The Witch's Tale (Sister Frevisse Medieval Mysteries) (2 page)

BOOK: The Witch's Tale (Sister Frevisse Medieval Mysteries)
10.74Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Dame Claire finished with the men, and crossed the shed to her, Frevisse following.  As Margery curtseyed, Dame Claire said, "Let me loose your hands so you can take off the gag.  I've told them you won't do anything.  We want to talk to you."

Dame Claire freed Margery's hands, and gratefully she unknotted the cloth behind her head.  "Thank you, my lady," she said hoarsely.

"Have something to drink."  Dame Claire indicated the ale kindly.  "Have they let you eat?"

Margery nodded over the rim of the clay pot as she drank thirstily.  When she had finished, she said, "They've been as kind as might be.  And village folk have brought me things."  She gestured at her bed and food and lamp.  She was clearly tired as well as frightened, worn out by too many strange things happening to her.  "But I hoped you'd come, so I could tell you why I didn't come t'other day when I said I would."

"I wondered what happened to you," Dame Claire answered.  "But I never thought this."

Margery hung her head.  "Nor did I."

"They say you killed your husband."

Margery nodded.  "I did that."

"Margery, no!" Dame Claire protested.

"Jack came at me, the way he's done ever since we married whenever I've not done right.  But this time we were in my garden and he was trampling my plants."  It plainly mattered very much to her that Dame Claire understand.  "I told him to stop but he didn't care, and I -- lost my temper."

"You truly did kill him?" Dame Claire asked, still disbelieving it.

"Oh, yes.  Sure as sure.  I didn't know the spell would work that way but it did.  Took him off afore he could hit me again, just like that."

"What -- exactly -- did you do?" Frevisse asked carefully.  Murder, serious enough in itself, was worse for the murderer when done by witchcraft.  Charms and spells were simply part of healing; every herbwife knew some.  But if they were turned to evil, they became part of the Devil's work and a matter for the Church as well as lay law.

Margery looked at Frevisse with mingled shyness and guilt, and did not answer.

"Tell us, please," Dame Claire urged.  "Dame Frevisse and I want to help you."

"There's no help for me!" Margery said in surprise.  "I killed him."

"How?" Frevisse persisted.

Margery hung her head.  She twisted her hands in her apron and, low-voiced with embarrassment, said, "I'd been saving bits of him this while.  Hair, you know, and his nail cuttings."

"Margery!  That's wicked!" Dame Claire exclaimed.

"I know it!" Margery said piteously.  "But I was only going to make a small charm.  When I'd money for the wax to make the figure.  Not kill him, like, but weaken his arm so he couldn't hit me so hard.  That's all I wanted to do.  Just weaken him."

"But you hadn't made the figure yet?" Frevisse asked.  Margery shook her head dumbly.  Frevisse pressed, "What did you do then, that you think you killed him?"

"I had the -- things in a little packet.  I held it up and told him what it was and that he'd better stop what he was doing.  That I'd made a charm and I'd kill him if he didn't stop."

"But you hadn't made a charm yet.  You said so," said Dame Claire.

"That I hadn't.  But I meant to.  I really did."  She looked anxiously from one nun to the other.  "If I make confession and do penance before they hang me, I won't have to burn in hell, will I?  Not if I'm truly penitent?"

"Surely not," Dame Claire reassured her.

"But if you didn't have the charm, what happened?" Frevisse asked.

Margery shuddered.  "Jack kept hitting and shoving.  I knew he'd near to kill me, once he had his hands on me, and I'd never have another chance to make a charm against him, not now he knew.  I was that frighted, I grabbed the first words that came to me, thinking to scare him off with them.  I didn't even think what they were.  I just said them at him and shook the packet like I was ill-wishing him.  I just wanted to keep him back from me, I swear that's all.  Just hold him off as long as might be."

She broke off, closing her eyes at the memory.

"And then?" Dame Claire prompted.

Faintly, tears on her cheeks, Margery said, "He stopped.  All rigid like I'd hit him with a board.  He stared at me with his mouth open and then grabbed his chest, right in the center, and bent over double.  He was gasping like he hurt, or couldn't catch his breath.  Then he fell over.  In the path, away from my herbs.  He curled up and went on gasping and then -- he stopped.  He just stopped and was dead."

A little silence held them all.  Frevisse was aware of the two men at her back, and knew that everything they were hearing would be told later all around the nunnery and village.

"Margery," Dame Claire said, "You can't wish a man dead.  Or rather, you can wish it, but it won't happen, not that simply."

"But it did," Margery said.

And there would probably be no convincing anyone otherwise.  But for Dame Claire's sake, Frevisse asked, "What was it you said to him?  A spell?"

Margery nodded.  "The one for -- "

Master Naylor interrupted her with a firm rap on the door frame. He inclined his head respectfully to Frevisse and Dame Claire, and said, "The crowner wants to see her now."

"So late?" Dame Claire protested.

"He hopes to finish the matter tonight so he can be on his way at earliest tomorrow.  He has other matters to see to," Master Naylor explained.

Matters more important than a village woman who was surely guilty, Frevisse thought.  A woman who was the more inconvenient because she would have to be sent for examination before a bishop before she could be duly hanged.

"We'll come with her," said Dame Claire.

Master Montfort had been given the guesthall's best chamber, with its large bed and plain but sufficient furnishings.  The shutters had been closed against the rainy dusk, the lamps lighted, and at a table against the farther wall his clerk was hunched over a parchment, quill in hand and inkwell ready.

The crowner himself stood by the brazier in the corner, his hands over its low warmth.  He was short in the leg for the length of his body, and had begun to go fat in his middle, but to his own mind any shortcomings he might have -- and he was not convinced that he had any -- were amply compensated for by the dignity of his office; he no more than glanced over his shoulder as Master Naylor brought Margery in, then sharpened his look on Frevisse and Dame Claire following her.  A flush spread up his florid face and over the curve of his balding head.

"You can stay, Naylor," he said.  "But the rest of you may go."  Belatedly, ungraciously, he added, "My ladies."

With eyes modestly downcast and her hands tucked up either sleeve of her habit, Frevisse said, "Thank you, but we'll stay.  It would not be seemly that Margery be here unattended."

She had used that excuse in another matter with Master Montfort.  He had lost the argument then, and apparently chose not to renew it now.  His flush merely darkened to a deeper red as he said tersely, "Then stand to one side and don't interfere while I question her."

They did so.  Master Montfort squared up in front of Margery and announced in his never subtle way, "I've questioned some several of your neighbors already and mean to see more of them before I'm to bed tonight so you may as well tell what you have to tell straight out and no avoiding it.  Can you understand that?"

Margery did not lift her humbly bowed head.  "Yes, m'lord."

"You killed your husband?  Now, mind you, you were heard and seen so there's no avoiding it."

Margery clearly had no thought of avoiding anything.  While the clerk's pen scratched busily at his parchment, recording her words, she repeated what she had already told Frevisse and Dame Claire.  When she had finished, Master Montfort rocked back on his heels, smiling grimly with great satisfaction.  "Very well said, and all agreeing with your neighbors' tales.  I think there's no need for more."

"Except," Dame Claire said briskly, knowing Master Montfort would order her to silence if she gave him a chance, "I doubt her husband died of anything more than apoplexy."

The crowner turned on her.  In a tone intended to quell, he said, "I beg your pardon, my lady?"

Dame Claire hesitated.  Frevisse, more used to the crowner's bullying, said helpfully, "Apoplexy.  It's a congestion of the blood -- "

Master Montfort's tongue caught up with his indignation.  "I know what it is!"

Frevisse turned to Master Naylor.  As steward of the priory's properties he had far better knowledge of the villeins than she did.  "What sort of humour was this Jack Wilkins?  Hot tempered or not?"

"Hot enough it's a wonder he was in so little trouble as he was," Master Naylor said.  "He knocked a tooth out of one of his neighbors last week because he thought the man was laughing at him.  The man wasn't, being no fool, but Jack Wilkins in a temper didn't care about particulars.  It wasn't the first time he's made trouble with his temper.  And he was known to beat his wife."

"Choleric," said Dame Claire.  "Easily given to temper.  People of that sort are very likely to be struck as Jack Wilkins was, especially in the midst of one of their furies.  He was beating his wife -- "

"As he had every right to do!" Master Montfort declared.

As if musing on his own, Master Naylor said, "There's a feeling in the village that he did it more often and worse than need be."

But Dame Claire, refusing to leave her point, went on over his words, " -- and that's heavy work, no matter how you go about it.  Then she defied him, maybe even frightened him when she said her spell -- "

"And down he fell dead!" the crowner said, triumphant.  "That's what I'm saying.  It was her doing and that's the end of it."

"What was the spell she said?" Frevisse interjected.  "Has anyone asked her that?"

Master Montfort shot her an angry look; determined to assert himself, he swung back on Margery.  "That was my next question, woman.  What did you actually say to him?  No, don't look at anyone while you say it!  And say it slow so my clerk can write it down."

Eyes turned to the floor, voice trembling a little, Margery began to recite, "Come you forth and get you gone...."

If Master Montfort was expecting a roaring spell that named devils and summoned demons, he was disappointed.  The clerk scratched away busily as Margery went through a short verse that was nevertheless quite apparently meant to call the spirit out of the body and cast it away.  Part way through, Dame Claire looked startled.

In the pause after Margery finished speaking, the clerk's pen scritched on.  Master Montfort, ever impatient, went to hover at his shoulder and, as soon as he had done, snatched the parchment away.  While he read it over, Frevisse leaned toward Dame Claire, who whispered briefly but urgently in her ear.  Before Frevisse could respond, Master Montfort demanded at Margery, "That's it?  Just that?"  Margery nodded.  Master Montfort glared at his clerk and recited loudly, "Come you forth.... "

The man's head jerked up to stare with near-sighted alarm at his master.  The crowner went on through the spell unheeding either his clerk's dismay or Master Naylor's movement of protest.  Margery opened her mouth to say something, but Frevisse silenced her with a shake of her head, while Dame Claire pressed a hand over her own mouth to keep quiet.

When Master Montfort had finished, a tense waiting held them all still, most especially the clerk.  When nothing happened after an impatient minute, Master Montfort rounded on Margery.  "How long is this supposed to take?"

Margery fumbled under his glare.  "My husband -- he -- almost on the instant, sir.  But -- "

"Spare me your excuses.  If it worked for you, why didn't it work for me?  Because I didn't have clippings of his hair or what?"

Keeping her voice very neutral, Frevisse suggested, "According to Robert Mannying in his
Handling Sin
, a spell has no power if said by someone who doesn't believe in it.  Margery uses herbs and spells to help the villagers.  She believes in what she does.  You don't.  Do you believe in your charm, Margery?  This one that you said at your husband?"

"Yes, but -- "

"She's a witch," Master Montfort interrupted.  "And whatever good you claim she's done, she's used a spell to kill a man this time, and her husband at that.  Who knows what else she's tried."  He rounded on Margery again and said in her face, "There's a question for you, woman.  Have you ever used this spell before?"

Margery shrank away from him but answered, "Surely.  Often and often.  But -- "

"God's blood!" Master Montfort exclaimed.  "You
admit
you've murdered other men?"

"Margery!" Frevisse said urgently, "What is the spell
for
?"

Driven by both of them, Margery cried out, "It's for opening the bowels!"

A great quiet deepened in the room.  Margery looked anxiously from face to face.  Frevisse and Dame Claire looked carefully at the floor.  Red darkened and mounted over Master Montfort's countenance again.  Master Naylor seemed to struggle against choking.  The clerk ducked his head low over his parchment.  Nervously Margery tried to explain.  "I make a decoction with gill-go-on-the-ground, and say the spell over it while its brewing, to make it stronger.  It provokes urine, too, and... and... "  She stopped, not understanding their reactions, then finished apologetically, "They were the first words that came into my head, that's all.  I just wanted to fright Jack off me, and those were the first words that came.  I didn't mean for them to kill him."

Master Montfort, trying to recover lost ground, strangled out, "But they did kill him, didn't they?  That's the long and short of it, isn't it?"

Margery started to nod, but Frevisse put a stilling hand on her arm; and Dame Claire said, "It's a better judgement that her husband died not from her words but from his own choler, like many another man before him.  It wasn't Margery but his temper that did for him at the last."

Master Montfort glared at her.  "That's women's logic!" he snapped.  "His wife warns him she has bits of him to use against him, and cries a spell in his face, and he drops down dead, and it's
his
fault?  Where's the sense of that?  No!  She's admitted her guilt.  She was seen doing it.  There's no more questioning needed.  Naylor, keep her until morning.  Then I'll take her in charge."

Other books

The Last Song of Orpheus by Robert Silverberg
Nora Jane by Ellen Gilchrist
Mistress Pat by L. M. Montgomery
Taken by Moonlight by Violette Dubrinsky
A Christmas Promise by Annie Groves
Justice Incarnate by Regan Black
The Sundial by Shirley Jackson