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The Midnight Man

Page 25

by Paul Doherty


  ‘We demand a fair trial,’ Higden spluttered, face pale as he realized the full impact of what was happening.

  ‘Taken in arms against the King.’ Cutwolf stepped back. ‘You murdered my master, a royal clerk. You pillaged the King’s treasure. Your coven attacked the King’s loyal servants. You murdered then revelled in your victims’ blood. You have committed heinous treason, sacrilege and arson.’

  ‘By what right?’ Higden took a step forward.

  ‘I am a cleric,’ Almaric bleated.

  ‘By this.’ Cutwolf, still holding the sword up, dug into his wallet and handed Stephen a small script. ‘Read it aloud, boy, read it so all can hear.’

  Stephen, hands shaking, unrolled the stiff, cream-coloured parchment.

  ‘Out loud!’ Cutwolf repeated.

  ‘What the bearer of this seal has done, he has done for the Crown, the realm and Holy Mother Church. All officers and loyal subjects of the Crown, on their duty of allegiance and on pain of treason, must give the bearer of this seal and all his work full sustenance and support.’

  ‘And?’ Cutwolf demanded. ‘What else?’

  ‘Given under the secret seal at our Palace of Sheen, on the fourth of May in the forty-seventh year of our reign, Edward the King.’

  ‘And the seals?’

  ‘Two,’ Stephen replied. ‘The signet seal of the King.’ Stephen peered at the generous blob of purple wax. ‘And that of the Secret Chancery at Westminster.’

  ‘Taken in arms.’ Cutwolf’s words were full of menace. ‘Adjudged traitors, sentenced to death, punishment immediate.’ He stepped forward. ‘Archers,’ he lifted a gauntleted hand. ‘Notch!’

  Stephen shivered at the ominous rattle. Higden fell to his knees. Almaric turned, looking wildly for escape. Gascelyn drew his dagger.

  ‘Loose!’

  The air thrummed with a sombre twang, the hiss of feathered death as the arrow shafts, one volley after another, sped into the exposed group. The two failed assassins simply toppled over. Almaric, his back turned, was hit three times. One shaft pierced his neck, bursting through his gullet. Gascelyn was struck in both face and chest. Higden, caught on all fours, rolled in agony as the shafts pierced deep into his side and belly.

  Stephen glanced at Anselm. The exorcist’s face was as white as snow, his lips crusted with blood. He could only sketch a cross in the air. The condemned lay sprawled. Gascelyn and Higden still jerked. Cutwolf, sword sheathed, misericorde dagger in his hand, moved from corpse to corpse, slitting throats as cleanly as a woman would clip a flower head. Once finished he plucked the commission out of Stephen’s icy fingers, winked at the novice and walked away. ‘Do not grieve for them,’ he called out over his shoulder. ‘Hell has them and God’s creation is richer for it.’ Cutwolf walked back, tears glittering in his hard eyes. ‘I loved Sir Miles,’ he whispered, ‘more than David loved Jonathan. A good man, Stephen. In my eyes, God’s own child. These villains brought their death on themselves. God will judge them.’

  ‘What now?’ Anselm moved back to sit wearily on the sanctuary steps.

  ‘We will burn the corpses,’ Cutwolf replied, spittle wetting his dry, cracked lips. ‘We will have it rumoured abroad how poor Sir William and his loyal servants were trapped in another hideous blaze at Saint Michael’s. The King will know the truth. He will seize all of Higden’s wealth, along with this treasure hoard. He will embrace me as his friend and order chantry priests to sing Masses every day for the repose of Sir Miles’ soul. And you, Brother?’

  ‘I must finish what I first came here for,’ Anselm replied. ‘Now the root of all this evil has been pulled up – the sheer human wickedness which nourished and sustained it – I must finish the cleansing process.’

  ‘Here?’ Cutwolf asked.

  ‘No, in the cemetery, on the burial pit. If you could set up a makeshift altar . . .’

  Anselm took Stephen deeper into the sanctuary, to the recess where those who fled for protection used to shelter. Anselm made them both as comfortable as possible; they sat with their backs to the blackened wall while Cutwolf and Bolingbrok became busy. The corpses were heaped in the centre of the nave and a funeral pyre of dry wood, kindling and bracken was swiftly built about them. Archers were despatched to find oil and saltpetre. ‘The King’s business!’ Cutwolf shouted after them. ‘Arouse anyone you want.’

  ‘Do not light the fire,’ Anselm called. ‘Not yet, not until I say.’ Cutwolf nodded in agreement. Stephen, cold and desperate, sat thinking about Alice. The more he did, any compassion or pity for Higden and his adherents ebbed away; their deaths had been shocking, sudden and cruel, but just. He watched as the archers worked. He could tell from the shouts and cries that the priest’s house had been broken into and Anselm’s altar was being raised on the place of slaughter. Stephen’s eyes grew weary and he slept. He awoke to Anselm talking.

  ‘I have waged war on you all my priestly life.’ The exorcist was pointing at something or someone crouching before him. ‘So this is our last confrontation?’ Anselm paused, nodding as though listening to a reply. ‘If necessary,’ the exorcist murmured, ‘if that is the price, I will pay.’ Stephen could see nothing. No voices sounded, no visions swirled.

  The funeral pyre was ready and it rose – a sinister hive of oil-drenched wood and kindling, the bitter smell of saltpetre tainting the air.

  ‘All is ready, Brother!’ Anselm, coughing and spluttering, clambered to his feet. They walked down to the corpse door.

  ‘We found these in the priest’s house.’ Cutwolf gestured at the vestments heaped on a stool.

  Anselm swiftly dressed in the alb, stole and amice. He crossed himself and walked out into the dark. The altar, a plain table, stood ready in the centre of the burial pit. Candles fluttered in their brass holdings either side of the black crucifix on its wooden stand. A dish of cruets and a plain brass paten and chalice were also there. Stephen placed the exorcist’s pannier close to the altar, opened it and took out the sacred chrism, phial of salt, the small stoup of holy water and asperges rod as well as the exorcist’s battered brown leather psalter. Anselm grasped the latter and, in the light of the lantern horns, placed either side of the altar, sifted through its yellowing pages. ‘We will say the Mass of Michaelmas, Stephen, the Mass of Saint Michael, Lucifer’s great opponent. Help me now!’ Anselm crossed himself and intoned, ‘I will go unto the altar of God, the God of my youth . . .’

  The Mass began. Stephen was swept up by the power of Anselm’s voice and his vigorous observance of the ritual. An array of cowled archers circled the altar. Stephen was surprised. The night had fallen quiet. There was a deathly calm – no sign of anything, nothing but the wild grass and bramble bush bending under a gentle breeze. Anselm moved to the consecration, bending over the wafer, the thin host Cutwolf had found in the priest’s house. He murmured the words of Christ and was about to raise the paten when he staggered back.

  ‘Get you gone, prattling, filthy, stupid priest!’ The voice cracked like a whip. Abruptly the air around them was filled with trails of smoke, each formed into the ugly, sinister face of that old woman. A stench like that of the filthiest cesspit swept across, forcing both Carmelites to gag and retch. The candles fluttered out. Red blotches appeared on the white altar clothes. Above these swarmed a horde of black flies.

  Stephen was aware of Cutwolf beside him. ‘What is the matter?’ the clerk whispered.

  ‘Can you see anything?’ Stephen begged.

  ‘Nothing,’ Cutwolf hissed. ‘The candles have gone out. This stench, and the cold!’

  ‘Leave us!’ Anselm ordered. The exorcist stepped back to the altar but he was caught by a coughing fit. A dark-feathered bird of the night came swooping over the altar, wings wafting threateningly. Stephen glimpsed its cruel jutting beak and curved claws. A raven appeared as if out of nowhere; the bird sailed slowly down, wings extended, through the gloom to perch on the top of the cross and caw raucously. The archers became agitated; their shouts and cries broke the silenc
e. Shadow-tinged shapes moved through the bristling gorse, long and sinister, as if some wolf or wild dog pack circled ravenous for prey. Wraiths danced around the altar. Anselm had returned to the Mass but his words were drowned by a cacophony of voices hurling blasphemous obscenities. ‘Stephen,’ Anselm declared, ‘we continue. Cutwolf, order your men to pray. Ignore what is happening.’ Anselm continued with the ritual. A horrid face appeared above the altar; only half of this could be glimpsed, a red eye glaring from a deathly pallor. Somewhere a drum sounded the death beat of a tambour. A shape, like that of a war horse caparisoned for battle, clattered through the cemetery, hooves pounding, armour rattling. Anselm, who had finished the consecration, now moved to the exorcism. Armed with the sacred chrism and holy water, he anointed the night air to the east, north, south and west, a circle of protection as he called on the powers of heaven.

  ‘Bitter blasts!’ a voice called. ‘Look, they come! Shall we be destroyed?’

  ‘Kill the priest,’ a second voice urged. ‘Shut the shaven pate’s scrawny throat! Silence his tongue!’

  Stephen watched as the faces of the night-prowlers, the juddering shapes, gathered around Anselm. The exorcist was now on his knees, leaning back on his heels. Blood dribbled from his mouth; his shroud-white face was drenched in sweat. The hideous sights and sounds faded, leaving the old priest throbbing with pain. Anselm began to cry; tears drenched his cheeks as he shook his head and breathed replies to his tormentors’ questions. The cemetery lay silent; even the breeze had fallen. Anselm was sobbing like a child, praying fervently, striking his breast in an act of contrition. Stephen went to grab his hands and started in horror. Anselm’s right hand was so cold while the left was too hot to even touch.

  ‘Stay back, Stephen, stay back!’ Anselm’s feverish jerking grew worse. He coughed huge globules of blood and spittle, eyes half-closed he tried to pray. Cutwolf came and crouched beside him. Stephen gazed around helplessly; the night was proving to be a beautiful one. He caught the scent of wild flowers in his nostrils; the air was warm.

  ‘Light the fire!’ Anselm’s bloodshot eyes opened, staring frantically. ‘Light the fire!’ he repeated. ‘Now, burn the wicked ones.’

  Cutwolf hurried to obey. Anselm stretched out a hand and Stephen helped him up. The exorcist insisted on finishing the Mass, mouthing the words quietly. He reached the kiss of peace. ‘Pax vobiscum,’ he called.

  ‘Pax tecum, Magister.’ The phrase was repeated time and time again out of the darkness. ‘Pax tecum, deo gratias – Peace to you, thanks be to God.’ Stephen heard a sound and whirled around. The funeral pyre had been lit, the flames roaring heavenwards. He turned back just in time to catch Anselm as the exorcist collapsed in a dead faint. Cutwolf came and knelt beside them. ‘The fire is consuming them, Brother.’

  ‘And they have consumed me.’ The exorcist opened his eyes and smiled up at both of them. ‘The final battle,’ Anselm tapped the side of his head, ‘was in here. The last great temptation. They taunted me, Stephen, with the sins of my youth but they were defeated, driven back. Now,’ he coughed, and a trickle of blood seeped between his lips. ‘My body’s for the dark, my soul for the light. All is finished.’ He paused. ‘Do you hear that, Stephen?’

  The novice, tears in his eyes, glanced up, then he heard it. Despite the dark and the raging flames, the liquid, beautiful song of a nightingale carried from somewhere deep in the cemetery.

  ‘It is finished, completed, consummated.’

  The exorcist jerked and fell back, staring blindly up into the star-filled sky.

  Words Amongst the Pilgrims

  The physician finished his tale. One hand leaning on the mantle of the great fireplace, he turned, smiled at his fellow pilgrims and toasted them with his wine cup. ‘No more,’ he declared. ‘My story is done and so am I.’ His words were greeted with cries of applause and appreciation. The pilgrims, busy discussing both his story and their own encounters with the powers of evil, rose and began to leave the taproom. Chaucer remained, as did two others – the Wife of Bath and the summoner. Chaucer watched as they and the physician gathered at the head of the common table, heads together, whispering heatedly. Chaucer rose and sauntered towards them. Curious, yet he would not have stayed if the summoner hadn’t grabbed his arm, indicating that he should join them on the bench. Once he did, Chaucer pointed to the physician. ‘Tell me, sir, you are Stephen of Winchester?’

  ‘I am.’ The physician smiled. ‘After Anselm’s death, I no longer heard the voices or saw the visions. I also realized I had no vocation for the religious life. Instead, I decided to follow my father’s calling and so I have, to be the most skilled of physicians.’

  ‘And also a very wealthy man?’

  ‘Yes, Master Chaucer, he is,’ the summoner replied.

  ‘And who are you really – Cutwolf?’

  The summoner laughed and shook his head.

  ‘And you?’ Chaucer turned to the Wife of Bath. ‘You must be Marisa.’

  ‘I am. My father returned to Bath and died of a broken heart. I took my dear departed sister’s name, Alice. I, too, am a wealthy woman.’

  ‘Because of me,’ the summoner intervened. ‘I am Bolingbrok, Master Chaucer. My life, my energy is dedicated to hunting down and executing every single blood-drinking member of the Midnight Man’s coven. The physician and the Wife of Bath spend generously on achieving this both at home and abroad. Many years have passed but the hunt continues.’

  ‘So your story is not finished?’

  ‘No, Master Chaucer,’ the physician replied. ‘Sometimes, very rarely, the visions return. But this does not matter; our pursuit of justice does.’

  ‘And Cutwolf?’

  ‘Oh, Master Chaucer,’ a mocking voice answered from the darkness of the deep window embrasure behind him. ‘Do not turn master poet but, believe me, Cutwolf is very much alive and never far away!’

  Author’s Note

  The Midnight Man is, of course, a work of fiction, though one seamed with major themes of fourteenth-century society. Caesarius Von Heiserbach, the Cistercian, is one of my main sources for the visions, hauntings and exorcism. Other chroniclers such as Walter Map, Gerald of Wales and William of Malmesbury are also a thriving source for all kinds of hair-raising stories, be it hauntings or the work of Satan and his legions. We must remember that the medieval mind viewed the veil between the visible and invisible as very thin – sometimes non-existent. We have our own theories of physics; they certainly had theirs. According to them, Satan and his legions did ride the black winds and demons lurked in corners, jibbering and waiting. The dead spoke to the living and interfered in their affairs.

  The Church’s attitude to formal exorcism was very much as it is today. Hauntings, ghosts and possession were taken with more than a pinch of salt. It was only ready to officially move when it had the evidence. It adopted a similar attitude to witchcraft and the black arts, certainly frowning on men and women leaping naked about in forest glades and worshipping some idol. However, both Church and State would only act officially against witchcraft when it was linked to treason, murder or heresy. The great witch craze, especially in England, occurred only after the Reformation. Indeed, more women were burnt or hanged for witchcraft in Essex between 1603 and 1663 than in the entire kingdom during the medieval period. Accusations of witchcraft during the Middle Ages were usually introduced in the destruction of a political opponent – for example, the Gloucesters in the fifteenth century, Saint Joan of Arc a few decades later and, of course, Henry VIII levelled the same allegation against Anne Boleyn.

  Glastonbury and the legends of Arthur dominated the Middle Ages. Glastonbury Abbey was, and undoubtedly still is, a spiritual and mystical place. Of course, the good monks there were not, as they say in Ireland, backwards in coming forwards. They portrayed their abbey as Arthur and Guinevere’s last resting place, their tomb allegedly discovered in 1191. Successive English kings visited Glastonbury to celebrate this shrine so sacred to their monarchy. Certai
n artefacts mentioned in the story, such as the Merlin Stone, are fictitious, but Eleanor’s Dagger and the Cross of Neath are genuine items.

  The underworld of medieval London was both colourful and violent. Professional beggars and thieves flourished. There was no safety net and if you fell, the fall could be long and hard. Certain areas of London, such as Whitefriars and Southwark, were the nesting places of these undesirables. The problem was worsened by the presence of sanctuaries in London such as Westminster and St Paul’s, where outlaws could shelter with impunity, protected by the Church, and be safe from arrest. However, the real danger of medieval London was, as it is today, organized professional gangs, who often had powerful patrons amongst the so-called respectable leading citizens of the City. These gangs or rifflers could prove very dangerous. For example, in 1326 the gangs actually took over London. They even killed the Chancellor of the Exchequer at the time, Walter Stapleton, the Bishop of Exeter, outside St Paul’s, along with two of his squires. Many people think the Tower of London was built to protect the city. It wasn’t! The Tower’s main purpose was to overawe the city, which was why the constable was always a King’s man, both body and soul.

  Puddlicot’s robbery did take place in the spring of 1303. A failed businessman, Puddlicot brought together all the undesirables in London. Outlaws, sanctuary men, defrocked priests, whores and thieves, as well those judged more worthy, such as aldermen and the sinister sheriff of the time, Hugh Pourte. The goldsmiths, the medieval bankers, handled stolen items, though of course they later protested that they were innocent and did not know the origin of the precious items which flooded the London markets. Puddlicot certainly suborned the leading monks, Alexander of Pershore and the sacristan in charge of security, Adam Warfield. Both these abbey luminaries enjoyed an unsavoury reputation with certain ladies of the town. They successfully managed to blackmail their abbot, Wenlock, over the latter’s illegitimate daughter. Wenlock seemed to act like a man in a dream, claiming he had no knowledge of what was happening in his own abbey. Puddlicot did sow fast-growing hempen seed in the monks’ cemetery, and used members of this gang to cordon it off. He hired the master mason, John St Albans, who forced open the crypt window. The robbers broke in on the eve of St Mark and helped themselves. The list of magnificent items stolen is given by Henry Cole in his ‘Records published by the Records Commission’ in 1836. A similar list of documents can be found in F. Palgrave’s, Kalendars and Inventories of the Exchequer. Puddlicot’s confession can still be read in the original (National Archives Kew: King’s Remembrancer E/101/332/8). This document conveys Puddlicot’s cool impudence and his clear assertion that he did it all his way, as well as the fact that he organized an earlier robbery of the abbot’s silver to finance his great undertaking!

 

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