Read A Plague on Both Your Houses Online
Authors: Susanna Gregory
Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #General
at last,’ he said. ‘He has chosen Robert Swynford to be our next Master.’
‘No great surprise, and he will make a good Master,’
Bartholomew said. ‘Will he come back from the
country?’
William shook his head. ‘Robert also sent a message
saying that there has been plague in the house of his
relatives and most of the menfolk have died. He asks
our indulgence that we allow him to remain away for
a few weeks until he is sure the women will be properly cared for. He has asked Alcote to act as his deputy
until then.’
Bartholomew wondered if leaving the College in
the care of a man who had just been deprived of the
position might not be a risky move. Then he thought of Robert Swynford’s easy grace and confidence, and knew
that he would have no problem whatsoever in wresting
delegated power back from Alcote.
‘But Alcote is hiding in his room like Wilson was,’
said Bartholomew. ‘How can he run the College?’
“I assume Swynford has not been told that,’ said
William. ‘Alcote has asked for various documents to
be sent to him, so it seems he will at least see to the administration.’
Bartholomew went outside for some air and to
stretch limbs cramped from bending over his patients
all afternoon. The rain had stopped, and the clouds were beginning to clear. The porter saw him and scuttled over, stopping a good ten feet from Bartholomew, a large
pomander filled with powerful herbs pressed to his face.
Bartholomew realised that he had not seen the porter’s face since the day he had returned from the house of
Agatha’s cousin and announced to Michaelhouse that
the plague had come. The man held a note that he
placed on the ground so he would not have to go
nearer to Bartholomew than necessary. When he saw
Bartholomew pick it up, he scurried back into the safety of his lodge. Bartholomew watched as he slammed the
door. Perhaps the porter was right, and Bartholomew
did carry a dangerous miasma around with him. He felt
well enough, but how did he know he did not carry the
contagion with him, in his breath, his clothes? He sighed heavily and turned his attention to the scrap of parchment in his hand which, in almost illegible writing, said that he was needed at the tinker’s house near the river.
Bartholomew collected his cloak and bag of medicines,
and set off. A wind was getting up, and it seemed
to be growing colder by the moment. Bartholomew
wondered whether the river would freeze over, as it
had done the year before. As first, he had welcomed
this, because it had cut down the smell. But then people just threw rubbish onto the ice rather than into the water, and it was not long before the smell was worse than it had been when the river was running.
He reached the river, and turned to walk along the
row of shacks where the river people lived. He recalled that the last patient he had seen before the plague had been the tinker’s little girl, and he remembered that he had seen her body buried in one of the first plague pits to be dug. The last house in the row belonged to the
tinker, but only one child stood outside to greet him
this time.
Entering the single room, he walked over to the
pile of rags in one corner that served as a bed, and
crouched down to look at the person huddled there.
He was pleasantly surprised to see a healthy woman
lying on the bed.
She appeared startled to see him, and exchanged
a puzzled glance with the child who had followed
him in.
‘You sent for me,’ said Bartholomew, kneeling on
the earth floor. ‘What can I do?’
The woman exchanged another look with the child,
who shook her head. “I would not send for you for this, Doctor,’ the woman said. ‘My baby is coming. The
midwife is dead, and I had to send my lad to fetch a
woman to help me. I do not need a physician.’
Bartholomew returned her puzzled look. ‘But you
sent me a note …’
He stopped as the woman tensed with a wave of
contractions. When she relaxed again, she blurted out, “I did no such thing. I cannot write, and nor can my
children. I do not need a physician.’
And could not pay for one was the unspoken
addendum. Bartholomew shrugged. ‘But since I am
here, and since your time is close, perhaps I can help.
And I will require no payment,’ he added quickly, seeing concern flitting across the woman’s face.
Bartholomew sent the child to fetch some water
and cloths, and not a minute too soon, for the top of
the baby’s head was already showing. Between gasps, the tinker’s wife told him how the other women who lived
nearby were either dead or had the pestilence, and she had sent her son to fetch her sister from Haslingfield.
But since that was several miles, she had known help
might come too late. Physicians usually left childbirth to the midwives, and Bartholomew was only ever called
if there was a serious problem, usually when it was far too late for him to do much about it. He was not surprised to find that he was enjoying doing something other than dealing with plague victims. When the baby finally slid into his hands all slippery and bawling healthily, he
was more enthusiastic over it than were the exhausted
mother and her wide-eyed daughter.
‘It is a beautiful girl,’ he said, giving the baby to the mother to nurse, ‘perfectly formed and very healthy.’ He pulled back the cloth so he could look at her face, and exchanged grins with the mother. He took one of the tiny hands in his. ‘Look at her fingernails!’ he exclaimed.
The tinker’s wife began to laugh. ‘Why, Doctor,
anyone would think a newborn baby was something
special to hear you going on!’ she said. ‘You would
not be like this if it was your ninth in twelve years!’
Bartholomew laughed with her. “I would be happy
to help with any more babies you might have, Mistress
Tinker,’ he said, ‘and would consider it a privilege to be asked.’
Bartholomew left the house feeling happier than he
had since the plague had started. He made his way back along the river, whistling softly to himself. As he turned the corner to go back to College, a figure stepped out of the shadows in front of him, wielding what looked to be a heavy stick.
Bartholomew stopped in his tracks and glanced
behind him, cursing himself for his foolishness. Another two shadowy forms stood there similarly armed. The
note! It had been a trap! He swallowed hard, a vision of Augustus’s mutilated body coming to mind. His stomach
was a cold knot of fear. He had a small knife that he used for medical purposes, but it would be useless against
three men armed with staves. He twisted the strap of
his bag around his hand, and suddenly raced forward,
swinging the bag at the figure in front of him as he did so. He felt it hit the man, and heard him grunt as he
fell. Bartholomew kept going, hearing the footsteps of the two behind him following.
He fell heavily to the ground as a fourth figure shot
out of some bushes in the lane and crashed into him. He twisted round, and saw one of the men who had followed raise his stick high into the air for a blow that would smash his head like an egg. He kicked out at the man’s legs, and saw him lose his balance. Bartholomew tried to scramble to his feet, but someone else had grabbed him by his
cloak and was trying to pull it tight around his throat.
Bartholomew struggled furiously, lashing out with fists and feet, and hearing from the obscenities and yelps
that a good many of his blows were true.
He brought his knee up sharply into the groin of
one man, but he could not hold out for ever against
four. He looked up, and saw for the second time an
upraised stick silhouetted against the dark sky, but now he was pinned down and unable to struggle free. He
closed his eyes, waiting for the blow that he was certain would be the last thing he would know.
The blow never came. Instead, the man toppled
onto him clutching his chest, and Bartholomew felt
a warm spurt of blood gush over him. He squirmed
out from underneath the inert body, and made a
grab for the cloak of one of his attackers who was
now trying to run away. The man kicked backwards
viciously, and Bartholomew was forced to let go. He
heard their footsteps growing fainter as they ran up
the lane, while others came closer.
He drew his knife, knowing that he did not have
the strength to run a second time, and prepared to sell his life dearly should he be attacked again. He squinted as a lamp was thrust into his face.
‘Matt!’ Bartholomew felt himself hauled to his feet,
and looked into the anxious face of Oswald Stanmore.
‘Matt!’ Stanmore repeated, looking down the lane
after Bartholomew’s attackers. ‘What happened? Who is
this?’ He pushed at the body of the man who had fallen with his foot.
Bartholomew saw that Stanmore’s steward, Hugh,
was with him, armed with a crossbow. Stanmore kept
looking around, as if he expected the attackers to
come again.
“I was sent a note to see a patient by the river,’
Bartholomew said, still trying to recover his breath, ‘and these men attacked me.’
‘You should know better than to go to the
river after dark,’ said Stanmore. ‘The Sheriff caught
three of the robbers that have been menacing the
town there only last week. Doubtless these are more
of the same.’ He glanced around. ‘Who sent you
the note? Surely you can tie note and attackers
together?’
Bartholomew showed him the now-crumpled message.
‘The tinker did not write this,’ he said.
Stanmore took it from him and peered at it. ‘The
tinker most certainly did not,’ he said, ‘for he died last month. I heard that only two of his children live, and his wife is expecting her ninth, poor woman.’
Bartholomew bent to look at the man on the ground.
He was dead, the crossbow bolt embedded deeply in his
chest. Bartholomew rifled hurriedly through his clothes, hoping for something that would identify him. There was a plain purse, filled with silver coins, but nothing else.
Bartholomew shook the purse at Stanmore. ‘He
was paid this money to attack me,’ he said. He thought about the tinker’s baby: it would make a fine gift for her baptism.
Stanmore began to lead the way cautiously up the
lane towards Michaelhouse. Bartholomew caught his
sleeve as they walked. ‘What were you doing here?’ he
asked, keeping a wary eye on the trees at the sides of the lane.
Stanmore raised the lamp to look into some deep
shadows near the back of Michaelhouse. ‘A barge came
in today,’ he said, ‘and I have been sitting with the captain negotiating the price of the next shipment.’ He nodded at his steward. ‘When I am at the wharf after dark, I always tell Hugh to bring his crossbow. You never know who you might meet around here.’
Bartholomew clapped Stanmore on the shoulder. ‘I
did not say thank you,’ he said. ‘Had you been a second later, you would have been rescuing a corpse!’
They reached Michaelhouse, and Stanmore joined
Bartholomew for a cup of spiced wine in the hall, while Hugh was despatched to take the news to the Sheriff.
Father William was there too, trying to read by the light from the candles, and several students talked in low voices in another corner.
Stanmore stretched out his legs in front of the small
fire. ‘These robbers are getting bold,’ he said. ‘They have only picked on the dead and dying up until now.
This is the first time I have heard them attacking the healthy.’
Bartholomew put the purse on the table. He quickly
told Stanmore about the blacksmith, and how he had
been paid to do Bartholomew harm during the riot.
Stanmore listened, his mouth agape in horror.
‘For the love of God, Matt! What have you got
yourself mixed up in? First this blacksmith business,
then Philippa, and now this!’
Bartholomew could only look as mystified as his
brother-in-law.
When Hugh returned, Stanmore rose to leave,
declining Bartholomew’s offer of a bed for the night.
‘No thank you, Matt!’ he said, looking round at the
College. ‘Why should I spend a night in this cold and
wretched place when I can have roaring fires and bright, candle-lit rooms with Stephen?’
Bartholomewr went back to his own room, and
undressed ready for bed. He had to wash and hang
up his clothes in the dark, because scholars were not
usually given candles for their rooms. It was considered wasteful, when they could use the communal ones in
the hall, or, more usually, the conclave. He tidied the room as best he could, and lay on the creaking bed,
rubbing his feet together hard in a vain attempt to warm them up. Stanmore was right: Michaelhouse was cold
and gloomy. He tried to get comfortable, wincing as
the wooden board dug into a place where one of his
attackers had kicked him.
So, who had tried to kill him? Both the blacksmith
and the dead man had been paid about five marks in
silver in leather purses. Were they connected? They had to be: surely there was not more than one group of people who would pay to have him killed! Bartholomew shifted
uncomfortably. He could hear Michael’s Benedictine
room-mates chanting a psalm in the room above. Then,
somewhere in the lane outside, a dog barked twice. A
gust of wind rattled the shutters, and rain pattered