Willows for Weeping (17 page)

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Authors: Felicity Pulman

BOOK: Willows for Weeping
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They retraced their steps for part of the way, and finally came through a sprawling settlement to the old walled hill fort that Master Thomas told her was called Sorviodunum in Latin, although the Normans referred to it as Sarisberie or Sarum. Janna felt a flutter of excitement as she looked up at the huge chalk ramparts that dominated the sky. They crossed the drawbridge over a deep moat and there they had to wait while Master Thomas spoke to the gatekeeper. After some persuasion and what looked like a coin exchanging hands, they were at last given access to the outer bailey.

Janna's gaze was immediately drawn to the gleaming chalk ramparts that surrounded and dominated the inner bailey at the centre of the large hill fort. They were topped by a timber palisade, and surrounded by a deep and seemingly impregnable ditch. The white chalk was so dazzling bright in the sunlight that she had to squint her eyes against the glare. A wooden drawbridge over the ditch gave access to the gate-house, a strong and imposing building that towered above their heads. The jongleurs wasted no time looking around the small settlement that sprawled to one side of the outer bailey but instead forged ahead towards the gatehouse.

'We'll try our luck on the way out,' Faldo explained as they walked past the houses and the shops of craftsmen and traders, all those who were useful to the castle and who might have been expected to welcome the prospect of entertainment from the jongleurs.

Janna was wide-eyed with excitement and awe, for she'd never been near a royal castle before. She waited impatiently while Master Thomas crossed the drawbridge to seek permis-sion to enter from the constable of the castle. She was fearful they'd be denied entry, but Faldo laughed at her misgivings when she voiced them. 'We have been here before, mistress, and have always been welcome in the past,' he explained. 'It's not often the castle's inhabitants get the chance to watch such marvellous entertainment as we provide!'

To Janna's relief, his words proved true. The first thing she saw, as they passed through the gate into the inner bailey, was the full extent of the castle keep. It rose before her, a huge tower with bright whitewashed stone walls. Faldo explained to her that this was where everyone would take shelter if the castle came under siege and, by chance, the enemy managed to breach the outer defences.

'But surely that's impossible!' Janna exclaimed, thinking of all the ditches and ramparts and gates and walls that would have to be negotiated.

Beside her, Ralph chuckled. 'There are other ways to bring about surrender than siege engines and armed combat,' he said. 'Time. Thirst. Starvation,' he added as he noticed Janna's puzzled expression.

Janna nodded in comprehension. She looked up at the windows of the keep. They were long, vertical slits, wide enough for archers to take aim at enemies outside but too narrow for enemy fire to penetrate. The keep was topped by flat ramparts, where a flag hung limp in the hot and airless afternoon. Soldiers might go up there, she thought, and fire arrows at their enemies, or cast stones or pour boiling oil down upon them, for she had heard the jongleurs discussing some of the battles they'd witnessed on their travels, as the king fought his cousin and the barons fought each other for possession of castles and land. This castle was well set up for warfare – but not, perhaps, for food. Nor water, either, for there was no sign of a stream or any running water up here.

The royal palace abutted the keep. It wasn't quite so high, but was built of the same stone, painted a dazzling white, and topped with red-tiled roofs. There was a covered well outside where women stood and gossiped as they drew their buckets up and down. All conversation stopped at the jongleurs' approach. They were subjected to curious scrutiny as they walked on past, threading their way through the clutter and clamour of the courtyard. It was crowded with merchants and traders, horses and carts, soldiers mounted and on foot, visitors and castle servants, all busy about their own purpose.

Janna gazed around, drinking in every detail as they were shown up to the great hall in the palace where the jongleurs were to perform. She had thought the manor house at Babestoche very grand, and the abbess's quarters at Wiltune the very height of luxury, but she'd never seen anything like this before!

Awestruck, she stood and stared. The walls were painted with various scenes. One depicted a hunt, with men on horseback in pursuit of a deer. The artist had captured perfectly the eager expression of the hunters as well as the terror of the deer as it fled for its life. Janna felt uncomfortable as memories stirred. She knew how it felt to run for your life. She hoped that, on this occasion at least, the deer had outpaced its pursuers.

She drew in a breath as she came to another painted wall. Flowers, trees, birds and butterflies formed a colourful backdrop to a courting couple. Although only their hands touched, their ardent yearning for each other was evident in their expressions and in every line of their bodies. Janna imagined herself and Ralph standing just so, and knew just how they felt. She, too, longed for Ralph's touch, the warmth of his regard, a word of love. Without meaning to, she looked around to find him. But he seemed to have disappeared on some errand of his own.

Servants rushed about, setting up trestle tables and benches for the meal to come. The hall was soon overflowing with people, from the castellan and his family and other notables who sat at the high table, to the lowliest of the king's subjects who sat some distance away. There was a loud buzz of conversation, everyone shouting above his or her neighbour to be heard over the general din. After the quietness of their meals at the abbey, the noise seemed deafening to Janna.

She stood to one side, feeling awkward and somewhat useless as Master Thomas recited
laisses
from The Song of Roland, after which the rest of the group played their musical instruments, juggled, sang and generally played the fool. She wondered if there'd be any dancing and, if there was, whether she could take part. But the castle occupants ate their dinner, laughed and talked, and for the most part paid little heed to the entertainment provided by the jongleurs.

Later, in the kitchen where they were being fed, Faldo explained that they were used to being ignored. 'But it matters little to us what they pay in attention so long as they pay us good silver.' He gave a sudden snigger. 'Barons are always a'frighted we'll spread stories of how stingy they are. It's enough to open their purses wide. They feed us well too, and for the same reason.'

'Mmmm,' Janna agreed through a mouthful of left-over goose. She smacked her lips and turned her attention to a dish of frumenty. Her mother had taught her how to make it, but this looked somewhat different, she thought, as she spooned some into her mouth. It tasted different too, for eggs and almond milk had been added to the wheat, as well as saffron to turn it a rich, yellow colour. Janna drained her bowl, and took another helping, before finishing her meal with a portion of cream custard pie. Her stomach strained tight against her gown at the end of it, and she sat back with a sigh, well contented. Beside her, Faldo gave a loud burp, grinned, and heaped some more slices of beef onto his trencher. He shovelled it down hungrily, for he was of an age where he was growing rapidly. Meals like this seldom came his way and he was clearly making the most of it.

Janna talked to one of the serving wenches as she helped clear the tables in the Great Hall. Her name was Goda, she told Janna, and she proved to be a fount of information once Janna started asking questions.

'The king's chamber is through there at the back,' she said, pointing her finger to show Janna where she meant. 'And his privy chambers are on the other side of the courtyard. It's like three sides of a square. But of course there's no king now, and no bishop either,' she added thoughtfully.

'Will the empress be welcome here, if she comes?' Janna asked, hoping that the empress might visit the castle while the jongleurs were still there.

Goda gave a fleeting grin. 'Yes, I think she would be welcome after what's happened.'

'What's happened?' Janna asked, ever eager to hear more about the woman she most admired.

'This castle was once occupied by Bishop Roger. He was the old king's justiciar and he rebuilt and refurbished the castle. After Stephen became king, he captured our bishop and imprisoned him in an old cowshed. It was a great scandal! The king also captured the bishop's son, who was the chancellor, and two of his nephews, but one of them managed to get away. They were bishops too, and one of them was also the old king's treasurer.'

'How do you know all this?' Janna asked, impressed and intrigued.

Goda shrugged. 'People talk, and I listen. I'm just a serving wench, so no-one pays me any mind.' A smile crossed her face, with just a hint of calculation in it. Janna wondered if Goda sometimes profited from the information she was able to pass on, or perhaps was convinced to withhold. She looked at her with wary respect. But it seemed Goda was quite willing to share her knowledge, for she continued to tell Janna all she knew.

'Bishop Roger died soon after his arrest, and the king would not appoint anyone in his place. He took possession of this castle and all the property and wealth belonging to the bishop and his family, and glad he was to get his hands on it, so 'tis said. But the king was much hated and feared because of what he did. Indeed, some say that what happened at the Battle of Lincoln was God's punishment for this crime.' Goda lowered her voice, and Janna leaned closer to hear her. 'The lord William, brother of Patrick, Earl of Sarisberie, is both governor and castellan here and 'tis said he favours the empress's cause. So yes, I think she would be very welcome here.'

Goda took Janna's arm and pointed across the courtyard. 'That would be the lady's chamber, if she came to visit us. There's a private chapel there too, the chapel of St Nicholas. And do you know, there's always a candle of wax burning there, day and night, whether the castellan is in residence or no!' It was clear from Goda's tone that she considered this a huge waste.

'There's a chapel below, too, for the soldiers and the castle servants. We sleep here in the hall and the soldiers sleep in the Great Tower next to the palace,' Goda continued her explana-tion. 'Back there is a kitchen and garderobes.' She held her rough, chapped hands in front of Janna for inspection. 'I work hard and long,' she said, 'and see, my hands bear the marks of it.' She wrinkled her nose and pulled a face. 'But at least I don't have to clear out the cess pits below. We have gong-fermours for that.'

Janna had never heard of gong-fermours, but she understood well enough what Goda meant, and shared the servant's pity for those unfortunates whose lot it was to clean the waste from the cess pits. She also knew that the task wouldn't end there, for the waste would then have to be carted out to the fields and spread about to enrich the soil and help wheat and other crops to grow. It had been Janna's least favourite task when she lived with her mother, but she'd done it because their livelihood depended on what they could grow for food and medicaments. Imagining the size of the castle and the number of its occupants, Janna's pity increased. This would be a dreadful task indeed.

The serving wench was also a great source of gossip about the castle's occupants, Janna discovered, as she spent more time with her and gradually won the girl's confidence. It seemed there was a prison in the castle keep where several wretches were held captive, either awaiting punishment or serving time. It was only when Goda began to name them that Janna remembered, with a jolt of alarm, that this was where Mus had been sent after he'd attacked her. Dame Alice had insisted that he be kept imprisoned, although her husband, the lord Robert, might well have secured the wretch's release by now. 'Do you know of a man called Mus? Or Alan? That's his real name,' she interrupted anxiously.

'Mus?' A slight smile tugged at the corner of the girl's mouth. 'He tried to sweet talk me once when I took a message to his gaoler. Not that it did him any good, fettered as he was. But no, mistress. His lord purchased his freedom some moons ago, and took him back to his manor under warrant for his good behaviour in the future.'

A shiver of fright ran through Janna. Mus was free! She tried to comfort herself with the notion that, after what had happened, the abbess would tell neither Robert nor Mus where she had gone, nor would anyone from the abbey know anything of her present whereabouts. Nevertheless, she resolved to keep an eye open for the villain for she knew well that he wished her dead and would pursue her if he could, as would the lord Robert.

The girl had named someone else, she remembered now. It had passed her by in the sudden horror of her realisation that she might, by chance, have come close to Mus once more. 'Did you say you have someone called Adam here in the castle?' she questioned.

'Indeed, mistress. The sergeant brought him in only yesterday. He is accused of murdering a pilgrim, and of theft, and of breaking his pledge to visit the shrine of Compostela and return to his home. The pilgrim's mother has been sent for, from Oxeneford, to hear his answer to the charge. But he is already saying he's guilty of nothing but breaking his pledge.'

Janna nodded thoughtfully. Adam would say that, of course. In spite of the coolness between her and Ulf, she wasted no time in passing on the news to him.

The relic seller's face became unusually serious as he listened. 'I'll ask if I may see him,' he said.

'Goda told me that Dame Juliana has been sent for, to hear Adam answer the charge against him.'

'Do you think Adam speaks the truth when he says that he is innocent of Bernard's murder?'

'If not Adam, then who?' Janna waited, interested to hear what Ulf would say.

'I suppose it could have been someone unknown to us? Someone who saw that Bernard was the leader of our band, and might expect him to be carrying a heap of coins to pay for our passage. Bernard's scrip went missing, after all. Easy enough to disguise coins as your own; not so easy to disguise someone else's pack and walking staff. Nor is it necessary to take 'em, if you already have your own. So it could be that Adam tells the truth. I have to see him, Janna. I want to hear what he has to say for himself.'

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