Authors: Shirley McKay
âI am an anatomist, sir, as well as a physician, and I have a collection of some objects to do with cadavers. I have an interest, explicitly, in skulls. And, it is possible, that among the items that are there accumulated, there may be something similar to what you have described.'
âMay I fetch it, sir?' Roger asked.
âAye, perhaps you should.'
The instrument with which the boy returned made the last sour dregs in Hew's raw stomach churn, just to look at it. It was a kind of clamp, that fitted on the head, through which there passed a screw
that could be lowered down to elevate the parts impacted on the brain, rotated and pressed down to screw into the bone.
The surgeon hesitated. âThis is hard to do, without causing damage to the membranes of the brain. And I have not tried it before. I cannot do this well alone. Someone must assist.'
âI am willing to advise. But I cannot put my hand in it,' said Giles.
âAye, God forbid,' the surgeon answered bitterly, âthat ever a physician soiled his hands.'
âCome, you know full well, that I have not been trained to it. And you would be the first to complain of the trespass.'
âIt is your instrument.'
âIt is your profession.'
Roger urged, âPlease, will you not try?'
âThere is no help for him, son. For he is certain to die,' the surgeon explained.
âThen what can be lost, in the practice? If you will not, then I will.'
Hew did not stay to help. But he could not turn his back upon the horror there, for the porter had returned with the crownar Andrew Wood, having chanced to find him at his brother's house. Hew was obliged to take him to the dining hall, in the absence of Giles, and revisit the scene they had found there. Here Andrew Wood came uncannily into his own, for he was little moved to look upon a hanged man, having hanged enough of them himself. He cut the painter down, and laid his body out upon a trestle board, with an efficiency that was, oddly, reassuring, as though it were the matter of an ordinary day, and nothing untoward. And though his handling of the corpse was brisk, and businesslike, it did not want for courtesy, or for the respect, deserving to the dead. He covered up the painter with a cloth. And Hew felt grateful to him, calmed by his authority.
âGiles Locke must make what arrangements he can to dispose of this body, for, if he died at his own hand, as the evidence suggests, he cannot have the solace of a Christian burial. Sometimes, in such cases, it is a kindness to keep it from the Kirk. Where is the other victim? Is he dead?' the crownar said.
âHe is not dead.' Giles Locke had joined them, white-faced, wiping his hands on a cloth, in defiance of the charge that he did not get them dirty. âYet. The operation was, to some extent, a success.'
âThen you found the way to turn the implement?' Hew asked.
âRoger did. He is with the boy now, and refuses to leave him. The surgeon has left. And what happens next must lie in God's hands.'
âWe must hope that he recovers, and can tell us what has happened here,' Sir Andrew said.
âHe will not do that. For even if his brain can heal intact, he cannot speak,' said Giles.
The crownar rubbed his beard. âThen I must leave you to work out, whatever way you can, to determine what might move a man to such a dreadful act. For my part, I will go to Edinburgh, and inform this man's family of his death in Fife.'
As he left, he saw the pleated picture on its scaffold still, and picked it up. âWhat is this?'
Giles said, âIt is a perspective picture, belonging to the king. He has given it to Hew, in hope to find its origin.'
âThe king believes that it may be bewitched,' said Hew.
The crownar placed the picture quickly back. He wiped his fingers on his coat, the fingers that had lately lifted down the corpse, and set it on the board without a qualm, and retreated nervously. âThe signs are clear enough,' he said, âthat the king was right.'
He left behind a silence in that room, which Hew was first to break. âBut we do not believe that.'
âNo.' Giles did not sound sure. But then, he was distracted by the horror that had happened in the college, by the practicalities of dealing with a corpse, and a mortal causality, without disruption to the students who were in his care. He was distracted also, by this senseless loss of life. He did not believe, could not have believed, that the picture of a death's head, who might have been a queen, had any kind of magic in it, over and above the painter's craft.
Hew looked round the room. âThe answer must be here. It must, in truth, be here.'
He knew it must be there. But, for all the world, he could not find it there.
The horror of the painter's death, for the college of St Salvator, was not the death itself, but that fact that he had died at his own unhappy hand. The corpse was taken out by night, when the college was asleep. The porter had insisted it be taken through the window, since a person who died at his own hand would infect a whole house, if he departed there using the door. In practice, this did not prove practical, and a compromise was reached, in using the back channel out from the latrines, which opened to the Swallow Gate, avoiding both the chapel and the college gate. It was buried in the dark, in unconsecrated land, far beyond the comfort of a hostile kirk. And if the doctor knelt, and said a private prayer, then no one was offended there but God.
âIf there is a chance,' Hew said, âthis painter did not die by his own unaided hand, howsoever small, then for his family's sake, we ought now to search for it.' Doctor Locke agreed. He could however, find no clue, nothing in that place appearing untoward. It was, if anything too neat, too tidy for the work the painter had produced in it. Hew remembered Vanson's shop, and Vanson's training of his own apprentices, which, it seemed to him, was nothing like this boy's. He looked among the brushes and the pots of paint, which were small, and few.
âWhere did the painter mix his paints?' he asked, and was told there was a workshop somewhere in the town, but no one there could tell him where it was.
Roger looked after the boy, for ten more days through which he drifted in and out of consciousness, by the grace of God, blissfully asleep, and in his waking moments, Roger fed him milk and pottage from a spoon. The spittle on the spoon, when Roger pulled it out, was often flecked with blood. From time to time, the surgeon called. The Easter disputations were put back till June, and Giles Locke did his best to dissipate the gloom which darkened the whole college, and to quell the superstitions of the fearful boys. Self-slaughter in a
college was a rare event, and a perverse and strange one. The dinner hall was locked. The turning picture was removed to Giles Locke's room, and covered with a cloth. It filled Hew with a deep unease, not because he feared it was the devil's work, but for the power he knew it held in it, to move a troubled mind. He hoped and prayed that Andrew Wood would not relate this horror to the king, before he had an answer to the riddle there.
Andrew Wood returned, and brought with him some news that troubled even more. He had broken the news of the death to the Workman family, with his usual brusqueness. This had not been well received by John Workman's mother, the more so since her son was at that moment up a ladder, patching up the plaster in the Edinburgh tolbuith. When his brother was despatched, to inform him of his death, he almost fell from it. It did not take Andrew long to establish unequivocally that the Workman men were every one accounted for, and that there was no member of the mason's gild who ever had a prentice who was deaf and dumb. It turned out Vanson's scepticism had a solid core.
Chapter 20
The Doctrine of Signatures
The provost, who had engaged the painter, could furnish no clue as to his identity. His provenance was vague. He had surfaced in Cupar, in the first wave of peste in 1585. There, a man was charged with painting the lids of the burgh coffins black. After several months he succumbed to the plague, and among the painters in the masons' gild, none had shown a keenness to replace him. Workman had turned up, fortuitous and out of the blue, offering his services. He had claimed to be a member of the long-established family living still at Edinburgh, though the provost had been hazy quite what the relation was. He had a boy with him, who was deaf and dumb, and who the provost took to be a younger brother. Under those extraordinary circumstances, and on demonstrating in his work a modicum of competence, the contract was drawn up, and no one dared dispute the painter's title to it. In the year of the plague, the strict laws of the gilds were far more lax and fluid. People were displaced, there were vacant posts, requiring to be filled, and for anyone who wished to reinvent themselves, there were opportunities. At the end of the year, the provost had employed the painter in his own house at Dairsie, on works both plain and decorative. The painter had presented him a picture of his wife. And the provost was impressed with the result.
Ars naturam adiuvans
, thought Hew. Or, as the goldsmith had said, it was an unco ill wind.
On the eleventh day following the painter's death, the college of St Salvator was shaken from its sleep by an unearthly wailing sound. It echoed through the cloisters and billowed through the court,
plaintive, keen and melancholy. The students who were woken by it fell upon their knees, all but Roger Cunningham, who slipped out from his bed and to the little chamber that was Bartie Groat's, where he found the painter's boy at long last awake, and lowing like a bull-calf in this disparate world, in which he had no sense of any sound he made. Roger soothed him then, by taking in his lap the great lolling head, with its fluff and stubble, cavities and shafts, and stroking with his hands the wet slabs of his cheeks, that were crazed with tears, until the noise diminished to a burn-like babble, bubbling from his throat.
The painter's boy was locked, imprisoned in a glass, where he could be seen and heard, but could not be reached. Roger had amended this, as far as was possible, through the sense of touch, revealing in his hands a sympathetic power. Later in the day, when Giles and Hew arrived, and came in to examine him, Giles found his state of health was not at all discouraging; less certain, more concerning, was that of his mind.
âPoor man. There is no way to tell what damage has been done to his unfettered brain.'
Roger disagreed. âI do not believe it has been harmed at all. His distress is not derangement. It is his frustration, that he cannot find a way to make his feelings kent. He has lost the man who was his window on the world. And I think it probable he does not ken it yet. It does not seem very likely that he was conscious still, when the painter died.'
If what they had supposed was so, that the painter hanged himself, remorseful for the death blow he had dealt the boy, then that was no doubt true. âPerhaps he does not ken what happened there at all? We could take him to the hall, and see if it revives in him the glimmer of a memory,' suggested Hew.
âWe
cannot,'
Roger said. âFor what he might remember there would drive a man to madness, if he had no way to make it understood, or to have explained to him the questions in his mind.'
Doctor Locke agreed with him, impressed by this display of passion
and sound reason, which justified his trust. âYet how can we know, that he is not mad now?'
Roger gave an answer that was unexpected. âBecause he has his language still.' He demonstrated to them, that the twitching of the hands, which were loose and agitated, rarely ever still, were attempts to speak. âI have been watching him, now, for a while. I watched him when he was in conference with the painter. I have not got far. But these are the signs he makes for brush, and paper, this for bread, and meat, and this for the pot, when he wants to piss. He is hungry, now.'
âThat is quite remarkable,' said Giles. âHe shall have at once, something from the buttery. Anything he likes. Can he tell you what?'
âI expect he can, though my kenning of the signs is not yet so refined. I only began on it, properly, this morning. And, you understand, he does not have a grammar. Something soft, I doubt. He finds it hard to eat. His teeth are somewhat loose, and some are rattled out.'
âReally?' tutted Giles. âLet me take a look.'
Roger coaxed the painter's boy to open up his mouth, and Doctor Locke probed gingerly among the cracks and cavities. âHas the surgeon seen this? What does he say?'
âThat the blow from the hammer rippled through the jaw, resounding through the teeth, and shook them from their sockets.'
âHmm. I will prescribe a paste, of alum and black pepper, and a little salt, that will help to strengthen them. You have done well here, Roger. Many other men would have given up, but you did not despair of him. Now, it is time to return to your studies. You will have till June, to prepare for the black stane, but that is not long. The bones in his skull will take that time to heal. Others can take care of him. You have done your part.'
Roger protested, as they knew he would. âI can manage both.'
And it was Hew who came down on his side, knowing that Giles Locke was minded to refuse. âLet him,' he urged, and Giles acquiesced, trusting to his friend.
Hew had already drafted something in his mind, that he thought to try. From a stationer in town, he bought two table books; one
large and blank, and a second small and lined. He bought a box of chalks, in red, black and white, and the stationer cut for him four slender reeds, into which he could slide the soft strips of chalk, and sharpened them up to a point, showing to him how he could make his own. He took them back to Bartie's room. The smaller of the books he gave to Roger Cunningham. âI want you to make a dictionary, of all the words you learn, or that you invent, in your talk with him. Write a description, and, if you can, draw the shape of every sign you use, and write the meaning next to it, in whatever language that you can, as well as Scots, since we have no kenning where he comes from. Then others can have access to his private world, and he will not be closed in it. The other tablet is for him, for it is high time he shared with us what happened here, and tells us what he knows.'