after all, it is here that the children are buried. Well, we shall see, we shall see.”
Such a good man, her first friend in England and she had not thanked him. “My lord, I owe you my life. If it hadn’t been for your gift of the dog, bless him…Did you see what was done to him?”
“I saw.” Prior Geoffrey shook his head, then smiled a little. “I ordered his remnants gathered and given to Hugh, whom Brother Gilbert suspects of secretly burying his hounds in the priory graveyard when no one is by. The Safeguard may well lie with human beings who are less faithful.”
It had been a small grief among all the rest but a grief nevertheless; Adelia was comforted.
“However,” the prior went on, “as you and I know, you also owe your life to someone with more right to it, and, in part, I am here for him.”
But her mind had reverted to the nun.
“I won’t have it, Prior,” she said.
Prior Geoffrey’s mouth had been shaping words that obviously pleased him; now it stopped, open. He blinked. “A somewhat hasty decision, Adelia.”
“People must know what was done. She must be brought to trial, even if she is adjudged too mad for sentence. For the children’s sake, for Simon’s, for mine; I found their lair and was near killed for it. I will have justice-and it must be seen to be done.” Not from blood-lust, nor even revenge, but because, without a completion, the nightmares of too many people would be left open-ended.
Then something the prior had said caught up with her. “I beg your pardon, my lord?”
Prior Geoffrey sighed and began again. “Before he was forced to return to the assize-the king has arrived, you know-he approached me. For lack of anyone else, he seems to regard me as in loco parentis…”
“The king?” Adelia wasn’t keeping up.
The prior sighed once more. “Sir Rowley Picot. Sir Rowley has asked me to approach you with a request-indeed, his manner suggested it to be a foregone conclusion-for your hand in marriage.”
It was all one with this extraordinary day. She had gone down into the pit and been raised from it. A man had been torn to death. Next door was a murderess. She had lost her virginity, gloriously lost it, and the man who had taken it now reverted to etiquette, using the good offices of a surrogate father to request her hand.
“I should add,” Prior Geoffrey said, “that the proposal is made at some cost. At the assize, the king offered Sir Rowley the bishopric of Saint Albans, and with my own ears I heard Picot reject the position on the grounds that he wished to remain free to marry.”
“King Henry was not pleased,” the prior went on. “He has a particular wish to appoint our good tax collector to the see of Saint Albans, nor is he used to being thwarted. But Sir Rowley was not to be moved.”
Now it was Adelia’s mouth that remained paused over the answer she had known she must make, unable to make it.
With the rush of love came fear that she would accept because she so very much wanted to, because this morning Rowley had soothed away the mental damage done and purified it. Which, of course, was the danger in itself.
Prior Geoffrey said, “He may have disappointed King Henry, but he charges me to tell you that he is still well regarded and marked for high position so that there can be no disadvantage to you by the match.” When Adelia still didn’t answer, he went on: “Indeed, I have to say I would be content to see you bound to him.”
“Adelia, my dear.” Prior Geoffrey took her hand. “The man deserves an answer.”
He did. She gave it.
The door opened and Brother Gilbert stood on the threshold, rendering the scene before him-his superior in the company of two women in a bedroom-into something naughty. “The lords are assembled, Prior.”
“Then we must attend them.” The prior raised Adelia’s hand and kissed it, but it was his wink at Gyltha-who winked back-that was naughty.
THE CONVOKED LORDS were met in the monastery’s refectory rather than its church so that the canons were free to keep the hours of vigil where and when they always did; nor, having taken supper and it being some hours until breakfast, need they disturb the convocation at its business.
They called it a convocation, but it was, in effect, a trial.
The accused was Vesuvia Adelia Rachel Ortese Aguilar, a foreigner, who, according to an angry Prioress Joan called from her bed, had made an unwarranted, obscene,
Adelia stood in the middle of the hall with the imps that studded the beams of its hammer roof grinning down at her. Its long table with its benches had been pushed to one side against a wall, so that the line of chairs at the far end in which the judges sat was off-center, skewing the room’s otherwise lovely proportions for her and giving another scrape to nerves already quivering from disbelief, anger, and, it had to be said, plain fear.
For facing her were three of the several justices in eyre who had come to Cambridge for its assize-the Bishops of Norwich and Lincoln, and the Abbot of Ely. They represented England’s legal authority. They could close their jeweled fists and crush Adelia like a pomander. Also, they were cross at being summoned from a sleep they deserved after the long day’s hearings at the assize, at traveling from the castle to Saint Augustine’s in darkness and pouring rain-and at her. She could feel hostility emanating from them strong enough to blow the floor’s rushes down its length and into a pile at her feet.
Most hostile of all was an Archdeacon of Canterbury, not a judge but someone who regarded himself, and, apparently, was regarded by the others, as a mouthpiece for the late, sainted Thomas a Becket and seemed to think that any attack on a member of the Church-such as Adelia’s denunciation of Veronica, sister of Saint Radegund-was comparable to Henry II’s knights spilling Becket’s brains on his cathedral floor.
That they were all churchmen had taken Prior Geoffrey aback. “My lords, I’d hoped that some lords temporal might also attend.”
They silenced him; they were, after all, his spiritual superiors. “It is purely a Church matter.”
With them was a young man in nonclerical dress, slightly amused by the whole proceeding and using a portable writing desk to make notes of it on a parchment. Adelia knew his name only because one of the others addressed him by it-Hubert Walter.
Behind their chairs were ranged a selection of assize attendants, two clerks, one of them asleep where he stood, a man-at-arms who’d forgotten to take off his nightcap before putting on his helmet, and two bailiffs with manacles at their belt, each carrying a mace.
Adelia stood apart and alone, though for a while Mansur had stood beside her.
Mansur had been banished from the room.
Prior Geoffrey was standing to one side of the line of chairs with Sheriff Baldwin-Brother Gilbert behind them both.
He had done his best, bless him; the dreadful story had been told, Adelia’s and Simon’s part in it explained, their discoveries and Simon’s death recounted, the evidence delivered of the prior’s own eyes as to what lay beneath Wandlebury Hill-and he had outlined the charge against Sister Veronica.
He had carefully mentioned neither Adelia’s examination of the children’s bodies nor her qualification for it-a neglect for which she thanked God; she was in enough trouble, she knew, without facing an accusation of witchcraft.
Hugh the hunter had been called into the refectory with his frank-pledges, the men who, under England’s legal system, answered for his honesty. He’d stood with his hat on his heart to state that, looking down the shaft, he had seen a bloody, naked figure that he recognized as Sir Joscelin of Grantchester. That he had later descended into the tunnels. That he had examined the flint knife. That he had recognized the dog collar attached to the chain in the womblike chamber…
“’Twas Sir Joscelin’s, my lords. I’d seen it a dozen times on his own hound in former days-had his seal embossed in its leather, so it did.”
The dog collar was produced, the seal examined.
No doubt that Sir Joscelin of Grantchester had killed the children-the judges had been appalled.
As for Sister Veronica…
There was no direct evidence against her, because Ulf was not allowed to give it.
“How old is the child, Prior? He may not be accorded frankpledge until he is twelve.”
“Nine, my lord, but a percipient and honest boy.”
“Of what degree?”
“He is free, my lords, not a villein. He works for his grandmother and sells eels.”
At this point, there was an interjection from Brother Gilbert, who whispered treacherously into the ear of the archdeacon with every sign of satisfaction.
Ah, the grandmother was not married, never had been, possibly the progenitor of illegitimate children. The boy was likely a bastard, then, of no degree whatsoever: “The law does not recognize him.”
So Ulf, like Mansur, was banished to the kitchen that lay behind the refectory, with Gyltha’s hand over his mouth to stop him from shouting out, both of them listening on the other side of the open hatch from which a smell of bacon and broth came to mingle with that of the rich, rain-dampened ermine lining the judges’ cloaks, while Rabbi Gotsce, also in the kitchen, translated into English for them proceedings that were being held in Latin.
The court had been scandalized by his very presence.