âThere you are, then,' he snapped ungraciously. âJust be careful how you handle them, that's all I can say. They're over a century and a half old, and fragile.' He advanced his tight, weasel-like little face to within an inch of mine. âI don't suppose you've ever heard of Richard de Bury?' he sneered.
Not for the first time in my life, I blessed the teaching and knowledge of Brother Hilarion, our Novice Master at Glastonbury, and the endless trouble he had taken to hammer that knowledge into our unreceptive heads. âBishop of Durham, sometime Chancellor and close friend of King Edward III in the last century,' I answered with a smirk.
âOh.' For a moment my interlocutor was nonplussed, but he soon made a recovery. âHe was also,' he went on, âone of the greatest bibliophiles this country has ever known, and he wrote a treatise on the disgusting way in which people handle books. Ever read it?'
âNo,' I said foolishly â but consoled myself with the reflection that even had I answered, âYes,' he would still have told me what it said. He was one of those who, once he was riding his hobby-horse, there was no way of stopping.
âRichard de Bury complains' â and the little man spoke as one who had learned the passage by heart â âabout the abuser of books who underlines favourite passages with his dirty nails, who marks his place with straws because his memory is poor, who stains the parchment with fruit and wine, who drops into the open pages crumbs of bread and cheese and other such victuals, who falls asleep over his book and in so doing creases the leaves, who turns back the corners of pages and presses wild flowers between them with his sweaty hands, who marks the vellum with soiled gloves and who, finally, flings aside the sacred object so that its leaves are splayed and will no more shut.' Brother Librarian finished, breathless, on a triumphant shout, an admonitory finger waggling beneath my nose. âI trust,' he added, a gleam of hatred for the despised reader in his eye, âthat you are not one of those!'
âNo, no!' I assured him hastily and sat down in the reading stall, spreading out the pages of the account books and diary in front of me.
At last he seemed to take the hint that I wished to be left alone and, still muttering under his breath, moved away to busy himself elsewhere.
The pages I had before me were written on neither vellum nor parchment, but on a cheap paper made of rags. Those belonging to the two account books were the most numerous and, as Father Abbot had warned me, of very little interest except, perhaps, to the abbey's present manciple as an indication of what was being ordered a hundred and fifty years ago, and for the date. This latter was repeated twice, in Roman numerals, as 1326, which suggested that the pages of the diary were possibly written about the same time. Not necessarily, I reminded myself, but probably.
I turned to them eagerly and was disappointed to see that there really was little more than a page and a half of black, spidery, very upright writing, very difficult to read. This was not the fault of the ink which had retained its colour after all those years and was still beautifully vivid. I wondered if it had been made from blackthorn bark or oak galls, or to one of the abbey's secret recipes. (Most religious establishments had their own, which they zealously guarded.) It certainly wasn't thickened blackberry juice mixed with blood, which faded early.
I applied my mind to deciphering the narrative. This wasn't easy, the writing being extremely uneven and the style discursive. Almost all the first page was devoted, as the abbot had said, to squabbles amongst the brothers, with particular attention being paid to the disagreement between a certain Brother Barnabas and another named Philip. What it was about, I couldn't have told you even ten minutes later, so rapidly did I skip the lines, searching eagerly for the incident of the strangers' arrival.
I came to it at last at the top of the second page. â“They came last night as we had feared they might, having had warning that they were close by. Two others were with them; Reading, I think, and Baldock were the names, but I cannot be sure. We had begged Father Abbot not to give them sanctuary; their crime is too great, but he ignored our wishes. Perhaps he was afraid to do otherwise. It seems they will stay here again tonight, but after that Father Abbot has assured us they will be gone. God have mercy on their souls. They will need it.”'
This, disappointingly, was all on that head, and for the next twenty or so lines, the writer returned to the feud between Brothers Philip and Barnabas until breaking off mid-sentence and leaving the rest of the page blank. What had happened to make him stop writing so abruptly it was impossible to say with any certainty after a century and a half; but if I was forced to hazard a guess it would be that someone had snatched the paper from him to stuff into the abbot's secret hiding place, along with pages torn from the account books. He had probably protested violently, but if his fellow monks suspected that he wrote about them in his diary, someone must have borne him a grudge and taken malicious pleasure in frustrating him.
But that was just idle speculation and not the riddle that was teasing me. I stared down at the black lettering thoughtfully. The longer I considered the problem, the more I felt convinced that whatever our thief had stolen tonight, whatever it was that had lain concealed in the hiding place for so long, had been brought by the strangers that night a hundred and fifty-odd years ago. It had been hidden for them by the abbot and walled in, the papers then being placed in the remaining space and the tiles of the hearth replaced. Had the strangers intended to return for what they had left? I thought it more than likely, but something had prevented them. Imprisonment? Death? The diarist had spoken of them and their crimes with revulsion, so either was probable if the law had eventually caught up with them and exacted reparation. Their treasure, whatever it was, had lain buried and forgotten as the long progression of years went by and those who had placed it there had died. Indeed, knowledge of the hiding place itself had been lost until its accidental discovery fourteen years earlier.
So far, so good. Exactly why the abbot of the time had agreed, not only to give sanctuary to four criminals for two nights but also to keep their treasure for them was beyond my comprehension, but indisputable. And it was impossible that I should discover the reason now, so there was little point in agonizing over it. What did exercise my mind was the fact that this treasure had suddenly been rediscovered and stolen at the very time that Gilbert Foliot had been talking to the abbot on the subject of its hiding place. Coincidence, one might say. But I have never liked coincidences. All right, so they do happen or, as I have remarked somewhere else in these chronicles, there wouldn't be a word for them. I still don't like them.
But if there was a connection between the two events, I had to admit that I had no inkling what it was.
My travelling companions must have found me rather taciturn for the rest of the day, but as I refused to say what was bothering me, they soon shrugged and left me alone with my thoughts. And I can't say that those did me much good. In fact by evening, with an incipient pain nagging behind my eyes, I was thoroughly sick of the whole subject. So when, next morning, the weather was found to be greatly improved, with a watery sun struggling to show its face between the clouds, and when news was brought that rumours of rebels in the vicinity had yet again proved to be a false alarm, I was as happy as the others to set out for home.
It was my intention to walk back to Gloucester in order to cross the Severn there, and Oliver Tockney said he would accompany me. We both needed to refill our packs, which we could do either from the ships anchored in the town's docks or from its market. I didn't say so, but I had another, more cogent, reason for wishing to visit the place, having arrived quite suddenly at the decision to seek out Juliette Gerrish and demand an explanation for her unpardonable conduct earlier in the year.
Gilbert Foliot, Lawyer Heathersett and Master Callowhill would follow the same route, but on horseback and would no doubt be home in Bristol some days ahead of us.
âThe horse ferry won't be running after all this rain,' Gilbert Foliot wisely remarked, âso, my friends, we have no choice but to retrace our steps and cross the Severn higher up.' He smiled graciously at me across the table in the lay brothers' refectory, where we were having breakfast. âI'm sorry I can't offer to take you up behind me, Master Chapman, but you and your pack together are too weighty, I'm afraid.'
I inclined my head with a graciousness equal to his own. âI thank you for the thought, Master Foliot, but I should prefer to walk. I'm used to it and, like Master Tockney, I'm not easy on horseback. He and I have kept one another company from Hereford. We shall do so still.'
He had the decency to look uncomfortable, knowing full well that he preferred to overlook Oliver's presence as much as possible. (As, indeed, he would have overlooked mine had he not had this erroneous idea that I was some sort of spy for the king.)
We were just finishing our meal and preparing to return to the infirmary in order to gather our belongings together, when the abbot entered to wish us all a safe journey and give us his blessing.
âYou may travel safely,' he announced. âI have it on good authority' â people always have it on good authority but never tell you exactly how good that authority really is â âthat the roads this side of Severn are clear of rebels. Presumably they have gone to join up with their fellow insurgents in the south and west. The last rumour concerning the royal forces is that the king is moving south and is probably at Coventry by now. Soâ'
He was interrupted by one of the lay brothers rushing in, obviously in a state of suppressed excitement. âFather!' he gasped. âCome quickly!'
The abbot frowned, annoyed. âWhat is it?' he snapped.
The man flapped an ineffective hand. âA â a body! Washed up on the river bank! A young man!'
The goldsmith and I exchanged startled glances, sharing the same thought. The same certainty. Then, in the wake of the lay brother and with the others following, we both made a dash for the refectory door.
âThis way!' the layman panted, urging us on across the soggy, rain-soaked ground.
A few rays of sun were filtering through the clouds to glimmer palely on wet grass and gleam corpse-like on the surface of the river. A flock of birds rose suddenly in a ragged line, screaming and cawing against the darker shapes of the surrounding hills. Crouched around something lying at the water's edge were several of the brothers, their white habits looking a dirty grey in the early morning light.
Gilbert Foliot and I reached them first, unceremoniously pushing our way between them to stare down at the ashen-faced body at their feet. The lad had been young, not more than about eighteen, I reckoned, with a snub nose in a roundish, freckled face and hair, now plastered tightly to his scalp, that was probably sandy-coloured when dry. Caught among the reeds, standing sentinel along the bank, was his travelling satchel and cloak. In his headlong flight to escape last night, he had fallen into the river and drowned.
I stared at the smooth, beardless young face, the eyes now closed in death. The features were vaguely familiar, and I realized that I had seen them at some time or another around the Bristol streets.
I turned to Gilbert Foliot, who was looking as pale as the corpse. âDo you know him?' I asked.
âI should do,' he answered in a shaking voice. âIt's Peter Noakes, the young ne'er-do-well who's been courting my daughter.'
T
he abbot arrived, breathless from unaccustomed exertion. âHas anyone searched the body?' he gasped, then recollected himself and made the sign of the Cross. He turned to Gilbert Foliot. âDid I hear you say, sir, that you recognized this unfortunate young man?'
The goldsmith nodded. He now had himself well in hand. âHe is a Bristol youth who, much against my wishes, has recently been courting my daughter. There can be no doubt that it is from her that he learned of the secret hiding place here at Tintern, just as Ursula learned of it from me.'
This explanation gave the answer to one question that had been troubling me, but begged others. Why, for instance, after almost a decade and a half, would the hiding place have been resurrected as a subject of discussion in the Foliot household? And what had caused speculation that it might, in fact, be larger than had been previously thought? Or that it could contain something other than the papers originally found? But there was no time at the moment to look for solutions.
Two of the more elderly monks were by now hurriedly searching the body, while a third had rescued the satchel from among the reeds. The latter, however, contained only some spare clothing and a hammer and chisel, tools obviously deemed necessary by young Noakes to accomplish the job he had in mind. Of stolen treasure, there was no sign. Nor was there anything to be found on the body, although it was stripped nearly naked before the abbot, or indeed the rest of us, could be satisfied that a few coins for the lad's travelling expenses were all that was concealed about his skinny person.
âNothing!' exclaimed the abbot disgustedly.
âProbably because there was nothing to find in the first place,' said the lawyer's dry voice. He and Henry Callowhill had just arrived, having proceeded to the scene of the accident at a more dignified pace than the goldsmith and myself. Master Heathersett went on, âOur friend, the chapman here, must have been mistaken last night when he thought he saw something in young Peter's left hand.'
There was a general, if reluctant, nodding of heads in which I joined. It was the only explanation. A suggestion by one of the Brothers that the thief might have accidentally dropped his booty whilst in flight was considered, but eventually dismissed. It was felt by everyone that had he discovered anything of value, Peter Noakes's first priority would have been to secure it safely, either about his person or in his satchel. All the same, a half-hearted search was organized to scour the river bank and the ground between the abbey and the spot where his body had been found, but nothing came to light. I think, by this time, no one expected it to. Everyone seemed to be fast coming to the conclusion that the whole idea of undiscovered treasure was nothing more than a mare's nest; a bit of wishful thinking.