Authors: Paul Doherty
âWe watched you,' Eleanor continued, âwe heard of you, Brother Anselm. We needed to trust you.'
âBut not Sir Miles Beauchamp?'
âOh no, not the royal clerk. Drokensford was a royal clerk. He dragged Puddlicot from the sanctuary, loaded him with chains and sent him to the Tower. After he had been condemned, Drokensford put him in a wheelbarrow â an object of derision â and had him carted through the streets to a gruesome death.' Eleanor sipped at her wine. âDrokensford never allowed my mother to visit her beloved. Afterwards, I understand, he harassed her constantly.'
âJust for a while.' Joanne spoke up. âHe thought I had information.' The ancient one grinned, pert as a sparrow. âI did,' she sighed, âbut what was the use?' She blinked, staring up above their heads as if searching for something. âRichard organized that robbery. He brought the treasure to our house and then moved it to Saint Michael's. I believe Parson Spigurnel was going to help by securing safe passage abroad for both of us, but then Drokensford struck. So yes, I don't like royal clerks, particularly Beauchamp with his secretive, sly ways, hiding in that strange house which only his henchmen enter. Anyway, Richard had to flee to Saint Michael's at the dead of night. I only visited him once. I drew as close as I could to the sanctuary chair. I know my daughter has told you this but it is worth repeating: Richard whispered how he had left me a package, wrapped in a leather casing buried in our garden, containing the Cross of Neath and Eleanor's dagger, along with a message. I asked him about the rest of the treasure â that's when he repeated the message that it was under the protection of God's guardian. I suspect he hoped that I would find the treasure and perhaps use it to negotiate with Drokensford, but I could not â that clerk was too sharp. He had already ransacked our house and the garden. Remember, Anselm, I was only sixteen and bearing a child. I was truly terrified.' She began to sob. Eleanor put a protective arm around her shoulder.
âTell me,' Anselm leaned across the table, âdid Puddlicot ever talk about the Merlin Stone? I will be even blunter, mistress: did Puddlicot ever dabble in the black arts?' The ancient one glanced up, watery eyes creased in an impish smile. âGod bless you, Brother Anselm, but I find that amusing. Puddlicot was a merry fellow. He could dance a jig and tell a tale. He was a jongleur, a bully boy, deeply in love with life. He did not pray. He lived recklessly for the moment so he had no time for magic, wizards, witches or warlocks. He dismissed them all as charlatans.'
âThe Merlin Stone,' Anselm insisted, âwas part of the treasure stolen from the crypt?' The ancient one looked at Anselm then threw her head back, cackling with laughter. âI do remember that, small and round as a ball, smooth and polished.' She wiped her tired eyes on the back of her hand. âMerlin Stone!' she scoffed. âRichard tossed it into the carp pond as a useless piece of rock. He claimed it was man-made, the type of stone you carve from a falling star which has burned out and fallen to earth. He said the good monks of Glastonbury must have been hard at work to smooth that out! As far as I know,' she chuckled, âMerlin's Stone is still lying at the bottom of that carp pond!'
Even Anselm grinned, lifting his goblet of water in salute. He then told them about the Midnight Man, the disappearance of young women and the grisly murders at St Michael's. Both women sat in shocked silence. Eleanor raised her hand. âBrother Anselm, how will this end? You say my father's ghost still hovers, that even our prayers have not helped. Will my father's spirit ever find peace?'
âHow will it end, Eleanor,' Anselm replied kindly, âis in the hands of the Lord. I shall tell you something I have not yet told others. I am beginning to understand what happened and that opens further doors. Rishanger was undoubtedly a member of the Midnight Man's coven; that nest of vipers always had an interest in Puddlicot's treasure, probably because of the Merlin Stone. Rishanger and his fellow demons searched that house but found nothing. However, they were also blood-drinkers, feasting and revelling on the bodies of young women whom they slaughtered and buried in that hellish garden. During one such foray, Rishanger stumbled on those two treasures as well as the information Puddlicot had buried with them. This provided further impetus; hence the satanic revels at Westminster and particularly at Saint Michael's. They were intrigued by the written reference to Puddlicot's plunder being guarded by God's protector.'
âThe church of Saint Michael's?'
âOf course!' Anselm agreed. âSo, Mistress Eleanor, they performed their rites but these became entangled in some other wickedness and came to nothing.'
âWhat wickedness?'
âI shall tell you, mistress. I trust you. I will tell you something I have not yet told Sir Miles and the rest: somewhere in that church or cemetery lie other corpses.'
âWhy do you say this?'
âSatanic covens need consecrated ground for their filthy blood sacrifices. More practically, I suspect, Rishanger's garden could not hide any more corpses.'
âSo many were slaughtered?'
âWe are talking of a coven, all blood-drinkers. Perhaps a few of them are women but mostly men.' The exorcist paused. âI do wonder why cemeteries fascinate the human soul. Is it all the ceremony which goes into them? I have been to the Innocents in Paris, a forest of ornate, carved stone. The rich even try to make their dead flesh sweet, paying butchers to scoop out their entrails and fill their insides with fragrant spices.' Anselm laughed sharply. âIt only makes them tastier for the worms. What does it matter? I was also in Paris when the Pestilence returned. I heard her swish her scythe as she combed the streets, gathering her victims. I saw corpses piled high, the flesh turning a purplish-black, bereft of all soul and spirit. If people like the Midnight Man reflected on such an end, they would give up their filthy ways.'
âBrother Anselm,' Eleanor intervened gently, âwhen will you put paid to these nightmares?' The exorcist did not reply but rose to his feet, helping her and her mother, who had now grown sleepy-eyed. The exorcist simply blessed them. Stephen helped both women out from behind the screen. The taproom was now filling up. Tradesmen and tinkers jostled each other. A wandering scholar, his pet weasel in a cage, was offering to chant a poem but no one took any notice. Two relic sellers were inspecting the contents of their sacks. They caught Stephen's eye and invited him over. He ignored them and escorted the two women to the door. The sunshine had gone and a thin drizzle peppered the cobblestones. A man strode through the gates, face hidden in a deep hood, dark cloak billowing out like the wings of a bat. Cutwolf! He did not stop but glanced, mice-eyed, at the two ladies, brushed past Stephen and into the tavern. The ancient one patted Stephen on the arm and leaned heavily against her daughter, who smiled at Stephen.
âSo young! I hope what we told your master is of use?'
âI am sure it is,' Stephen reassured her. âAs he said, all these are pointers to the truth.'
âWill we ever be free of it?' Eleanor murmured. âYears ago I heard a story about a child who found an evil-looking toad in a field. The girl was so frightened, she killed it. That dead toad pursued her night and day, giving her no rest. The girl killed it time and again but the pursuit continued even after it was torched to ashes. The hapless, persecuted girl, to be eternally free of the torment, let her loathsome enemy bite her but escaped death by cutting away the venom-filled wound. Vengeance appeased, and the toad was seen no more.'
âMistress?'
âSometimes evil dogs our lives â a host of bats blacking out the sunlight.' She leaned over and kissed Stephen on each cheek. âI do believe your master will free us from the evil which seems to hound our souls. But remember, Stephen, there will be a terrible price to pay.' Then they were gone, two lonely figures shuffling into the gloaming.
Stephen returned to the taproom to find Cutwolf closeted with his master in the window-seat. âSir Miles wants to know what our two guests told us,' Anselm declared drily. âI have given Brother Cutwolf the gist of it. Sir Miles believes more mischief is afoot, but we also have an invitation to dine with him. You, me, Master Robert and Mistress Alice â it will be grand.'
âMy master is most appreciative of your work.' Cutwolf, despite the heavy cloak over his mailed shirt and clinking war belt, was friendly enough. âThe day after tomorrow, just before vespers, he insists that you sup with him.' Cutwolf's voice became teasing. âMaster Stephen, you did ask about my master's house . . .?'
Stephen blushed.
âAnd now,' Anselm rose, âwe have an appointment with a soul bound for God. Master Bolingbrok awaits us inside Saint-Olaf-all-alone.'
âA small tavern, deep in White Friars,' Cutwolf answered Stephen's puzzled look, âas different from this as hell from heaven. Don't be disappointed,' Cutwolf added kindly, âMistress Alice will be here when you return and remember, the evening after tomorrow, we have our festivities to celebrate.'
Stephen hid his disappointment. He gathered his cloak and sword belt with its long stabbing dirk and sought out Alice. He feverishly kissed her then joined Anselm and Cutwolf, already striding across the tavern yard. They went up through the constant drizzle towards St Michael's, a dark mass against the cloudy sky. They paused for a while by the dripping gates of that evil-festering cemetery with its heap of tumbled stones and crosses. Anselm stood staring out over the desolation. Stephen, busy with his cloak and belt, his mind still full of regret at leaving Alice, felt the crowding ghosts close in. He gazed down the empty lane. Figures moved. A shadow rose out of a puddle; others followed. Restless shapes, as if a mob of demons and spirits, were mustering. Faint traces of song and conversation teased Stephen's ear. A waft of heavy perfume came and went. A raucous voice shouted, âHarrow! Harrow!' The air turned abruptly cold. Cutwolf clapped gloved hands on the hilt of both sword and dagger. Stephen caught his breath. He glanced towards St Michael's. The cemetery was no longer just a stretch of moving grass. Tall trees now grew there bristling with thorns, their leaves like blades of red-hot iron. Near the lychgate a cauldron, seething with oil, pitch and resin, belched flames of black, smoky plumes. A huge snake, coiled round the cauldron, reared its ugly head and breathed out fiery sparks which assumed a life of their own. Somewhere in the darkness a filthy, grunting herd of swine rooted and snouted for food, their stench hanging like a heavy veil. The drizzle seemed to be raining down fresh horrors.
âStephen, Stephen!' Anselm was shaking him. The novice broke from his nightmare, trying to ignore the stabbing pain in his own head. âStephen,' Anselm whispered, âI can feel the same. This night is as restless as an evil conscience in a tumbled bed. Something is about to happen. Pray God we keep safe!' They walked on. Cutwolf drew sword and dagger as they left the thoroughfares of Dowgate. They entered the little, crooked, dog-legged alleys of White Friars, which ran under houses so dingy they'd turned black, and were so ancient and corrupt they had to be supported by wooden crutches. Now and again little knots of figures would break from wallowing in the dirt and dart like bats into the doorways or alley-mouths. Here human wolves alongside crime, filth and disease lurked in the shadows or behind dark doors leading down to even darker vaults and cellars. Underfoot the path was nothing more than slimy mud and stinking water. The dungeon-like doors and prison-like windows remained shut. Nevertheless, voices called and trailed. An occasional light flared and dimmed. Cutwolf was recognized, the two Carmelites noted as they made their way through the squalid, hellish maze of the needle-thin paths, their ill-dug sewers crammed with disgusting refuse.
Stephen had to cover his mouth against the constant, pressing, infected smell. He felt frightened. A hideous presence hovered close, hurrying breathless to his right then to the left, only to slip behind him like some threatening assassin. The sweat started on his body. Stephen fought the mounting panic until suddenly, without being bidden, Cutwolf broke into song, his harsh voice intoning St Patrick's Breastplate, a powerful invocation for God's help.
â
Christ be with me
,
Christ behind me
,
Christ before me
,
Christ beneath me.
'
Anselm joined in. Stephen grew calm, and also took up the refrain:
â
Christ in danger
,
Christ in the mind of friend and stranger
. . .'
The darkness thinned. The terrors receded as they swung into a narrow street and stopped before the ill-lit St-Olaf-all-alone, the creaking sign with its rough depiction of the northern saint almost hidden by dirt and grime. They pushed open the door into the drinking chamber, a gloomy place lit by the occasional taper glow. The taverner, standing by the board, recognized Cutwolf and snapped at the two oafs guarding the makeshift staircase built into the corner to stand aside. These gallowbirds, who rejoiced in the names of âVole' and âFang', stepped back into the darkness. Cutwolf led the Carmelites up into the stygian, stinking blackness along a narrow gallery lit by a lantern horn perched on a stool, and into a shabby chamber. Bolingbrok crouched by a pile of sacking which served as a bed. On this sprawled a narrow-faced man; in the mean light of the tallow candle his pallid, unshaven skin shimmered with sweat and blood bubbled between chapped lips as he clutched his belly wound, a soggy, gruesome mess.
âThis is Basilisk,' Bolingbrok murmured. âThief, assassin, God knows what else. Stabbed over a cogged dice and now bound for judgement.' He leaned down. âAren't you, my bully boy?'
Basilisk could only gasp. â
Miserere!
'
âYes, yes,' Bolingbrok replied. âI keep my eyes and ears open for the likes of Basilisk. He needs a priest. He couldn't care now about this or that. He has told me one thing, even though he recognized me as a cast-off priest, a defrocked one. We have chattered, Basilisk and I, and he has confessed.'