The Devil's Disciples (31 page)

Read The Devil's Disciples Online

Authors: Susanna Gregory

Tags: #Fiction, #General

‘What is missing?’ he asked of Langelee, as he sat on the bench next to Cynric.

‘That guide to witchery you found in Carton’s room,’ replied the Master. ‘He had been planning to burn it, along with other
heretical texts – the ones you put in the College library after his death.’

‘Those were all religious or philosophical books that have been on the curriculum for decades,’ explained Bartholomew, seeing
Mildenale’s eyes begin to widen in horror. ‘Such as Guibert of Nogent’s
De Sanctis
.’

‘I would never use Guibert in
my
lectures,’ said Mildenale in distaste. ‘He was a Benedictine, for a start.
And
he hailed from Nogent.’ He pursed his lips disapprovingly.

Bartholomew had never understood why a scholar’s ideas should be dismissed because of the Order to which he belonged, or because
he came from a different country. ‘Even if you disapprove of his theology, you must admire the precision of his grammar,’
he told the friar reproachfully.

Mildenale thought about it. ‘He does use longer sentences than anyone else,’ he conceded eventually. ‘However, I am disappointed
to learn Carton included him among his collection of heretical texts. I was under the impression he had gathered some
really
devilish works – such as this manual for witches.’

‘He considered anything written by non-Franciscans
anathema,’ said Langelee. ‘Except, for some unaccountable reason, books by Greeks on law. Still, I suppose we all have our
foibles.’

Mildenale was crestfallen. ‘This is a blow! I was hoping he had gathered a chest full of heresy, so we could have a decent
pyre in the Market Square – and Guibert, for all his flaws, does not deserve the flames. Unfortunately, now this manual on
sorcery has disappeared, I cannot even set fire to that.’ He clasped his hands together, and his eyes drifted heavenwards
as his lips began to move in prayer, presumably asking to be supplied with something suitably flammable.

‘I do not have it,’ objected Cynric, when the physician looked at him. ‘I handed it back this morning, just as you ordered,
although that was a mistake. It would not be missing, if I still had it.’

‘He is telling the truth,’ said Langelee, seeing Bartholomew’s sceptical expression. ‘He gave it to me in person.’

‘It is no great loss,’ said Cynric, refilling the jug and prudently offering Agatha the first mouthful. Her mouth was evidently
larger than he imagined, because when she handed it back he was obliged to make another trip to the barrel. ‘It contained
new snippets but most of it was basic general knowledge.’

Langelee took the jug from him. ‘It is a pity it has gone missing now, because it might have been a useful source of information
for those of us who are not intimately acquainted with witches and their habits. For example, telling us what the Sorcerer
might do on Trinity Eve. Mother Valeria was going on about his predicted début when I went to purchase a charm the other day.’

‘You did
what
?’ cried Mildenale in horror, while even Bartholomew was taken aback.

Langelee shrugged, clearly thinking the friar was overreacting. ‘I wanted a spell that would make Refham relent over selling
us his mother’s shops. But it transpired to be rather pricey, and required me to break into his house at night and bury a
dead rat under his hearth. I decided not to bother.’

‘I would have dealt with the dead rat,’ said Cynric helpfully.

‘Actually, it was the cost that put me off,’ confided Langelee. ‘I could have managed the rat with no trouble myself, although
I appreciate your offer.’

Bartholomew found himself exchanging a shocked look with Mildenale, although the Franciscan’s disquiet derived from the fact
that Langelee was willing to resort to magic; the physician was uneasy with the fact that the Master had just confessed to
being a competent burglar.

‘Are you sure this guide has not found its way back to you, Cynric?’ asked Langelee, after a short interval during which he
and the book-bearer speculated on the best way to gain access to Refham’s hearth. Agatha joined in, adding that she had already
purchased such a charm on the College’s behalf, although hers was from Eyton, who was considerably cheaper, and the rat under
the hearth was replaced by chanting three
Pater Nosters
beneath the nearest churchyard elm.

‘I wish it had,’ said Cynric. ‘Now it might be in the hands of someone dangerous.’

Mildenale gaped at him. ‘I would say that
anyone
who takes an interest in such tomes is dangerous.’

‘That is not true, because
I
am interested in them,’ said Cynric guilelessly. ‘And I cannot imagine who else in
College might want the guide, especially now the students have gone. They are curious about forbidden texts, but the Fellows
are not – or they have read them all already.’

‘The porters are less vigilant now the place is virtually empty,’ said Langelee. ‘So someone must have come in from outside
and taken it.’

‘How would a stranger know where to look?’ asked Bartholomew. ‘You kept it on the top shelf in your chambers, which is not
the most obvious place to search for valuables.’

Langelee looked sheepish. ‘Actually, it was in the garden. Cynric handed it to me when I was supervising the digging of the
new latrines. I set it down and forgot to bring it in when I came back.’

‘So the labourers have it,’ said Mildenale, looking as though he was ready to go and demand it back there and then. His expression
became angry. ‘Have you interrogated them?’

‘I
questioned
them,’ replied Langelee. ‘But none can read, and I doubt they are the—’

‘Books are valuable,’ snapped Mildenale. ‘They do not need to be able to read in order to sell one.’

Langelee regarded him coolly, not liking his tone. ‘I told them it was a dangerous text on witchery, and that anyone hawking
it was likely to be cursed. I know how to intimidate labourers, and I am certain none of them is the thief, so please do not
accuse them. It is not easy to get men to work in this heat, and I shall be furious if they walk out on us.’

Mildenale sniffed disapprovingly, and turned to another topic. ‘The Church does not sanction the use of charms and curses,
and for you to visit a witch in order to procure one—’

‘I did not procure one,’ argued Langelee pedantically. ‘I told you – it was too expensive.’

‘And do not rail at
me
, either,’ growled Agatha, when the Franciscan inadvertently glanced in her direction. She seemed hotter and crosser than
ever, and the ale had done nothing to cool her temper. Bartholomew thought she looked dangerous, and began to edge towards
the door. ‘My beliefs are my own business, and I do not allow mere priests to tamper with them.’

‘But it is my duty to tamper,’ declared Mildenale indignantly. ‘I am supposed to save people from the burning fires of Hell.’

Agatha glared at the sun, then at the friar. ‘So, it is your fault we are all roasting alive down here, is it? Your duty is
to save us from the fires of Hell, but the fires of Hell are
here
, spoiling meat and ale.’

‘That is not what I—’ began Mildenale.

‘This vile weather has gone on quite long enough,’ she growled, rising to her feet. ‘I should have known the Church was responsible.
You lot preach and pray, but none of you know what you are talking about. Well, let me tell
you
, something,
Mildenalus Sanctus
. If I ever have reason to—’

Bartholomew reached the door and shot through it. Cynric and Langelee were close behind him, neither willing to linger when
Agatha was on the warpath. Mildenale was left alone with her.

‘You know, boy,’ whispered Cynric, ‘there are times when I wonder whether
she
is the Sorcerer.’

Once Bartholomew had escaped from the kitchens, he went to look at the experiment he had been running in his storeroom. He
was pleasantly surprised to find it had worked, and he was left with two piles of powder.
He had managed to separate the compounds, and now all he had to do was identify them. Ignoring Deynman’s advice, which entailed
mixing them with fish-giblet soup and feeding it to William, he performed a number of tests. Eventually, he sat back, knowing
he had his answer.

‘What Carton found in Thomas’s room was not poison,’ he told Deynman. The librarian was not particularly interested in what
Bartholomew was doing, but he was lonely and bored without the students, and craved company. With Michael still at St Mary
the Great, and the other Fellows in the conclave, where mere librarians were not permitted to tread, the physician was the
only choice left.

‘So your sedative was responsible for Thomas’s death, after all,’ said Deynman, rather baldly. ‘Carton was hoping this powder
would be the culprit, so you would be exonerated. He told me he disliked the way Father William keeps taunting you about it.’

‘Did I hear my name?’ came a booming voice from the doorway. Bartholomew sighed. He did not have the energy for a verbal spat
with William.

‘Doctor Bartholomew has just learned that it was definitely him who killed Thomas,’ said Deynman, ever helpful. It was not
the way the physician would have summarised his findings, but he supposed it was accurate enough.

‘The powder Carton found was a remedy against quinsy,’ Bartholomew elaborated. ‘I thought as much when he handed it to me.’

‘Thomas did worry about quinsy,’ said William. ‘He told me so himself, after Goldynham died of it. Well, you had better make
your peace with God, Matthew. It cannot be easy, having a man’s death on your
conscience. And Thomas was a fellow prepared to fight against the Sorcerer, too, unlike most of the town. Either they are
actively supporting him, or they are standing well back to see what will happen when he makes his play for power. There are
not many true Soldiers of God left.’

‘There are plenty,’ objected Deynman. ‘Isnard, Eyton and even Yolande de Blaston have pledged to side with the Church. And
there are lots of scholars, too. In fact, the only College that has
not
condemned the Sorcerer is Bene’t – and that is only because its Fellows are afraid of their porters.’

‘Younge and his friends are members of the All Saints coven,’ said William, nodding. ‘But they will learn they have chosen
the wrong side when Satan devours them all on Saturday night.’

‘I wonder if he will devour those who use bits of cheese as bookmarks, too,’ mused Deynman pointedly. ‘I imagine so, because
I cannot think of a worse crime for a scholar to commit.’

They began to bicker, and Bartholomew was grateful when Cynric came with a summons from a patient, although his relief evaporated
when he learned it was Dickon Tulyet who needed his services. Few encounters with the Sheriff ’s hellion son were pleasant.

Dickon – large enough to verge on the fat and with eyes that were remarkably calculating for a boy his age – had cut himself
while attempting to relieve another child of a toy. When Bartholomew arrived, he was screaming at the top of his lungs, but
the physician was sure frustration at the failed theft was the cause of the racket, not pain from the relatively minor wound.
Dickon’s parents fussed and cooed, showering him with
sweetmeats and other rich treats that were likely to make him sick. With a resigned sigh, Bartholomew took salve and bandages,
and prepared to do battle.

‘I am sorry he bit you, Matt,’ said Tulyet, for at least the fourth time, as the physician took his leave. ‘But the kick was
not his fault. I should have held him more tightly, but I was afraid of hurting him.’

Bartholomew rubbed his eyes, not liking the way he was always tempted to be rougher than usual when he was obliged to deal
with Dickon. It was unworthy of him as a physician, and as a man. However, it was hard to feel too sorry when his hand burned
from its encounter with Dickon’s sharp teeth, and when his ribs ached from the flailing boots. The next time, he decided,
he would ask Michael to sit on the brat. That would keep him under control.

‘You are right to buy Sewale Cottage,’ he said, flexing his fingers carefully. The wound hurt. ‘It will not be many more years
before living with him becomes too perilous for you.’

‘What do you mean?’ cried Tulyet, stung. ‘He is a good boy. You cannot blame him for taking exception to painful cures. Of
course he will fight – I have trained him to look after himself.’

Bartholomew nodded a goodnight, refusing the offer of wine. Dickon had a habit of joining his father in his office, and the
physician did not want a resumption of hostilities that night. He was eager to go home and sleep, but Cynric was waiting outside,
to say Mother Valeria wanted to see him.

‘Can it not wait until morning?’ he asked weakly. The skirmish with Dickon had drained him, and all he wanted was to lie down.

‘She said not,’ replied Cynric disapprovingly. ‘However, if you decide not to go, please do not ask me to tell her you are
not coming. I do not want to be turned into a toad.’

Wearily, Bartholomew trudged up the hill. Cynric accompanied him part of the way, then disappeared into the Lilypot tavern.
Bartholomew had not been alone for more than a moment when he saw a shadow – one that was exceptionally large and that loitered
near Sewale Cottage. When a second shadow joined it, Bartholomew was sure they were the giant and Beard. Keeping to the darker
side of the street, he crept towards them, intending to do what Cynric had done, and watch to see what they were doing.

But when he reached the spot, they had gone. He pressed his ear to the door, but there was no sound from within and he was
sure they had not broken in a second time. He looked down one or two alleys, but the two men had disappeared into the darkness
of the sultry summer night, almost as though they had never been there at all.

Chapter 8

It was late by the time Bartholomew reached Mother Valeria’s little house, but tallow candles burned in gourds outside, lighting
the path through the nettles. As he trudged along the well-worn track, he met two people walking in the opposite direction.
He could not see their faces, but both greeted him by name as they passed. One held an amulet, and he supposed the witch was
still open for business. He tapped on the door frame and battled his way through the leather hanging.

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