Read A Plague on Both Your Houses Online
Authors: Susanna Gregory
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
child who lay in a tangle of dirty blankets, and began his examination. The child was obviously frightened,
and Bartholomew found himself chattering about all
manner of inane subjects to distract her. The other
children clustered round, giggling at his banter.
The child was about six years old, and, as
Bartholomew had thought, was suffering from dehydration resulting from severe diarrhoea. He showed
the mother how to feed her with a mixture of boiled
water and milk and gave her specific instructions about the amounts she should be given. He discovered that
the child had fallen into the river two days earlier, and suspected that she had swallowed bad water.
The rain was falling persistently as he walked back
along the High Street towards Shoemaker Row, and
he was drenched by the time he reached Holy Trinity
Church. It was the third time he had been soaked in a
week, and he was running out of dry clothes. The only
fires Wilson allowed in the College were in the kitchens and, on very cold days, in the conclave, and there was not enough room for all the scholars to dry their clothes.
Bartholomew began to invent a plan to warm stones on
the hearths so that they might be wrapped round wet
clothes.
The house of Agatha’s cousin, a Mistress Bowman,
was a small half-timbered building, with whitewashed
walls and clean rushes on the floors. Mistress Bowman
ushered him in fearfully.
‘It is my son, Doctor. I do not know what is wrong
with him, but he is so feverish! He seems not to know
me!’ She bit back a sob.
‘How long has he been ill?’ asked Bartholomew,
allowing her to take his wet cloak.
‘Since yesterday. It came on so fast. He has been
down in London, you know,’ she said, a hint of pride in her voice. ‘He is a fine arrow-maker, and he has been
making arrows for the King’s armies in France.’
“I see,’ said Bartholomew, looking at her closely,
‘and when did he return from London?’
‘Two days ago,’ said Mistress Bowman.
Bartholomew took a deep breath and climbed up
the steep wooden stairs to the room above. He could
hear the laboured breathing of the man before he was
half-way up. Mistress Bowman followed him, bringing a
candle because, there being no glass in the windows,
the shutters were closed against the cold and it was
dark. Bartholomew took the candle and bent down
towards the man on the bed. At first, he thought his
dreadful suspicions were unfounded, and that the man
had a simple fever. Then he felt under the man’s arms
and detected the swollen lumps there like hard unripe
apples.
He gazed down at the man in horror. So this
was the plague! He swallowed hard. Did the fact that
he had touched the man mean that he would now
succumb to the disease himself? He fought down the
almost overwhelming urge to move away and abandon
him, to flee the house and return to Michaelhouse.
But he had discussed this many times with his fellow
physician, Gregory Colet, and both had come to the
conclusion - based on what little fact they could distil from exaggeration or rumour - that their chances of
contracting the plague were high regardless of whether they frequented the homes of the victims. Bartholomew
understood that some people seemed to have a natural
resistance to it - and those that did not would catch it whether they had the slightest contact with a victim, or whether they exposed themselves to it totally.
Would Bartholomew die now - merely from touching
the man who writhed and groaned in his delirious
fever? If so, the matter was out of his hands, and he
could not, in all conscience, abandon the victims of the foul disease to their suffering. He and Colet had agreed.
While, all over the land, physicians were fleeing towns and villages for secluded houses in the country, Bartholomew and Colet had decided to stand firm. Bartholomew had
nowhere to flee in any case - and all his family and
friends were in Cambridge.
Bartholomew braced himself and completed his
examination. Besides the swellings in the arms, there were similar lumps, the size of small eggs, in the man’s groin and smaller swellings on his neck. He was also
burning with fever, and screamed and writhed when
Bartholomew gently felt the buboes.
Bartholomew sat back on his heels. Behind him, Mistress Bowman hovered worriedly. ‘What is it, Doctor?’ she
whispered. Bartholomew did not know how to tell her.
‘Did he travel alone?’ he asked.
‘Oh, no! There were three of them. They all came
back together.’
Bartholomew’s heart sank. ‘Where do the others
live?’ he asked.
Mistress Bowman stared at him. ‘It is the pestilence,’
she whispered, looking down at her son with a mixture of horror and pity. ‘My son has brought the pestilence.’
Bartholomew had to be sure before an official
pronouncement was made, and before people started
to panic. He stood. “I do not know, Mistress,’ he said softly. “I have never seen a case of the pestilence before, and we should check the other lads before we jump to
conclusions.’
Mistress Bowman grabbed his sleeve. ‘Will he die?’
she cried, her voice rising. ‘Will my boy die?’
Bartholomew disentangled his arm and took both
her hands in his firmly. He stood that way until her
shuddering panic had subsided. “I do not know, Mistress.
But you will do him no good by losing control of yourself.
Now, you must fetch clean water and some linen, and
sponge his face to bring his fever down.’
The woman nodded fearfully, and went off to do
his bidding. Bartholomew examined the young man
again. He seemed to be getting worse by the minute,
and Bartholomew knew that he would soon see scores
of cases of such suffering - perhaps even among those
he loved - and be unable to do anything about it.
Mistress Bowman returned with her water and
Bartholomew made her repeat his instructions. “I do
not wish to frighten you,’ he said, ‘but we must be
careful. Do not allow anyone in the house, and do not
go out until I return.’ She had gathered her courage
while she had been busy, and nodded firmly, reminding
him suddenly of Agatha.
He left the house and went to Holy Trinity Church.
He asked the priest if he could borrow a pen and a scrap of parchment, and hurriedly scribbled a note to Gregory Colet at Rudde’s Hostel, telling him of his suspicions and asking him to meet him at the Round Church in
an hour. Outside, he threw a street urchin a penny and told him to deliver the note to Colet, who would give
him another penny when he received it. The lad sped
off while Bartholomew trudged to the house of one of
the other men who had travelled from London.
As he arrived, he knew that any attempt he might
make to contain the disease would be futile. Wails and howls came from within and the house was thronged
with people. He elbowed his way through them until
he reached the man lying on the bed. A glance told
Bartholomew that he was near his end. He could scarcely draw breath and his arms were stuck out because of
the huge swellings in his armpits. One had burst, and
emitted a smell so foul that some people in the room
covered their mouths and noses with scraps of cloth.
‘How long has he been ill?’ he asked an old woman,
who sat weeping in a corner. She refused to look at him, and went on with her wailing, rocking back and forth.
‘God’s anger is visited upon us!’ she cried. ‘It will
take all those with black, sinful hearts!’
And a good many others besides, thought Bartholomew.
He and Colet had listened carefully to all
the stories about the plague that flooded into Cambridge in the hope of learning more. For months, people had
spoken of little else. First, itwas thought that the infection would never reach England. After all, how could the foul winds that carried the disease cross the waters of the Channel? But cross they did, and in August, a sailor
died of the plague in the Dorset port of Melcombe,
and within days, hundreds were dead.
When the disease reached Bristol, officials tried to
cut the port off from the surrounding areas to prevent the disease from spreading. But the wave of death was
relentless. It was soon in Oxford, and then in London.
Bartholomew and his colleagues discussed it deep into
the night. Was it carried by the wind? Was it true that a great earthquake had opened up graves and the
pestilence came from the uncovered corpses? Was it a
visitation from God? What were they to do if it came to Cambridge? Colet argued that people who had been in
contact with plague victims should stay away from those who had not, but even as Colet’s words of warning rang in his ears, Bartholomew saw that such a restriction
was wholly impractical. Among the crowd was one of
Michaelhouse’s servants - even if Bartholomew avoided
contact with the scholars, the servant would be among
them. And what of those who had already fled?
Thomas Exton, the town’s leading physician,
declared that none would die if everyone stayed in the churches and prayed. Colet had suggested that applying leeches to the black swellings that were purported to
grow under the arms and in the groin might draw off
the poisons within. He said he meant to use leeches
until his fellow physicians discovered another treatment.
Bartholomew argued that the leeches themselves might
spread the infection, but agreed to try them if Colet
could prove they worked.
Bartholomew pulled himself out of his thoughts
and slammed the door, silencing wailing and whispering alike.
‘How long has this man been ill?’ he repeated.
There was a gabble of voices answering him, and
Bartholomew bent towards a woman dressed in grey.
‘He was ill when they came home the night before
last,’ she said. ‘He had been drinking in the King’s Head tavern on the High Street, and his friends brought him back when he began to shake with this fever.’
Bartholomew closed his eyes in despair. The King’s
Head was one of the busiest taverns in the town, and, if the rumours were true and infection spread on the wind, then those who had been in contact with the three young men were already in danger. A hammering on the door
stilled the buzz of conversation, and a thickset man in a greasy apron forced his way in.
‘Will and his mother are sick,’ he yelled. ‘And one
of Mistress Barnet’s babies has turned black!’
There was an immediate panic. People crossed
themselves, the window shutters were thrown open,
and some began to climb out screaming that the plague
was there. Rapidly, only the sick man, Bartholomew, and the woman in grey were left in the house. Bartholomew
looked at her closely, noting a sheen of sweat on her face.
He pulled her into the light and felt under her jaw. Sure enough, there were the beginnings of swellings in her
neck; she was already infected.
He helped her up the stairs to a large bed, and
covered her with blankets, leaving a pitcher of water
near her, for she was complaining of a fierce thirst. He went to look at the young man downstairs on his way
out, and saw that he was already dead, his face a dark purple and his eyes starting from his face. The white
shirt under his arms was stained with blood and with
black and yellow pus. The stench was terrible.
Bartholomew let himself out of the house. The
street was unusually silent as he made his way to the
Round Church of the Holy Sepulchre, where Gregory
Colet was waiting anxiously.
‘Matt?’ he said, stepping towards him, his eyes
fearful.
Bartholomew held up his hand, warning him to
come no closer. ‘It has come, Gregory,’ he said softly.
‘The plague has come to Cambridge.’
The next few weeks passed in a whirlwind for
Bartholomew. At first, there were only a few cases,
and one of them even recovered. After five days,
Bartholomew began to hope that the pestilence had
passed them by, and that the people of Cambridge
might have escaped the worst of the fever, or that it
had burned itself out. Then, without warning, four
people became infected one day, seven the next day,
and thirteen the day after that. People began to die and Bartholomew found himself with more requests for help
than he could possibly answer.
Colet called an urgent meeting of the physicians
and surgeons, and Bartholomew described the symptoms
he had seen first-hand while he stood in the gallery of St Mary’s Church, as far away from the others as possible.
There was much to be done. Gravediggers needed to be
found, and collectors of the dead. There were few who
wanted such tasks, and there was an argument between
the medics on the one hand and the Sheriff on the
other about who should pay the high wages to entice
people to do it.
The number of cases of the plague continued to
rise dramatically. Some people died within a few hours of becoming ill, while others lasted for several days.
Others still seemed to recover, but died as their relatives began to celebrate their deliverance. Bartholomew
could see no pattern as to who lived and who died,