‘Is this Julian Fulk’s own idea?’ he asked. ‘Or are all the parish priests being encouraged to do the same?’
She gnawed some more meat from the capon’s leg she was holding before replying. ‘The idea was suggested to him by our neighbour, Doctor Clement,’ she admitted. ‘He is a forthright man with increasing influence in the town, and no one else I know has greater devotion to the well-being of the Holy Church.’
De Wolfe held his tongue but thought that it was a pity that the physician did not use some of this enthusiasm to help the poorer people when they needed medical aid.
As soon as his wife had lumbered up to her solar to sleep off the effects of a large meal, John collected Odin from Andrew’s stables and began his journey down to Stoke-in-Teignhead. On previous trips he had seen no sign of footpads on the road, so he decided against taking Gwyn as an escort, as with Thomas out of action there was no one else to attend to any coroner’s business if some new case cropped up. With the weather cool, but dry and frost-free, the going was good, and he covered the thirteen miles to Dawlish at a steady trot in three hours, stopping once at an alehouse to water Odin and himself.
Riding resolutely through the little port without diverting to Hilda’s house, he reached the River Teign to find the tide had not dropped far enough on the ebb to ford across, so he led his horse on to the flat-bottomed ferry and paid a penny to cross to Shaldon with dry legs.
Soon afterwards, he was riding into Stoke, nestling in its sheltering valley, and turned into the manor yard with some trepidation, unsure of what he might find. He left Odin with one of the stable boys and hurried into the square-built manor house. His mother and her steward were coming to meet him, and from their expressions he knew that, unlike with Thomas, no miraculous cure could be expected.
‘How is he?’ he asked as soon as he had hugged and kissed his mother and sister, who had hurried out of William’s sickroom on hearing John arrive.
‘Very little changed, I’m afraid,’ said Enyd sadly. ‘The yellowness has faded somewhat and he is half-conscious some of the time.’
He followed them into the sickroom, where the steward’s wife was bathing William’s brow with scented water. His brother looked haggard and drawn, cheekbones standing out under stretched skin, giving his face almost the appearance of a skull. His eyes were half-open, but they were dull and failed to focus on John, even when he stood over him and spoke softly to him.
‘We had an apothecary over from Totnes yesterday,’ said Evelyn. ‘A sensible man, but he admitted there was little he could do. He said the actual plague seems to have receded, but that it must have damaged the balance of William’s humours.’
John sat on a stool alongside the bed for a time, holding one of his brother’s bony hands and talking quietly to him. He spoke of their boyhood together, their adventures in the surrounding woods and the ponies they had ridden, but William made no sign of understanding what he said. Eventually, John went back into the hall for a meal and to discuss domestic matters and the running of the manor.
‘So far, our steward, bailiffs and reeves have coped well, both here and at Holcombe,’ said his mother. ‘But soon there will have to be decisions made about the ploughing and what stock can be kept over the winter. Without William, we are not sure that we can make the right decisions.’
‘I will do what I can to help, Mother,’ said John. ‘But I am no farmer, God knows!’
He stayed another hour, but there was nothing useful he could do, apart from listen to the steward and bailiff as they tried to explain the rudiments of estate management to him. It was dusk when he set off again, this time aiming only to ride the few miles back to Dawlish. The tide had dropped in the meanwhile and he was able to ride Odin in the twilight across the river, between the sandbanks. Then slowly and carefully he traced his way back along the coastal track to Dawlish, thankful for a half-moon shining in a clear sky.
Hilda was surprised to see him turn up on her doorstep in the dark, but nonetheless delighted. When he had settled Odin in a nearby livery stable, he came back for another meal in Hilda’s kitchen, before spending a blissful night in her bed up in the solar.
Just as the coroner was sloshing his way across the shallows of the River Teign, back in Exeter two score parishioners were converging on the small church of St Olave. They assembled expectantly on the earthen floor of the nave, beaten rock-hard by generations of worshipping feet. Some were there because of their obedience to Father Julian’s summons, others from a burning antipathy to heretics — and the remainder out of sheer curiosity. Matilda was escorted in by Clement and Cecilia, whom she had met as they all came out of their front doors. She had a ready-made excuse for her husband’s absence, by explaining that he had to go to his manor to visit his very sick brother, which set Cecilia off on an anxious enquiry as to how William was progressing. Matilda had no real idea, but muttered some platitudes until she could change the subject.
‘I think it very virtuous of your husband to encourage our reverend father to call this meeting,’ she said earnestly to Cecilia. ‘I wish more eminent people in the city would show such public spirit.’
The doctor’s wife made no reply, but looked at Clement as if to pass on the burden of response to him, which he gladly took on.
‘I suggested it, rather than merely encouraging the good priest,’ he said smugly. ‘It is time that some firm action was taken, after the fiasco of that enquiry and then the blasphemers being allowed to walk free and vanish from the country.’
He assumed an expression of sad piety as he continued. ‘I regret to say that the law officers, including your husband Sir John, did not come out well from that episode.’
Matilda tried hard to conceal her anger, mainly directed at John. He had shamed her before this devout physician, who was gently, but pointedly, condemning her own husband. But some of her ire was kept for Clement himself, for being so insensitive as to publicly criticise her spouse. She tried to recover some merit for de Wolfe and regain her own lost face.
‘It is difficult for him, sir! He is a senior law officer, sworn to uphold the King’s Peace. Whatever his own feelings might be, he has to abide by the statutes set down by his masters in London and Rouen.’
‘I am sure Clement was aware of that,’ hastily broke in Cecilia, anxious to cover any embarrassment caused by the doctor’s gaffe. ‘The Church and the state are always uneasy partners, as old King Henry discovered at Canterbury.’
Any further awkwardness was thankfully erased by the appearance of the parish priest, who appeared from the tiny sacristy to stand on the single step that separated chancel from nave. Julian Fulk was a short, rotund man, unctuous in manner and full of his own self-importance, though secretly frustrated by his lack of advancement in the Church, feeling that he had the potential to be a canon or even a bishop and resenting being kept back in one of the smallest churches in the city. He seized every opportunity to make his presence known and saw this current heretic scare as another chance to make his name before the more senior figures at the cathedral.
Fulk raised his arms to command silence, the embroidered chasuble over his white alb rising like a pair of wings. Then a sonorous stream of Latin emerged from his mouth, which, apart from the physician, not a single person present could understand, but assumed it was a prayer.
Reverting to English, he asked for God’s blessing on those present and their families and added a profound wish that the yellow plague would now leave them in peace. Round-faced and completely bald-headed, apart from a narrow rim of sandy hair, the priest then launched into a tirade against those in the city and the surrounding countryside who were denying the right of the Holy Church to mediate with God on their behalf. There was nothing new in what he had to say, but he was a good orator and a number of the congregation began mouthing ‘Amens’ and other more earthy condemnations of the blasphemers.