Cow-Leys Corner. He stayed with Father Simon two nights, and might have discovered the cord hanging in the shed.”

  “But he is now in Exeter, at St Nicholas’s Priory. How could he have taken, then returned, the cord?” Father Simon scoffed.

  “Remember I told you of the mud on Thomas’s heels, and the twin gouges in the mud of the road. Two men took Thomas to Cow-Leys Corner, one at his shoulders, another at his feet. The man at his feet dropped him briefly. Perhaps Thomas struggled and the man lost his grip. Now Kellet is gone, but his partner in the crime remains among us and has chosen this time to return the unused cord, perhaps unaware that it has been missed.”

  Father Simon looked to his servant and spoke: “You said you would seek the stolen cord. Did you tell others of the theft?”

  “Aye,” Robert nodded.

  “Doesn’t mean John Kellet had aught to do with it,” Father Simon protested.

  “But the thief, whoso it was, feared discovery and restored what he took,” Father Thomas answered.

  “Perhaps he did not replace all of his theft,” I replied.

  I lifted the rope in my hand. “This is the cord from which Thomas atte Bridge dangled. Let us lay it and the returned cord out in the street, and see how long they be together.”

  We did so. When Father Simon’s belt, the fragment found on the forest floor, and the piece cut from Thomas’s neck were added to the two longer lengths, the total was twenty-one paces long.

  Father Simon peered down at the segmented cord thoughtfully, his chin resting upon his left hand. His servant stood behind him.

  “Near twenty paces long, you said,” I reminded the servant.

  “Aye; ’bout what you see here stretched out in the street.”

  I coiled the length of rope which had suspended Thomas atte Bridge and handed it to Father Simon.

  “This is yours, I think.”

  The vicar made no move to accept it. I suspect he wished no association with the dead to trouble his house.

  “I have no further need of it,” he grimaced. I shrugged and dropped my outstretched arm to my side. The servant followed my lead and coiled the segment which had reappeared in Father Simon’s toft, shaking the dirt of the street from it as he did so.

  “I’ll just put this back,” he explained.

  Father Thomas waved a hand toward the cord in my hand. “Is it possible that Thomas had assistance in taking his own life, and his companion replaced the unused cord? If so, ’twas a grievous sin.”

  “That does not explain the signs that Thomas was carried or dragged to the tree, or the absence of mud upon the stool where he would have s
tood did he take his own life,” I replied.

  Father Ralph had been silent while we examined the rope segments and considered their meaning. Now he spoke:

  “Kellet would have passed Cow-Leys Corner when he set out for Exeter. Did any man see him there?”

  The other vicars, the servant, and I peered at one another with vacant expressions.

  “Then he must have passed the place before atte Bridge was found, saw him there, and went his way. It was the herdsman who first raised the hue and cry, was it not? He made no mention of any other man there.”

  “What say you, Master Hugh?” Father Thomas asked. “Was Thomas long dead when he was found? You have more understanding of such matters than we.”

  “He was beginning to stiffen in death. He was hanging from the tree since well before dawn, I think.”

  “So unless Kellet arose and set off very early, he would have seen him there, even in the dark of night, as Thomas was so near the road.”

  “When did Kellet set out for Exeter?” Father Ralph asked of Father Simon.

  “He bedded with Robert,” the vicar replied, and looked to his servant.

  “Kellet slept little. I awoke twice the first night to find him out of bed.”

  “Men often have need to rise from their slumber in the night,” Father Simon said. “I find it more so as I grow old, and Kellet is no longer young.”

  “First time,” Robert continued, “I saw him upon his knees before the window. When he saw that I had awakened he returned to bed. Where he was the second time I awoke I know not.”

  “Visiting the privy, I’d guess,” Father Simon said.

  John Kellet out of bed and upon his knees in the middle of the night? This was indeed a revelation. Such a scene, knowing what the man had done, was difficult to imagine. Father Ralph voiced my thoughts.

  “John Kellet on his knees at midnight is not credible. Probably he heard Robert stir in the night and feigned prayer.”

  “Why would he do so?” Father Simon objected.

  “Because he was about some nefarious business he did not want known, like finding a coil of rope in your shed.”

  “Bah. John Kellet is a changed man, I tell you. He wears a hair shirt.” Father Simon looked to me for confirmation, as if his earlier revealing this to me made of me a witness. I shrugged and said nothing.

  “Why did he seek only you, and skulk about the town unknown to all others?” Father Ralph asked.

  “He knows there is much ill will toward him, and did not claim it should be otherwise. He wished only to thank me for providing for him when he was a child.”

  “What of the second night?” I asked Robert.

  “I slept soundly and did not awaken ’til near dawn.”

  “John said he would depart early,” Father Simon added, “and would not trouble us when he did so. My cook left a loaf for him upon the table and it was half gone when I arose.”

  “He did not take the whole loaf?”

  “Nay. But half. I told you of his changed appearance. A walking skeleton.”

  Robert nodded agreement.

  “And you do not know when of the clock he set out?”

  The vicar and his servant shook their heads.

  “Did he speak of his journey to Compostela?” Father Thomas asked.

  “Some. Spoke most of folk here in Bampton,” the servant replied. “Said there was hardship aplenty on pilgrimage but he would not speak more of it. Asked of doings in the town since he’d been away.”

  “Did he ask of Thomas atte Bridge?” I questioned.

  “Aye, him more than most. Wanted to know had he changed his ways. I told him not so as anyone would notice.”

  “How did he receive this news?”

  “Seemed disappointed, troubled, like he’d expected to learn different.”

  “Of an atte Bridge? The father was not a bad sort,” said Father Ralph, “but the sons… ’tis no calamity they are gone.”

  “So whoever murdered Thomas atte Bridge,” Father Thomas replied, “if murder it was, has done a kindness to the town?”

  “That is for God to judge,” Father Ralph crossed his arms sanctimoniously. “Men must preserve order and punish evildoers.”

  “Some might say as that’s what was done, Thomas bein’ as he was,” Robert said softly.

  Father Ralph blew out his cheeks and looked askance at the servant for his unwanted opinion.

  “One other thing,” Father Simon said. “John wears no shoes. Walked from Spain barefoot. Said his shoes wore out on the way to Compostela and he had no coins to replace them. Decided to go on with no shoes as penance.”

  “There were such footprints in the mud at Cow-Leys Corner,” I said. “Some barefoot man trod the road and stood under the limb where Thomas atte Bridge was found.”

  “Many poor folk save their shoes and go about barefoot when the weather warms,” Father Simon asserted.

  This was so. I tried to recall the day atte Bridge was found. Of all the throng gathered at Cow-Leys Corner, did any go about bare of foot? I could not remember. There were other matters clogging my thoughts that day.

  “Father Simon’s returned cord leaves us, I think, with a serious question,” Father Thomas said. “Was the cord taken by a murderer, or an accomplice in suicide? Master Hugh, you believe a murderer, is this not so?”

  “Aye.”

  “And you?” The priest turned to his associates.

  “It may be as Master Hugh says,” Father Simon offered. “But I know his mind. He believes John Kellet guilty of a felony, and will seek evidence to prove it so. It cannot be. Kellet is not the man we knew of days past. Master Hugh remembers him only as he was.”

  “When he did slay Henry atte Bridge,” Father Ralph continued the thought, “and would have aided Thomas atte Bridge in doing murder to Master Hugh. Will a leopard change his spots? Master Hugh must travel to Exeter and seek Prior Richard. He must be told of Master Hugh’s suspicion and John Kellet must be examined closely.”

  I greeted this recommendation with mixed feelings. I had convinced myself that John Kellet was guilty of Thomas atte Bridge’s murder, and had some evidence it was so. Pilgrimage to Compostela was small penance to pay for his previous crimes, and did I not seek him and truth at St Nicholas’s Priory he would escape retribution for this new felony. But I had no wish to travel to Exeter, even at a season when the weather was benign and the roads dry.

  “Perhaps,” I said, “a letter might be sent to the prior. He and the almoner, if told of this business, might query Kellet about his hours in Bampton.”

  “If he answers falsely,” Father Ralph replied, “how will Prior Richard know? Kellet has served the priory for but a few days. His character is unknown there. No, a letter will not serve. You, who know Kellet and might press him if he dissembles, you must go.”

  “Such a journey will be a waste of Master Hugh’s time,” Father Simon said heatedly. “Kellet is a new man. He lives now as a penitential and mendicant. Why would he do some new felony for which he must do even greater penance?”

  Father Ralph and Father Simon scowled at each other, then looked to Father Thomas, each seeking support for his opinion.

  “Pilgrimage and penance may indeed change a man. I hope for John Kellet’s soul it did. But you, Master Hugh, will not be convinced it is so unless you travel to Exeter and seek him. If he is yet iniquitous you may be able to discern it. Is he not, that also may be plain. If you assume his guilt in the matter of Thomas atte Bridge, you will not seek another. Then whoso did murder atte Bridge, did Kellet not, will escape punishment for his felony, in this world, if not the next. Father Ralph speaks true. You must go to Exeter, to put your own mind at ease, if for no other reason.”

  There was little more to say of the matter. If I did not go to Exeter, when Lord Gilbert returned at Lammastide and I had found no murderer in Bampton, my employer might be unhappy. Thomas atte Bridge was not his tenant, but died upon his land. Lord Gilbert would not be pleased to find me
slothful in my duties. And if John Kellet was guilty, as I thought likely, I would not prove it so from Bampton while he served St Nicholas’s Priory.

  I left the priests standing before the vicarage and sought Galen House. Kate’s face appeared in my mind, and you will understand why I was loath to travel to Exeter. At best the journey would take five days, and five more to return. I had not been out of Kate’s presence since the day we wed. The vicars of St Beornwald’s Church now required of me a fortnight away from my bride.

  Kate was displeased by the vicars’ decision, and spoke of accompanying me. I rejected the suggestion. I admit that the thought of leaving with her beside me, instead of leaving her behind, was a tempting one. But she was with child, and should rest at home.

  “Of all those in Bampton who disliked Thomas atte Bridge, you believe John Kellet most likely his murderer?” she asked.

  “Aye. He had cause and opportunity, and the deed fits his character.”

  “Did not others have greater cause? Peter Carpenter, surely?”

  “Men may have great cause to do violence to another, but not act on it because they have not the stomach for it, or because they will not do wrong to right a wrong.”

  “And this Kellet would act?”

  “Aye. He has done so, many times. I had lumps upon my head to prove it so.”

  “You spoke of two men, one at atte Bridge’s head and the other at his feet, dropping his burden to the mud.”

  “Kellet did not do this alone. But who might have aided him? Atte Bridge had so many enemies I know not where to begin to sort through them all.”

  “The man would have been a friend to John Kellet before he was sent on pilgrimage, would he not? It seems unlikely,” Kate mused, “that Kellet would return to Bampton and seek aid to do murder from one he did not know well.”

  I could not dispute her logic. To seek an accomplice among John Kellet’s friends might narrow the list of conspirators. But how could I discover guilt without some proof to lay at such a man’s feet, so that he might speak to charge the priest and turn justice from himself? Unwilling as I was to leave Kate for a fortnight, I was beginning to see the use of such a journey and found myself arguing Father Thomas’s position to Kate. After much persuasion, she reluctantly agreed.

 

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