My last word to Arthur and Uctred was to urge them to haste. This they must have taken to heart. One might suppose that sitting on cold, wet ground in a silent forest accompanied only by the dead would cause time to creep. I did not find it so. The sound of voices from the road soon told me that the grooms had completed their mission in good time.
Arthur pushed into the clearing first, Lord Gilbert at his heels. “You have found Sir Robert?” he asked.
“I fear so.”
Lord Gilbert’s eyes fell to the excavation before him. He knelt and peered in. The cold of winter had slowed decomposition, so no stink assailed his nostrils as he bent to look at the bodies. He remained motionless for so long that I began to fear that the sight might cause him to become unhinged.
But Lord Gilbert had seen men slain in battle; some were friends, a few were relatives. This apparition could not disturb him much. He rose slowly to his feet. “’Tis Sir Robert. I have no doubt. And his squire. The lad was slight and dark.”
Lord Gilbert ordered the exhumation of the bodies, and directed that they be taken to Galen House for my inspection when that work was done. I would have objected to this, had I thought of a reasonable complaint. I thought of many reasonable protests while riding Bruce back to Bampton, but by then it was too late to interfere with Lord Gilbert’s command. And he explained himself logically enough as we rode to the town together:
“You are our expert on bones and bodies. This time you will not need to identify the dead. You must tell me and the coroner’s jury what you can of how they died, as you did for the girl found in my cesspit.”
I thought that clear already, and considered telling Lord Gilbert so, but doubted he would be content with a conclusion based on so cursory an examination.
“That may tell us,” he continued, “why they died, though I doubt it. But if you can discover why they died, we may then also know who has done this.”
I agreed with that possibility. But I had deep misgivings that I could learn anything past the how of the business. We parted at Galen House. The reeve, riding behind us, took Bruce’s reins and led him on while I employed my time making another draught of ale and hemp for Henry atte Bridge.
I found Henry where I left him the night before, not that I expected any different. Pale afternoon sunlight filtered through the single window which illuminated the fuming interior of the hut. A smoldering fire continued to burn, putting some heat, and much smoke into the atmosphere. The bed my patient lay on, I saw, was yet flat on its four legs.
“Could you not find someone to raise the bed?” I asked the girl, rather more sharply than I should have, I fear. She began to cry.
“Nay. Asked me brothers. They would not. Too busy in t’fields.”
This seemed unnatural to me. Lifting the head of their father’s bed would be but the work of minutes and in no way harm their work for the day. There is, I thought, some family discord lodged in these huts.
“Very well. I will raise him. First, help me prop him up to take this draught.”
Henry atte Bridge grunted heavily as we lifted him, but took the ale readily.
“Did the potion give you sleep last night?” I asked him. “Aye…the pain returned by morning. I’ve looked for your return, and another draught.”
“Send your daughter tomorrow, after the morning Angelus bell. I will have another draught prepared for the day.”
I walked back up the track to the castle, then along Mill Road to the brook. On its banks I found two round, flat stones of likely size, grasped them with wet, frozen fingers, and returned with them to the hut. I placed them on the packed earth floor, one on either side of the bedposts, and instructed Alice to slide them in place as I lifted the bed. I reminded the girl to come to Galen House in the morning for another draught, then made my way home through the gloom of a winter evening. A cart with two bodies, attended by half a dozen cold, impatient men, awaited me.
My table would have to serve again. The toft behind Galen House was enclosed, so I ordered the bodies moved there. The table was long enough to serve the squire, but Sir Robert overhung it head and foot. He would not care.
Chapter 9
There were advantages to residing across from the churchyard. Being awakened before dawn by the Angelus bell was not one of them. I reasoned that I could learn nothing from the corpses until daylight, anyway, so kept to my bed for two more hours. Had I known who lingered at my door I would not have been so sluggardly.
I stumbled down the stairs and lit a cresset to improve the dim glow from my east window. Before I could slice a loaf of barley bread for my breakfast, I heard a soft knock at my door. I opened it and found Alice, bundled against the cold, shivering there. I bade her come in, and asked how long she had waited there.
“Since the Angelus bell, sir,” she replied.
“Is your father taken worse?”
“Nay, not worse. But the draught you gave him last night no longer serves. He needs another. You told me to come.”
I set about preparing the crushed seeds and root of hemp, added some crushed lettuce for good measure, then mixed the stuff in a pint of ale.
The girl watched me work in silence for a time, then spoke: “He’ll not live, will he?” she said softly. It was more a statement than a question.
Not for the last time in my profession, I met an issue for which I had no good answer. Should I destroy all hope, and speak frankly? Should I attempt to preserve hope, especially in a child, when I knew that hope was all that remained? Henry atte Bridge had too many obstacles to overcome: the broken hip, his age, the cold of winter, and the noxious air of his hut among the worst of these. He would not live.
I paused before I answered the girl, sorting these thoughts in my mind. My hesitation was response enough.
“I thought not,” she said quietly. I turned to her, the laced ale before me. The girl stood, trembling yet from the cold, with a tear reflecting the lamp as it coursed down her cheek. “What will become of me?”
“You have family. Your brothers live at the Weald, do they not? Surely one will make a place for you?”
“No,” she whispered, “they’ll not want another mouth to feed. Not mine, ’specially.”
I needed ask only a few questions. The girl gave me the story of her life with little prompting. Henry atte Bridge’s first wife died twenty years before. His sons were angry when, six years later, he married a widow of the town, Alice’s mother. They feared another son who might share Henry’s meager possessions at his death. A daughter born of the union should have allayed their fears, but too much anger had passed between the families. The death of Alice’s mother eliminated the possibility of more contenders for inheritance. This also should have softened the sons, but did not. Then plague struck again. There was fallow land available across the shire for payment of a small fine and rent. Henry atte Bridge’s smallholding might be doubled or tripled by enterprising tenants. But the alienation continued.
I sent the girl back to her father with the draft and what remained of my barley loaf. I had another loaf, of mixed oats and barley, and a finer one of barley and wheat. I feared there might be little to eat in her hut and I had plenty. I must confess that, as I watched her go, I reflected that this child might grow to become a beautiful young woman. Her features were fine, her carriage seemly, and her eyes and hair glistened.
I could put off my repulsive duty no longer. I opened the rear door and approached the bodies. In the light of day I discovered the cause of death quickly. I had not seen this from above the grave, because of the bent position the corpses took in the ground, and in the night, as they were deposited on my table, it was too dark. But now in the day I could see clearly.