SEVENTEEN

It took me a long time to get to sleep, and in the morning I felt groggy and listless. I recognized that I had suffered a shock last night; more than one, for I had seen a ghost and been kissed hard by a stranger. Stranger. . no, that was not the right word for him, for something inside me had known him, recognized him. . With an effort I pulled myself back from the indulgence of thinking about him and instead addressed myself to the day ahead.

Although I felt I ought to hurry out to pursue my investigations, I knew I was in no fit state. I made myself a calming brew, the main constituents of which were chamomile, clover and honey, and then I ate some bread and more of the honey for my breakfast. I barely tasted the food, but I did feel better after it had gone down.

Then I tidied the room, folding my borrowed garments and stowing them back in Sibert’s pack, and tried to see my way through the misty maze that appeared to surround me. I sat in thought for some time, and I got absolutely nowhere. I began to wonder what I was doing in Ely, for surely I was no good to anyone here and I’d be better off at home pursuing my studies and helping my aunt with her patients? But I knew that I would stay; for one thing, Sibert was still absent, and although Hrype was on his trail it was by no means certain that he would find Sibert if Sibert didn’t want to be found. Some instinct told me that, if ever Sibert was going to ask for anyone’s help in finding the answers about his own past that he so badly wanted, it would not be Hrype he approached but me.

I could not therefore leave Ely and desert my friend. There was something else: when I thought back to the previous evening and managed to see beyond the terrifying vision in the old church, I remembered the pale youth. He had recognized me and he had been about to hurry over and speak to me, of that I was sure. He needed my help, and I wasn’t going to let him down.

Although I told myself it was on account of these selfless reasons that I resolved to stay in Ely, even in my own head that was a lie — or, if not exactly that, then a fudging of the truth. I stayed because my dark-eyed stranger was on the island, and I wasn’t going to leave all the time there was a chance I would see him again.

I swung my cloak round me, pulled up the hood and went out into the morning. I was not at all sure where I was going but, as I paced up the narrow alley, I was filled with the sense that something was about to happen. The foreboding was at the same time both exciting and vaguely threatening.

Hrype had woken at dawn stiff and cold. After parting from Lassair the previous day he had looked for Sibert all along the Ely quays, asking if anyone had seen him or ferried him across the water. Nobody had or, if they had, they weren’t prepared to reveal the fact to a nosy stranger. As the light failed he had found a waterside tavern and ordered food and beer while he’d decided what to do. The obvious answer had been to return to the room, have a good night’s sleep and start again in the morning, but he could not face Lassair just then — or now. She surely must know from Sibert that he had welcomed the visit to Ely because it gave him an opportunity to discover more about his past, and Hrype perceived that she was very curious about what exactly was going on between him and Sibert. With good reason, he thought ruefully, but that did not mean he was ready to explain. He was not at all sure that the day when he was ready would ever come. .

So he’d paid for a bed in the tavern, but the space that his coins bought him was narrow, smelly, bug-ridden and he’d had to share it with other men. He had opted to sit on the bench in the corner, where he’d managed to doze on and off through the long night. It had been a relief when morning had come.

A wakeful night had, however, given him time to think and he had resolved to find Sibert, whatever it took and no matter how far he had to travel in the search. Hrype was not like other men, and he had an aid in his search that was not available to many; after he had taken a fairly unappetizing breakfast in the inn, he’d set off along the quay until he found a quiet spot where the track gave out and low-lying, waterlogged fields began.

He went in under the thin shelter of some winter-bare alders and crouched with his back against the trunk of the largest. It was not ideal; even his skill could not light a fire on the sodden ground. Also, although it was a desolate and deserted place, the town was quite near, and there was always the possibility that he would be disturbed. Nevertheless, he closed his eyes, drew deep on his reserves for the necessary concentration and, when he had put himself in the light trance state, summoned the guardian spirits and asked his animal guide for help. He opened his eyes and thought he glimpsed a large presence beside him, its thick brown fur brushing against him. His bear was there. He smiled faintly, then he shook the runes on to their cloth.

He looked for a long time. What he saw both reassured and deeply disturbed him, for the stones told him how and where he would find Sibert but also that there was a great disturbance hanging over the young man and grave danger hovered very close.

Hrype thanked the spirits, asked his guide to stay close and, his hands moving deftly but reverently, packed the runes away in their leather bag. Then he stood, straightened his cramped spine and set out back the way he had come.

He found a boatman to row him across to March. Almost in a daze, he headed off for the place where the causeway to Bearton branched away into the misty distance. He had almost reached it when he felt a hand on his sleeve. He turned to see Aetha.

‘I have been awaiting you, Magic Man,’ she said very quietly. There were people about, hurrying to and fro about the morning’s business. Aetha looked around quickly, and then she climbed the low wall and walked a few paces down the causeway to a place where a stand of willows stood with the bases of their trunks in water. She hopped nimbly up on to the top of a low rise where the ground was relatively dry and beckoned him to join her.

He stood staring down at her, waiting for her to speak. He read guilt and distress in her expression, and he believed he knew what she had done. The stones had spoken true.

Finally, she said, ‘I have betrayed you, Hrype. I told you when you came to me before that I believed some things are best left in the past, and when the youth came looking for me the first time I played on his fears and made sure he stayed away.’

‘But he came back,’ Hrype said dully.

‘He did.’ Her voice was barely audible.

‘So what changed?’ Hrype burst out. ‘Why did you allow him to reach you when before you had kept him away?’

‘He was desperate!’ she cried. He saw clearly that she was as angry as he was. ‘I had no wish to be involved in your anguish, Magic Man, for I know what you are and I fear you. It was through no invitation of mine that the boy came to seek me out with you hot on his heels!’

It was a fair comment, and Hrype waited until the blaze of his fury had cooled. Then he said, ‘You sensed his despair then, and this time you allowed him across.’

She smiled grimly. ‘It was not a question of allowing him, for his despair fed his courage and he mastered his fear. Before I could prevent it, he was on the island knocking at my door.’

Very slowly Hrype nodded. ‘And you told him.’ He knew it; there was no doubt in his mind, for the stones had hinted at it in their own enigmatic way and now he read it in the old woman who stood before him.

She gritted her teeth, looked him in the eye and said, ‘I did.’ Then she closed her eyes and added, ‘Do what you will with me, Hrype. I deserve it, and life holds little sweetness for me any more.’

He stood rock-still beside her, bending his whole concentration on controlling the fury and the malice that threatened to pour out of him. He would not hurt her, though, for this was no fault of hers. He asked himself what he would have done had the positions been reversed and it was he to whom a deeply disturbed, suspicious young man had come seeking answers. He had an idea he would have acted no differently.

‘Aetha, I do not blame you,’ he said wearily. ‘I have been praying that Sibert would not reach you, but it was ever a feeble hope. He is more determined than I give him credit for.’

‘He has courage, but he does not realize it,’ she said. He had heard her sigh of relief at what he had just said, and now he observed, amused, that with her fear gone she was now trying to be as helpful as she could to make up for her betrayal. ‘I see a stout heart in him, yet he does not believe in his own abilities.’

‘He saved a young woman’s life once,’ Hrype said. ‘It took courage, for to prevent her death he had to kill a man.’

Aetha nodded. ‘He is from warrior stock,’ she said. ‘It is-’ She stopped, her expression revealing embarrassment.

‘Go on.’

She eyed him cautiously; then, apparently deciding that she had nothing to lose, she said, ‘He was with me for some time, and we talked much, or rather he talked and I listened.’

‘That was ever your skill,’ he remarked.

Her face softened in a gentle, reminiscent smile. Then she went on, ‘He spoke to me about his mother. I remember her, Hrype, and from what the boy says it appears she has continued along the path that I foresaw for her.’

He believed he understood what she was saying. ‘Froya is not strong,’ he said. ‘She. . many things disturb her equanimity, and she lives in a state of fear even when there is nothing to be afraid of.’

‘She requires a lot of love and a lot of care, I imagine,’ Aetha said. ‘Like her son, she has courage but does not see it.’

‘Courage?’ he echoed. It was not a word he associated with his brother’s widow.

‘She took her man away to safety, making the crossing of the fenland under the most difficult and dangerous circumstances,’ Aetha reminded him. ‘That was not the action of a coward.’

‘No indeed, but-’ But what? It was not the moment to discuss Froya’s fragile emotional state with someone he had not been close to in almost twenty years. And, indeed, what would he say?

He became aware that Aetha was watching him. He met her eyes. ‘Be careful, Hrype,’ she warned. ‘There is a great anger in him.’

‘Directed at me, no doubt,’ Hrype said lightly. Despite everything, he found that it was difficult to be apprehensive about Sibert.

‘Do not underestimate him,’ Aetha said darkly. Then, starkly, ‘He wants to kill you.’

Hrype had no memory of leaving the causeway, but he must have done for he found himself down by the waterside at the southern end of March island, waiting for a ferry to take him back to Ely. As he returned to himself he realized that he did not in fact wish to go back, for he knew that Sibert was not there. I must find him and face him, he thought.

Moving almost like a sleepwalker, he turned away from the quay and the busy scene of people, animals, boats of all sizes and shouting, sweating boatmen and, taking a narrow path that turned and twined away inland, he set off to look for Sibert.

It was late in the day when he found him. It was, he thought, more a question of allowing Sibert to find him, for he sensed the young man’s presence before he saw him. He was on a path that led between water meadows; there was a cluster of dwellings in the distance, but nobody was about. Hrype felt fear; turning, he saw Sibert sliding down a low bank. He reached the path and leapt forward, straight for his uncle.

He had a long knife in his hand.

Hrype stood quite still. There was nothing he could say or do and he knew it.

Sibert’s face was working, and he had tears in his eyes. More than anything, Hrype wanted to comfort him, but he knew he could not, either now or perhaps ever.

He waited.

‘How could you do it?’ Sibert shouted. ‘It was betrayal, of the worst kind!’

Betrayal. That word again, Hrype reflected. What a terrible word it was. . Still he did not speak, for the words he longed to utter would sound like the most insubstantial excuse. Rather than be misunderstood, he preferred to keep silent.

Sibert wanted him to speak and now he goaded him, accusing him of terrible things from which Hrype flinched, despite himself. Still he would not speak in his own defence, and he had to listen as all the hurt and distress poured out of the young man who stood, tears in his eyes, trembling with tense emotion and brandishing his blade, on the path in front of him.

That it was Sibert who so accused him made it all but impossible to endure. We do not care what our enemies and those we despise may think of us, Hrype thought as he lowered his eyes before the onslaught. What rips us apart is when we are attacked by those we love.

He gathered his courage and raised his head. He tried to put his heart into his expression. He tried silently to tell Sibert that he understood.

He got it wrong. He who thought he could read people so well, predict what they would say and do and be busy working out how to react even before they had moved a muscle, made a mistake so grave that it threatened his life.

For where he intended love and compassion, Sibert read something very different. Perhaps he read pride; perhaps he believed Hrype was demonstrating by his apparent lack of emotion that, complacent in his power, he did not fear Sibert and was not disconcerted by his fury. There was no time to think it through. There was no time for Hyrpe to defend himself, even had he wanted to.

With an animal howl of anguish that ripped at Hrype’s heart, Sibert swung his knife high in the air and, leaping forward, brought it down in a wide, whistling arc that was aimed at Hrype’s head. But his toe struck a tree root that snaked across the path and, stumbling, his swing went off course. Hrype, still as a statue and with his eyes closed, was aware of a very hard blow that knocked him off his feet.

He heard another cry — a very different cry now — and there was a thump as Sibert’s blade hit the damp ground. He heard footsteps pounding off down the path, the sound steadily receding until he could not detect it any more.

He was lying on something wet and warm. He turned his head slightly and saw that it was his own blood.

Then the pain began.

I frittered away most of the entire day. I was still beset by the weird sense that something was approaching but as the hours went by, and the daylight began to fade, nothing revealed itself. I wondered if I ought to try again to go inside the abbey that evening. I could dress myself in Sibert’s clothes and get in as I had late the previous afternoon; it had worked once, and there was no reason it wouldn’t do so again.

I wondered if I could locate the place where my dark-eyed stranger had helped me over the abbey wall last night. After a few dead ends and false trails, I found it. Not that it helped me much for, although there had been a convenient compost heap to climb on the inside, out here the wall reared unbroken high above my own height, and there was no way I could climb it unless someone gave me a leg up.

I stood staring up at the top of the wall. Last night I had jumped down from there into someone’s arms and that someone had kissed me. .

I admitted to myself that all day I had been hoping I would bump into my stranger. Now, faced with the fact that I had failed, I felt both crushingly disappointed and also cross with myself for mooning after someone who probably hadn’t spared me a single thought.

Dejected and miserable, I went back to the little room.

I’d forced myself to eat a bite of supper and was just clearing away the remains when I heard a noise outside. I thought I heard footsteps — slow, irregular footsteps — and there was a sound as if someone was dragging something heavy along the alley.

At first I took little notice. The dwellings around ours housed workmen engaged on the new cathedral, and when they had money in their pockets some of them were apt to stay too long in the tavern so that their progress home was haphazard, to put it mildly.

The steps grew closer. They paused — I thought whoever it was had reached his own house — then after some time they started again. There were several in quite quick succession, and then there was a heavy, dull thud on my door.

I froze. Who could it be? Was it one of the burly monks? Had they seen me last night and taken note of where I lived so that now, when it was dark and I was all alone, they were taking their chance to come and kill me?

Oh! They had attacked that nun who they’d thought was me. Now they had come for me. .

I stood in the middle of the room, weakened by terror and emitting soft little moans of distress. I was too scared even to reach for my knife.

Then I heard someone whisper my name.

It’s a ruse, I thought, they’re pretending to be someone I know who is calling me outside, and when I go out there they’ll jump me and slit my throat.

Even in my panic I realized how silly that was. If anyone wanted to kill me then surely they would slip inside to do it behind a closed door rather than summoning me out into the alley? As my terror receded I realized something else: it was becoming known that I was a healer, so it was just possible that someone had come to me sick or injured for help.

I gathered my courage, made sure my knife was on my belt and opened the door.

There was a body slumped against it; the thump had been the sound of it falling. I detected the metallic smell of blood and, as instinctively I put out my hands to my patient, I felt it, warm and wet on my skin.

I pushed aside the heavy cloak and got hold of the tunic underneath — my patient, it seemed, was a man — and slowly dragged him inside. The hood had fallen across his face and from beneath it I could hear ragged, uneven breathing. He was still alive then. I got him on to my mattress and tucked his cloak around him — even through it I could feel how cold he was — then knelt to build the fire and blow it up into a good blaze, setting water on to boil as I did so.

Then I lowered the hood, unfastened the neck of the cloak and set about discovering where he was injured and how bad it was. The blood was welling up from where his left arm met his chest and the cut was long and deep. I stifled my groan of despair, for Edild always presses upon me the need to reassure rather than alarm a patient. But in my heart I doubted my ability to save him. He seemed to have been bleeding for some time, and even if I managed to stitch him up and stop the flow now it could well be too late.

I was going over in my head Edild’s lessons in stitching, recalling what I had done for Morcar and mentally checking that I had everything I would need, when my patient spoke.

‘I think,’ he said in a husky voice that was barely audible, ‘that it may look worse than it is.’

I looked up into his face. It was Hrype.

I bathed and stitched for what seemed like most of the night. I had never treated such a grave injury without the steadying presence of my aunt, and I knew in my heart that I was not ready for anything like this. I must have caused him so much pain, and when he managed to unclench his teeth sufficiently to suggest some of the poppy draught I could have kicked myself for not having thought of it straight away.

Once the sedative took effect I managed better. Hrype relaxed, and I think he lost consciousness. A new dread filled me — that I had put too many drops of the draught into the cup of water and he would never wake up — but it made it much easier to force his sliced flesh together and insert the stitches. At long last, the bleeding slowed and eventually stopped. I sat back on my heels and all but wept with relief.

I checked that my patient was warm and then carefully covered him, piling on his cloak, my blanket and two of Sibert’s. Edild had told me that it’s no use tucking up a cold person because the covers merely hold the chill in and that she advocated warming a patient with your own body if that is the only means available. I was quite glad it had not been necessary. I was not sure how I would have felt about snuggling up to Hrype, even if he had been unconscious.

I watched him for some time. He was restless, twisting and turning so much that I had to keep putting the covers back. I put my hand on his forehead and found that he was burning. I did not know what to do.

It is indicative of my state of mind that I did not even think to wonder where Sibert was until, shortly after dawn, the door opened quietly and he slipped inside. I was so glad to see him that I leapt up and threw myself into his arms.

He did not respond and I was instantly cross with myself for not realizing how shocked he must be at the sight of Hrype lying there heavily bandaged and pale with fever. ‘He’s strong and he’s fighting it,’ I said, trying to sound reassuring, ‘but I’m worried because he’s so hot. What should we do, Sibert? Do you think we ought to-?’

‘Don’t ask me, you’re the healer!’ he interrupted angrily. He did not sound like himself. His voice was high and strained.

I stroked his arm, trying to calm him. ‘I wasn’t going to ask for your professional advice,’ I said gently. ‘I just wondered if you thought we should summon the infirmarer from the abbey. This is really beyond my skill and-’

No,’ he said, ‘not the monks,’ and even though he was whispering there was no ignoring the emphasis.

‘But-’ I began, then stopped. This dreadful injury to his uncle seemed to have unhinged poor Sibert, and if I insisted on involving the abbey infirmarer it might make matters worse. There was, in any case, an alternative.

I took Sibert’s hand and led him over to his own mattress, where I gently pushed him down and then sat beside him.

‘Very well then,’ I said, keeping my voice level and steady, ‘we won’t ask the monks.’ I felt him slump with relief. ‘But I do need aid from someone, Sibert. I can’t manage this by myself, and I won’t risk your uncle’s life.’

He turned to look at me, and I was horrified by his expression. ‘What must we do?’ he whispered.

‘I will stay here with Hrype,’ I said firmly, ‘and I want you to go for help. You remember the boat you borrowed when you took Morcar off the island?’ He nodded. ‘Well, you must borrow it again. The water’s not quite as high as it was then but it’s not far off. Go back to Aelf Fen and fetch my aunt Edild.’ Just saying her name calmed and reassured me.

‘Your aunt Edild,’ Sibert echoed.

‘Yes, that’s right. Tell her that Hrype has what looks like a deep sword cut and, although I’ve stitched it and the bleeding has stopped, I’m worried because his skin is burning and there must be some bad infection.’

He repeated my instructions back to me, almost word for word. I knew then that, despite his shock, I could trust him. ‘Will she save him?’ he asked, his eyes full of pleading.

‘She will do her very best,’ I said staunchly.

He got up and headed for the door. I noticed that he could not make himself look at Hrype. He stopped, his hand on the latch, and said softly, ‘Should I bring my mother?’

Why should he ask that? I had no idea. In fact, Froya was pretty much the last person I wanted in the little room. She might once have been Hrype’s pupil, and had worked side by side with him as they’d tried to save Edmer, but I guessed she had changed since then, or perhaps life had changed her. I judged her to be easily frightened and someone who would lose her head in a crisis.

But she was Sibert’s mother, and it would have been unkind to say so. I smiled at him and said, in what I hoped sounded a reassuring tone, ‘No, I shouldn’t — just bring Edild.’ He still looked anxious so I added, trying to make a joke, ‘I don’t suppose that leaky old boat would hold three of you!’

He tried to smile back, but it was a poor attempt. Then he opened the door just enough to get through the gap, quickly closing it behind him.

Alone with my patient again, I knelt beside Hrype and tried not to think how long it was going to be before my aunt Edild arrived.

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