Authors: Penelope Wilcock
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Text copyright © 2012 Penelope Wilcock
This edition copyright © 2015 Lion Hudson
The right of Penelope Wilcock to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
All the characters in this book are fictitious and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
Published by Lion Fiction
an imprint of
Lion Hudson plc
Wilkinson House, Jordan Hill Road
Oxford OX2 8DR, England
www.lionhudson.com/fiction
ISBN 978 1 78264 152 0
e-ISBN 978 1 78264 153 7
This edition 2015
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Cover illustration © Brian Gallagher
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“If Penelope's goal was to bring the hope that only Jesus can offer, please know she has been successful. She has this way of being able to authentically portray the human heart and all of its struggles that leaves one full of hope and love. That is not easily doneâthank you. Excellent book. I loved it.”
Mary Gliserman, Dean of Faculty, Vice-Principal, and teacher, The Daniel Academy associated with the International House of Prayer, Kansas City
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“Penelope Wilcock has penned a wonderful medieval series. In
Remember Me
, she explores the struggle of a monk who has chosen his vocation wrongly to face the implications of his choice. The flavour of medieval and monastic life in Wilcock's work is to savour anew with each volume.”
Mel Starr, author,
The Unquiet Bones
,
A Corpse at St Andrew's Chapel
, and
A Trail of Ink
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“Magically beautiful, tender, and exquisitely drawn; full of teaching on love and forgiveness and almost every page brought a smile to my lips. I have fallen in love with all the books and I think Father William's journey, interlaced with Abbot John's, is the best I have read.”
Sue Ridley, Sussex, United Kingdom
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“These books are not only âa good read', but also touch on the deeper truths that profit us for eternity.”
Benedictine Abbess, Kent, United Kingdom
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“We devoured the books, passing them on from one to another, identifying with the characters, appropriating their idiosyncrasies and easily recognizing parallel situations in community life. Congratulations to Penelope for so faithfully describing the phenomenon called monastic lifeâand for grabbing the heart of it with its daily struggles and surprises, its hopes and fears, its strengths and weaknessesâa microcosm of the human experience.”
A Sister of Thicket Priory Carmelite Monastery, Yorkshire, United Kingdom
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FOR
ELVIRA McINTOSH
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who never gave up searching for me
but went on until she found me
who lifted me up and encouraged me
who supported me as a writerâwhich is what I am
who understands Christ's call to community
and also to simplicity
and who looks for ways
to bring the Gospel to ordinary people
exactly as she finds them
and where they are.
God bless you, Elvira, and thank you.
Remember Me
Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom
Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom
Taizé chant of the words of the Thief on the Cross
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Do this to remember me.
Words of Jesus at the institution of the Eucharist
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If you find it in your heart to care for somebody else,
you will have succeeded.
Maya Angelou
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Some stories are true that never happened.
Elie Wiesel
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Dying is a wild night and a new road.
Emily Dickinson
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Accept me, Lord, as thou hast promised,
and I shall truly live.
Benedictine Suscipe
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Can you not find it within you to look with eyes
of compassion?
Tony Collins
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There is no fear in love.
1 John 4:18
Contents
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The Community of St Alcuin's Abbey
The Community of St Alcuin's Abbey
(Not all members are mentioned in
Remember Me
.)
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Fully professed monks
Abbot John Hazell | once the abbey's infirmarian |
Father Chad | prior |
Brother Ambrose | cellarer |
Fr. Wm. de Bulmer | cellarer's assistant (formerly an Augustinian prior) |
Father Theodore | novice master |
Father Gilbert | precentor |
Brother Clement | overseer of the scriptorium |
Father Dominic | guest master |
Brother Thomas | abbot's esquire, also involved with the farm and building repairs |
Father Francis | scribe |
Father Bernard | sacristan |
Brother Martin | porter |
Brother Thaddeus | potter |
Brother Michael | infirmarian |
Brother Damien | helps in the infirmary |
Brother Cormac | kitchener |
Brother Richard | fraterer |
Brother Stephen | oversees the abbey farm |
Brother Peter | ostler |
Brother Josephus | acted as esquire for Father Chad between abbots; now working in the abbey school |
Brother Germanus | has worked on the farm, occupied in the wood yard and gardens |
Brother Mark | too old for taxing occupation, but keeps the bees |
Brother Paulinus | works in the kitchen garden and orchards |
Brother Prudentius | now old, helps on the farm and in the kitchen garden and orchards |
Brother Fidelis | now old, oversees the flower gardens |
Father James | makes and mends robes, occasionally works in the scriptorium |
Brother Walafrid | herbalist, oversees the brew house |
Brother Giles | assists Brother Walafrid and works in the laundry |
Brother Basil | old, assists the sacristanâringing the bell for the office hours, etc. |
Fully professed monks now confined to the infirmary through frailty of old age
Father Gerald | once sacristan |
Brother Denis | scribe |
Father Paul | once precentor |
Brother Edward | onetime infirmarian, now living in the infirmary but active enough to help there and occasionally attend Chapter and the daytime hours of worship |
Novices
Brother Benedict | assists in the infirmary |
Brother Boniface | helps in the scriptorium |
Brother Cassian | works in the school |
Brother Cedd | helps in the scriptorium and when required in the robing room |
Brother Conradus | assists in the kitchen |
Brother Felix | helps Father Gilbert |
Brother Placidus | helps on the farm |
Brother Robert | assists in the pottery |
Members of the community mentioned in earlier stories and now deceased
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Abbot Gregory of the Resurrection
Abbot Columba du Fayel (also known as Father Peregrine)
Father Matthew | novice master |
Brother Cyprian | porter |
Father Aelred | schoolmaster |
Father Lucanus | novice master before Father Matthew |
Father Anselm | once robe maker |
Brother Andrew | kitchener |
C
HAPTER
O
NE
July
Like a subtle wraith of mist in the still-dark of the night in late July he stole: silent and fleet, not hesitating. He came from the northwest corner of the church, where a small door led out into the abbey court from the side of the narthex. He did not cross the court, but passed stealthily along the walk between the yew hedge and the perimeter wall. Swift and noiseless he slipped along the close. It was a clear night but the dark of the moon, and only the stars gave light at this hour of the morning. At the end of Lauds, as the brothers shuffled back up the night stairs to resume their sleep, he had abstracted himself so unobtrusively that no one had seen. He had dodged back into the nave and stood in the deep shadows of the arcade in the side aisle on the north side of the church, hardly breathing. When all was still, he opened the small door with utmost caution; sliding the bolts back slowly and steadily without a sound, drawing the door closed and lifting and dropping the latch with barely a click, he left, and he was outside in the freshness of the night. Such faint light as the stars gave out found his silver hair, but that was the only glimmer of his presence as he slid from the abbey court along the close.
Peartree Cottage stood in the middle of the row of houses. The wicket gate stood ajar, and he pushed it open without a sound. As he stepped into the garden, the herbs gave up their fragrance underfoot. He felt a slug fall into his sandal. He stooped to flick out the slug and to scratch up a handful of earth that he flung at the upstairs window. No response. He tried again. This time the casement was opened with irritable vigour from the inside, and Madeleine's voice said sharply, “Who is it?”
Peering down suspiciously into the garden she might not have seen him, but he moved very slightly and most quietly spoke her name.
“Whatever do
you
want?” she whispered then, surprised.
“Will you let me in?” She heard the soft-spoken words. And as she came in the dark down the narrow ladder stairway, she realized the implications of this visit. Naturally cautious, she asked herself,
Are you sure you welcome this?
Just in going down the stairs, in opening the door, she realized her heart was saying,
Yes
.