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Brother John pounded the table lightly in evident delight. “My lady, not only is Master Tostig’s cheese famous, so is his ale. The local ale-wives praise his even above their own.”

“It is made in competition with the priory’s ale,” Brother Simeon said, his deep voice lowered to a growl. He had tasted nothing offered.

“Indeed? Do we lose income as a consequence of this?” Eleanor asked, pointing to the sweating crock in front of her and glancing at Tostig’s expressionless face.

“We make far more but sell less as a result of this, this…” Simeon waved his hand dismissively in the direction of the aforementioned jug.

“Then perhaps we should cease trying to compete in such a profitless area,” Eleanor said.

Tostig’s eyes widened slightly.

“You have just seen our accounts. We cannot lose more revenue just because this…” Simeon waved his hand in the direction of Tostig as if Gytha’s brother were no more than a piece of pottery.

Eleanor raised her hand to silence the receiver before he finished his sentence and before Gytha’s brother could react to the suggested insult. “Master Tostig, I have an idea which may be of benefit to both you and the priory. Perhaps you could come to Tyndal to discuss the possibilities of a partnership in this ale venture?”

Tostig glanced at his sister, who nodded imperceptibly.

“I would be honored, my lady.”

Brother Simeon rose to his feet, his eyes narrowed in rage.

“And what did you have in mind? Surely, as your receiver, I have a right to know what sort of scheme…”

Thomas, who was sitting next to Simeon, reached over and tugged at the monk’s sleeve. “Brother,” he whispered. “Calm yourself. They are speaking of ale. Mere ale.”

Simeon looked down at Thomas. The receiver’s eyes looked dead, so glazed were they with the white heat of his anger. Then his body shuddered almost imperceptibly as he regained control. He smiled, but his eyes remained narrowed.

“Of course. My apologies, my lady, and I beg forgiveness. I have fallen prey to the sin of anger today. Perhaps Satan tempted me in my weakness from fasting. I succumbed and shall seek penance.”

Thomas thumped the monk on the back.

Eleanor said nothing.

“Donkeys, my lady? You came to see my donkeys.” Tostig broke the silence and gestured toward the door to his cottage.

Both a prudent and a proud man, Eleanor thought as she rose and walked to the door. She glanced back at him. His face showed no emotion as he waited for her to pass first through the low door. Then she smiled and winked at him.

Tostig’s eyes grew round, his head moving a fraction backward in surprise. Then he too smiled. And winked back.

You are a quick judge of character, my fine Saxon, Eleanor thought. I will remember that.

As she stepped outside to the slightly muddy and gouged earthen path between the two rows of village huts and hovels, Eleanor stopped. She trembled as if a cold wind had struck her, and she looked quickly to one side.

A man was staring at her. His black beard and brackish colored clothing were unkempt, ragged.

Eleanor blinked. He was the man she had seen in the forest.

He turned and sped through the space between two huts.

“That man!” she cried to Tostig, who was just behind her. “Who is he?”

Tostig looked around him very slowly, his expression once again blank. “What man, my lady? I see no one.”

“Did anyone see that man?” Eleanor asked the monks as they emerged from the doorway.

“No, my lady,” they said in near unison, standing aside to let Gytha come out behind them.

Perhaps they had not, but Eleanor saw a fleeting frown on Tostig’s face as he gazed in the direction the strange man had disappeared.

Chapter Twenty-Two

“My foot is fine, sister.”

Eleanor’s ankle still hurt, but she was quickly becoming intolerant of the inactivity forced on her by the injury. She had accepted the help of Gytha on the walk to the village to buy her donkey, but now that she was back in her chambers, she was both exhausted from the pain and frustrated by restlessness.

Sister Anne was gently rewinding the ankle. “Need I remind you, my lady, that lying is a sin. Your entire foot is now swollen twice its size from the walk.”

Eleanor sighed. Most assuredly, Prioress Felicia would have reprimanded Anne for such bluntness. Rank did demand due courtesy. On the other hand, respect must be earned else it would be as hollow and short-lived as prayers said without faith. Something her aunt had taught. Nay, she preferred the honesty, Eleanor decided. Anne did not present a false face to her and that was refreshing. Besides, she was growing quite fond of this nun whose bluntness never held malice in it. “Had you been born a man, I would have wanted you to be my confessor,” she said. “Yet I would have little to confess, for you would have already seen all my faults.”

Anne patted the finished wrapping and stood. “Had I been a man, I would have ordered you to stay in your chambers and not allowed you to go shopping for a donkey. A donkey, of all things!” The gruffness of her rebuke was spoiled by her laugh.

“I like Adam. He is a sweet donkey. I hope he is happy in his new home.”

Anne rose with a slight creak in her knees and walked over to the window. Eleanor noticed that the nun stretched her shoulders as if they were stiff. Over Anne’s head she could see mounds of great clouds rushing across the sky pushed by a moist wind. A rain, chill with the hints of coming autumn, would arrive soon, she thought.

“Most likely he is eating,” Anne said, turning back to face her prioress. “Brother Thomas took him to the stable as soon as we got back. He seems quite competent with four-legged creatures.”

“And how is he with his two-legged charges?”

“He shows great compassion with the suffering in the hospital. Brother Andrew also commented on that the other day.”

“Well and good. I was concerned about choosing someone no one knew anything about to replace Brother Rupert. It was Brother Simeon’s suggestion, and it seems to have been a good one. By the way, our good receiver was not pleased with my decision to consider a partnership with Tostig on the ale business. Did I err?”

“No, I do not think so. Tostig is a good man. Brother Simeon would not be happy with the concept, however. He has never thought the villagers any better than animals, and finds some animals superior to the villagers. The idea of joining with Tostig on making ale quite interests me, however. May I ask what in specific you had in mind?”

“I wanted him to join with us in the making of it instead of competing against us. If we can produce more but he makes it better, I thought he might first teach us how he makes it and then monitor our process to guarantee the product was consistently good. For this I would suggest giving him a high percentage of the profit. We would gain by increased sales, and he would lose nothing, probably even gain from our mutual success.”

“Brother Simeon would never be pleased with a man from the village telling Normans, albeit monks, what to do. Our receiver aside, however, I do not think most of the monks and certainly none of the local lay brothers would have any problem with the arrangement. Tostig is well respected here.”

“Then Brother Simeon needs to be reminded that Saxons are not beneath us. Fontevraud has taken in monks and nuns of all ranks and origins, including prostitutes, as Jesus did Mary Magdalene. And after all these years of doing as he pleased, the good brother also seems to have forgotten that it is the prioress who makes the final decisions about the running of the priory. If he does not approve, he should ask to leave the Order and become, perhaps, a Cistercian.”

“If I may say so, my lady, the practices of which you speak have been true at the mother house, but, except for the primacy of the prioress, we have seen little of the rest of it in England.”