4 The Bishop's Tale

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4 The Bishop's Tale Page 12

by Frazer, Margaret


  “My cousin,” Guy corrected politely. “Or rather my father’s cousin and so mine once removed.”

  “And the farther removed the better,” Lady Anne said.

  She was holding on to Guy’s arm now, ready to go away with him, but Frevisse continued her relentless gossiping. “Lady Anne was telling me how he’s kept a quarrel with you these many years.”

  “Oh, yes.” Guy smiled with rueful good humor. “The infamous marchpane.”

  Jevan appeared behind him. “My lord,” he said.

  Guy looked over his shoulder—toward but not directly at him—and said curtly, “Yes?”

  “There’s a question of what can be packed and what you’ll want while you’re still here.”

  “You can’t decide?”

  “It would be better if you did.”

  “I’ll see to it,” Lady Anne said. “I have to ask my maid about something anyway.”

  She kissed Guy’s cheek lightly. Beyond Guy, Frevisse saw Jevan’s face was bleak with a control that did not quite hold before he stepped back with a bow to let Lady Anne go past him.

  Frevisse remembered something she had wanted to ask and said brightly, “Oh, Lady Anne—and you gentlemen, too—I was wondering… Master Broun who was with Sir Clement at his death—God keep his soul—Master Broun was saying he saw the mark of a hand on Sir Clement’s face.” She lowered her voice impressively, much as the physician had done. “A red mark as if an inhumanly large hand had slapped him. I had to admit I didn’t see it, but I was wondering if you had? It would be such a great wonder.”

  Lady Anne said after a moment’s hesitation, “Why, no, I never saw anything like that.”

  “Nor I,” Jevan agreed.

  “He was just all welts all over,” Guy said. “Maybe it was on his other cheek than the one I saw,” he added helpfully.

  “No, I saw both sides of his face,” Jevan said. “There were only the welts, no pattern to them.”

  “Oh. That’s that then,” Guy said, and added, “Go on with Lady Anne.”

  Jevan bowed, and as he followed Lady Anne away, Frevisse asked Guy, “You’ll keep him in your service?”

  Guy shrugged. “For a time anyway. He’s knowledgeable about Sir Clement’s affairs so he’ll be useful awhile.”

  “And then?”

  “He was Sir Clement’s dog. I’ll be rid of him as soon as may be. He can find employment elsewhere.”

  “But he didn’t like Sir Clement any better than you did.”

  “He served him nonetheless. And he has too much of his look. I don’t want him around me.”

  “Did Sir Clement make provision for him, or will he have nothing when you let him go?”

  The impertinence of her questions had begun to penetrate his absorption with his own affairs. Frowning, he said, “I’ve no idea.” And added, “If you’ll excuse me, my lady.”

  Chapter 14

  Very few of the other guests were to be inconvenienced by the crowner’s coming. Only those who had been nearest Sir Clement at the feast supposed they had to stay, but they were precisely the people Frevisse wanted to talk with, and since the morning was worn away well toward ten o’clock and dinnertime, she guessed they could be found in the hall, a warm and convenient gathering place.

  They were there, a lady and five men, three of them booted and cloaked for travel, standing at one end of the dais, out of the way since the servants were busy setting up the tables only in the lower part of the hall, in token that the family would not be dining here this midday. With a touch of dismay, Frevisse realized she did not know any of them by name, but as a member of the family she had reason to approach them, to ask after their well-being, and join politely in their conversation. She and the lady exchanged slight curtsies; the men removed their hats and bowed to her; she bent her head to them. Their talk had broken off at her coming. To set it going again she said, “I hope you’ve been made comfortable. If there’s anything you need…” Her gesture indicated it was theirs to ask for.

  “We’re doing very well, thank you, my dear,” the lady said. She was middle-aged, wide, and comfortably matter-of-fact. “How does poor Matilda?”

  “Very poorly at present, I fear. It’s all been too much for her, with Uncle Thomas’s death and then that dreadful trouble at the feast.”

  “Bad business,” one of the cloaked men said, shaking his head. “Bad business all around. Not a good way to go, and a pity it had to happen here.”

  “It was bound to happen somewhere. He’d asked for it over and over,” one of the others said. He gave a knowing wink. “Is there any of us who haven’t heard him bluster for God’s judgment a score of times at the least?”

  “I thought he’d done it less often of late,” said one of the men not dressed for travel. “The times I’ve been with him this past year or so, he seemed less given to it.”

  “Not that you spent any more time in his company than you could help! St. Roche, but that man was a plague to everyone around him.” The cloaked man shook his head with a bitter grin of remembrance, then bethought himself and added, “God keep his soul.”

  “The devil more likely. But there’s no denying his sheep had some of the best wool this part of Oxfordshire.”

  “That’s young Jevan’s doing, not old Clement’s. Old Clement wasted his brains in looking for quarrels, but that youngling knows what he’s about with sheep.”

  The talk veered off to wool and overseas prices, confirming Frevisse’s thought that the men ready to leave were likely merchants. The other two, because they had sat at the table near Sir Clement, must be knights, and one of them did not join in the general talk but stood gravely a little behind the lady who, though probably his wife, was taking knowledgeable part in the wool talk. Frevisse eased toward him and said aside from the flow of the conversation, “You were seated near to Sir Clement at the feast, I think?”

  The man was tall, with a soft voice. “I had that misfortune, yes. Next to the young lady.”

  “Sir Clement quarreled with you during the feast, didn’t he?”

  “Over a matter of grazing rights that was settled in court three years ago, but since legality never mattered to him, he brought it up whenever we had the misfortune to meet. Like Jack says”—he nodded at the merchant who had claimed to see a mellowing in Sir Clement of late—“he’d lost some of his edge at making new quarrels, but he could still hold to his old ones well enough.”

  “So he hadn’t truly changed his ways?”

  The man gave a faint, mild smile. “He’d maybe worn out his fondness for saying ‘May God strike me down’ so often, but he could still make life a hell for anyone in his reach.”

  “Still, Ralph, he’d given up fisting anyone in the face who displeased him,” put in the other knight. He had sat next to Guy at the feast, Frevisse suddenly remembered. “I’d noticed that of late.”

  “Ah, that’s because he was growing too old for it, Sir Edward,” Sir Ralph’s lady said.

  “Maybe it finally came to him that someone would fist him back someday if he went on the way he was,” the shorter and rounder of the merchants said.

  “Someone should have, and a long time ago.”

  There were noddings and general agreement. They were plainly enjoying the chance to cut at Sir Clement now that it was safe to do so.

  “He made that poor girl’s life none too easy,” Sir Ralph’s lady said. Then she added mostly under her breath, “And now she’ll do the same for Guy, I’d guess.” She and Frevisse exchanged private smiles, understanding that dainty Lady Anne had a will of her own.

  The men began talking of Guy’s good fortune. Now that Sir Clement was out of his way, he was expected to do well.

  “He’s a solid enough fellow, with none of the crotchets that family seems to carry like other folks pass on brown hair,” the short merchant said. “But the day isn’t going to better for our staying here and we ought to be on our way. We only stayed to talk with you this while longer, and now we have.”


  He embraced the lady, dropped a casual kiss in the vicinity of her cheek, and said, “You take care, Eleanor. No rheums this year, you hear?”

  “And the same to you, brother,” she returned. “We’ll expect you at Christmas if you know what’s good for you.”

  There were handshakes and bows all around, and the three merchants left the hall in a bustle of cloaks and servants.

  “Ah, now, I’ll miss him,” Lady Eleanor said wistfully.

  Her husband took her by the arm and drew her close. “Christmas isn’t so far off,” he said comfortingly.

  “If die weather doesn’t have us all pent-up like badgers by then,” Sir Edward said. “All the signs say this will be a bitter year.”

  “It’s been bitter enough for Sir Clement already,” Frevisse said. The three of them would leave to sit to dinner soon, and there were still things she wanted to ask them before then, so she returned directly to Sir Clement. “I’ll be asked so many questions when I return to St. Frideswide’s, but I was so far away from what happened. You were all beside him at die feast. What especially did you see?”

  The three looked at each other. Sir Edward shrugged as if he could think of nothing special, and Lady Eleanor answered more fully, “Why, nothing in particular. Sir Clement was simply being offensive, as always, and I faced away from him as much as might be, talking to the lady on my other side. Until he quarreled with my lord.” She smiled sympathetically up at her husband. “And not very long after that he began to make strange sounds. That was terrifying, let me tell you!”

  “I thought he’d choked on something at first,” Sir Ralph said.

  “There wasn’t any warning? He just began to choke?” Frevisse asked. She did not know what she was trying to learn, but if she kept asking questions, someone might say something that mattered.

  Sir Ralph shook his head. “After his outburst at me—and mine at him, I lost some of my temper, too,” he admitted to his wife’s knowing prod at his ribs, “we all set to eating again. He snapped at a server for not refilling his wine fast enough, but that was all.”

  “Jevan was waiting on him then?”

  “Not with the wine,” Sir Edward said. “That was all from the household servers, moving in front of the tables, you know, and keeping an eye on everyone. They did well. Your aunt’s to be complimented on her people.”

  “But lightning itself wouldn’t move fast enough for Sir Clement,” Lady Eleanor said.

  They agreed on that, and went on chatting until dinner was called. Then Frevisse assured them her aunt was most sorry for the inconvenience to them, and received their assurances that they held no one responsible for the trouble—except Sir Clement who continued to be a trial even in death, they agreed—and they all parted in mutual goodwill.

  Dame Perpetua was still in Chaucer’s library, huddled down on a stool in front of one of the aumbries with an open book on her lap, too intent on it to notice Frevisse’s arrival. Across the room Master Lionel, scrutinizing a selection of documents laid out along the window seat, did not acknowledge her, either. Amused, Frevisse slipped across the room to lay a hand on Dame Perpetua’s shoulder.

  The other nun twitched her head a little and said, “Mmmm?” without looking up.

  “Is it a good book?” Frevisse asked.

  “Mmmm.” Dame Perpetua drew her attention reluctantly away to blink up at her, decided she was really there, and said enthusiastically, “It’s Mandeville’s Travels! I haven’t read it since I was a girl. I loved it. All those wonders—”

  Knowing how long Dame Perpetua could go on about a book, Frevisse interrupted, “Did you find anything useful to our problem?”

  Dame Perpetua’s face blanked, then she brightened. “Indeed I did! Here.” She set Mandeville aside and took up one of the volumes lying beside her. “Your uncle was wonderful. There are books here about everything. I could stay forever. This one is a Materia Medica, with a whole part just about poisons and their effects.”

  Frevisse took it. “How did you manage to find it? And so quickly?”

  “I asked Master Lionel,” Dame Perpetua said with the simplicity of the obvious. She lowered her voice. “He doesn’t want to talk to anyone, but he knows where everything is. I asked about poisons, and he showed me this one right away.”

  “Does it have what we need?”

  Dame Perpetua looked abashed. “I decided to let you see for yourself if it’s any help, while I…” She lovingly touched the book in her lap.

  Frevisse knew she had been no better herself with the Gawain book earlier that morning. She smiled and said, “Then I’ll look into it. You go on.”

  The book was everything Dame Perpetua had said it was. A little skimming of the pages brought her to the part about poisons, just after a treatise on the diagnosing of humors according to the planets. She sat on the chair at Sir Philip’s desk, laid open the book, and began to read. Her Latin was imperfect, but unlike literature, this was mostly straightforward text and she could follow its gist, translating the fragments that were pertinent to the question. Was there a poison whose symptoms matched Sir Clement’s fatal ones?

  The list ranged from commonly known poisons found in any English woodland or roadside to exotic ones difficult to obtain except from very specialized merchants with the most exotic of contacts. It seemed very complete.

  And none of the poisons listed created symptoms that matched Sir Clement’s.

  There were ones signified by difficulty in breathing but not the swollen, strangled closing of the throat Dr. Broun had described. There were vomitings of different quality and color, and sometimes fits or mania, but Sir Clement had been quite clear in his mind and not given any sign of being even sick to his stomach, let alone vomiting. As for discolorations of the body, particularly of extremities, there were no suggestions of his general blotching of itching welts on face and arms.

  If Sir Clement had been poisoned, it was not with any poison described in what seemed to be a most scrupulously thorough book.

  Dame Perpetua had been paying closer heed than Frevisse had thought. She said from across the room, “It doesn’t have what you want?”

  “No.”

  “Then perhaps Bishop Beaufort is wrong. Perhaps it was God’s hand against Sir Clement.”

  “No.”

  Dame Perpetua made no effort to hide her surprise. “You don’t think so anymore?”

  “I’m not sure anymore. Not the way we were sure when it happened. I want to ask more questions. Will you look for another book on poisons? There might well be another.”

  “If you think it’s needed, certainly.” Dame Perpetua put down the Mandeville.

  Frevisse had noted that Master Lionel, ceasing to shuffle among his papers while she talked, had been standing still with his head partly turned to listen. Now she said directly to him, “Will you help Dame Perpetua with this, Master Lionel?”

  The old clerk’s head snapped away and his hands began to move busily among his papers. But he made a sound that might have been agreement, and Dame Perpetua smiled and nodded in confirmation.

  Satisfied that between them they would do far more than she could, Frevisse left them to it.

  Frevisse went to Aunt Matilda’s chamber. Her aunt lay sleeping, her plump body under the covers, her slackened, ravaged face looking vulnerable. Her daughter had sent for her sewing and was sitting comfortably on a cushion under the window, coloring a rose pink with silk thread. She looked up when Frevisse entered and put a long finger in front of her pursed lips. Frevisse nodded and went to peer more closely at her aunt, who never stirred. Joan was sitting on a stool beside the bed, staring at her mistress, her own face wretched.

  Frevisse bowed her head and offered a prayer for the solace of this sad company, and left.

  The kitchen of Ewelme manor house was large, floored with stone flags, and rising two stories to a roof set with louvers that could be opened to let the smoke and heat out. A tray of roasted chickens was cooling on a table,
and a cook’s helper was leaning gingerly into a low-burning fireplace to stir a large pot hanging over the coals. The cook himself was seated on a tall stool, wiping his strong-looking hand with a clean towel. When he saw Frevisse, he rose at once to his feet and bowed twice.

  “You grace this room with your presence,” he said, bowing yet again. He spoke with an accent Frevisse could not identify. He was a tall man, with dark, curly hair that glistened as if washed in oil, and he moved his hands eloquently as he spoke. “Is there some way I may help you? Something I may bring to you?”

  “Will you answer one or two questions?” returned Frevisse.

  “Of course, if I can. Do you want a recipe to take back with you to your nunnery?” He turned to the helper. “I require a bit of paper, a quill, and some ink, at once!”

  But Frevisse raised a hand to stop the helper. “No, it is nothing like that. This concerns the funeral feast, from which a guest had to be helped, who later died.”

  The cook sat down as if someone had cut his hamstrings. But he said nothing, only waited.

  “Do you know the man who died? Sir Clement?”

  “No, madam. But he sent his servant in to speak to me about the menu for the feast.”

  “Which servant?”

  “I do not know, madam. A lean fellow, with brown hair and a sad face.”

  “Why was Sir Clement interested in the menu?”

  “Because, I gather, he had an unhappy stomach, which required certain things to keep its balance.”

  “What things?”

  The cook gave a lengthy sigh, held up a hand, and began to count on his fingers. “The milk used in the making of any dish must be fresh, as Sir Clement could not abide sour milk; his saltcellar must be full and clean, as he used a good deal of salt on his food, and was inclined to throw a contaminated saltcellar on the floor; any dish containing nuts must be announced when it was brought to his place, as he would not, under any circumstances, eat anything containing nuts; and the goblet he drank from must be silver or gold as he could not bear the taste pewter gave to his drink. I will say what I told this servant, madam, that I assured Sir Clement’s servant that only the finest, freshest, and most costly ingredients were going into every dish prepared in this house, and that the final remove, which Sir Clement never got a chance to throw on the floor, contained filberts. And I had the impertinence to ask if Sir Clement had brought a goblet of his own to use, as it was quite impossible for us to take a goblet reserved for, say, the duke of Norfolk and give it to Sir Clement’s use. And it transpired he had, as this problem had arisen before on Sir Clement’s journeying, and he had learned to bring his own.” The cook had set off on this story calmly, had become indignant by the middle of it, but cooled to triumphant amusement by the end. The cook’s helper, by his expression, stood ready to back the cook in every particular, so Frevisse did not question him, only asked the cook to make a copy of the feast menu, which he did. She tucked it up her sleeve, thanked him for his cooperation, and withdrew.

 

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