It was as Master John predicted. I was but a few steps past the gate to Baliol College when Broad Street straightened enough that I could see past Catte Street into the curve of Holywell Street. Two hundred paces or so before me I saw three black-gowned students milling about before a shop. As I watched and walked they took counsel of each other, threw back their adolescent shoulders, and disappeared inside the shop.
When I first entered the stationer’s shop I did not understand the reason for their manly display. The interior was dark, as the establishment was on the south side of the street and the shutters opened to the north. The slanting morning sun did not penetrate to the shaded corners of the business.
I envisioned the proprietor as a young man, setting out on business on his own, but the man who waited on the youths was middle-aged, and carried himself with the stiffness of old age. There was another figure in a dark corner of the shop, arranging bundles of parchment and vellum on a shelf. When this person turned toward me Master John’s words and the behavior of the students became clear.
My eyes beheld a lovely young woman of perhaps twenty years. She looked up from her duties and smiled, and my heart was captured. My heart does not do battle well against attractive females who possess a fetching smile. Truth to tell, I had surrendered it several times before, but those who seized it in the past always found some way of returning it, wounded and scarred, to me.
The girl turned and addressed me, asking might she be of service. Two of the students turned to her, hoping, I think, that she spoke to them, then watched, subdued, as she approached me.
The girl was of average height — perhaps on the tall side of average — and slender. Her neck was long and flawlessly white. Fair hair, not quite blonde, framed her face from under a turned-back hood. Her eyes were brown, and seemed to dance with laughter, though what she found amusing I could not tell. I hoped ’twas not me.
I was smitten. As I have written, this was not a new experience for me. I was become accustomed to the blows.
She wore a long cotehardie of deepest red, which swayed delightfully as she left the corner where she had been employed and walked toward me. The bodice of this garment was cut fashionably low, and thus gave more than a hint of an ample bosom, made more fetching by the belt she wore about a slender waist.
It is customary at this point in describing a beautiful woman to make some point regarding her flawless face and complexion. In all truth I cannot do so, for the girl’s nose was somewhat over-large — although, unlike my own, it pointed out straight and true, whereas my own has a decided turn to the right. And an unfortunate pimple marred her left cheek.
But when she smiled these flaws faded. The girl possessed straight teeth, and these shown through red lips in a smile which seemed to bring light to the dim recesses of the shop.
The girl stopped before me and waited until I remembered that I had been addressed and had made no answer. Her large eyes remained fixed on mine, and the corners of her eyes crinkled to duplicate the laugh lines creasing the corners of her mouth. I believe she knew her effect on men, and enjoyed their bewilderment.
“Parchment…uh…I would like some parchment. And a pot of ink,” I stammered.
The girl turned to the shelf where I had first seen her. “How much?”
I had intended to purchase three gatherings, but had I done so I would not need to visit Oxford to replenish my supply for many months. I thought quickly — which surprises me even now when I think back on it, for beautiful women usually leave me dazed — and replied, “One gathering.”
The girl began to count, leafing through the sheets with nimble fingers. She spoke and counted at the same time. I was amazed. I could not do it, nor could any other, I think.
“You do not appear a copyist,” she remarked.
I suppose I did not. I wore no robe or gown, but chauces cut tight to show a good leg, and a short cotehardie. My hood ended in a liripipe of fashionable length, which I had wrapped around my head, as young men now do.
“Indeed, you observe correctly. I do not earn my bread with goose quill in hand.”
“I have not seen you here before,” the girl continued.
“I am from Bampton.”
This information the girl received blankly. I think she had not heard of the place, being new in Oxford.
“’Tis a short way to the west, fifteen or so miles. Most of the town is in the manor of Lord Gilbert Talbot. I am his bailiff, and also a surgeon.”
“A surgeon?” The girl looked toward her father as she spoke.
“Aye.”
“My father suffers much. A complaint physicians cannot cure. Perhaps you might have a treatment…?”
I turned to view the stationer. He stood erect and tall and seemed well enough to me. He and the young scholar had apparently agreed on the price of the book, and coins were exchanged as I watched.
The three students cast wistful glances toward the girl, then passed from the dim shop to the sun-bright street. They seemed morose. I believe my appearance interfered with their goal, which was not, I think, literary. Well, the day was bright with spring, the term was near done, and they were young. They would soon forget their disappointment.
The girl spoke as the students reached the door. “Father, this is…uh…” She turned helplessly to me.
“I am Hugh de Singleton,” I bowed.
“A surgeon,” the girl added quickly. “Perhaps he might help you.”
“I am done with physicians,” the stationer snorted, and the smile faded from his lips. “My money is gone; the ailment remains.”
The girl looked helplessly to me. “He has suffered near a year,” she explained.
“I am not a physician. I make no judgments of unbalanced humors, nor can I diagnose a man’s illness with a sniff of his piss.”
The young woman blushed, but I wished to make clear that some things I could not do. And furthermore, saw no need for another to do them, either.
“’Tis not a complaint suited to a surgeon,” the stationer said. “The best physicians in Cambridge and Oxford cannot help me.”
“The best?”
“Aye, must be…they charged enough.”
I was now curious of the man’s disorder, and, I admit, eager to see if I might succeed where some arrogant physician had failed. I know, not all physicians are arrogant, but most are.
“What is the malady which besets you?” I asked. “I will tell you plainly if I can cure it or not.”
The man peered at his daughter, sighed with exasperation, then spoke. “’Tis a fistula…just there.” He reached an arm stiffly behind his back and poked gently about his ribs, just above the kidneys.
“The physicians, they have treated it with salves and egg albumin?” I guessed.
“Aye. But ’tis no better.”
“This fistula — how did it first appear?”
“Near a year ago. I fell from a ladder…struck my back. There was a stick laying on the ground where I fell, a bit of broken plank. A sharp end drove into my back. ’Twas a nasty wound, and will not heal no matter what is applied.”
“Nor will it,” I told him.
“Never?” The girl gasped.
“Not so long as poultices and salves be the remedy.”
“Is there another? The stationed asked.
“Aye.”
“You are sure of this?”
“More so than of ointments.”
“What is it you would do?” the girl asked.
“The fistula oozes blood and pus, does it not?”
“Aye,” the sufferer agreed.
“At its root there will be an abscess. This must be removed. No salve can do so.”
“What must be done?” the stationer was now interested, but hesitantly so.
“The putrid flesh must be excised.”
“You mean, cut away?” He frowned.