The Crown (48 page)

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Authors: Nancy Bilyeau

Tags: #Historical fiction

BOOK: The Crown
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Gardiner looked at her, torn with emotion. Finally, he said, in a strained voice, “No, he is not. He sought to shorten the suffering of a family member who burned at Smithfield, but that is all. The crime does not meet the definition of treason.”

“Then you will see he is released?” she asked. “Do you have the authority?”

Gardiner and Norfolk exchanged a look.

“Why do you hesitate?” she asked, anger rising in her voice.

Gardiner bowed. “I will see to it. Stafford will be released by the end of the week.”

“I am glad,” she said, and then turned back to me. “Isn’t there anything else you need?”

“I only need to return to Dartford Priory, with Brother Edmund, in
safety
.” I placed an emphasis on the last word no one in the room could mistake. “I ask for your blessing, Lady Mary.”

She took my hands in hers and squeezed them. “You have a friend for life. My mother, the queen, cherished a Dominican blessing; shall I say it to you?”

Brother Edmund and I knelt before her and closed our eyes.

She recited softly: “May God the Father bless us. May God the Father heal us. May God the Holy Spirit enlighten us, And give us eyes to see with, ears to hear with,
hands to do the work of God with. Amen.”

I got to my feet, and made a final Spanish curtsy. “
Gracias a Dios y la Virgen,

I said.

She smiled and her eyes glistened again with tears.

“I know you must wish now to have conversation with the Duke of Norfolk and Bishop Gardiner,” I said, quickly backing toward the door, for no one could turn their back on royalty. “And so we will take our leave.”

“Only if you promise to write to me, and often,” she said.

“It would be an honor.” I was close to the door now, Brother Edmund beside me.

He opened the door for me. I took one last look at Lady Mary, and then at Bishop Gardiner. His light hazel eyes were fixed on me, but with an expression I could not read.

And so we were out of the room—and, moments later, out of Norfolk House. Night had fallen.

John almost wept with relief when we appeared at the stables. “Everyone else left but there was no sign of ye—I did not know what to do.”

“Could you get us to Dartford, John?” Brother Edmund asked. “Do you know the roads well enough?”

“Aye, I can do it,” he said. “I miss my wife so much, Brother. I’d do anything to get back to her tonight.”

As we trotted up the drive, to Paradise Street, I said to Brother Edmund, “Will Gardiner release my father?”

“He must. He gave his word to the princess.”

“And what about us? Are we safe from Gardiner?”

He turned in his saddle, to peer at Norfolk House again. “For a short time,” he said. “Perhaps just tonight. He will endeavor to learn why we were at Norfolk House and what we are doing out of the priory.”

A realization came to me. “If my father is released, I am no longer constrained by Gardiner.”

“Yes,” said Brother Edmund. “You need not search for the crown any longer.”

I felt a rush of anger.
“Do you think it is only because of the threat to my father that I try to learn about the crown and find it in the priory? I wish to save the monasteries as much as you.”

Brother Edmund reached out, awkwardly, across the horses. His fingers grazed my arm. John was riding ahead of us, fast; we would have to cease talking if we hoped to pick up speed.

“I honor your commitment,” he said. “Truly I do.”

“Then we shall continue—together?” I demanded. “And when we return, we will do all we can, use all that we have learned?”

He nodded.

“Brother, what did you see in the tapestry inside Norfolk House?” I asked. “Something disturbed you greatly. What is the story of the sisters?”

“I believe them to be the Pleiades,” said Brother Edmund.

“Who are they?” I asked. “What is the significance of the dance?”

Brother Edmund said quietly, “They are dancing for someone.”

“Who?”

He opened his mouth, then shut it.

“Brother, it seemed to me they were frenzied in their movements, perhaps even angry. You must tell me: Who were they dancing for?” I demanded, my voice rising. Could it be possible that Brother Edmund was withholding information from me, after what we had just been through at Norfolk House?

Finally, he answered me. “They were dancing for their father, Sister Joanna.”

What was sinister about that? Confused, I looked over at him. Even in the darkness on the road out of Lambeth, I could see in Brother Edmund’s eyes the flicker of fear.

And he whipped his horse, something I’d never seen him do before, to ride faster down the road to Dartford Priory.

45

S
omething
is wrong,” I said to Brother Edmund.

After more than two weeks away, I did not know what to expect at Dartford. Exhausted and stiff from the cold, we turned off the road onto the priory trail. It was past midnight; Dartford would be closed up and locked for the night.

But as we rode around the bend where the priory first comes into view, a torch flickered at the gatehouse. Beyond, the priory door hung open, even though it was a frigid night. A man stood in the doorway, holding a lantern. It was Gregory, the porter.

We jumped off our horses and ran to the arched entrance.

“Gregory, what’s happening?” I asked.

He stepped down the stairs, not in greeting but with his arms stretched out, as if to bar us.

“Stay back,” he said.

“Why?” asked Brother Edmund.

“It’s the bailiff who ordered it. He told me no one could go inside until he’s found help in London. He promised to return by midnight.”

My stomach clenched.

“Why is help needed?” I asked.

“The prioress has been missing for two days,” he said. Now that we were much closer, I could see Gregory’s eyes were hollow with exhaustion. “We have searched everywhere. She’s disappeared. Then, this afternoon, Sister Christina and Brother Richard went missing, too.” Gregory’s voice broke into hysteria. “They’re vanishing one by one. This priory is cursed. That’s what they say in town, and God’s blood, they’re right!”

Brother Edmund moved one step closer to the agitated porter. “Gregory, you
must
let us in. We may be able to find them.”

“No.” Gregory came down,
so that he stood face-to-face with Brother Edmund. “The bailiff said no one else comes in, without his approval.”

I moved forward to try to persuade him. “We won’t go into the cloistered area. We only want to look in the front rooms. We may—”

Gregory pushed me back. “I won’t do it.”

“Don’t lay hands on her,” Brother Edmund said angrily. Our porter turned on him, and before I knew it, he’d struck Brother Edmund.

As they grappled on the steps, I darted around them and slipped inside.

“Wait for me, I beg you,” Brother Edmund called after me. “It’s too dangerous for you to go alone.”

“Stop, Sister Joanna!” bellowed Gregory.

I didn’t stop.

I ran as fast as I could, past the statue of the Virgin Mary, through the entranceway hall, and then I turned. I wouldn’t search for a door to underground rooms in the prioress’s chamber, I knew it couldn’t be there or Cromwell’s men would have found it.

I snatched a taper from the wall and ran into the guest bedchamber. I felt all the walls, every corner, jabbing at shelves and cracks the way Prior Roger had pushed on the wall in Malmesbury.

Nothing.

I was burning with frustration. It had to be here. There had to be a way down. I didn’t have time to push and pull and bang against every inch of the wall. Even if Brother Edmund were able to get the better of Gregory, the bailiff would arrive soon with his men.

I needed a sign to tell me where the door was, just as the lion and ivy carvings over the door at Norfolk House revealed it to be the one leading into the great hall.

It hit me, with such force I gave a loud cry.

Young Catherine Howard said:
“Most of the time, the ivy is in front of the lion. But atop that door, the lion is in front. That’s how I remember which door to use.”

All over Dartford Priory, I’d seen the carvings of a crown and lilies. Always the crown was behind the symbol of the Dominican Order. Except for one place. The room where outsiders were allowed to sit with sisters—or with the prioress herself. In the
locutorium.

I could hear men shouting
outside the priory as I scrambled into the room where I’d sat with Brother Edmund and Brother Richard and been questioned by commissioners Layton and Legh.

I had only minutes before they’d find me.

I went to the half-empty bookcase directly under the carving of the crown in front of the lily. I ran my hands up the shelves. I pushed against the sides hard, searching for something that opened, something that slid.

On the top shelf, it gave way. There was a
click
. I pushed hard, and the bookshelf eased open several inches.

My taper held high, I stepped into the opening, and then closed the shelf behind me.

It was a narrow opening behind the shelf. No more than two feet wide. And very dirty. This was not the well-kept passageway of Malmesbury. My candle alighted on a pile of rotting crumbs. It was a yellow cake. With a start, I realized it was one of the soul cakes gathered by the Westerly children. This was how they moved around Dartford Priory so stealthily.

I came to a set of rickety stairs and descended.

At the bottom was a wider passageway, not much more than a tunnel. I followed it, scanning the walls for another sign of the crown.

I heard a woman’s voice. Someone was talking down here. Perhaps I’d find the prioress . . . and Brother Richard. Obviously, they had located this entranceway, too, but I couldn’t understand why they’d remained down here so long. Didn’t they know Gregory and the others would sound the alarm?

The dirty tunnel met with a wider passageway. Its walls were lined with bricks. The woman’s voice was a bit louder. I didn’t hear anyone else; who was she talking to? The voice died away. I kept walking.

When I rounded the end of the passageway, I saw three things in sequence.

A man in blood-soaked friar’s robes lay on the ground, very still. A woman was tied up in ropes and gagged, sitting on a short barrel against the wall. Next to her stood my fellow novice, Sister Christina. She was half-turned away from me and held a long knife in her right hand.

I stood there for a while before
Sister Christina noticed me. I could not move; I could not speak. I was struck motionless, dumb, by the tableau before me.

I realized the man was Brother Richard. His eyes were open. He was most definitely dead.

Prioress Joan saw me. She shook her head, very slightly. That movement made Sister Christina turn around quickly.

“Sister Joanna,” she said in a hoarse voice. And then louder, with her usual vigor, “Sister Joanna.”

“What is happening?” I asked. “I don’t understand.”

“I had to do this,” she said, very earnest. “You must understand, I had to. The prioress found the door in the
locutorium
;
she came down here, to the tunnels. She was looking for it, the crown. I came at her from behind with this”—she brandished her knife—“and I tied her up.”

“Is the crown here—now?” I asked, my eyes scanning the floor.

Sister Christina laughed, and the sound of it brought me into the reality of what was happening. I had been too shocked and confused until that moment. With my eyes I could see Brother Richard was dead and the prioress was in ropes and gagged—and Sister Christina was free with a knife. But I could not accept what it meant.

But the laughter, the bitter, angry laughter, made me understand, finally, that Sister Christina was a murderess. And she was, most likely, within the next few minutes, going to attempt to murder me.

“The crown! The crown! The crown!” she shouted, mockingly. “Is that all that matters to you, even now? It’s all that mattered to her”—she swung her knife at the prioress—“and to Brother Richard. He came looking for her, but he wanted to find the crown, too. Instead, he found
me
.”

“You imprisoned the prioress two days ago?” I asked, trying to calm her.

“Yes, and it caused me no regret to do so,” she said. “If it weren’t for her, none of it would have happened, Sister Joanna. She invited my father to the priory. She defiled our chapter house with his presence.”

“Your father?”

“I killed him,” she said defiantly. “God will not punish me for it. He was a despoiler—a demon.
He was not human. Did you know that?”

I did not dare to bring up her mother. But a shiver of torment crossed Sister Christina’s face. “I didn’t kill my mother. I went to her that day, using the tunnels. I’ve known about them since the day Prioress Elizabeth died. But the Westerly children must have found out how to get to them, too, and I knew that if you found the children that day and spoke to them, all could be discovered. They’d finally know how someone would get from the cloister to the guest bedchamber, and that it was I who killed him. I had to be the one to tell my mother; I wanted to explain myself.” Sister Christina began to weep. “She went mad when I told her why I’d done it. She said that it was her fault, and that she had failed me. After I left, she wrote that letter and took her own life to remove any suspicion from me.”

Sister Christina slammed her other hand against the wall, inches from the prioress’s head. The prioress shrank back from the novice’s rage.

I tried again to calm Sister Christina. “The tunnels go far?”

“They go all the way to the barns,” she said. “There was a foolish prioress, a hundred years ago, who feared someone would try to take the crown by force. She had workmen dig another tunnel and connect it to the dark-house passageway. They added another entrance, from a hidden door in the passageway just outside the church. That way, she thought, if the priory were set upon, they could smuggle out the crown and themselves. She swore all the workmen to silence. But someone didn’t stay silent.”

There was a noise behind her, at the end of the passageway. A man’s voice said, “That was how Lord Chester found out about the tunnels.”

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