The Mad Monk of Gidleigh

Read The Mad Monk of Gidleigh Online

Authors: Michael Jecks

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #blt

Annotation
The Fourteenth Knights Templar Mystery
As
the winter of 1323
descends upon a windswept chapel on the edge of Dartmoor, who could blame young priest, Father Mark, for seeking affection from the local miller’s daughter, Mary? But when Mary’s body, and the unborn child she was carrying, is found dead, Mark is the obvious suspect.
Called to investigate, Sir Baldwin de Furnshill and his friend Bailiff Simon Puttock soon begin to have their doubts. Could one of Mary’s many admirers have murdered her in a fit of jealousy? Or might it be someone even closer to home? By the time their search is over, life for Baldwin and Simon, and their families, will never be quiet the same again.
Michael Jecks
THE MAD MONK OF GIDLEIGH
2002
For all at Caterham & District Rifle Club, but especially my good friend Hugh Keitch.
Good shooting!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

About the Author

 

Michael Jecks gave up a career in the computer industry to concentrate on his writing. He is the founder of Medieval Murderers, has been Chairman of the Crime Writers’ Association, and helped create the Historical Writers’ Association. Keen to help new writers, for some years he organised the Debut Dagger competition, and is now organising the Aspara Writing festival for new writers at Evesham. He has judged many prizes, including the CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger. Michael is an international speaker on writing and for business. He lives with his wife, children and dogs in northern Dartmoor.
Michael can be contacted through his website: www.michaeljecks.co.uk.
He can be followed on twitter (@MichaelJecks) or on Facebook.com/Michael.Jecks.author.
His photos of Devon and locations for his books can be found at: Flickr.com/photos/Michael_Jecks.
Acknowledgements

 

There are too many people to whom I am indebted for me to mention them all, but I am especially grateful to Mike, a great countryman and local historian in his own right, for introducing me to his friend, the late Dickie Narracott, last hereditary Warden of the Bradford Leat. From them came the plot, and I am hugely grateful.
There is another person who must be thanked. In the week that my copy-editor asked where we could find a vocabulary of medieval curses and insults, along came an email with thirty-odd. Max, thanks!
Finally I have to thank those who have helped, advised, guided and slapped me down occasionally: first my wife Jane, then my agent Jane; Marion, Andi and Shona, the world’s three best commissioning editors (I would say that, wouldn’t I), and Joan Deitch, for copy editing with courage, conviction and courtesy.
Having said all that, of course, I have to point out that all errors are
their
fault and not mine.
Glossary

 

Benefit of Clergy
If a priest or monk was accused of a crime, he could claim the ‘benefit’ of being tried only by his peers in an ecclesiastical court. This meant that he was safe from penalties of life and limb – he couldn’t be hanged. To prove his eligibility, he had to recite, usually, the
pater noster
in Latin or a similar sequence that only a cleric would be expected to know.

 

Chevauchée
A small band of warriors on a raiding party; the name was given to the raid or campaign as well as the group itself.

 

Frankpledge
All the male inhabitants of a vill were automatically members of the Frankpledge. At the age of twelve they had to swear to keep the peace and to restrain anyone who did not. All members were answerable for any infringements and for damages caused by others. This system was imposed by the Franks (the Normans) after the invasion.

 

Grace
In the 1300s Grace could be said either before or after the meal, unlike today when it is invariably spoken before the meal.

 

Leyrwyte
A fine imposed on women for sexual incontinence.

 

Pater Noster
The ‘Our Father’ prayer; at the time of Baldwin and Simon, it was known only by priests and recited in Latin.

 

Petty Treason (
petit treason
)
The term given to simple treachery. It was the treason of a serf to his master, or even a wife to her husband, as opposed to high treason, which was treachery against the Crown.

 

Placebo
This was the evensong of the dead, known from the first word of the service.

 

Seven Interrogations
The seven questions asked by a priest to confirm that a dying person believed in God, the scriptures, Jesus, and that God would forgive those who sincerely regretted their sins and offences.

 

Seyney
Many monks lived in conditions of extreme hardship, and there were times when they had to be sent away for a short period to recover. At such times, they would be rested and given better food, including good cuts of meat. This recreational period was known as a ‘seyney’.

 

Stannaries
The Stannaries of Devon were any locations in which miners claimed to have found tin to mine. These sometimes lay beyond the bounds of Dartmoor, which at the time was a relatively small area.

 

Vill
A basic administrative area. It could mean a single farm, a hamlet, a small town, borough or city. Every part of England belonged to a vill. In later years, the vill or group of vills grew to become a ‘parish’, but this did not happen until the Tudor period.
Cast of Characters

 

Sir Baldwin de Furnshill
Once a Knight Templar, he has returned to his old family home in Devon where he is now Keeper of the King’s Peace. He’s known to be an astute investigator of violent crime.

 

Lady Jeanne
His wife, to whom he has been married for two years. Jeanne is a widow whose first husband abused her. She has now learned to enjoy married life.

 

Edgar
Baldwin’s servant and Steward.

 

Simon Puttock
Bailiff of the Stannaries, and Baldwin’s closest friend and trusted companion. Based at the administrative and legal centre of the Stannaries, Lydford Castle, Simon is responsible for keeping the peace wherever miners work under the Warden of the Stannaries, Abbot Robert Champeaux of Tavistock.

 

Margaret Puttock (Meg)
Simon’s wife, the daughter of a farmer, whom he married many years ago.

 

Edith
Simon and Meg’s daughter, some fifteen years old.

 

Hugh
Simon’s servant of many years.

 

Elias
A sad, widowed ploughman.

 

Sir Richard Prouse
Terribly wounded in a tournament in 1316, he is the impecunious owner of Gidleigh Castle until his death in 1322 aged thirty.

 

Mark
On the death of the previous incumbent, he was given the chapel at Gidleigh. The monk is not happy in the rural backwater.

 

Piers
An intelligent and hardworking peasant, now Reeve in the vill.

 

Henry
Piers’s young, somewhat feckless son.

 

 

Huward
The miller, living near to the castle.

 

Gilda
Tall, attractive wife to Huward.

 

Mary
Eldest daughter of Huward and Gilda, she is known for her kindness and beauty.

 

Flora
The younger of Huward’s two daughters, and perhaps not so attractive as Mary.

 

Ben
The miller’s spoiled and precocious son.

 

Osbert
A local freeman who adores Mary, but whose affection is not reciprocated.

 

Sir Ralph de Wonson
Master of Wonson Manor, he acquires Gidleigh on Sir Richard’s death.

 

Esmon
Son of Sir Ralph, he is an experienced warrior and successful raider.

 

Lady Annicia
Wife of Sir Ralph and mother to Esmon.

 

Surval
The hermit who tends to Chagford Bridge, maintaining the small chapel at which he prays for travellers and pleads for forgiveness.

 

Roger Scut
A cleric at the canonical church of Crediton, he makes notes during Baldwin’s inquests.

 

Thomas
One of the new Constables at Crediton; a surly but loyal servant of the Law.

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