Authors: Paul Doherty
âLord, save us,' Sir William interjected, âthat's Rishanger's house, the goldsmith who tried to take sanctuary in the abbey and was murdered.'
âThe same. I shall come back to him,' Anselm agreed. âWhat is noteworthy is that Puddlicot, the great thief and violator, escaped from Drokensford's clutches and, Parson Smollat, took sanctuary in Saint Michael's, Candlewick.' Anselm's words created further cries and exclamations of surprise. âIt's true,' he confirmed. âI have visited the crypt. I cannot say what happened there except that those involved in the great sacrilege decades ago still haunt that gloomy place. Little wonder! I also asked Sir Miles to bring from the memoranda rolls stored in the Tower all the records pertaining to Puddlicot. Our notorious felon was plucked by force from Saint Michael's, sanctuary or not.'
âBut that is against church law!' Parson Smollat cried. âNot to mention the statutes of Parliament?'
âOh, at the time the Bishop of London and all the city clergy pleaded and protested but Drokensford had his way. Puddlicot was lodged in the Tower where he was tried before the King's justices. He tried to plead benefit of clergy, that he was a cleric â this was later proved to be a lie. He was condemned to hang on the gallows outside the main abbey gate. The King insisted that he be humiliated, so Puddlicot was pushed from the Tower to the Westminster gallows in a wheelbarrow. He was hanged, then his corpse suffered further indignities, being peeled and the skin nailed to the door leading down to the crypt.' Anselm paused at the exclamations this provoked.
âOur present King's grandfather,' the exorcist continued, âwas determined that the monks of Westminster never forgot their part in the sacrilegious theft. They had to pass that door with its grisly trophy every time they wound their way up to the chapter house.'
âAnd the skin remained there,' Almaric whispered fearfully.
âFrom what I learnt from the records, yes. It decomposed and merged with the wood. I went and re-examined that door; traces of human skin can still be detected.'
âSo Puddlicot's ghost still walks?'
âPuddlicot, God rest him, was a great sinner. He left his wife to consort with a whore. He committed sacrilegious theft and died a violent death. I doubt if his corpse was given holy burial. Little wonder he haunts Westminster as well as here, at Saint Michael's, Candlewick in Dowgate ward.'
âYou are sure?' Sir William swallowed hard.
âPuddlicot definitely lived in Dowgate, in Hagbut Lane. He and Joanne Picard were members of this parish.'
âSir William is correct â that's where Adam Rishanger lived,' Almaric declared. âPuddlicot was a thief and so was Rishanger . . .'
âA hateful soul.' Sir William spoke. âA greedy madcap full of dark designs and sinister stratagems. He once approached me for money. He claimed he'd found a way to create the philosopher's stone and so transmute base metal into gold. Gascelyn threw him into the street.'
âMad as a March hare,' the squire declared lugubriously.
âRishanger rarely took the sacrament,' Parson Smollat observed. âRumours abound that after he was murdered treasure was found close to his corpse.'
âThat is correct,' Beauchamp affirmed. He went on: âSuch a story spread across the city: a dagger and a pure gold cross,' then fell silent.
âBut what,' Sir William pleaded, âhas this ancient robbery got to do with our troubles at Saint Michael's?'
Beauchamp gestured at Anselm. âBrother, your thoughts?'
â
Primo
.' Anselm paused as if listening to the rain pattering against the window. âPuddlicot hales from Saint Michael's, from whose sanctuary he was illegally dragged. He also haunts the abbey, the stage on which he lived and died a hideous death, sent into the dark, his soul drenched in sin. However, why Puddlicot's ghost has defied all attempts to prise him loose to continue his journey I am not sure.
Secundo
,' Anselm continued, âghosts surround us all like plaintiffs outside a court. They wait for their opportunity for a door to open; the demons do likewise. Our souls are like castles, constantly besieged by the lords of the air, the dark dwellers, malevolent wraiths and unsettled ghosts.'
âAnd a door has been opened?'
âYes, Amalric, it certainly has. More than one gate or postern has been unlocked, unbolted and thrown wide open.'
âBy whom?'
âWhy, parson, the Midnight Man, which brings me to my third point â
tertio
: his macabre rites around All Souls, on Saint Walpurgis eve. What happened then? I truly don't know. Something went dreadfully wrong. I have questioned Sir Miles but . . .'
âAll I have learnt,' Beauchamp explained, âwas from one of my spies in the city and, believe me, they are many. This gentleman, who rejoices in the name of Bolingbrok, heard rumours, nothing more, about a midnight ceremony where the Satanists summoned up powers they could not control, so they fled. I have searched â hungered â for more details.' He pulled a face. âI have whistled sharply into the darkness but so far there has been no reply.'
â
Quarto
,' Anselm continued, âsomehow Rishanger, that petty goldsmith, found or was given two precious items from the long-lost treasure. Others, we don't know who, also discovered this. Rishanger tried to flee into exile but he was ambushed and later murdered. Now how â and where â did they come across this treasure? We don't know. Nor do we know if what Rishanger held was part of an even greater hoard, or who murdered him and his mistress Beatrice Lampeter, whose eyeless corpse was dug up in that garden at Hagbut Lane.' Anselm paused for breath. Stephen could hear the bubbles on his chest and wondered if his master was falling ill.
â
Quinto
,' Anselm continued, âwho is the Midnight Man? Is he still searching for the missing treasure which, according to the Exchequer records, still totals hundreds of thousands of pounds?
Sexto
, what has happened in Saint Michael's cemetery? Why has it led to an infestation of demons and ghosts? My friends, to conclude,' Anselm stared sadly around the assembled company, âI believe some other grievous sin lurks deep within the layers of our existence. But what?' He pulled a face.
âWhy did the Midnight Man choose Saint Michael's, Candlewick?' Beauchamp asked. âMy parish church, our parish church.'
âBecause he knew about Puddlicot,' Stephen declared, âwhich means that the warlock learned about Puddlicot's story, but from where? I mean, the robbery occurred decades ago.'
Anselm smiled at the novice. âYou are correct, Stephen. How did the Midnight Man know? Did he study the records? Yet I asked the clerk of the Tower muniment room. No one, apart from you, Sir Miles, has asked to study that schedule of documents.'
âI asked,' the clerk replied tersely, âafter the treasures were found near Rishanger's corpse.'
âHas any other such treasure been found in the city?' Sir William asked.
âNo.' Beauchamp shook his head. âThe royal surveyors have been most scrupulous.' He paused as one of the window-shutters, loose from its clasp, banged noisily. Stephen, the nearest, rose. He pulled the shutter closed and stared back at the narrow face, eyes all bloodshot, mouth gaping, long hair straggling down, pushed up against the opaque, square window glass. Stephen caught his breath. The lips moved soundlessly, as if cursing him.
âStephen?'
âSorry, Magister.' Stephen glanced over his shoulder. Anselm was staring at him curiously.
âSir William?'
âYes?' The merchant knight glanced in surprise at the novice.
âMagister, my apologies, but that young woman, Alice Palmer, daughter of the tavern master at The Unicorn?'
âWhat about Alice?' Parson Smollat asked. âOh, she's approached you, hasn't she? About one of the slatterns at the tavern â a young woman called Margotta Sumerhull who has apparently disappeared?'
âYes, yes, she has asked the same of me.' Sir William leaned back in his chair. âSir Miles, I appeal to you. How many young women in London just disappear?'
The royal clerk nodded. âThe chancery coffers and pouches are crammed with such enquiries.' Stephen caught the note of despair in the clerk's voice.
âI organized a search,' Sir William added. âAsk Parson Smollat's parishioners. But to no avail. However,' Sir William rubbed his hands together, âwe have talked enough. My cooks have prepared brawn in mustard, some savoury
doucettes
made from the sweetest, freshest pork, all mixed in with honey and pepper.' He paused as Simon the sexton rose swiftly to his feet.
âSir William, please excuse me.' Simon pointed to the hour candle standing in its ornate bronze holder on a corner table. âGod waits for no one. The archangel guild meet for their weekly devotions before the statue. I must ring the bells, open the doors . . .'
Sir William excused him and Simon hurried out. Anselm and Sir Miles began to collect their sheaves of manuscripts. Sir William rose and walked away, deep in conversation with Gascelyn and Amalric. Stephen stared around this comfortable chamber, its lime-washed walls above the highly polished, dark oak panelling, the lowered candelabra shedding a ring of glowing light. He rose and walked across to study the heraldic shields fastened on the wall. One boasted a silver pen with three gold books on a blue field depicting the insignia of St Hilary of Poitiers. Next to this the arms of St Thanus of Alexandria, the courtesan who converted to Christ, and beneath it a white scroll with the Latin tag: âYou who have made me, have mercy on me', written in black on a blue and violet field. Stephen studied these even as he guiltily recalled his meeting with Alice Palmer â her kiss so soft and warm, the faint trace of perfume about her. Excitement flushed his face. He only wished he could meet her again. What would it be like, he wondered, to court a young woman such as her? He tried to push aside the usual dark temptation of despondency. How refreshing it would be, Stephen wondered, to break from the shapes, shadows and glimmerings constantly on the border of both his vision and consciousness. He had rejoiced to be free of his father and his wealthy Winchester mansion. The White Friars had welcomed him warmly, educated him as rigorously as any scholar in the schools of Oxford and Cambridge. Magister Anselm had proved to be both a brilliant teacher and a very close friend. Stephen had gone to him to be shrived, to confess these very temptations of the flesh as well as those of the spirit. He had asked Anselm if all the phenomena, phantasms and visions were really true? Hadn't Stephen's own father raged like a man possessed against such fancies? Was there a physical explanation? Anselm had surprisingly agreed. âMost hauntings and so-called spiritual occurrences,' he had declared, âare illusions, the result of some very cunning sleight of hand. But there are those which are true. Yet, even then I concede,' Anselm had kept repeating this as one of his sacred rules, âsuch events or phenomena are always firmly rooted in the human will, in human wickedness, the devious perversity of the human heart.'
Stephen started from his reverie as he heard the Midnight Man being mentioned by Anselm. He walked back to the table where Sir Miles was explaining to the exorcist that neither officials of the Crown nor those of the Church, despite all their resources, could hunt down and trap that most elusive of warlocks. Beauchamp paused as the bells of St Michael's began to peal. They did for a while then abruptly paused, stilling all conversation in the chamber.
âWhat is the matter?' Sir William strode to the chamber door, flinging it open as the bells began to clang again but this time discordantly, sounding out the tocsin. Sir William, followed by his household, hurried out of the room, clattering down the stairs.
âWe also should go.' Beauchamp strapped on his sword belt, beckoning to the two Carmelites to accompany him. By the time they reached the tiled entrance hall the servants had also been roused. They passed through the main doorway, down the steps across the rutted trackway to the lychgate. A crowd had gathered â a few going up the winding path to the main door of the church. Sir Miles ordered these to step aside. Stephen noticed how many of those in the cemetery wore a blue and gold livery with a great medallion celebrating St Michael's victory over Satan on a chain around their necks. The light was dimming; the air fresh after the showers; the rain glinting on the grass and shrubs of the cemetery. As they hurried up the path Stephen noticed a group clustered to the right of the soaring bell tower. One or two were pointing up to the belfry where the tocsin still boomed out. Sir Miles strode off then hurried back, meeting them at the foot of the church steps. âBardolph the gravedigger,' he murmured. âAccording to members of the guild, they heard the bells tolling and, as they approached the church, saw Bardolph's body fall from the tower bouncing like a pig's bladder on to the roof, spinning like a top to the ground.' Beauchamp crossed himself. âParson Smollat is administering the rites of the dead, and Almaric is with him. Let's find out . . .'
They hastened up the steps, through the doorway and left through the narrow entrance into the bell tower. Simon the sexton ceased pulling the two oiled, hempen ropes. He stood gasping for breath, almost oblivious to Sir William's constant questions. Gascelyn came clattering down the tower steps. âNothing,' he exclaimed. âNo one is there.'
âSimon,' Sir William gently touched the sexton's face with his gloved hand, âSimon, what happened in this benighted church?'
âI er, came in,' Simon stammered. âAll was quiet.' He gestured around the bare-walled chamber furnished with a stool, table and a battered, iron-ribbed chest, its concave lid thrown back. âI took out my gloves and the woollen clasp for the ropes. All was quiet. I prepared myself saying the usual prayer to Saint Michael.' He smiled, though his eyes were full of fear, his red-poxed face deeply flushed. âThen one to Saint Gabriel and Saint Raphael â they are also archangels. Our two bells are named after them.'