Read The Paths of the Air Online
Authors: Alys Clare
âThere was in fact little left of the guest wing to burn, but the fire did not spread to neighbouring buildings,' Thibault corrected. âWhy, I do not know.' He spoke somewhat stiffly. âAll I can tell you is what happened.'
âI am sorry,' Josse said instantly. âI do not doubt your word but I've never known a fire behave like that.'
âNeither have I,' Thibault agreed. He appeared mollified by Josse's apology. Then, thoughtfully, he added, âHave you ever seen a fire-eater at the fair? That's what it was like, as if someone had lit their outward breath and, as soon as it had all been consumed, the fire went out.'
âThen it was some sort of a trick?' Josse asked.
Thibault shrugged. âI do not know.' He sighed deeply. âIt took the life of one of my brethren, whatever it was.'
Josse met the Abbess's eyes. He was torn between the need to ask further vital questions and the desire to give Thibault a few moments to mourn the dead monk. Presently the Abbess gave a very small nod; taking this as encouragement, Josse said, âThibault, you say that Brother Jeremiah was not of your original company but that you encountered him on your way up from the coast?'
âThat is correct,' Thibault said wearily. âIt was just after Robertsbridge. Brother Jeremiah was, as I said, bound for Clerkenwell and fell into step with Brother Otto and me. He had never left his native land â he was only a young man â and he was eager to hear our tales of Outremer and our long journey over land and sea. The good Lord filled his heart with zeal and after only a day or so he had made up his mind to ask permission to go on crusade himself.' He sighed again. âThat will not now come to pass,' he said sadly.
Josse knew what he must ask next. âThibault,' he began, âyou said that since Brother Jeremiah was sleeping in the bed closest to the door, it was he whom the murderer came to first. Do you think that is the only reason why he attacked Brother Jeremiah? Or do you think he deliberately targeted the poor young man?'
Slowly Thibault shook his head. âI have asked myself that same question over and over again,' he muttered. âIf the assailant wished to kill Jeremiah â and I cannot for the life of me see why â then it would not have been difficult to discover which bed he slept in. As I told you, we had already spent one night at the priory and anyone could have looked in and seen which bed each of us occupied. We go early to our rest and we sleep deeply. Not one of us would have been aware of someone spying.'
Josse nodded. âThank you, Thibault. So, Brother Jeremiah could very easily have been the intended victim and, as Canon Mark suggested, the fire was started in an attempt to hide the fact that he had already been murdered. But
why
should anyone want to kill him?'
âHe was eager, friendly, devout and, I believe, hard-working,' Thibault affirmed. âI cannot imagine that in his young life he had done any harm to anyone.' His face crumpled. âI grieve for him,' he whispered. âGod rest his soul.'
âAmen,' said the Abbess.
Josse was looking down at the sleeping Brother Otto. He could hear the wheeze and rattle of air in the monk's throat and chest.
He sings bass baritone
, Thibault had said. Would he ever sing again?
âHe won't be ready to speak to you yet awhile,' Thibault said, mistaking the reason for Josse's interest. âAnd he won't be able to tell you any more. He did not wake up until the flames started to roar.'
Josse put a hand on Thibault's shoulder; one of his few undamaged areas of flesh. âI am sorry,' he said sincerely. âIt must have been unspeakable.'
Thibault nodded. âIt was.'
The Abbess was moving towards the gap in the curtains. âWe have disturbed you for long enough,' she said. âThank you, Thibault, for going through your terrible experience again. It cannot have been easy.'
âNo, my lady, but it is done now.' Thibault's expression seemed to lighten and for a moment he was almost smiling. âIt's strange, but I feel better.'
âI will make sure that Gervase de Gifford hears your story,' Josse said. âWe will do whatever we can to catch Brother Jeremiah's killer; that I promise you.'
Thibault eyed him. âIt won't bring him back,' he said quietly.
There was really no answer to that. With a brief bow, Josse left the recess and the Abbess followed him.
He walked beside her to her room. She seemed deep in thought and it was with reluctance that he broke into her reverie.
âMy lady,' he said tentatively, âThibault said he did not see how the assailant could have slain Brother Jeremiah
inside
the guest room and set the fire
outside
at the same time, butâ'
âThere must have been two of them,' she interrupted calmly.
âAye, that was what I was about to say. Who were they? Why did they want poor Jeremiah to die?'
âIt has been occupying me since we knew the poor young man had been so cruelly killed,' she said. âHe seems to have lived a short and fairly limited life. What can he possibly have done to earn such retribution?'
âWe'll have to find out more about him,' Josse said glumly; he did not relish the prospect. âNo doubt Thibault will be able to tell us where he was based and, perhaps, what business was taking him to Clerkenwell. We shall have to notify his brethren of his death.'
âWe shall,' she repeated dully.
He suddenly realized how tired he was. âI am going to bed,' he announced. âMy head is full of shadows and vague shapes that I feel I ought to recognize yet cannot. I will see more clearly after a good night's sleep.'
She turned to him and he saw that she looked as weary as he felt. âSleep well, Sir Josse,' she said. âI shall try to do likewise.'
Josse slept deeply for many hours. But then he fell into a vivid and alarming dream in which he and Abbess Helewise rode on a huge white horse along a narrow dusty track, following two shadowy figures. One of them was dressed in the black habit of a Knight Hospitaller; the other wore a flowing brown robe and carried a leather satchel. There was a great sense of urgency, for the figures kept disappearing in mist and sometimes when he caught sight of them there was only one of them. The Abbess was urging him on, and he dug in his heels so that the horse leapt forward with such a violent lurch that he was all but unseated and had to fling his arms around her waist. She felt slim as a reed in his arms and then she was no longer the Abbess but Joanna, naked, twisting round with a smile on her face as she pressed her flesh against his and he began kissing her, caressing her, untilâ
Beside him in the lay brothers' sleeping quarters somebody began to snore.
And Josse, flinging himself over onto his back, clutched the covers around him against the cold of the night and wondered how long it was until morning.
He must have dozed and when he woke again, Brother Augustus was stirring a pot of porridge over the hearth and whistling happily. Josse too felt happy; not as cheerful as Augustus perhaps, but with the quiet satisfaction of knowing his next step. Hurriedly he went to wash as much of himself as the cold morning and the even colder water allowed â which amounted to his hands, face and neck â and he joined Gussie, Brother Saul and old Brother Firmin for breakfast. Then he took his leave of them and hurried to suggest to the Abbess that they ask Thibault about the runaway monk whom they had come so far to find.
The improvement in Thibault's condition appeared to be continuing. Helewise thought, as she and Josse entered the recess, that his face had lost its deathly pallor and his eyes were brighter.
âThibault,' she began, âwhen you came here before you said you were searching for a runaway monk from your Order; an Englishman. When I asked you to describe him or to tell us his name, you said you did not know these things. I realize,' she added softly, âthat you must have had very good reasons for your reticence, but I must confess I did not believe you; for how would it be possible for you to hunt for someone if you didn't know what he looked like? And surely you must know his name as well as you know your own, for he was of your Order and, I presume, served with you in Outremer.' She paused, watching Thibault's face, from which he had carefully removed all expression. âI appreciate that those of us in holy orders must obey our superiors,' she went on, âand I do not expect you to reveal information that you have been commanded to keep secret. However, the situation has changed now. A monk has been murdered and you and Brother Otto were badly burned. Will you not share your burden with us, Thibault? Can we not help you carry it for a while?'
Thibault did not answer for some time but stared silently into her eyes. She read yearning in his, as if he longed to confide but knew that he could not. Eventually he said, âI appreciate the offer. There is little that I may tell you of
why
we hunt our runaway. However . . .' He paused, as if testing his decision. âHowever, I feel that I may at least tell you something of the man's life in Outremer.'
She shot a glance at Josse, to discover that he was unsuccessfully suppressing the same excitement that she felt rise up in herself. She said calmly, âVery well, Thibault; if you are prepared to do so, then Sir Josse and I are listening.'
Thibault glanced at Brother Otto in the next bed. Otto had his eyes open but Helewise did not think he was aware of them. He looked vacant and she suspected that he was still being dosed with the infirmarer's sedative and analgesic mixture.
Then Thibault began to speak. âThe English monk was not a Hospitaller when he arrived in Acre. He came out to Outremer in a company of twenty-five knights and their attendants, all in the service of an English lord who was going to the support of his kinsman in Antioch. The kinsman was a wealthy landowner but his wife had given him only daughters and, hard pressed, he had sent home to England for help in defending his lands. The Englishman fought for his lord at the Battle of Hattin, and in the aftermath of the defeat his master retreated to his kinsman's home in Antioch to lick his small wounds and recover his strength. According to the Englishman, his master had not enjoyed his experience of fighting and was not keen to repeat it. He had the excuse that his kinsman needed his and his knights' help in defending his property, which was after all why the lord had come out to Outremer in the first place. Our Englishman, however, felt differently. He made his way from Antioch to Crac des Chevaliers where, in the early autumn of 1187, he was admitted to the Order of the Knights of the Hospital. He was strong and blessed with a fit and healthy body, and worked hard, training his less experienced brethren in the arts of war.'
âI thought you said he was young?' Josse asked. âHow was he able to teach such skills?'
Thibault smiled. âYoung he might have been â he was eighteen or nineteen when first I met him â but in the year he had spent in Outremer he saw a great deal of action. Moreover, he had received the training that prepares a man for the life of a knight. There was much he had to teach and I observed that once the monks had overcome their disinclination to be drilled by a younger man, they learned to appreciate him. He was modest and he did not permit the role to inflate his sense of self-regard.' For a moment Thibault stared into the distance. âThen,' he resumed, âKing Richard arrived and we began the next major onslaught against the enemy.'
âYou were in the fighting?' Helewise asked.
âYes, my lady. I was in the army that took back the great fortress and port of Acre from the infidel and the English monk was of my company. We rode together on the march from Acre to Jaffa and we fought at the Battle of Arsuf, where the Hospitallers formed the rear guard; we and the Templars took it in turns to be the advance guard and that day it was their turn. Despite this, it was our Grand Master himself who led the charge.' His face glowing, he added quietly, âThe English monk and I rode side by side.'
Helewise, glancing at Josse, noticed that his face too was alight with excitement. Men, she thought.
âAs we routed the last attacking Saracens, the English monk encountered an old friend. It was his former lord and he had been stricken with dysentery. He was so unwell that he could not sit his horse and the Englishman was ordered to take him back through the lines to where he could be treated. But the lord showed no sign of a speedy recovery and it was decided that he should go back to Acre and thence to his kinsman's estate in Antioch. Our army was indebted to him; he had supplied a strong force of knights and men-at-arms, most of whom remained to fight with us, and in recognition of this the Hospitallers were ordered to provide an escort to see him safely home. The English monk was selected to care for his lord, and although the task was not to his taste and he would have preferred to remain with the army, he had to do as he was told.'
âWas that the last time that you saw him?' Helewise asked.
âNo, my lady. When the fighting was over and King Richard set sail from Acre after the Peace of Ramla, we returned to Crac des Chevaliers and quite soon after that I was posted to Margat. The English monk turned up there one day late in 1192. He had, apparently, been there on and off for the past year, alternating his duties with nursing his lord back to health in Antioch. By December his lord was well enough to go home to England and our monk, not wanting to go with him, came back to us.' Thibault frowned. âHe was different,' he said. âSomething deep within him had changed. He was still dutiful and conscientious; he took on any duty that was laid upon him, however arduous, without complaint and he would carry out the task to the best of his ability. But it seemed to me that his heart was no longer in it.'
âAnd it was at this time that he was selected for the mission in the desert?' Josse asked. âThe prisoner exchange that went so wrong?'
âYes,' Thibault replied. âI selected him to be part of the escort because I thought that the experience would be something out of the ordinary. Something with a dash of excitement, which might help him draw the sundered parts of himself back together again.' He looked at Helewise. âMy intention was good,' he said quietly. âBut it ended, as you know, in disaster.'