Read A Plague on Both Your Houses Online
Authors: Susanna Gregory
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
Oliver’s breath came in short agonised gasps. ‘The
Master told me,’ he whispered, flashing a terrified glance at Bartholomew.
‘Swynford?’ asked Bartholomew, astonished. ‘Swynford
told you I would kill you?’
Oliver shook his head. ‘Master Wilson. Wilson said
you would kill him. And you did!’ He sank back
against the wall, exhausted. Bartholomew looked at
him thunderstruck, while the monk knelt to begin
taking off Oliver’s wet clothes.
The Benedictine smiled briefly at Bartholomew.
‘Delirious,’ he said. ‘They claim all sorts of things, you know. Poor Jerome over there keeps saying he was
responsible for the murder of Montfitchet!’
Bartholomew groaned. It was all happening too fast.
Did this mean that Jerome, in his feverish delirium, was declaring that he was the murderer? And why had Wilson told Oliver that Bartholomew was going to kill him?
His energy spent, Oliver was unresisting while the
monk and Bartholomew put him to bed. He began to
squirm and struggle again when Bartholomew examined
him, but not with the same intensity as before. The swellings were as soft as rotten apples in his armpits and groin, and Bartholomew knew that lancing them would bring
no relief. While the monks tended to the other patients, Bartholomew tried to make Oliver drink some water.
Oliver spat the water from his mouth, and twisted
away from Bartholomew.
‘Poison!’ he hissed, his eyes bright with fever.
Bartholomew took a sip from the water cup himself,
and offered it again to Oliver, who took it reluctantly, but drank thirstily.
‘Now,’ said Bartholomew. ‘You must rest.’
He stood to leave, but Oliver caught at the edge
of his sleeve. ‘Master Wilson said he was in fear of his life from you, Physician,’ he said. ‘My aunt believes you killed him.’
Bartholomew had had enough of Oliver and his
unpleasant accusations. ‘Well, she is wrong,’ he said.
‘And how would she know anyway, since Wilson never
left his room to talk to anyone, and your aunt never
leaves her Priory?’
Oliver sneered and spat onto the floor. ‘He went to
see her, he said.
‘Wilson visited your aunt?’
‘Of course!’ Oliver said, his voice dripping contempt.
‘Most days, between Compline and Matins.’
‘In the middle of the night?’ said Bartholomew,
amazed. ‘Wilson visited your aunt in the middle of the night?’
‘They were lovers,’ said Oliver, ‘although what she
ever saw in that fat pig I will never know.’
‘He was going to take major orders,’ said
Bartholomew, bemused, ‘vowing to abstain from
physical relationships with women.’
Oliver gave a short bark of laughter. ‘My aunt had
already taken such a vow,’ he said, ‘but what did that matter?’
Bartholomew stared at the student. Oliver glowered
back at him spitefully, and once again, Bartholomew
wondered what he had done to earn himself such an
intense dislike. Oliver, however, was growing exhausted, and Bartholomew did not want to tire him further with
more questions. He went to sit with Jerome, who was
still fighting his illness with a spirit of defiance that Bartholomew never guessed he had. Jerome’s skeletal
hand gripped his.
“I did it,’ he muttered. “I killed Montfitchet. I made him drink the wine when he said he had already had
enough. Jocelyn and I made him drink the Master’s
health, and he died. His death is on my head.’
‘Did you know the wine was drugged?’ asked
Bartholomew.
The old man shook his head slowly, his eyes filling
with tears. ‘No, I did not. But that does not absolve me,’
he whispered.
Bartholomew rose to leave. ‘Father William will
come to you,’ he said. ‘He will absolve you.’ He felt a sudden urge just to leave Michaelhouse and Cambridge
and go to York or Lincoln where he could practise
medicine in peace, and escape from the vile intrigues
and affairs of the University. Even Father Jerome, who had probably never harmed anyone in his life, had been drawn into its murky depths, and would die believing
he had committed a crime in which he had played no
knowing part.
As he left the commoners’ room and made his way
back to the kitchen, he thought about Oliver’s words.
Oliver had said that Wilson had left the College almost every night to visit his mistress, the Abbess. That certainly explained how he might have caught the plague when, in everyone’s eyes, he had isolated himself from the outside world. Bartholomew and Cynric had slipped unnoticed
in and out of College the night before, so there was no reason why Wilson could not have done the same.
But it still made no sense. Bartholomew had already
established that Wilson could not have been the murderer, because Augustus’s body had been dumped in
the stables after Wilson had been buried. Did Wilson
believe Bartholomew was the murderer? Did he talk to
him on his deathbed so that Bartholomew would fall
into some kind of trap and be exposed? But that made
no sense either, because if Wilson believed Bartholomew to be capable of committing so grave a sin as murder,
why did he ask him to ensure that his tomb was built?
Why not Michael, or William?
He went to huddle near the kitchen fire, elbowing
Cynric to one side so that they could share the warmth.
They could not risk going too early in case they were
seen, so Bartholomew dozed until Cynric announced it
was time to leave. The Welshman made Bartholomew
change his white shirt and dispensed with cloaks and
scholar’s robes because they were difficult in which to climb. Both wore two pairs of woollen leggings and two dark tunics to protect them against the cold. When he
was satisfied that they were well prepared for a long
chilly wait on a narrow window-sill, Cynric led the way out of the College.
Bartholomew was amazed at the way the nimble
Welshman could blend into the shadows, and felt clumsy and graceless by comparison. When they reached Bene’t
Hostel, it was in total darkness, but Cynric insisted on waiting and watching for a long time before he decided it was safe. He slipped down a narrow passageway like a cat, Bartholomew following as quietly as he could. The passageway had originally led to the yard at the back of the hostel, but had been blocked off by a wall when the yard had become more of a refuse pit.
The wall had not been built of the best materials, and Bartholomew found it easy to gain hand-and footholds
in the crumbling mortar, and climb to the top. Cynric
pressed him back into the shadows, where they waited
yet again to ensure it was safe to continue. At last Cynric motioned that they could drop over the wall into the
yard below. Bartholomew was used to foul smells, but
the stench that rose from the deep layer of slime on the floor of the yard made his eyes water. Cynric quickly led the way to a row of straggly shrubs that grew against the wall of the hostel.
Bartholomew cursed under his breath as he skidded
on something slippery and almost fell. Cynric grabbed at his arm, and they waited in tense silence until they were certain that no one had heard. They reached the bushes where they could hide from anyone looking out of the
windows, and Bartholomew smothered an exclamation
of disgust as his outstretched hand touched a rotten slab of meat that had been thrown there.
Cynric pushed his way through the bushes until he
reached the ivy that climbed the wall of the house. It was ancient and sturdy, and Bartholomew nodded that
he could climb up it without difficulty. They had agreed that Bartholomew would climb to the window-sill, while Cynric would keep watch down the passageway from the
top of the wall for any indication that the well-wisher had led them into a trap. If that were the case, they
would effect an escape by climbing up the ivy, and over the roofs.
Gingerly, Bartholomew set his foot on the vine,
and began to climb. The slop drain was apparently
directly above, for the ivy was treacherously slick, and all manner of kitchen waste was caught on its branches.
Bartholomew tried not to think about it, and continued upwards. Glancing down, he could not see Cynric. He
must already have slid into his vantage point in the
shadows at the top of the wall.
The sound of soft singing came through the slop
drain. Bartholomew prayed that it was not a scullery
boy who would throw the kitchen waste down on his
head. Cautiously, he climbed a little further, noting
that the singer’s words were slurred and his notes false.
One of the scholars, objecting to an early night, must have slipped down to the pantry to avail himself of the wine and ale stored there. From his voice, it would take a thunderbolt to disturb him, not someone climbing
stealthily outside.
He climbed higher, until he saw the lancet windows
of the hall just above him. For an awful moment, he
thought the woman had misinformed him, for there was
no deep window-sill on which he could wait and listen, but then he realised that he was too far to one side, and needed to move to his right. This proved more difficult than he had anticipated, and he had to climb down past the kitchen drain before he could find a stem of the ivy large enough to bear his weight.
At last he saw the window-sill above him, and he was
able to grasp its edge with both hands and haul himself up. The shutters were firmly closed, but he could just see the merest flicker of light underneath them, suggesting that someone was there. He almost fell when a branch
he had been holding snapped sharply in his hand. He
held his breath and waited for the shutters to be flung open and his hiding place discovered, but there was no sound from within, and gradually he relaxed.
He eased himself to one side of the sill, his back
propped up against the carved stone window-frame. He
learned that, by huddling down a little, he could see
a fraction of the main table in the large hall through a split in the wood of the shutter. But, although one
of the Sub-Principal’s precious candles burned, there
seemed to be no one there to appreciate it. The meeting was evidently not due to start for a while. Bartholomew tried to make himself more comfortable. A chill wind was beginning to blow, and, although the sky was clear and it seemed unlikely to rain, he knew that, despite Cynric’s precautions, he was going to be very cold before he could go home.
He heard the church clock strike the hour twice
before anything happened. He was beginning to wonder
whether he had been sent on a wild-goose chase, and was considering giving up. It was freezing on the window-sill, and the bitter wind cut right through his clothes. He felt that if he did not climb down the vine soon, he would
be too cold to do so at all.
Suddenly, he became aware that something was
happening. Huddling down to peer through the split
wood, he saw Master Burwell pacing around the hall,
and heard him giving orders to Jacob Yaxley, who had
been ousted from his room to make way for the plague
ward. Yaxley was lighting more candles and sweeping
the remains of the scholars’ evening meal off the table onto the rushes. Burwell walked across Bartholomew’s
line of vision and seemed to be talking to someone else.
The wind rattled one of the shutters, and Bartholomew
swore softly. If this happened, he would not be able to hear what was going on in the meeting. Carefully, he
broke off a piece of vine, and jammed it under the
loose wood. The wind gusted again, and Bartholomew
saw with satisfaction that he seemed to have solved that problem at least.
The clock struck the hour again, and the activity
in the hall increased dramatically. There was a growing murmur of voices, and Bartholomew could see a number
of people filing into the hall. He was surprised: he had been expecting a small gathering of perhaps four or
five people, but there were at least fifteen men, with a promise of more to come.
He heard someone banging softly on the table to
bring the meeting to order.
‘Gentlemen. I would not have called you here in this
manner unless there was an important reason,’ Burwell
began. “I am afraid that our cause has suffered a grave setback.’
There was a mumble of concerned voices, and
Burwell waited for them to die down before continuing.
‘We have heard that the Acting Master of
Michaelhouse has established contact with Oxford.’
The voices this time were louder, and held
questions.
Burwell raised his hand. “I do not need to spell
out the implications of this to you, gentlemen. We have been uncertain of Master Alcote’s loyalties, and this
proves we were correct. Our spies have intercepted
messages from him telling which hostels were the
weakest and most likely to flounder under pressure.
Oxford will now see that pressure will be brought to
bear against these places, and the University will be
undermined as they fall.’
The room erupted into confusion again, and
Burwell had to bang on the table to bring the meeting
back under control.
‘What do you suggest we do?’ asked one man.
Although he had his back to Bartholomew, he recognised the wiry black hair as belonging to the Principal of Mary’s Hostel, Neville Stayne.
Burwell sighed. ‘We could take Alcote from the
equation,’ he said. Bartholomew saw Stayne nod his
head in approval, but there were voices of dissent.