Read Quest of Hope: A Novel Online
Authors: C. D. Baker
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Historical, #Historical fiction
“Now, how may I serve thee, good sir?”
“My name is Leopold of Limburg and I’ve needs to find a home for this.” Leopold pushed his son to the fore.
“Ah. Good sir, and what of your wife?”
“I’ve no wife.”
“Ah, she is dead?”
“I’ve had no wife. The thing’s mother died of a fall a week back.”
Boniface stroked his face and stared at the moneybag. “You are the child’s father?”
Leopold grunted. “Yes. A momentary slip off the path, Father Abbot. I thought to make penance by offering a heavy price for its care.”
Boniface sighed. He stared at the man with a mixture of pity and contempt.
The man is indulgent. He is fat and soft like a November hog. Hmm. The otter hat, embroidered clothing …he obviously has wealth.
The abbot cleared his throat. “We’ve a need to better steward our finances. I pray God’s wisdom for you as you seek elsewhere for the lad’s care.”
Leopold sat quietly, picking at the large mole on his left earlobe. “Nay, methinks you’ll take it from me. Think of the thing like a little Christ child, and think of me as a Magi with silver a’plenty.” He slammed his purse hard upon the abbot’s desk. It was stuffed full and the abbot knew it to be worth about ten shillings—the rent of one full hide for two years. The two stared at each other for a long moment. But it was Leopold who erred. He, being less shrewd than old Boniface, spoke first. “It whines a little but comes of good stock.”
The abbot nodded politely.
Leopold waited, then finally snatched two coins from a hidden pocket. “Ach,
mein Gott!
Ill add two gold pieces from Genoa!”
Boniface extended his arms toward the waiting child. “God’s blessing for thy father’s selfless and most generous gifts. Ah, a soul and a purse for us, oft traded for each other, are both now granted to our humble abbey.”
Leopold released his son to the monk. “I’m in no further debt and owe no other penance?”
Boniface bowed. “Go in peace, my son, thy sin is forgiven. We shall raise the boy into a fine smith, perhaps a—”
Leopold looked suddenly solemn. “The thing’s a bit lazy but methinks it shows cleverness at times. Swear to me, Abbot, that he’d be no workhand for the monks his whole life.”
Boniface shrugged. “I know not God’s will for him.”
Leopold paused. “You see my clothing? My fine doublet? It took me near to a lifetime to get out of my short-slit tunic and the fields. I’ve no love for this … nuisance, but I swore an oath that no issue of mine would ever wear a serf’s tunic, nor a workman’s apron. I’ll not bear that shame no matter what I think of the thing. It’s to be trained a merchant or a priest and wear linen and silk or the robes of a churchman. I want your vow on that!” The man pulled a purse from inside his silk sash. He lowered his voice and leaned close to Boniface. “The bag and the two coins are given to the Holy Church for its care. But this is for
your
pledge and for you alone.”
The abbot smiled and tapped his fingers next to three gold coins stacked neatly before him. “Yes, my son. I believe the little fellow might make a good priest.” Then, like a snake striking its prey, the gold was snatched away to a dark pocket within his simple robe.
Leopold nodded and smiled and cast a final look at his son before he turned away. As he followed the porter toward the courtyard he called to Boniface, “If any should ask, he was baptized Pious.”
The hay harvest of the following spring was poor again. Kurt and his tenant, Herwin, labored for hours under the hot sun in order to fulfill the work requirements of the abbey. They swung their scythes over the monks’ meadows by the Laubusbach but sheaved less than half a good year’s yield. Thorny weeds seemed to always do best in hard times; it was as though they relished adding pain to misery. Kurt had pricked his hand on a thick thorn a week prior and the wound made his grasp of the scythe an agony.
Kurt’s own fields were suffering badly in a second year of drought. The harvest would yield little more than his rent required, and as he worked he wondered how he would buy barley for the field now waiting in fallow. With the carpenters’ guild now hiring laborers from Villmar, Kurt would have to rely on the harvest from his own small holding and the pittance Herwin paid in rents.
Most of the village men were working in the field that day. Each owed a fixed number of days in service to the monks in exchange for their protection. It was the ancient way. At the far end of the meadow worked the old men, most sitting in the shade with the village whetstones, sharpening dulled blades for the harvesters. The meadows were filled with scythe-swinging men, and behind them followed the women and children, including young Heinrich, raking and bundling the cut grass into sheaves for the carters to haul away. Berta, however, was home carding wool. She was due to deliver her fourth child and was suffering much discomfort.
At the bells of compline the weary peasants were dismissed from their tasks and most immediately plunged into the Laubusbach for a cool respite. A few splashes in the stream’s waters did wonders to brighten spirits, and soon a column of peasants in dripping woollens began the short march from the meadows to the village, singing songs of spring.
Kurt and Herwin stumbled through the door in search of beer or cider, but came upon the midwife in the middle of her work. “Out! Out at once!” she shrieked. Men were strictly forbidden to be present at times like these. By the look on Berta’s face Kurt knew something was not in order. He retreated through the doorway and sat against the wattled wall of his hovel where he winced and grimaced at the cries of his wife. Heinrich and Axel stared wide-eyed and sat close to their worried father.
At last there was silence. And then sobbing, followed by a curt reprimand. “Enough, woman. ‘Tis as God wills it to be!” The midwife came through the doorway wiping her bloodstained hands on her apron. “Kurt, you’ve lost a son. He was born breathing so ye’d best call on Father Gregor and have him baptized straightaway.”
“Kurt … Kurt!” cried Berta from within. “Kurt, get the priest and quick, we’ve needs to catch his soul before it falls in the Pit!”
The man’s face hardened in grief and he pushed his boys aside. He stepped into his hut and stared at his sobbing wife lying in the bedchamber. She was whimpering and holding her limp newborn tightly to her bared breast. He knelt by her dutifully and kissed her on the forehead.
By matins little Reinhard was baptized a Christian, bathed, and shrouded. He was buried in the morning, and before the bells of terce Kurt was scything hay once more.
The harvest feast of Lammas, August the first, was only two weeks away, yet the village was still bustling with its summer labors. The hay had been gathered and carted to the abbey, the wool had been carded and bundled into bales for sale in Limburg. The parched grain fields stood ready for the scythes, while the fields in fallow were turned by sluggish oxen.
Kurt grew weaker as an infection spread from his hand through his forearm. Heinrich faithfully bathed his father’s sweating brow through long nights of fever sweats, yet at each dawn the man rose to fight his way to dusk with a resolution that would have greatly pleased old Jost.
The summer had brought few changes, no season really ever varied much, but one addition to the village proved an annoyance to all. A stray mastiff had wandered into Weyer looking for food and attention. Reeve Lenard took ownership of the beast, hoping to train the dog to hunt.
Lenard’s new dog proved to be playful and bright but preferred his own pleasures to those of his master. Each night, Lenard loudly commanded the animal to sit or lie down, roll or fetch a stick. The more the man commanded, however, the less the dog performed until, exasperated, the man beat and pounded the dog with a leather strap. “You shall yield to me, beast!” Lenard cried each night. Then, night after night, grumping and grousing and bellowing foul oaths, the defeated reeve collapsed into his straw bed.
Heinrich lay awake each of those nights teary-eyed and sobbing for the poor animal. By day, the four-year-old would sneak over to Lenard’s cottage and play with the dog. Though the animal was twice the boy’s size, he had no malice in his simple heart and gently rolled the little lad around the ground. The beast was kind and gentle, though strong; intelligent and tender of heart. Heinrich sat quietly by his side and stroked his dusty, red-brown fur, laughing at the drooping tongue of his panting kindred spirit.
Heinrich’s affections had become quickly attached to the dog as they had to his best friend and cousin Richard, the son of Arnold. Blond and handsome, Richard was lean, strong, and quick of mind. Arnold swore he’d see the boy knighted in Runkel’s castle someday—an ambitious dream for the son of a cart-hauler.
The mastiff and young Richard were not Heinrich’s only friends, however. Emma’s son, Ingelbert, was one whom the lad had oft wished he might see more often. Heinrich rarely saw Emma’s son, save those times Ingelbert fetched water with his mother at the village well. Heinrich’s own mother, as well as the other mothers of the village, had banned their children from speaking with Ingelbert, believing Emma and her misshapen child to bear a curse of some sort.
For her part, Emma persistently offered Berta kindness on every occasion. Heinrich had watched the lonely newcomer help his mother break the ice off the well one cold day in the winter just past. It was such kindness that had caught the child’s attention quickly, and the selfless acts were beginning to calm Berta’s fears.
It was July thirty-first, just before the feast of Lammas, when Baldric and Arnold arrived at Kurt’s hovel. Exhausted from the day’s toil, Kurt slowly opened the door and stepped out into the humid night air. After the brothers conversed in low, urgent tones for a few moments, Kurt finally nodded and returned to his wife, his face tight and flushed. “Wife, we’ve business to tend to this night and tomorrow we feast. Sleep well and mind the children. I shall return soon.”
Berta felt a sudden chill. She sensed danger but dared not ask more. Holding her husband’s palm against her cheek, Berta whispered a blessing to her man. With that, Kurt moved toward the door. He touched his boys’ heads briefly. Weak with fever and favoring his badly infected right arm, he paused to retrieve a steel carving knife hidden beneath the table. He shoved it under his belt and stepped out into the dark village.
Arnold’s labors as a cart-hauler earned him two pennies per day but also paid a hearty wage in information. A peddler told him of a distant shepherd’s family swearing oaths against some folk in Weyer. He further learned that some shepherds of Runkel’s lands were conspiring to “teach smother lesson to Weyer” after they delivered bales of wool to nearby Arfurt, lying on the far bank of the Lahn.