Read A Plague on Both Your Houses Online
Authors: Susanna Gregory
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
A Plague On Both Your Houses
by
Susanna Gregory
The bizarre death of the Master of Michaelhouse College appears to be suicide. At least, it does until it is swiftly followed by several more deaths, an assault, a ransacking, an attempted murder and a disappearing corpse. Added to a previous series of deaths in Cambridge colleges, it generates rumours of a plot by Oxford to undermine its rival. For with a terrible pestilence sweeping across the country, there may soon be only one university left standing; and the weaker Cambridge is to begin with, the greater the chance that Oxford will be it.
Michaelhouses Fellow of Medicine, Matthew Bartholomew, wants his friends death investigated. The Bishop wants to cover it all up. Bartholomew is forced to give in, and indeed has enough to do with preparing for the plague and dodging the malice of someone whos clearly out to get him - though he hasnt the faintest notion who or why. Then the Death hits Cambridge … and despite the fact that people are dropping like flies, someone sees the need to commit another murder. Reasoning that the Bishop will be busy, Bartholomew decides to investigate the matter himself, and soon comes to suspect even his friends and family of being involved in the plot thats afoot. That is, if the plot exists at all.
Who would have thought academic life could be so dangerous? Thats what I love about Susanna Gregory - she manages to combine loads of historical detail with a high body count and plenty of other crimes and misdemeanours. Mediaeval Cambridge springs to life on the page without slowing down the plot. And what a plot it is! By page 300 I was thoroughly baffled and wondering how on earth it could all be resolved. A hundred pages later I was marvelling at how something so (relatively) simple could spawn such a complex heap of criminal activity, and feeling both educated and entertained. As well as town and college life, the novel shows the chaos created by the black death and the waiting that preceded it.
A Little, Brown Book
This edition first published in Great Britain by Little, Brown in 2.001
The Matthew Bartholomew Omnibus Copyright Š Susanna Gregory 2001
The moral right of the author has been asserted.
All characters in this publication are fictitious and any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced,
stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior permission in writing of the publisher, nor be otherwise circulated in any form of
binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
A CIP catalogue record for this book
is available from the British Library.
ISBN 0 316 85891 9
Printed and bound in lra.lv
Little, Brown and Company (UK)
Brettenham House
Lancaster Place
London WC2E 7E
Cambridge, 1348
THE SCHOLAR WAITED IN THE BLACK SHADOWS OF the churchyard trees for the Sheriffs night patrol to pass by, trying to control his breathing. Two of
the men stopped so close that he could have reached
out and touched them. They stood for several minutes,
leaning against the wall surrounding the churchyard,
looking up and down the deserted road. The scholar held his breath until he thought he would choke. He could
not be discovered now: there was so much to lose.
Eventually, the Sheriffs men left, and the scholar
took several unsteady breaths, forcing himself to remain in the safety of the shadows until he was certain that they had gone. He jumped violently as a large cat stalked past his hiding place, glancing at him briefly with alert yellow eyes. He watched it sit for a moment in the middle of the road, before it disappeared up a dark alleyway.
The scholar gripped the voluminous folds of his
cloak, so that he would not stumble on them, and slipped out of the trees into the road. The moon was almost full, and shed an eerie white light along the main street. He peered carefully both ways, and, satisfied that there was no one to see him, he made his way stealthily down the street towards his home.
The main gates of the College were locked, but the
scholar had ensured that the little-used back door was left open. He turned from the High Street into
St Michael’s Lane. He was almost there.
He froze in horror as he saw someone was already
in the lane: another scholar, also disobeying College
rules by being out at night, was walking towards him.
Heart thumping, he ducked into a patch of tall nettles and weeds at the side of the road, in the hope that his stillness and dark cloak would keep him hidden. He
heard the footsteps come closer and closer. Blood
pounded in his ears, and he found he was trembling
uncontrollably. The footsteps were almost level with
him. Now he would be uncovered and dragged from
his hiding place!
He almost cried in relief as the footfall passed him
by, and faded as his colleague turned the corner into the High Street. He stood shakily, oblivious to the stinging of the nettles on his bare hands, and ran to the back
gate. Once inside, he barred it with unsteady hands,
and made his way to the kitchens. Faint with relief, he sank down next to the embers of the cooking fire and
waited until his trembling had ceased. As he prepared
to return to his room to sleep away what little remained of the night, he wondered how many more such trips
he might make before he was seen.
Several hours later, the Bishop’s Mill miller dragged
himself from his bed, tugged on his boots, and set off to his work. The sky was beginning to turn from dark
blue to silver in the east, and the miller shivered in the crispness of the early morning. He unlocked the door
to the building and then went to feed the fat pony that he kept to carry flour to the town.
A short distance away, he could hear the rhythmic
whine and swish of the water-wheel, powered by a
fast-running channel diverted from the river. The
miller had grown so familiar with its sound that he
never noticed it unless there was something wrong.
And there was something wrong this morning. There
was an additional thump in the rhythm.
The miller sighed irritably. Only the previous week
he had been forced to ask the help of his neighbours to free the branch of a tree that had entangled itself in the wheel, and he was loathe to impose on their good graces again so soon. He tossed some oats to the pony, and,
wiping his hands on his tunic, he went to investigate.
As he drew nearer, he frowned in puzzlement. It did not sound like a branch had been caught, but something
soggier and less rigid. He rounded the corner and
approached the great wheel, creaking and pounding
as the water roared past it.
He felt his knees turn to jelly as he saw the wheel and what was caught in it, and sank onto the grass, unable to tear his eyes away. The body of a man was impaled
there, black robes flapping wetly around him as the
wheel dragged him under the water again and again.
As the wheel lifted the body, one arm flopped loose in a ghostly parody of a wave, which continued until the
body dived, feet first, back into the water for another cycle. The horrified miller watched the body salute him three times before he was able to scramble to his feet and race towards the town screaming for help.
THE DULL THUD OF HORSES’ HOOVES AND THE gentle patter of rain on the wooden coffin were the only sounds to disturb the silence of the dawn.
Black-gowned scholars walked slowly in single file along the High Street, following the funeral cart past the town gate to the fields beyond, where the body of their Master, Sir John Babington, would be laid in its final resting place.
Somewhere behind him, Matthew Bartholomew heard
one of the students stifle a giggle. He turned round and scowled in the general direction of the offending noise.
Nerves, doubtless, he thought, for it was not every day that the College buried a Master who had taken his own life in such a bizarre manner.
The small procession was allowed through the gate
by sleepy night-watchmen who came to the door of their guardroom to look. One of them furtively nudged the
other and both smirked. Bartholomew took a step towards them, but felt Brother Michael’s restraining hand on his shoulder. Michael was right; it would be wrong to turn Sir John’s funeral into a brawl. Bartholomew brought
his anger under control. Sir John had been one of the
few men in the University who had been liked by the
townspeople, but they had been quick to turn against
him once the manner of his death became known. Had
Sir John died a natural death, he would have been buried in the small churchyard of St Michael’s, and been given a glorious funeral. Instead, church law decreed that,
as a suicide, he should be buried in unconsecrated
ground, and be denied any religious ceremony. So,
in the first grey light of day, Sir John was escorted out of the city by the scholars of Michaelhouse, to be laid to rest in the waterlogged fields behind the church of St Peter-without-Trumpington Gate.
The horse pulling the cart bearing the coffin
stumbled in the mud, causing the cart to lurch
precariously. Bartholomew sprang forward to steady
it, and was surprised to see Thomas Wilson, the man
most likely to be Sir John’s successor, do the same. The eyes of the two men met for an instant, and Wilson
favoured Bartholomew with one of his small pious
smiles. Bartholomew looked away. No love had been
lost between the smug, self-satisfied Wilson and Sir John, and it galled Bartholomew to watch Wilson supervise Sir John’s meagre funeral arrangements. He took a deep breath, and tried not to think how much he would miss
Sir John’s gentle humour and sensible rule.
Wilson gave an imperious wave of a flabby white hand,
and Bartholomew’s book-bearer, Cynric ap Huwydd,
hurried forward to help the ostler lead the horse off
the road and across the rough land to the grave site.
The cart swayed and tipped, and the coffin bounced,
landing with a hollow thump. Wilson seized Cynric’s
shoulder angrily, berating him for being careless in a loud, penetrating whisper.
Bartholomew had had enough. Motioning to the
other Fellows, he edged Sir John’s coffin from the cart, and together they lifted it onto their shoulders. They began the long walk across the fields to where the grave had been dug in a ring of sturdy oak trees. Bartholomew had chosen the spot because he knew Sir John had liked to read in the shade of the trees in the summer, but
he began to doubt his choice as the heavy wood cut
into his shoulder and his arms began to ache. After a
few minutes, he felt himself being nudged aside, and
smiled gratefully as the students came forward to take their turn.
Wilson walked ahead, and stood waiting at the
graveside, head bowed and hands folded in his sleeves
like a monk. The students lowered their burden to
the ground and looked at Bartholomew expectantly.
He arranged some ropes, and the coffin was lowered
into the ground. He nodded to Cynric and the other
book-bearers to start to fill in the grave, and, taking a last look, he turned to go home.
‘Friends and colleagues,’ began Wilson in his
rich, self-important voice, ‘we are gathered together
to witness the burial of our esteemed Master, Sir John Babington.’
Bartholomew froze in his tracks. The Fellows had
agreed the night before that no words would be spoken: it was felt that there were none needed - for what could be said about Sir John’s extraordinary suicide? It had been decided that the Fellows and the students should
escort Sir John to his resting place in silence, and return to the College still in silence, as a mark of respect. Sir John had done much to bring a relative peace to his
College in a city where the scholars waged a constant
war with each other and with the townsfolk. A few of his policies had made him unpopular with some University
authorities, especially those who regarded learning to be the domain of the rich.
‘Sir John,’ Wilson intoned, ‘was much loved by us
all.’ At this, Bartholomew gazed at Wilson in disbelief.
Wilson had led the opposition to almost anything Sir
John had tried to do, and on more than one occasion
had left the hall at dinner red-faced with impotent fury because Sir John had easily defeated his arguments with his quiet logic.