Read A Plague on Both Your Houses Online
Authors: Susanna Gregory
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
Bartholomew’s first duty of the day was to examine
Alyngton and five students in the commoners’ room. He
lanced the swellings that looked as though they would
drain, and left Michael’s Benedictine room-mates with
instructions on how to keep the sick scholars comfortable.
That done, he visited three patients in the river
men’s houses down by the wharf.
Gray followed him from house to house carrying
the heavy bag that contained Bartholomew’s instruments and medicines. Bartholomew could feel the student’s
disapproval as he entered the single-roomed shacks
that were home to families of a dozen. The only
patient of which Gray did not disapprove was the
wife of a merchant. She was one of the few cases with
which Bartholomew had had success, and was lying in
a bed draped with costly cloths, tired, but still living.
The grateful merchant pressed some gold coins into
Bartholomew’s hand. Bartholomew wondered whether
they would be sufficient to bribe people to drive the
carts that collected the dead.
Once the urgent calls were over, Bartholomew
turned to Gray.
“I need to discover what happened to Philippa,’ he
said. “I am going to try to see if anyone knows Giles
Abigny’s whereabouts.’
Gray’s face broke into a smile. ‘You mean you plan
to visit a few of his favourite spots?’ he asked cheerfully.
‘Oh, good. Beats traipsing around those dismal hovels.
Where shall we begin?’
Bartholomew was thankful that Gray had so readily
agreed to help. ‘The King’s Head,’ he said, saying the first place that came into his head.
Gray frowned. ‘Not a good place to start,’ he said.
‘We would be better going there later when it is busier.
We should visit Bene’t’s first - that is where he spent most of his time outside Michaelhouse. Hugh Stapleton’s brother, Cedric, is ill and now Master Roper is dead,
they have no physician. We could see him first and then wheedle an invitation to eat there.’
Bartholomew saw he had a lot to learn in the sleazy
ways of detection. He walked with Gray up the High
Street to Bene’t Street. Gray strolled nonchalantly into Bene’t Hostel and a notion went through Bartholomew’s
mind that the scholars there might consider him to
have poached Gray from them. The student had
attached himself to Bartholomew with gay abandon,
and Bartholomew had not asked whether he had sought
permission from the Principal - whoever that was now
that Hugh Stapleton had died.
The hostel was little more than a large house, with
one room enlarged to make a hall. Bartholomew assumed
that the hall would be used for communal meals as well as teaching. The hostel was far warmer than the chilly stone rooms of Michaelhouse, and the smell of boiled
cabbage pervaded the whole house. Drying clothes
hung everywhere, and the entire place had an aura
of controlled, but friendly, chaos. No wonder Abigny
had felt more at home here than in the strict orderliness of Michaelhouse.
Gray made for the small hall on the first floor of the building. He stopped to speak to a small, silver-haired man, and then turned to Bartholomew. ‘This is Master
Burwell, the Sub-Principal,’ he said. ‘He is very grateful for your offer to attend Cedric Stapleton.’
Bartholomew followed Burwell up some narrow
wooden steps into the eaves of the house. ‘How long
has Master Stapleton been ill?’ he asked.
‘Since yesterday morning. I am sure there is little
you can do, Doctor, but we appreciate you offering to
help.’ Burwell glanced round to smile at Bartholomew,
and opened the door into a pleasant, slant-sided room
with two dormer windows. The windows were glazed,
and a fire was lit, so the room was remarkably
warm. Bartholomew stepped in and went to the
man who lay on the bed. A Dominican lay-brother
was kneeling by him, alternating muttered prayers with wiping his patient’s face with a napkin. Bartholomew
knelt next to him to peer at the all-too-familiar
symptoms.
He took a knife and quickly made criss-cross
incisions on the buboes in Stapleton’s armpits and
groin. Immediately, a foul smell filled the room,
and the lay-brother jerked backwards with a cry of
disgust. Bartholomew asked for hot water, and set about cleaning the swellings. It seemed that Bartholomew’s
simple operation had afforded Stapleton some relief,
for his breathing became easier and his arms and legs
relaxed into a more normal position.
Bartholomew sat for a while with Stapleton, then
went in search of Gray. He found him holding court in
the small hall, in the middle of some tale about how he had sold a pardoner some coloured water to cure him of his stomach gripes, and how the pardoner had returned
a week later to tell him that the wonderful medicine had worked.
Bartholomew sat on the end of a bench next to
Burwell. Burwell raised his eyebrows questioningly.
‘It is too soon to tell,’ Bartholomew said in response.
‘You will know where you stand with Master Stapleton by nightfall.’
Burwell looked away. ‘We have lost five masters
and twelve students,’ he said. ‘How has Michaelhouse
fared?’
‘Sixteen students, three commoners, and two Fellows.
The Master died last night.’
‘Wilson?’ asked Burwell incredulously. “I thought he
was keeping to his room so he would not be infected.’
‘So he did,’ said Bartholomew. ‘But the pestilence
claimed him all the same.’ He was wondering how to
breach the subject of Abigny without sounding too
obvious, when Burwell did it for him.
‘We heard about Giles Abigny,’ he said. ‘We heard
from Stephen Stanmore that he had been hiding in your
sister’s attic, and then ran off with Stanmore’s horse.’
‘Do you have any ideas where Giles might be?’
Bartholomew asked.
Burwell shook his head. “I never understood what
was going on in Giles’s head. A strange combination of incredible shallowness mixed with a remarkable depth
of learning. I do not know where he might be.’
‘When was the last time you saw him?’ asked
Bartholomew.
Burwell thought carefully. ‘He was very shocked at
Hugh’s death. After that he went wild, trying to squeeze every ounce of pleasure from what he thought might be a short life. He continued in that vein for perhaps a week. Then he seemed to quieten down, and we saw
less of him. Then, about two weeks ago, after going to the King’s Head, he regaled us with a dreadful tale about cheating at dice and stealing the wages of half the Castle garrison. He had an enormous purseful of money, so
perhaps there was some truth in it. He went off quite
late, and I have not seen him since.’
Bartholomew tried to hide his disappointment. A
sighting two weeks ago did not really help. He stood to leave, and beckoned Gray.
‘Please send someone for me at Michaelhouse if I
can be of any more help to Cedric,’ he said to Burwell.
‘And thank you for your assistance with Giles.’
Burwell smiled again, and escorted them to the
door. He watched as they made their way down
Bene’t Street and the smile faded from his face.
He beckoned to a student, and whispered in his
ear. Within a few moments, the student was scurrying
out of the hostel towards Milne Street, his
cloak held tightly against the chill of the winter
afternoon.
Bartholomew and Gray spent two fruitless hours enquiring after Abigny in the town’s taverns. They came up with
nothing more than Burwell had told them, except that
Abigny’s idiosyncrasies seemed to be notorious among
the townspeople.
Bartholomew was ready to give up, and retire to
bed, when Gray, with a display of energy that made
Bartholomew wonder whether he had been at the
medicine store, suggested they walk to Trumpington
to visit the Laughing Pig.
‘It is best we visit at night,’ he said. ‘More people
will be there, and they will have had longer for the ale to loosen their tongues.’
So the two set off for Trumpington. Although it
was only two miles, Bartholomew felt he was walking to the ends of the Earth. A bitter wind blew directly into their faces and cut through their clothes. It was a clear night, and they could hear the crack and splinter of the water freezing in the ruts and puddles on the track as the temperature dropped.
Bartholomew breathed a sigh of relief when the
Laughing Pig came into sight. Within a few minutes they were seated in the tavern’s large whitewashed room with frothing tankards of ale in front of them. The tavern was busy, and a fire crackled in a hearth in the middle of the room, filling it with pungent smoke as well as warmth.
The floor was simple beaten earth, which was easier to keep clean than rushes.
Bartholomew was well known in Trumpington, and
several people nodded at him in a friendly fashion. He struck up a conversation with a large, florid-faced man who fished for eels in the spring and minded Stanmore’s cows for the rest of the year. The man immediately
began to gossip about the disappearance of Philippa.
Bartholomew was dismayed, but not surprised, that
her flight had become the subject of village chatter doubtless by way of Stanmore’s party of horsemen who
had tried to catch up with the fleeing Abigny.
Overhearing the discussion, several others joined in,
including the tavern maid with whom Abigny had claimed he was in love back in the summer. She perched on the
edge of the table, casting nervous glances backwards to make sure the landlord did not catch her skiving.
‘How long do you think Giles Abigny was pretending
to be his sister?’ Bartholomew asked casually, in a rare moment of silence.
There was a hubbub of conflicting answers. Everyone,
it seemed, had ideas and theories. But listening
to them, Bartholomew knew that was all they were. He
stopped paying attention and sipped at the sour ale.
‘Giles was odd a long time before he did this,’
whispered the tavern maid, who, as Abigny had said,
was indeed pretty. She glanced towards the next table
where the landlord was serving and pretended to clean
up near Bartholomew. ‘The last time I saw him was at
the church two Fridays ago. He was hiding behind one
of the pillars. I thought he was playing around, but when I grabbed him from behind, he was terrified! He ran out, and I have not seen him since.’
Two Fridays before. That was three days after
Philippa had become ill. So Abigny had not been
impersonating her at least until then.
‘Do you know where he went?’ Bartholomew
asked.
The tavern maid shook her head. “I ran after him,
but he had gone.’
The landlord shouted for her to serve other customers, and she left. Bartholomew thought about what
she had told him: Abigny had been in the church at
Trumpington terrified of something.
He tried to bring the general conversation round to
what Abigny’s reasons could be, but the suggestions were so outrageous that he knew no one had any solid facts to add.
Bartholomew and Gray talked with the locals for a while longer, and decided to stay with Edith for the night. Perhaps he would have more luck with his search tomorrow.
Gray was already up and admiring the horses in
Stanmore’s stable by the time Bartholomew awoke.
He threw open the window-shutters and looked out
over the neat vegetable patches to the village church.
He could see the Gilbertine Canon, standing outside
the porch talking to the early risers who had been to
his morning mass. The weak winter sun was shining,
glittering on the frost that lay over everything like a white sheet of gauze. Bartholomew took a deep breath,
and the air was clean and fresh. He understood why
Stanmore preferred not to live at the house in Milne
Street so near the stinking ditches and waterways of
Cambridge.
He went to the garderobes and broke the ice on a
bowl of water. Shivering and swearing under his breath, he washed and shaved as fast as he could, and borrowed one of Stanmore’s fresh shirts from the pile on the shelf in the corner. He went down to the kitchens, where a
large fire blazed, and he and Edith sat on stools and
discussed Philippa’s disappearance. It seemed he could have saved himself a walk, because she had been busy
on his behalf, collecting scraps of information from the Trumpington folk.
She, too, had spoken to the tavern girl, and had also
questioned the Canon. He had told her that Abigny had
frequented the church a great deal following Philippa’s arrival. Abigny had seemed restless and agitated, and
once the Canon had alarmed him by standing up suddenly from next to the altar where he had been meditating.
Abigny had turned so white that the Canon had been
genuinely concerned for his health. The day after,
he had disappeared. The Canon had assumed that
Abigny had been waiting while Philippa was ill, and
as soon as she was well again, he had returned to
Michaelhouse.
‘So,’ said Edith, ‘Giles may have been in the house
pretending to be Philippa as early as the day her fever broke, since that was when either of them was last seen.
I do not understand why he did not just come here. He
has stayed with us before.’
Bartholomew nodded in agreement.