The Raven in the Foregate

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Authors: Ellis Peters

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BOOK: The Raven in the Foregate
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The Raven

 
in the

 
Foregate

The
Twelfth Chronicle of Brother Cadfael, of the Benedictine Abbey of Saint Peter
and Saint Paul, at Shrewsbury

 

Ellis Peters

 

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter One

 

ABBOT RADULFUS CAME TO CHAPTER, on this first day of
December, with a preoccupied and frowning face, and made short work of the
various trivialities brought up by his obedientiaries. Though a man of few
words himself, he was disposed, as a rule, to allow plenty of scope to those
who were rambling and loquacious about their requests and suggestions, but on
this day, plainly, he had more urgent matters on his mind.

“I must tell you,” he said, when he had swept the last
trifle satisfactorily into its place, “that I shall be leaving you for some
days to the care of Father Prior, to whom, I expect and require, you shall be
as obedient and helpful as you are to me. I am summoned to a council to be held
at Westminster on the seventh day of this month, by the Holy Father’s legate,
Henry of Blois, bishop of Winchester. I shall return as soon as I can, but in
my absence I desire you will make your prayers for a spirit of wisdom and
reconciliation in this meeting of prelates, for the sake of the peace of this
land.”

His voice was dry and calm to the point of
resignation. For the past four years there had been precious little inclination
to reconciliation in England between the warring rivals for the crown, and no
very considerable wisdom shown on either side. But it was the business of the
Church to continue to strive, and if possible to hope, even when the affairs of
the land seemed to have reverted to the very same point where the civil war had
begun, to repeat the whole unprofitable cycle all over again.

“I am well aware there are matters outstanding here,”
said the abbot, “which equally require our attention, but they must wait for my
return. In particular there is the question of a successor to Father Adam,
lately vicar of this parish of Holy Cross, whose loss we are still lamenting.
The advowson rests with this house. Father Adam has been for many years a much
valued associate with us here in the worship of God and the cure of souls, and
his replacement is a matter for both thought and prayer. Until my return,
Father Prior will direct the parish services as he thinks fit, and all of you
will be at his bidding.”

He swept one long, dark glance round the chapter
house, accepted the general silence as understanding and consent, and rose.

“This chapter is concluded.”

 

“Well, at least if he leaves tomorrow he has good
weather for the ride,” said Hugh Beringar, looking out from the open door of
Brother Cadfael’s workshop in the herb garden over grass still green, and a few
surviving roses, grown tall and spindly by now but still budding bravely.
December of this year of Our Lord 1141 had come in with soft-stepping care,
gentle winds and lightly veiled skies, treading on tiptoe. “Like all those
shifting souls who turned to the Empress when she was in her glory,” said Hugh,
grinning, “and are now put to it to keep well out of sight while they turn
again. There must be a good many holding their breath and making themselves
small just now.”

“Bad luck for his reverence the papal legate,” said
Cadfael, “who cannot make himself small or go unregarded, whatever he does. His
turning has to be done in broad daylight, with every eye on him. And twice in
one year is too much to ask of any man.”

“Ah, but in the name of the Church, Cadfael, in the
name of the Church! It’s not the man who turns, it’s the representative of Pope
and Church, who must preserve the infallibility of both at all costs.”

Twice in one year, indeed, had Henry of Blois summoned
his bishops and abbots to a legatine council, once in Winchester on the seventh
of April to justify his endorsement of the Empress Maud as ruler, when she was
in the ascendant and had her rival King Stephen securely in prison in Bristol,
and now at Westminster on the seventh of December to justify his swing back to
Stephen, now that the King was free again, and the city of London had put a
decisive end to Maud’s bid to establish herself in the capital, and get her
hands at last on the crown.

“If his head is not going round by now, it should be,”
said Cadfael, shaking his own grizzled brown tonsure in mingled admiration and
deprecation. “How many spins does this make? First he swore allegiance to the
lady, when her father died without a male heir, then he accepted his brother
Stephen’s seizure of power in her absence, thirdly, when Stephen’s star is
darkened he makes his peace—a peace of sorts, at any rate!—with the lady, and
justifies it by saying that Stephen has flouted and aggrieved Holy Church… Now
must he turn the same argument about, and accuse the Empress, or has he
something new in his scrip?”

“What is there new to be said?’ asked Hugh, shrugging.
“No, he’ll wring the last drop from his stewardship of Holy Church, and make
the best of it that every soul there will have heard it all before, no longer
ago than last April. And it will convince Stephen no more than it did Maud, but
he’ll let it pass with only a mild snarl or two, since he can no more afford to
reject the backing of Henry of Blois than could Maud in her day. And the bishop
will grit his teeth and stare his clerics in the eyes, and swallow his gall
with a brazen face.”

“It may well be the last time he has to turn
about-face,” said Cadfael, feeding his brazier with a few judiciously placed
turves, to keep it burning with a slow and tempered heat. “She has thrown away
what’s likely to be her only chance.”

A strange woman she had proved, King Henry’s royal
daughter. Married in childhood to the Holy Roman Emperor Henry V, she had so
firmly ingratiated herself with her husband’s people in Germany that when she
was recalled to England, after his death, the populace had risen in
consternation and grief to plead with her to stay. Yet here at home, when fate
threw her enemy into her hands and held the crown suspended over her head, she
had behaved with such vengeful arrogance, and exacted such penalties for past
affronts, that the men of her capital city had risen just as indignantly, not
to appeal to her to remain, but to drive her out and put a violent end to her
hopes of ever becoming their ruler. And it was common knowledge that though she
could turn even upon her own best allies with venom, yet she could also retain
the love and loyalty of the best of the baronage. There was not a man of the
first rank on Stephen’s side to match the quality of her half-brother, Earl
Robert of Gloucester, or her champion and reputed lover, Brian FitzCount, her
easternmost paladin in his fortress at Wallingford. But it would take more than
a couple of heroes to redeem her cause now. She had been forced to surrender
her royal prisoner in exchange for her half-brother, without whom she could not
hope to achieve anything. And here was England back to the beginning, with all
to do again. For if she could not win, neither could she give up.

“From here where I stand now,” said Cadfael,
pondering, “these things seem strangely distant and unreal. If I had not been
forty years in the world and among the armies myself, I doubt if I could
believe in the times we live in but as a disturbed dream.”

“They are not so to Abbot Radulfus,” said Hugh with
unwonted gravity. He turned his back upon the mild, moist prospect of the
garden, sinking gently into its winter sleep, and sat down on the wooden bench
against the timber wall. The small glow of the brazier, damped under the turf,
burned on the bold, slender bones of his cheeks and jaw and brows, conjuring
them out of deep shadows, and sparkling briefly in his black eyes before the
lids and dark lashes quenched the sparks. “That man would make a better adviser
to kings than most that cluster round Stephen now he’s free again. But he would
not tell them what they want to hear, and they’d all stop their ears.”

“What’s the news of King Stephen now? How has he borne
this year of captivity? Is he likely to come out of it fighting, or has it
dimmed his ardour? What is he likely to do next?”

“That I may be better able to answer after Christmas,”
said Hugh. “They say he’s in good health. But she put him in chains, and that
even he is not likely to forgive too readily. He’s come out leaner and hungrier
than he went in, and a gnaw in the belly may well serve to concentrate the
mind. He was ever a man to begin a campaign or siege all fire the first day,
weary of it if he got no gain by the third, and go off after another prey by
the fifth. Maybe now he’s learned to keep an unwavering eye fixed on one target
until he fetches it down. Sometimes I wonder why we follow him, and never look
round, then I see him roaring into personal battle as he did at Lincoln, and I
know the reason well enough. Even when he has the woman as good as in his
hands, as when she first landed at Arundel, and gives her an escort to her
brother’s fortress instead of having the good sense to seize her, I curse him
for a fool, but I love him while I’m cursing him. What monumental folly of
mistaken chivalry he’ll commit next, only God knows. But I’ll welcome the
chance to see him again, and try to guess at his mind. For I’m bidden forth,
Cadfael, like the abbot. King Stephen means to keep Christmas at Canterbury
this year, and put on his crown again, for all to see which of two heads is the
anointed monarch here. And he’s called all his sheriffs to attend him and
render account of their shires. Me among the rest, seeing we have here no properly
appointed sheriff to render account.”

He looked up with a dark, sidelong smile into
Cadfael’s attentive and thoughtful face. “A very sound move. He needs to know
what measure of loyalty he has to rely on, after a year in prison, or close on
a year. But there’s no denying it may bring me a fall.”

For Cadfael it was a new and jolting thought. Hugh had
stepped into the office of sheriff perforce, when his superior, Gilbert
Prestcote, had died of his battle wounds and the act of a desperate man, at a
time when the King was already a prisoner in Bristol castle, with no power to
appoint or to demote any officer in any shire. And Hugh had served him and
maintained his peace here without authority, and deserved well of him. But now
that he was free to make and break again, would Stephen confirm so young and so
minor a nobleman in office, or use the appointment to flatter and bind to
himself some baron of the march?

“Folly!” said Cadfael firmly. “The man is a fool only
towards himself. He made you deputy to his man out of nowhere, when he saw your
mettle. What does Aline say of it?”

Hugh could not hear his wife’s name spoken without a
wild, warm softening of his sharp, subtle face, nor could Cadfael speak it
without relaxing every solemnity into a smile. He had witnessed their courtship
and their marriage, and was godfather to their son, two years old this coming
Christmastide. Aline’s girlish, flaxen gentleness had grown into a golden,
matronly calm to which they both turned in every need.

“Aline says that she has no great confidence in the
gratitude of princes, but that Stephen has the right to choose his own
officers, wisely or foolishly.”

“And you?” said Cadfael.

“Why, if he gives me his countenance and writ I’ll go
on keeping all his borders for him, and if not, then I’ll go back to Maesbury
and keep the north, at least, against Chester, if the earl tries again to
enlarge his palatinate. And Stephen’s man must take charge of west, east and
south. And you, old friend, must pay a visit or two over Christmas, while I’m
away, and keep Aline company.”

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