‘You alright?’ he asked. Sweat beaded his brow.
‘Aye.’ Gwenn held up the purse. ‘Yours?’ He nodded. Lip curling, she chucked his no doubt ill-gotten gains onto his chest.
‘My thanks,’ he gasped, white about the face. He made no move to pocket his coins.
‘What’s the matter?’
Her dark saviour stretched taut lips into a grin. He was a stranger to Gwenn, but she would recognise excruciating pain on the face of the Devil himself. ‘You’re hurt!’ she exclaimed, dashing away a hot tear.
‘Aye. It was me who was too big,’ he gasped, and winced. ‘I think my leg has broken.’
Because the mercenary had saved her, and she did not like to see even a devil in pain, Gwenn moved towards him. Her grandmother was beyond her help, but this man was not.
Chapter Eight
The hamlet of Kermaria perched on the eastern bank of a marshy river tributary which wandered lazily through vast unchartered tracts of forest to the north, and flowed south through the wetlands, eventually seeping into the Small Sea. To the south the village was bounded by a flat, boggy area; the western approaches were protected by the river; and the woodlands screened it to the north. From a military point of view Kermaria needed little to make it defensible, it could be reached easily only from the east – the route to Vannes.
Its population was small. Neglected by their lord this past two years, a few stalwart villagers managed to scrape a meagre living from the marsh. They either cut wainloads of rushes and sedge for thatch and carted them to Vannes, or they netted fish and eel as well as the wildfowl which gathered in flocks on the reed-edged waters.
Riding into Kermaria along the main trackway, with her clothes sodden from the steady drizzle, Yolande tried to appreciate the forethought that had gone into the siting of this isolated manor. Her children would be secure here. Nonetheless her heart sank. It was a desolate, unlovely spot and her first sight of it, with the landscape reflecting back the oppressive, unremitting grey of the clouds, was enough to depress the spirits of the hardiest soul. A spine-chilling shriek, like that of a wild pig, whipped through the damp air. ‘What was that?’ she demanded.
‘Water rail.’ Jean’s smile mocked foolish fears. ‘An insignificant, timid bird.’
‘With a large voice.’ Shivering, Yolande drew her cloak about her shoulders though the dripping garment could not possibly warm her. ‘It almost had me out of the saddle.’
‘I’d forgotten what a townswoman you are. You’ll become accustomed to the birds, there is an abundance of them here.’ Jean’s eyes wandered along the approach road, and Yolande followed his gaze.
The avenue was protected on either hand by a stone wall two yards high. Ahead of them at the end of the avenue, loomed three stories of squat, drab building. Jean’s manor was a dumpy tower. Built on a square base, it was solid, grey and ugly. Green-grey lichen clung to the walls. Several window slits were visible, but only one of them, the larger central opening, would allow more than the slenderest spear of light into the interior. Pigeons nested in the sagging roof. All grey. Ivy-hung walls skirted an unkempt yard, in the midst of which a tumble of stones marked the spot where once there might have been a well. There was no well rope, the iron mechanism having rusted to dust. The outbuildings were in a similar state of disrepair and spoke of a lifetime of neglect. Rooks swirled on the horizon above the edge of the forest, black shapes against leaden clouds. Grey. Grey. Nothing but grey.
‘What do you think?’ Jean asked, a half-smile playing about his lips.
Yolande dredged her mind for a positive comment. ‘It...it looks very...safe, Jean, very sturdy.’ She eased her damp veil from the skin at the back of her neck.
‘You don’t like it,’ he said, lips twitching.
Yolande blinked through wet eyelashes at the pile of weathered stone. What could she say?
As they drew nearer, the dilapidation grew more apparent. The stones of the manor were broken and eroded; the mortar was gone in places; the stairway leading to the door had subsided, and some steps were missing. There was a gap between the top step and the door. A garden of weeds and moss was flourishing on the flat roof. If the building was left untended much longer, it would crumble back into the ground completely. Yolande knew her lover had rarely even visited the place since he had inherited two years ago, but to give him his due, the neglect was not all his; his father before him had let the place go to seed after Jean’s mother, Lady Anne St Clair, had died. God only knew what horrors lurked inside.
‘It has...possibilities,’ Yolande got out, hardly daring to look her lover in the eye. ‘But there’s much to be done.’
‘Aye.’ His dark eyes were smiling, teasing. ‘Go on, say it, my love. Admit that it could hardly be worse, and then we can laugh and have done. I’m lord of a bog. Do you understand now why I was loathe to bring you here?’
Yolande’s mare picked her way along the walled trackway towards the manor, and suddenly a woman materialised as if out of nowhere, work-reddened hands wrapped firmly round a sedge scythe. Yolande’s mare skipped sideways. Thin as the reeds in the riverbed, the woman stared at Yolande in unsmiling silence, hostile eyes lingering scornfully on Yolande’s soaked finery. The woman clutched her scythe to her scrawny breasts as though it were a talisman to ward off evil. The scythe moved, fractionally.
Biting her lip, Yolande reined back. There was no doubting the challenge in the woman’s mien. ‘Jean?’
His mount brushed past her. ‘It’s only Madalen, my love. They are unused to strangers, but I think she’ll remember me.’ He nodded at the woman, who stared sullenly at him before a reluctant smile tugged the disapproving features into a semblance of friendliness. The woman called Madalen returned Jean’s gesture, bobbed him a curtsy, and melted back into the wall.
Recovering her composure, Yolande straightened her back and spurred both her mare and her own flagging humour. ‘I hope there’s nothing else skulking in the stonework, Jean.’ She wagged a finger at him. ‘I think you’d best tell me the worst–’ She broke off, for her horse had drawn level with the spot where the woman had been, and the wall was pierced by a door. Further down she saw another. ‘By my faith, are all their houses built out of the wall? Look, there’s a window.’
‘The wall was begun in my grandfather’s time, as a defence,’ Jean said. ‘But it was never finished, and when it fell into disrepair, some of the villagers propped their cottages against it. You’ll see them more clearly from the window in the solar. They’re lined up on the other side, wooden shacks leaning against the wall, nothing but hovels really.’ Jean drew in a deep breath, and grimaced ruefully. ‘I’ve let my holding fall apart at the seams. When my father died, I was daunted by what needed doing, and by the lack of funds. My name will be mud when I make a start. The cottages will have to be rebuilt elsewhere and the doors bricked up – they’re a liability where they are.’ Jean trotted briskly over a small bridge spanning an overgrown ditch.
The moat would have to be cleared. A portcullis should be erected by the courtyard entrance. It would all cost a pretty penny, but his first task must be to arrange for a steward to set down how many bondmen he had at his disposal, and whether any freemen had remained in the village. More used to hawking and hunting and dining in comfort with the Foucard household while he ‘courted’ Louise, Jean was aware that he would not find it easy to shoulder his responsibilities.
‘I hear Brittany’s in the area,’ Yolande said.
‘Aye. My father was sworn to the old Duke, but since he died I’ve not renewed the oath. Perhaps if I swear fealty to Brittany and apply for further revenues, he may grant a sum to tide me over until I knock this place into shape.’
‘I thought you favoured France, not Brittany?’
‘De Roncier favours France.’
‘I see.’ Having completed her inspection of the village, Yolande’s eyes returned to the main dwelling. Cheek by jowl with it, at its eastern base, she noticed a smaller edifice, also
in stone.
‘The chapel,’ Jean informed her as their horses came to a halt at the steps of his abandoned home. ‘It’s dedicated to Our Lady.’
‘I had best visit the priest and pay him my respects,’ Yolande said, wondering whether the local incumbent would be as understanding towards her and her dubious position as kind Father Mark had been.
‘No need,’ Jean relieved her mind of that burden, ‘there is no resident priest. The prior from St Félix’s Monastery ministers to the village on Sunday.’
‘Monastery? Where’s that?’
Jean pointed his crop at the forest. ‘There’s a small community of monks in there. I came across them while hunting as a young lad, and was horrified. Sometimes I think holiness borders on insanity. Why at least one of their number had the others wall him up in a cell – for life.’
‘An anchorite!’ Yolande shuddered.
‘Exactly my reaction. The other monks put his food and water through a tiny slot in the wall. There’s no light and not much air. The hermit swears the most sacred of vows to spend the rest of his life in there. The poor wretch rarely speaks. They have to be mad, but they’re quite harmless. I expect the old boy who was walled up has died by now. The others were not so...zealous.’ Jean dismounted, and offered his hand to help her climb down.
‘I mistrust zealots.’
He lifted Yolande to the ground, and squeezed her waist reassuringly. ‘Don’t worry, my love. They live in sickening squalor, but there’s no malice in them. And as I said, one of their number comes visiting on Sunday.’
Satisfied, Yolande nodded. ‘Well, until the Sabbath, I’ll content myself with a swift prayer in the chapel. But before that, you must show me what’s needs doing inside.’
Jean linked arms with his mistress. ‘Yolande, I love you.’
‘And I love you, Jean. Come on. Show me our new home.’
***
The solar at Kermaria was on the first floor. Yolande stood in the window embrasure, leaning against the open shutters. For all that she’d had a large fire built and had dried out, she was cold. Hugging a woollen wrap to her, she stared out of the window. The rain had ceased and night was drawing in. Worn to the bone, Yolande would be glad to see this day done.
She had met most of the women, and thought she would be able to work with them to resurrect Kermaria. She sighed. One or two, it had to be said, had not viewed her arrival with the greatest of delight, being set in the old, slothful ways that Jean’s long absence had let them fall into. But the younger ones seemed actively pleased to see her. One especially, a fresh-faced girl called Klara who had a bloom in her cheeks and a shining sheaf of light brown hair, had leapt to sweep the festering rushes from the solar. Klara had been sent out for fresh ones, and had strewn them liberally before the fire to dry, together with a clump of fragrant thyme which had survived the winter beneath a tangle of weeds in its overgrown plot. Mattresses were being aired. Bread was being baked. Meats were roasting in what passed for the cookhouse.
Progress had been made, but it had been slow and wearisome, and the musty bed which Yolande had unearthed in an alcove off the solar looked more attractive by the minute.
Thin slivers of mist were inching in from the marsh. Delicately, they drifted up the walled lane, piling one on top of the other until they formed a white pool in the middle of the yard. The tumble of stones around the old well was become an island. They had been drawing water from the river, but on the morrow, Yolande resolved, the well must be cleaned out and its housing rebuilt. She shivered, and conscious that the chill was more than merely physical, frowned. Her children and their escort were late. She could hear a bell tolling in the distance, but no hoof beats. The ringing did not appear to come from any particular quarter. It glided in on the mist; it was everywhere and yet nowhere. The sound, like the white fingers of mist, hung suspended. It was eerie.
Jean strode into the solar, and Yolande jerked her wrap close about her shoulders. ‘Listen, Jean.’ She tipped her head at the window and he came to wind an arm about her. She rested against him, glad of his warmth and his solidity.
‘I don’t hear anything.’
Yolande could see that Jean was preoccupied with his duties. His villeins had been used to going on as freemen, and it was years since his freemen had been called upon to work out their rents. Bondman and freeman alike were fearful that his return heralded a loss of privilege. Yolande understood their resentment at being dragged out of their comfortable ruts by a lord they had not learned to trust. They could not see the advantages that would come to them if life was breathed into Kermaria. No word of protest had been uttered thus far, Yolande had learned all this from their eyes, but given time, there would be complaints. There was nothing for it but to give Jean’s retainers time to adjust. He must prove he meant to deal justly with them. If they refused to adapt, the freemen could go and make their livelihoods elsewhere, while the bondmen would have to be sold. ‘There, a bell. Jean, you must hear it,’ she said, worrying at her lower lip.
‘Your ears must be sharper than mine. But it’s the hour for Vespers.’
‘The brethren in the forest, of course!’
‘What did you think the bell signified?’
Yolande avoided his eyes. ‘Nothing. You will think me most odd, Jean, but now I’ve stopped running about, I feel like death. It’s as though...’ She struggled to find words for her sense of disquiet, but her fears drifted just beyond expression, formless and elusive – as impossible to grasp as the mist. ‘It’s as though an evil spirit is hovering around the corner. Where are they, Jean?’
‘You distress yourself unnecessarily.’ Soothingly, Jean rubbed the small of her back in a way that normally calmed her. ‘You put me in mind of a mother hen who has lost her chicks.’
A smile trembled on the corners of her mouth. ‘I do feel rather like that. But I wish they’d come. Where are they? It’s only a couple of hours’ journey, they should have arrived long since. Do you think something’s happened?’ Restlessly, she turned back to the window. ‘Where can they have got to?’
Three strides took Jean to the door, and he beckoned for her to follow. ‘Come, let’s go up to the roof. You can see the whole road from there. We’ll watch them ride up.’
***
‘There!’ Yolande pointed into the half light, where, seeming to float on a cushion of snowy mist, a small cavalcade was drawing nearer. ‘I can see them!’
‘I told you they’d be alright.’ Jean screwed up his eyes. ‘That’s odd...’
‘What? What have you seen?’
‘I could swear I sent two men with the pack horses. But there are three now. See, there’s another on one of the mules.’ Jean gasped. ‘Holy Christ! I can see what looks like a litter.’
Yolande clutched her throat. ‘Someone’s been hurt! Not Raymond, I can see him on that pack horse. And there’s Gwenn, riding with Katarin before her.’ She shaded her eyes. ‘Jean, I can’t see Izabel anywhere. Or any baggage.’
Jean swallowed. He had seen the coffin; a simple, ungilded box such as the common folk used in Vannes. But of Izabel Herevi there was no sign. Even when he squinted, the cavalcade was too distant for him to make out who was reclining in the litter, but he did not think it was a female form. He cleared his throat. Yolande was white as milk, and she had not yet marked that plain, unpainted box. ‘I think we had better go down, my dear.’
When they reached the top of the uneven flight of steps leading into the yard, Jean threaded a steadying arm through Yolande’s. Shreds of unearthly mist clung to the ground. A bedraggled cockerel moved through the pale, vaporous pools with his hens, scratching for seed in the rain-soft earth while there was yet daylight. The air was dank and smelt of river. A pig squealed. In the walled lane, the doors gaped like greedy mouths; and as the procession drew nearer, figures gathered in the open portals, eyes blinking. Rooks circled overhead. The bell ceased tolling. The silence was doleful, more tangible than the mist.
‘They take fo
rever,’ Yolande forced the words through her teeth. ‘Why don’t they hurry?’
‘The litter slows them down.’ Jean could see that his eldest daughter was in a desperate state. She wore a travelling cloak that must be borrowed, for it swamped her. The hem of her dress was ripped, her hair was unkempt and plastered to her cheeks by wind and rain. She wore no veil, and her face was scratched and black with dirt. Black?
‘Jesu, Jean, look at Gwenn!’ Yolande pulled free and stumbled down the broken steps. ‘Gwenn!’
‘Mama!’ Katarin wriggled in her sister’s arms, and reached out for her. ‘Mama!’
Yolande lifted her youngest from Gwenn’s lap and all but squeezed the breath out of her. ‘Come here, darling. Give Mama a kiss. That’s better.’ Scrutinising Katarin, Yolande discovered the child did not seem unduly distressed. Relaxing, she transferred Katarin to her hip. A glance at the litter relieved her mind further, for it did not contain Izabel, only a stranger. The man’s coal-black hair was streaked with sweat, and like her eldest daughter his features were obscured by a mask of what looked like soot. Under the filth, severe pain cut lines in his face. One of his legs was in a crude splint. ‘Where’s Izabel? Where’s my mother?’
A huge tear rolled down Gwenn’s grubby cheek and, lips trembling, she looked appealingly at her brother. Raymond dismounted. A look of bewilderment blurred the handsome lines of his face. His bright green eyes were glassy with shock.
Yolande felt as if she had been plunged into a trough of icy water.
‘Mama...’ Her son ran a hand – a shaking hand – round the back of his neck. ‘Mama...’
‘Raymond, why won’t you look at me?’ Following the direction of her son’s gaze, Yolande saw the coffin.
‘Mama, I’m sorry.’ Raymond’s voice shook. ‘There was a fire. The house is gone. And Grandmère...’
The Stone Rose Page 12