Brewer's Tale, The (76 page)

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Authors: Karen Brooks

BOOK: Brewer's Tale, The
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My hand rushed to cover my mouth. I raised my face to Tobias. He nodded grimly.

I wanted you to learn of this from me first and no other. For the time being, I am at Ashlar Place where I am making arrangements for her burial and mourning. After the period is over, I know not where I will find myself.

Written on the Feast of the Conception of Our Lady,

Leander.

‘How?'

Tobias stamped his feet and slapped his hands together a few times. His escort had not yet dismounted and their breath parted the air in frosty plumes.

‘Don't answer. Come inside and get warm. Tell your men to go to the kitchen. Cook will provide for them.'

Tobias followed me upstairs and into the solar where, before a blazing fire and with some mulled wine, he told me about the Lady Cecilia. How, even before Tobias left for Gloucester back in October, she had been possessed of a dreadful cough that was hidden from Leander lest it cause him concern. Blood would stain her kerchief with growing regularity. Upon learning of her affliction, Leander sent the best doctors to tend her. Despite the blood-lettings, the star charts that were read and the potions drunk, she grew progressively weaker, her breathing more difficult until, finally, Leander was summoned home. He arrived just yesterday.

‘He was too late, Anna. Though she received Extreme Unction, she passed into the Lord's arms only an hour before he arrived, Leander's name on her lips.'

Bowing my head, I sent a prayer to sweet Jesù for her soul. ‘May God assoil her,' I murmured and was surprised at the deep sadness I felt for this woman I had never known but who I'd wronged so markedly and who occupied a great deal of my thoughts. After all, we loved the same man.

‘My master grieves, Anna, and it is difficult for me to leave him at such a time, but he insisted.'

I barely heard Tobias, all I could think about was Lady Cecilia dying alone, without her husband, without the comfort of his presence. The poor woman. She deserved better.

‘Anna, Anneke,' Tobias stepped closer. Troubled, his brow was drawn and a tic worked in his cheek. ‘There's something I must ask you and, if I'm wrong, I beg your forgiveness now.'

‘What is it, Tobias?' Birds took wing in my chest. From the look on his face, the distant manner in which he had given me the letter, I knew what he was going to ask and I feared the question. Would I have the courage to answer him truthfully?

‘Sir Leander … Leander, was most insistent that I deliver that,' he pointed at the scroll curled on Alyson's desk. He shook his head slowly. ‘I find it strange that of all those he must tell, of all those he reaches out to at a time of such grief, it is you. It puzzled me, as a great many things have over the last year: his desperate need to find you, his desire for your ale and even your beer over other perfectly fine alternatives. The way he ensured your brew was offered to the king, how he would describe your talent. How he used Lady Cecilia's dowry to repay his father the debt
you
owed for the loss of the house when it burned down.'

I stumbled into a chair.

‘Did you not know that?'

With my hand upon my breast, a poor attempt to still the moths that fluttered within, I answered, ‘I did not.'

‘Perhaps I should not be telling you, but he did. It seems he can forgive you anything, even the veneer of respectability you lost when you left Elmham Lenn in the manner you did.'

‘Tobias —' I began to rise.

‘Let me finish.'

I sank back onto the cushion again.

‘For months, I tried to persuade myself that Sir Leander did it out of the kindness of his heart, took pity on my family when circumstances were so dire. That he didn't want your foolish preferences —'

‘Please, Tobias —'

‘Let me finish!' he shouted so loud the words propelled him forward, hands clenched by his side. I shrank back.

Lowering his voice, he continued. ‘Making my way here today, the reason for this forgiveness, generosity and, frankly, absurd patronage occurred to me. I hesitate to ask lest I be wrong and grossly offend you and the memories of loved ones.'

‘What do you wish to ask, Tobias?'

Inhaling deeply, his eyes fixed on mine, he took a step closer. ‘Am I a bastard?'

Elevating his chin, there was high colour on his cheeks that threw into contrast the mauve shadows beneath his eyes. I'd failed to see them before, being so caught up in the news he delivered.

‘You see, I know Leander has a great fondness for you, one would have to be blind to not. The actions he takes on your behalf are more akin to those of a lover,' his eyes flickered; I looked down ‘or what one would do to protect the interest of familial relations. Lover, I discredited at first but, mayhap, I'm wrong?'

I didn't respond.

‘I see.' His lips thinned. ‘Which led me to consider family. At once, so much made sense. Thus, I'm compelled to ask, am I a
Rainford
bastard?' The air escaped his lungs.

A falsehood teetered on the tip of my tongue. It would have been so easy; it would have spared so much heartache.

My response was whisper-quiet. ‘You are a Rainford, Tobias.'

His chin fell to his chest. ‘How long have you known?'

‘Since mother died. How long have you?'

His head flew up. His eyes were metal. ‘Lady Cecilia told me — not directly. She made mention of how fortunate I was that my father saw fit to bestow, if not his name upon me, then to at least ensure I reaped its benefits. She assumed I knew. I didn't understand at first, not until I took Leander's behaviour into consideration.' His fists were white-knuckled balls at his side. ‘I didn't believe it at first. I thought it a cruel jape. Why didn't you tell me?'

‘Because it made no difference which side of the bed you were made upon or whose blood flowed in your veins. It still makes no difference. You are Tobias Sheldrake, my brother.'

He began to laugh. It was forced, brutal. ‘But I'm not, Anna, don't you see? All this time I've operated under the delusion that though father never appeared to care for me, he at least secured me an honourable position in the Rainford household, and as a squire, no less. I told myself that though he never showed affection, he must be invested in my future, otherwise why go to the trouble of procuring such a posting? Giving me to the Rainfords, I believed, was an act of fatherly care of the kind I'd been lacking. I did feel gratitude towards him, while labouring to find the feelings befitting a son towards a father — pride, a desire to emulate him, fondness. They never came. I felt only anger, fear and loathing, and thus I felt guilty and disappointed in myself that I was such an ungrateful wretch. Discovering I was given to the Rainfords not out of paternal duty, but as part of a business deal struck years earlier, both liberated and crushed me. For all that father or Lord Rainford cared, I was a bale of wool, wine or livestock to be traded and exchanged over a handshake and signature.'

‘Tobias —'

He continued as if I hadn't spoken. ‘In the end, father didn't even profit from the agreement, nor did you and the twins. I've gained and you have lost everything, because of father, because of me.' His voice became thick. ‘Here I was, accusing you of damaging the Sheldrake reputation, when all along I've been the blight on the name — a name I've no right to bear.' He flung his arms out and gave a bark of laughter. ‘The irony, Anna, the irony.'

He crossed the room and gripped me by the forearm, his fingers digging into my flesh. ‘And you knew and never said a word.'

‘I … I …'

‘Don't say anything.' He let go of my arm and, in one swift action, collected his hood and cloak. ‘Truth is, I don't know whether to thank or curse you for not disclosing the truth. Knowledge can be a terrible thing — ­especially when you don't know what to do with it.'

‘What do you mean?'

‘Now I know
what
I am, I need to work out
who
I am. Who I want to be. I also have to make amends for the losses I've caused.'

‘There is no compensation to be had, Tobias, not by me. You didn't cause any of this.' I tried to hold him, but he threw off my hand. ‘It was God's will.'

‘What? Father's bargain? The loss of our fortune? You being forced to brew —'

‘That was a choice.'

‘Was it? Do you really believe that Anna?' He made a grunting sound. ‘And what of Karel's death? The evil Calkin wrought? Was that God's will? Do you believe that?' He waited. I didn't reply. ‘I didn't think so.'

‘You're my brother, Tobias, regardless of what's happened.'

‘Am I?'

His eyes bore into mine until I was forced to look away. Hadn't I thought to use his birth against him, to fling the truth like mud when he sought to denigrate and control me? Hadn't I used knowledge of his true father to further my cause and that of the family of which Tobias no longer believed himself a part?

It was not Tobias who finally destroyed what we'd once been, that blame was mine alone to bear. Shame rose inside me. I was no better than father, or Lord Rainford. It was not for Tobias to make amends, but me.

As these thoughts circled in my head, crows picking at memories, Tobias donned his cloak.

‘Exactly,' he said when still no answer was forthcoming. And before I could reassure him, ask that we talk further so I could beg forgiveness for my part, he left the room without another word.

FIFTY-TWO

THE SWANNE

The cruellest winter: Christmastide to February

The years of Our Lord 1407–1408 in the ninth year of the reign of Henry IV

N
either Leander nor Tobias arrived to accompany the brew to Eltham. In the end, four days before Christmas, Captain Stoyan, Harry and Master atte Place delivered the cargo. They returned the following day brimming with excitement; our ale and beer had been well received by the official taster, his Grace, and the peers of the realm sharing Christmastide at Eltham. This alone should have made the time of year special, as should the additional orders that came via the royal bottler, the man in charge of all the king's drink, and which were delivered by courier before the year was even over. Yet, they failed to do so. Consumed by pity and guilt towards Tobias, ­sympathy and yearning for Leander, wanting to comfort both, I was forced to work.

In many ways, the demands of the brewery were a blessing as they distracted me from what I couldn't change.

Tobias departed before I'd time to write a response to Leander's tragic news. Quickly putting quill to paper after he left, I pushed our conversation to the back of my mind and wrote what needed to be said at such a time. I made no mention of what had passed between Tobias and myself, but offered my prayers and sympathy for his grave loss, and entrusted my heart into his keeping. I asked Hodge to deliver it.

As the weeks passed and there was no reply, I tried to ignore my growing concern.

Having kept the secret of Tobias's birth for so long, I saw no point in revealing it now. If he chose to tell others, I would support him — likewise if he did not. This didn't stop me worrying about the way we had parted, the doubts he'd expressed and the blame he was so ready to wear like a hairshirt. I wrote a long missive to him, absolving him of all responsibility for what had happened to us and confirming what I hoped he knew he always had — my love.

I prayed for him and his heart, hoping that in Leander's company, returned to his duties at court, he would find some solace and, most of all, what he wanted. His words rang:
I need to work out who I am. Who I want to be.

Understanding that desire only too well, my subsequent letters contained no advice or warnings. I recounted simple events, like carolling around the fire, feasting upon goose and venison, baking eel pies. I told of Isabelle's and Karel's growth and changes, teeth acquired, curls cascading, bruises obtained through curious explorations. I spoke of Betje, and of my efforts both inside the brewery and without. By concentrating on the activities of family members from whom he was ready to divorce himself, I hoped he would recognise the love and inclusion extended to him.

Christmastide came in a blend of holly, mistletoe and fragrant smoke from the enormous yule log salvaged by Captain Stoyan who on the Feast of St Thomas the Apostle moved into The Swanne, renting a room from Alyson and thus becoming part of our ever-growing concern. Snow fell thick and fast for days on end and the howling winds found every crack and crevice and set us shivering even as we sat before blazing hearths, wrapped in blankets and sipping mulled wine. Still, no letters delighted my day; no words from Leander or Tobias to provide Christmas cheer or much desired reassurances. I began to wear glumness like a tunic, as anxiety slowly eroded my joy in the season.

January made way for February and the winter grew colder and more savage until, one day, when the clouds slumbered over Southwark and a chill wind blew along the river, a longed-for courier finally arrived.

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