Authors: Philippa Gregory
Tags: #Fantasy, #Romance, #Paranormal, #Historical, #Chick-Lit, #Adult
The dwarf shrugged his strong shoulders. “As you wish, Mistress Alys.”
“Are you betrothed or married?” Alys asked the girl.
“No, my lady,” she said breathlessly. “I am a virgin.”
Alys shot a hard, suspicious look at David. He smiled blandly at her.
“You can wait in the ladies’ gallery until I send for you,” Alys said abruptly. The girl dipped a curtsy and went into the castle.
David remained. He took a pinch of lavender and sniffed it, savoring the smell, demonstrating his ease and comfort.
“She is very beautiful for a peasant girl,” Alys observed.
“Yes, indeed,” David replied.
“Very like the girl in the field who took Hugo’s flowers at haymaking.”
“Her sister, actually,” David said. He squinted up at the blue sky. “Very like her, now I come to think of it,” he said thoughtfully.
Alys nodded. “Do you think to supplant me with some plump sweeting, David? Do you think Hugo would put me aside for a sudden fancy, when I carry his child and he has been besotted with me for months?”
David opened his eyes in amazement. “Of course not, Mistress Alys! I merely obeyed Lord Hugh. He said you should have a maid of your own, my task it was to find you one. If she is not to your liking I can send her away. I will tell the young lord that the maid I suggested was too pretty for your liking, and I will find some plain old woman. It is no trouble at all.”
“It is no matter,” Alys said abruptly. “I am not afraid, David. You can bring a hundred such as her and throw them into Hugo’s path. They will not conceive his child. They will not take my place. They may amuse him but they will not sit at the high table. D’you think the old lord will prefer a village wench to me?” She laughed sharply, enjoying the small man’s angry face. “I will employ the girl. She can do my sewing for me and run errands.”
“Up to Bowes Moor perhaps?” David asked quickly. “To see the new arrival there? Another wise woman, in your old cottage. Who is she, Alys? Another kinswoman who is no kin at all? Or Morach returned from the dead?”
“Hardly a ghost!” Alys said, swiftly recovering from the change of tack. “No, it is a traveling wise woman who has a fancy to stay at the cottage. I sent her some goods and a message because I shall need a wise woman in the spring, when my time comes. Either she or the one at Richmond will have to come out to me.”
“I see.” David turned to go. Alys breathed out in relief at having come through his questioning so well.
“And why should the kitchen-boy pretend to be mute?” David asked. “Why could he not speak to her? Does she know secrets that she might share if someone asked her?”
Alys laughed aloud, a note as blithe as the birdsong from the orchard. “Oh, the silly lad!” she exclaimed. “I ordered him not to tire her with his chatter, nor eat the food on the way, nor stop to play with his friends. And next thing he thinks he has to act like one struck dumb! I wish I had been there to see him acting like a mute simpleton!”
David smiled thinly. “He is a fool, that boy.” He nodded his head to Alys and left her. Alys watched him go, her face stiff with her unconcerned smile until he was gone.
The sun was burning on her back. Alys felt flushed, her thick mane of hair made her neck and her head hot. She was sweating. Her green gown was strapped too tight, the stomacher too stiff. She went indoors for the cool and the shade. As she climbed the stairs to the ladies’ gallery she felt a deep weight of pain in her head and the skin behind her ears tightened on her skull like pincers.
Mary was in Alys’s bedchamber, straightening the counterpane on the bed, gawking out of the window.
“Everything so fine, my lady!” she exclaimed as Alys came in. “So fine and so pretty!”
“Unlace me,” Alys said, turning around. The girl unfastened the stomacher and then the gown and caught them as Alys slid them off and let them fall. “I have a headache,” Alys said. “Close the shutters over the window and go and sit in the ladies’ gallery. I want to be alone. Call me an hour before supper.”
“I’ll put your gown away,” Mary said. She took the green gown and moved toward the chest of Alys’s herbs and oils.
“Not that one,” Alys said sharply. “I am an herbalist, a healer. I keep all my medicines in there. You must never go to that chest. You must never touch it. Some of the tinctures are very delicate and they would spoil if anyone but me touched them. The other chest is for my clothes.”
The girl bobbed a curtsy and folded Alys’s gown carefully into the chest. She shut it with a bang. “Sorry, my lady,” she said.
Alys lay back on the pillows and closed her eyes.
“I was told to tell you that Lady Catherine wanted to see you,” the girl suddenly said. “I forgot to tell you at once.”
“Tell her I have a headache and I am resting,” Alys said, without opening her eyes. “I will come to her at suppertime.”
Mary bobbed another curtsy and went out. The draft from the open windows of the gallery caught the door and banged it shut. Alys winced. Through the door she could hear Mary speaking to Eliza.
“My lady Alys is lying down,” she said. “She will see Lady Catherine at suppertime.”
Even in her pain Alys smiled. “My lady Alys,” she said to herself. “My lady Alys.”
Alys knew she had to see Hildebrande. She could not trust anyone in the castle with messages—David’s information was too precise, too accurate. He knew everything that went on within the castle and without. She dared not send another message, she could trust no one. And Hildebrande, the fool, was as capable of sending a verbal command as an unsealed letter. She sat by the old lord at supper and picked at the food on her plate.
“You are not eating, Alys,” he said at once. “Are you unwell?”
Alys summoned a smile. “A little sickly, my lord,” she said. “And I have run out of the powders I need.”
“Someone shall get you whatever you need,” he said. “They can get them immediately. It is bad for the baby if the mother does not eat. You shall have whatever you want.”
Alys shook her head. “I need some powdered bark from an elm tree,” she said. “It’s a special tree I know. I could not direct anyone to it; it grows in a copse by the river at the foot of the moor. There must be a dozen elm trees there. Only I know which one I use.”
“Do you wish to go out there?” the old lord asked. “I would send you in a litter. It is not safe for you to ride.”
“I would do well on a mule,” Alys said. “I would not fall, and I would not do more than a walk. No harm could come to me or the child. And I do indeed need the powders.”
“A couple of the men-at-arms shall go with you,” Lord Hugh decided. “And your new maid. David said he has brought you a bonny wench who was anxious to serve you. You could go tomorrow morning and be back by dinner.”
“Yes,” Alys said. “Or we could take our dinner with us. It should be fine again tomorrow, and then I will not have to hurry. I do not want to have to trot or canter.”
“No, no,” the old lord said hastily. “Take all day if you wish, Alys, as long as you are safe. Stay out of the bright sunlight and take care that you do not overtire yourself.”
“Very well,” Alys said agreeably. “As you desire, my lord.”
Hugo did not come to the ladies’ gallery nor to Alys’s room that night. Mary, the new maid, slept in Alys’s room on a little truckle bed which rolled out on wooden wheels from underneath the big bed. Alys lay in the darkness listening to Mary’s steady breathing with rising irritation. At midnight she shook her awake and told her to go and bed down in the gallery. “I cannot sleep with you in the room.”
“Very well, my lady,” the girl said. Her fair hair was tousled into ringlets, her cheeks rosy. She blinked owlishly at Alys, still half asleep. Her shift, open at the neck, showed the inviting curves of her breasts.
“Go,” Alys said irritably. “I shall not sleep until I am alone.”
“I’m very sorry, my lady,” Mary said. She went as quietly from the room as she could, picking her way in the darkness. She closed Alys’s door with silent care and then clattered into a stool in the gallery. Then there was silence. Alys rolled over and slept for the rest of the night.
In the morning she ordered Mary to bring her ale and bread and cheese, and ate it sitting up alone in the great bed. She told Mary to pour hot water into a ewer and bring it to her, and to warm a bath sheet before the fire for Alys to dry herself. Mary went to the chest of gowns.
“The brown gown,” Alys said. “And the black stomacher and the black gable hood.”
When she was dressed she looked at herself in the hand-mirror. The stomacher flattened her belly and her breasts into one smooth board. Hildebrande would not see the curse of her pregnancy. The old-fashioned gable hood rested low on her forehead at the front and covered her hair completely at the back. The brown gown was a rich, warm russet, elegantly cut—but as unlike the cherry-red gown of Meg the whore as any Alys owned.
“Can you ride?” she asked Mary as they came down the stairs.
Mary nodded. “My father once owned a little farm,” she said. “He kept many horses. He bred them for the gentry.”
“Does he have it no longer?” Alys asked, leading the way through the inner gate, across the drawbridge, and across the other manse to the stables.
Mary shook her head. “They were lands belonging to the abbey,” she said. “When the abbey was wrecked the land was bought from the king by my lord Hugh. The rents were too high for us, we had to leave.”
“What does your father do now?” Alys asked idly.
Mary shook her head. “The loss of his farm was like death to him,” she said. “He does a few jobs—shearing in summer, hay-making. Digging in winter. Most of the time he is idle. They live very poor.”
“You can ride my pony,” Alys said. “I’ll take a mule. We can swap when we are out of sight of the castle. Lord Hugh worries too much about my safety.”
Mary nodded, and the stable-lad led the horses out. She mounted easily, shaking out the skirts of her gray gown with as much grace as if she were noble enough to wear colors. The lad whistled at her and Mary tossed back her blond ringlets and smiled at him. Alys was lifted to the mule’s back and kicked the animal into a walk.
Two men-at-arms joined them as they passed through the gateway into Castleton. One walked before them, one behind.
They went briskly over the bridge and up the hill. The sun was bright on the straight, pale road before them, it would be another hot day. Alys, feeling the weight of the gable hood and the heat of the cloth on her neck, looked enviously at Mary, who sat easily and confidently on the mare, looking all around her at the rye turning yellow in the fields, and the pale green of the wheat.
“Harvest soon,” she said pleasantly. “It’s been a good year for grains. And it’ll be a good autumn for fruit, my father says.”
“Pull up,” Alys said abruptly. “I’ll ride my own horse now.”
Mary stopped and the soldiers helped the two women exchange mounts. They rode on in silence as the road climbed higher and higher and the fields gave way to rough pasture land—good for nothing except sheep—and then they were out in the thick heather-purple haze of the open moorland. The hills around them stretched forever into the distance, the sky above them arched like a massive bowl of blue. Larks spiraled upward, singing and singing. Over a cliff face on the right-hand side, broad-winged buzzards hung effortlessly on the warm air. Higher still above them was a circling dot in the sky, a golden eagle.
The river was gone, hidden underground as if it had secrets too dark for the sunshine. The hard, white limestone riverbed threw back the light of the sun in a stony glare. Alys was glad when they rode into the green shadow of the coppice.
“You can sit here and eat your dinners,” she said to the three of them. “I am going deeper into the wood for the bark of a special tree. Wait here for me. I may be some time, I will have to find the best tree and cut the bark. Don’t come searching for me, I shall be perfectly safe and I don’t want to be disturbed.”
The two soldiers hesitated. “Lord Hugh said to keep you safe,” one of them objected.
Alys smiled at him. “What could harm me here?” she asked. “There is no one on the road and no one in this wood. I was brought up here, I know these parts better than anyone. I shall be safe. I shall not be far. I shall hardly go out of earshot. Rest here until I return.”
She rode down the slope, her mare stepping carefully over the roots in the path, and drew rein when she was out of sight. She waited for long moments. No one was following. Alys turned the horse’s head upstream and kicked her into a trot and then into a canter along the grassy bank of the river and up to Morach’s cottage.
Mother Hildebrande was sitting in the doorway, her tired old face turned to the sun as if she were soaking in the warmth. She opened her eyes when she heard the noise of the pony and stood up, hauling herself up the frame of the door.
Alys dismounted, tied the pony to the hawthorn bush, and stepped over the sheep stile.
“Mother,” she said. She glanced around swiftly. The open moorland all around the cottage was bare and empty. Alys knelt on the threshold and Mother Hildebrande rested her trembly hand on Alys’s head and blessed her.
“You are come at last, daughter,” Mother Hildebrande said.
Alys stood up. There was determination in the old woman’s eyes.
“I cannot stay,” Alys said gently. “Not yet. That is what I came to tell you.”
The old woman eased herself down on the stool at the doorstep. Alys sat at her feet. Mother Hildebrande said nothing. She waited.
“
I
am not unwilling,” Alys said persuasively. “But Lady Catherine is ill, near to death, and no one there can care for her. She has miscarried her child and is scouring with a dreadful white fluid which they say is a curse upon her and upon Lord Hugh’s house for the sacrilege of destroying our nunnery. A holy woman is needed there. She needs me to protect her from fear. No one knows what to do. She is mortally afraid and for no fault of her own. I cannot believe that our merciful Lord would want me to abandon her. And anyway, they would not let me go. Even now I am only released from the castle to fetch some herbs and some elm bark for her.”