Read A Plague on Both Your Houses Online
Authors: Susanna Gregory
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
against them. He curled up in a ball, and attempted
to wrap the bedclothes round his frozen feet. He tried to concentrate, but his thoughts kept running together.
Next he knew, it was morning.
It was overcast and wet. Bartholomew went to the church for mass, where he was the only one present other than Father William. The Franciscan babbled the Latin at
such high speed that Bartholomew barely heard most
of it. He wondered whether William could really be
sincere at such a pace, or whether he believed God
liked His masses fast so He could get on with other
things. Bartholomew would have asked him had he not
been reluctant to be drawn into a protracted debate.
Remembering his obligation to Wilson, Bartholomew
went to look at the spot the lawyer had chosen for his glorious tomb. Bartholomew had already asked one of
the Castle stonemasons to order a slab of black marble, although he wondered when he would be able to hire
someone to carve it. The Master Mason had died of the
plague, and the surviving masons were overwhelmed by
the repair work necessary to maintain the Castle. As
he gazed at Wilson’s niche, he thought it unfair that
good men like Augustus and Nicholas should lie in a
mass grave, while Wilson should have a grand tomb to
commemorate him.
Bartholomew left the church and stepped into the
street, closing the door behind him. He pulled his hood up against the rain, and set off to check the plague pits.
On his way, he met Burwell, who greeted him with a
smile and told him that there had been no new cases
of plague in Bene’t Hostel for two days.
As they talked, a beggar with dreadful sores on
his face approached, pleading for alms. Bartholomew
knew the beggar prepared his ‘sores’ every morning
with a mixture of chalk, mud, and pig’s blood. The
beggar suddenly recognised Bartholomew under his
hood, and backed off in dismay, as Bartholomew
grasped Burwell’s hand to prevent him from giving
his money away.
As Bartholomew turned to explain to Burwell, he
saw the purse in the hand he held. It was made of fine leather, and had ‘BH’ embellished on it in gold thread.
Bartholomew had one just like it in his pocket. He felt his stomach turn over, although there was no reason why the Sub-Principal of Bene’t Hostel should not have one of its purses. Burwell looked at him curiously. ‘Doctor?’
he said.
‘Sores painted on fresh every day,’ mumbled Bartholomew, hoping Burwell had not noticed his reaction,
and if he had, did not guess why.
Burwell looked up at the sky as the church bell rang
out the hour, and drew his hood over his head. ‘Well,
I must be about my business, and I know you must be
busy.’ He started to walk away, and then stopped.
‘When you next see that rascal, Samuel Gray, could
you tell him that he still owes us money for his fees
last term?’
Bartholomew was a little angry at Gray. He should
have cleared his debts with the hostel before changing to a new teacher. It was just another example of the
double life the student seemed to lead. Bartholomew
wondered what else he kept hidden. Since he was passing, Bartholomew went into St Botolph’s Church to look for
Colet. The Physician sat in his usual place, staring at the candles and twisting the golden lion round his fingers again and again.
When Bartholomew tried to talk to him, Colet fixed
him with a vacant stare, and Bartholomew was in no
doubt that Colet no longer knew who he was. His beard
was encrusted with dried saliva, and his clothes were
filthy. Bartholomew wondered if he should try to do
something for him, but Colet did not seem to be in
any discomfort. He decided to wait for a day or so and reconsider it then.
He left the church and continued along the High
Street. As he passed the King’s Head, Henry Oliver
emerged and gave him such a look of undisguised
enmity that Bartholomew stopped dead in his tracks.
Oliver began to walk towards him. Bartholomew waited,
taking the small knife out of his bag and keeping it hidden under his cloak so that Oliver would not see it.
‘Found your lady yet, Doctor?’ he said, his voice
little more than a hiss.
Bartholomew wanted to push him into the stone
trough that was full of water for horses, just behind him.
‘Why do you ask?’ he said, his voice betraying none of the anger that welled up inside him.
Oliver shrugged nonchalantly and gave a cold little
smile. ‘Just curious to know whether she continues to
hide from you.’
Bartholomew smiled back. ‘She still hides from me,’
he said, wondering what Oliver thought he was going
to gain from this cat-and-mouse game. ‘Now, if you will excuse me, pleasant though it is to talk with you, the plague pit calls.’
He walked away, wondering what on earth could be
the matter with the young man, and decided to speak
to Swynford about it when he returned to College. The
unpleasantness had gone on quite long enough.
As he approached the plague pit, an urchin
darted up to him and mumbled something before
turning to race away. Bartholomew, quick as lightning, grabbed him and held him as he struggled
frantically, kicking at Bartholomew with his small bare feet. Bartholomew waited until the child’s frenzy was
spent and spoke gently.
“I did not hear what you said. Say it again.’
‘A well-wisher has sommat to tell you if you come
here at ten tonight,’ he stammered, looking up at
Bartholomew with big frightened eyes. ‘But you got
to come alone.’
Bartholomew stared at him. Was this another ploy
to get him into a place where he could be dispatched
as he almost had been the night before?
‘Who told you to tell me this?’
The brat struggled again. “I don’t know. It was a
man all wrapped up. He asked if I knew you - you
came to my ma when she was sick - so I said yes, and
he told me to tell you that message and to run away
after. He gave me a penny.’ He thrust out his hand to
show it. Bartholomew let the child go and watched him
scamper down the muddy street.
Now what? he thought. As if the plague, the College
and Philippa were not enough to worry about!
The rain had eased off during the day, and, as night fell, patches of blue began to appear in the sky. But by the time Bartholomew returned to Michaelhouse after attending
his patients, it was so late that most of the scholars were already in bed.
He went to the kitchen where Cynric dozed in
front of the dying fire, and rummaged in the pantry
until he found the remains of a loaf of bread and
some hard cheese. While he ate, Cynric stoked up
the fire, and set some wine to mull for them both.
Bartholomew considered whether he should go to
meet his ‘well-wisher’ at the plague pit. It seemed an odd choice for a rendezvous, but it would certainly be private, for no one in his right mind would frequent that place of desolation and despair in the dead of night. He glanced at the hour candle. He would need to make up
his mind fairly quickly, for the meeting was in less than an hour.
Perhaps the mysterious sender really did wish him
well, and would have information about Philippa. He
tried to consider it logically. The people who attacked him would hardly expect that he would accept a second
invitation to meet an unknown person in the dark in
some god-forsaken spot after what had happened to him
the previous night. Therefore, his ‘well-wisher’ must be someone who did not know about the attack. Of course,
his attackers might use the same line of reasoning as
he had just done. He stared into the fire and tapped
his fingers on the table as his mind wrestled with the problem.
Abruptly, he stood. He was going. He would arm
himself this time, and would be alert to the possibility of danger, unlike the previous night. He had spent hours in taverns and hostels trying to learn something about the disappearance of Giles and Philippa: it was possible that his well-wisher might have the information he wanted,
and he did not wish to miss out on such an opportunity by being overly cautious.
Cynric looked at him sleepily. ‘You going out again?’
he asked. His eyes snapped open as Bartholomew took a
large double-edged butchery knife from its hook on the wall and slipped it under his cloak.
‘Now what are you going to do with that?’ he said.
He sat up straight in Agatha’s fireside chair, his interest quickened. ‘Not roistering about the town?’
“I have a meeting,’ said Bartholomew. He saw no
reason why he should not tell Cynric where he was going.
At least then, if he were attacked, Cynric could tell the Sheriff it had been planned, and was not some random
skirmish by the robbers as Stanmore plainly believed
had happened the previous evening.
Cynric grabbed his cloak from where it lay in a
bundle on the floor. ‘At this time of night? After what happened to you yesterday? I had better come too, to
keep you from mischief.’
‘No,’ said Bartholomew, thinkingabout the message.
It told him to come alone, and he did not want to run the risk of frightening off a potential informant.
Cynric threw his cloak around his shoulders, and
stood next to Bartholomew. ‘We have known each other
for a long time,’ he said quietly, ‘and I have seen that there has been something amiss with you since Sir John died. Perhaps I can help. I know you are anxious about the Lady Philippa. Is that what this meeting is about?’
Bartholomew gave a reluctant smile. He had forgotten
how astute the small Welshman could be. He nodded
and said, ‘But I have been told to come alone.’
Cynric dismissed this with a wave of his hand. ‘The
day someone sees Cynric ap Huwydd when he does not
want to be seen will be the day he dies. Do not worry, boy, I will be there, but none will know it other than you. Now, where are we going?’
Bartholomew relented. He was nervous about the
meeting, and it would be reassuring to have Cynric
nearby. If nothing else, at least he could run for
help if things took a nasty turn. ‘But you must
be cautious,’ he said. “I have no idea who we are
meeting, or what they want. If there is trouble,
run for help. Do not come yourself or you may
get hurt.’
Cynric shot him a disbelieving look. ‘What do you
take me for, boy? You should know me better than that.
I learned something of ambush tactics in the Welsh
mountains, you know.’
“I am sorry. It is just that so many people have met
untimely deaths in the College and I do not want to lose anyone else.’
‘Like Augustus, Paul and Montfitchet, you mean?’
asked Cynric. Bartholomew looked at him askance.
‘Just because I have no degree, like you scholars,
does not mean I have no sense,’ said Cynric. “I know
they were murdered, despite the lies that fat Wilson put about. I will keep my mouth shut,’ he added quickly,
seeing Bartholomew’s expression of concern. “I have
done until now. But you should know that you are not
alone in this.’
It was a long speech for Cynric, who indicated that
the subject was closed by pinching out the candles and selecting a knife of his own.
Bartholomew slipped out of the kitchen door and
across the courtyard. He walked briskly up St Michael’s Lane and turned into the High Street. It was not easy to walk in the dark. The night had turned foggy, blocking out any light the moon might have given, and it was
almost impossible to see the pot-holes and rubbish until he had stepped into them. At one point, he stumbled
into a hole full of stinking water that reached his knees.
Grimacing with distaste at the smell of urine and offal that came from it, he picked himself up and continued.
From Cynric there was not a sound, but Bartholomew
knew he was there.
At last he reached the field where the plague pits
had been dug. A crude wooden fence had been erected
around the field to prevent dogs from entering and
digging up the victims. Bartholomew climbed over it
and looked around. The mounds from the two full
pits rose from the trampled grass like ancient pagan
barrows. The other pit gaped like a great black mouth, and Bartholomew could make out the paler layer at the
bottom where the lime had been spread over the last
bodies to be laid there.
He tried to detect whether there was anyone
hiding in the hedges at the sides of the field, but
he could see nothing moving. A sound behind him
made him spin round and almost lose his balance.
His heart beat wildly and he felt his knees turn to
jelly. He grabbed at the fence with one hand, while
the other groped for the long knife that he had tucked into his belt.
A figure stood outside the fence, heavily cloaked
and hooded. It made no attempt to climb over, and when Bartholomew took a step forward, it held up its hand.
‘Stay!’
It was a woman’s voice. Bartholomew’s heart leapt.
‘Philippa!’ he exclaimed.
The figure was still for a moment, and then shook
her head. ‘Not Philippa. I am sorry.’
Bartholomew’s hopes sank. It was not Philippa’s
voice: it was deeper, older, and with an accent that