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Forsaken Soul Page 11


  She laughed. “That rough tongue of yours is far more effective than any hair shirt, good sir!”

  A fly buzzed by, slow and lazy with the summer warmth. The cat tensed, eyed the threat, then jumped down to the floor and began stalking it with due diligence.

  “Perhaps a hair shirt would scour away this feminine imperfection of rampant lust and recloak my soul with a cooler, manlier reason? While I sit immobilized by my weaknesses, a soul draped in evil, one that has broken God’s commandment against murder, walks free in Tyndal village. My sins will multiply even more if I allow myself to be blinded by my frailty over Brother Thomas and not help bring that viler creature to earthly justice.”

  Eleanor fell into a meditative silence.

  The cat, meanwhile, twisted and jumped at the diverting insect.

  “As my aunt told me, lusting after my monk gives Satan joy, but there is no sin in finding pleasure in the company of the man if that leads us both to better serve Our Lord. God gave Eve to Adam for companionship. Surely she found a like contentment with him before their fall from grace. That proves there is no wickedness in chaste affection.”

  She rose and walked over to the window. The sun was favoring the land outside with benevolent warmth. “Nonetheless, no man may have two masters.”

  The fly disappeared out the same window, leaving the cat baffled.

  The prioress clenched her fists. “And I shall claim first loyalty! Brother Thomas is my liegeman. I do not know the reason he became a spy, nor do I understand why he was sent specifically to Tyndal Priory.” Her lips curled with grim humor. “Perhaps the assumption was that I, a simple woman with few years on earth, would be easily deceived and manipulated. Until now, that was certainly true; but anyone who underestimates the niece of Sister Beatrice is the greater fool.”

  The breeze shifted and brought the smell of the eastern sea into her room. Eleanor breathed deeply, finding calming pleasure in it.

  “And now that I have been alerted to my monk’s other duties, this unnamed but arrogant churchman who claims his obedience would be well-advised to reconsider his methods.” Folding her arms, she looked back at her cat. “Of course, I shall let Brother Thomas leave Tyndal on missions to serve God, as he has been wont to do already, but henceforth he shall do so only by my grace! Perhaps I may even enjoy my next encounter with the priest, who comes with overt lies to purloin my monk, and shall consider how to make it quite clear that I am willing to let my monk serve God’s justice elsewhere, but only when it suits me.”

  She looked heavenward, her eyes narrowing with ardent determination. “As prioress of Tyndal, I may rightfully lay claim to the obedience of my flock. Brother Thomas is mine and shall be only mine until God takes either of our souls to judgement!”

  With that the prioress bent to pick up the disgruntled insect hunter and carried him out of her private chambers. Whatever grief Brother Thomas might bring her heart, Eleanor still had properties to manage and a murder to solve, whereas Arthur must clear the kitchen of thieving rodents.

  When they departed, a small mouse, that had been lying very still in a far corner, quickly disappeared through a crack in the wall some feet away. Were it able to thank God for the life-saving distractions of a languid fly and a woman’s angst, this one tiny creature most certainly would have done so.

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Hob slammed his hand on the table. “Martin told my brother that he had bedded Signy and would have her again! Will spoke the truth. As you should know, he’s not clever enough to tilt with words. His knuckles may be sharp but not his wit. In that he hasn’t changed since we were all lads. If you think otherwise, Crowner, you’re deaf and blind, or else a fool.”

  “Sharp knuckles and dull wit, eh? Then I conclude he may kill me like he did Martin.” Ralf gestured for more ale.

  Hob tensed, then shook his thoughts away and accepted the proffered drink. “My brother’s always had a hot temper, but he would no more kill a friend than I would.” He took a long swallow of the ale. “Martin, I mean, not you.”

  “Nevertheless, I must arrest him for menacing me. I may care little myself for his foolish words, but I am the king’s man and must demand reparations when my lord’s honor is insulted.” The crowner spat before drinking. “I wonder what your brother might say about the cooper’s death if he knows he will never again see daylight if he does not deal honestly with me?”

  “Why arrest a man you know to be no wiser than a child? You’ve spent too long with your elder brothers if you want to condemn a simple man just for behaving with no more sense than a king’s fool.” He watched Ralf, waiting for a reaction. When the crowner shrugged, he continued, “Will means what he says in heat but forgets it all the morning after, especially with Martin. The cooper was as close to us as if he, too, had been born of our mother.”

  “I will think about that. As for what I have remembered from my youth here, I know that Martin always did own a cruel tongue.” Ralf leaned closer. “What did he say that made you and your brother quarrel after you left him? And do not deny that you did. You were seen. I suspect the cooper said something that finally gave one of you reason to seek revenge.”

  “May not brothers disagree? Must that be cause for suspicion of murder?”

  “Abel and Cain bickered as well. Their example gives me good cause to wonder.”

  Hob rose from his seat, his face reddening. “Are you suggesting I plan to kill my own brother?”

  A tentative growl was heard from under the table.

  “Sit down and quiet that cur of yours. Will safely walks this earth with you as far as I know,” the crowner snorted. “I’m only interested in Martin’s death. It may well be true that the three of you have been like brothers since youth, but something happened that night—or perhaps before and the flame only burst out then. Knowing his unkind ways, I think Martin struck flint to rock and brought forth a hot spark from someone. If so, either you or your brother might have killed the cooper, perhaps with good reason. I would be willing to consider that in exchange for a confession.”

  “Will is right. You have always believed you were cleverer than the rest of us. As a boy you may have tried to cover yourself with village mud to look like us, but your Norman nose betrayed you. It still points up at heaven.”

  Ralf barked a laugh. “I do not mistake you for Will. Do not confuse me with my church-bound brother who exhales corruption with every prayer. I always thought you a better man than…”

  “You did not say that when we were boys and the witch’s son died. Then you blamed us in equal measure.”

  “And would do so again. But no one listened to my unbroken voice, and you were all held blameless.” The crowner reached toward the other man with a conciliatory gesture. “That day, I think you took on a man’s gravity, Hob, and changed for the better.”

  Hob drained his cup.

  Ralf poured more for them both.

  “What do you expect me to say, Crowner? I’ll not speak ill of my elder brother. I owe him fealty as my kin. To you, I owe nothing.”

  “You may owe me your life if you act wisely. Speak the truth.”

  “My brother is innocent of murdering Martin. On my faith in God’s mercy, I swear it.”

  “Then what was the quarrel?”

  “A private matter.”

  Ralf cupped his hands around the mazer and took his time glancing at the crowd. This gesture may have been intended to give Hob time to conclude there was prudence in providing more detail, but he found himself troubled. Wasn’t someone missing from the inn this night?

  He closed his eyes. It was Signy he didn’t see, he realized. She was not serving. A sharp pain stabbed at his heart. Quickly shaking the thought off, he went back to studying the men around him while he waited.

  Hob bit his thumb.

  The crowner was losing patience. He turned to face the younger blacksmith, his expression as chilling as winter ice.

  “A matter
between men,” Hob offered, a slight tremor in his voice.

  Ralf nodded but his manner suggested no compassion.

  “He would beat me if he heard I spoke of it.”

  “You may cast dispersions on my Norman nose, but you cannot claim I have ever failed to honor my word. If the cause does not bear on murder, your words die in my ears.”

  Hob fell silent and scowled.

  “In a brawl, I’d say you might be a match for your brother but the hangman always wins. Think on that.”

  “Enough talk of hanging, Crowner. Martin mocked Will for impotence. I told my brother to forget it, but he wanted to fight the man. Fight, I said, not murder.”

  “Give me more detail.”

  “When Martin offered to share his whore the last few times, my brother was too drunk. His manhood lay limp in spite of Ivetta’s talents. The other night, Martin ridiculed him for that. Will hit him, but I dragged him away before he could do more, telling him he would catch Martin soon enough with his own pole down. Then he could scoff at him in return. There was little to fight about and more downstairs to drink.”

  “But not before you tried to rape the innkeeper’s niece.”

  Hob paled at the anger in Ralf’s words. “Not I, Crowner. Martin and Ivetta were both jeering at Will when Signy walked into the room. Martin wagered Will could not swyve her. The cooper and the harlot held the wench, and, like a fool, my brother fondled her. I yelled at him and pulled my brother from the room. For that, we quarreled.”

  “Did you leave the inn with him?”

  “You claim to have witnesses. Ask them. I’ve nothing to fear.”

  “I want your version.”

  Hob frowned at his mazer, as if blaming it for being empty, then poured more ale and continued. “We came to blows outside the inn. I don’t recall who might have seen us except old Tibia. That I remember because she hurled insults at us, as she is wont to do, and passed on by. Ask her, if you don’t believe me. She might talk to you, if her humors are balanced.”

  “What happened next?”

  “Will’s temper cooled. We went home.”

  “He could have returned to the inn.”

  “He didn’t. When we got back, my brother grew quiet and sat out in the smithy for a long time before going to bed. In the past, when we had argued, he‘d find his pallet and pass out, yelling and muttering at me until he did. My brother has never been inclined to musing so his odd behavior troubled me. I watched until he finally sought rest. He couldn’t have gone back to murder Martin.”

  “He might have slipped out later.”

  “I heard the commotion from the inn not long after. Unless my brother’s been granted invisible wings to fly him there, he did not do the deed.”

  Ralf fell silent. Perhaps this tale did prove Will was guiltless. Or not. Hob might have made it up to protect his brother. Or he might have told it to place himself innocently at home at well.

  The crowner gazed at the groups of men nearby. Although he had never liked either brother when they were all boys, he had grown to tolerate Hob and even find some decency in him. Were he forced to swear an oath, Ralf knew he would have to say that Hob’s tale rang true enough.

  Rubbing his hand against the stubble on his cheeks, Ralf groaned silently. If neither Will nor Hob was the killer, then suspicion fell back on Ivetta or else, to his greater unease, Signy.

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Thomas stopped a few yards past the inn.

  Outside her hut, old Tibia and a man were in close conversation. Not wanting to interrupt, the monk decided to wait until they were done before he delivered the sleeping potion. As he walked slowly back along the path he had just traveled, he began to ask himself what business this Will Blacksmith could possibly have with the herb woman.

  The man is not known for his charity to any soul less fortunate than he, Thomas thought, so I rather doubt the visit has aught to do with alms or the offer of kind companionship.

  Curious and a bit troubled, he looked back at the pair.

  Tibia was sitting on a high, three-legged stool, her eyes wide and unblinking like a painted figure in a manuscript. The staff she used to help her walk lay across her knees.

  The blacksmith squatted on his haunches close beside her, his mouth next to her ear as if imparting some secret.

  She shook her head and turned away from him.

  Will reached for her arm and roughly pulled her back.

  “Monk I might be,” Thomas muttered, “but I will not tolerate any harm done to an old woman.” He hurried toward to the hut.

  Tibia’s eyes brightened as she saw the monk approach. “My son!” she cried out.

  Will dropped her arm and gaped at the monk as if he had just seen a ghost.

  “How cruel is your pain tonight?” Thomas stopped and glared at the blacksmith.

  Will jumped to his feet and gestured for the monk to leave. “Wait your turn! I have business with the herb woman.”

  “Indeed?” Thomas stepped closer.

  “He did,” Tibia said, then turned to look at the blacksmith, her eyes blinking in the reflected light from the inn. “But he’s done.”

  “For the sake of charity, old woman, give me what I need!” Although Will addressed the old woman, he glanced back at the monk. His expression was both confused and wary, his tone pleading.

  “I don’t have it. I can’t forage for such things anymore. Ask someone else.”

  “Tell me what’s needed and where to find it. I’ll get it for you. You’re the only one…”

  “Go away.” She waved at him. “I’m tired. Don’t want to talk to you. Come tomorrow. I’ll think about it.” Her staff started to roll off her knees, and she made a feeble attempt to catch it.

  Thomas picked it up. “I think your departure would be a wise act,” he said to the blacksmith, holding the sturdy branch in a position to strike if need be.

  Will’s face darkened with anger and he raised one clenched fist.

  “God’ll curse you if you hit a monk,” Tibia said. “And if He does, there’s nothing I can do to help you.”

  “Tomorrow, then.” With a curse, the blacksmith spun on his heel and strode away.

  “Did he harm you?” Thomas asked, kneeling beside her.

  “Nay,” Tibia sighed, her look growing distant. “You’re a good lad to me.” She reached out and patted his hand. “When I birthed a kind son, God did bless me.”

  Thomas opened his mouth to protest but quickly thought the better of that. What reason was there to waken her from all too brief but sweet imaginings? “Are you in pain?” he whispered instead.

  She looked down at him, her eyes refocusing as her mind returned to the present. “It’s now when I recall what it was like to be a younger woman, Brother, and in full possession of my powers.” Her chuckle was like a rasp on iron. “For just a few moments, I do forget suffering.”

  “Then you do not need this potion?”

  She reached out for the flask.

  Noticing how two of her fingers were bent backward from the joint disease, he realized that she was probably in constant pain. Any relief was but the difference between the bearable and the intolerable. He gave her the sleep-inducing drug.

  “I may yet awaken in the night. My pain overcomes me of a sudden.” She smiled, her mouth innocent of all but two yellow fangs and a few other teeth that had turned black. “Is it safe to take all this at once? I don’t want to send my sinful soul to God by chance, without a priest to hear my last confession.”

  “Sister Anne is careful about such matters. You may take this one draught with confidence but not more.”

  “Stay, if you will. For a few moments? Unless another sufferer waits for the mercy you bring.” She eased herself to the edge of the stool and rubbed a place next to her as if warming it for his comfort.

  “I saved this visit for last.” He rested one hip on the stool to give her more room. “I often watch over yo
u until you fall asleep.”

  “Like my dead boy, Brother, your company brings comfort.” Tibia fell silent.

  “You said he died as a young man.” Even though he could not read her expression, he heard both grief and anger well mixed in her speech. “Was it illness or an accident that took him to God so soon?”

  “That man?” With a gesture of disdain, she pointed in the direction Will had disappeared. “The blacksmith?”

  Thomas nodded.

  “He murdered my son.”

  His mouth opened in shock.

  “But those wise men of the crowner’s jury claimed I raised the hue and cry unjustly and that my son died by accident. They fined me for the trouble I caused.”

  “And Will?” he asked.

  “Suffered nothing. Oh, a mild rebuke.”

  Had grief clouded her reason in this, Thomas wondered. The men could have made a mistake, being imperfect mortals, but were not most fathers themselves? Few of them would fail to sympathize with a parent’s agony over a dead child, yet he did think the fine assessed against her most harsh. Had she been a nuisance to them perhaps in other matters? Had they wanted to teach her a lesson? And what reason could there have been to rule against her unless the evidence did unequivocally prove an accident?

  In any case, he thought, the lad was dead and it no longer mattered which conclusion was the true one. Kindness, not debate, was required now. “Then I commend you for your charity to him,” he said softly, “for you spoke most civilly a few minutes ago.”

  “Charity? Nay. I must be humble in the face of my wickedness. Priests tell me I’m kin to the Whore of Babylon. When I found my boy’s naked body, swinging from a tree with a rope around his neck, his eyes bulging and his face purple, villagers said I should’ve taken this pain as retribution for my sins.” Tibia’s next words came out in a gasp of labored breath. “Some even whispered that God had used Will as His instrument to punish me. I couldn’t question God.”

  I most certainly would have and, in truth, did at times, Thomas thought with a shiver, and then took her hand between his two, hoping to soothe her. “Why did the blacksmith hang your son? Was it out of malice?”