“Wait!”
Thomas stood in the doorway, his hands resting on either side of the door as he pretended to catch his breath.
“What in God’s name are you doing here?” Simeon growled. Brother John was still struggling, but Simeon’s sheer weight and height had overpowered the novice master. The receiver stood, twisting the wiry monk’s hands with one large fist until John cried in agony. With his other, Simeon held a knife to the monk’s throat.
Thomas blinked. The knife was in Simeon’s left hand. “I never noticed you were left-handed, brother,” he said.
Simeon’s laugh was hoarse. “Using my left hand was another reason for my father to beat me. He tied it behind me until I learned to use my right as godly men do. I never quite did so but my writing was serviceable enough.”
Sweat began to drip down Thomas’ chest. “My lord, I came to help you.”
“If this is a trick…”
“Why would I trick you? Didn’t you befriend me when I first came to Tyndal? Didn’t you see that we two, of all men here, would have a special understanding? I knew that you should be the one to run the priory, not the new prioress, that unnatural woman, and I resented her arrogance but could find no way to show you my full loyalty until now.”
Thomas hoped the fluttering light from the torch behind the monk did not deceive him. Simeon seemed to relax his tense grasp of John ever so slightly. Thomas glanced at John’s face but shadows hid any expression, and he did not dare to give him a sign. He continued in hurried but hushed tones. “Brother Rupert did not understand your relationship with Eadmund as I do, did he? He must have…”
“He understood nothing!” Simeon whined like a kicked pup. “I loved the young man like a son, but the Prince of Darkness entered my body and transformed me into a lustful woman whenever I saw Eadmund working in the priory fields. I became blind with desire for him. I was under a spell!”
“And you…”
“…fell to my knees before the lad and asked him, begged him, to come to bed with me. Then I took him to the cave and threatened him, forced him to make me his whore. When he left, I beat myself with my whip and Satan fled. For a while.”
“Did Brother Rupert discover you?”
“Nay, Eadmund’s father did. He came upon us together in the cave, and he ran. Screaming. When I found him later, he swore he’d tell Prioress Felicia or Brother Rupert, but I bought his silence with threats and money. No one would listen to a villein’s word over the Receiver of Tyndal Priory, I said.”
“Why, then, kill Eadnoth?”
“He came to me and said that money was not enough. He had heard in the village that our new prioress would give as much credence to the word of a simple man as to one of better birth.” Simeon’s eyes glittered. “That wayward woman who now leads us would never understand that I was not willfully sinning, brother. She would not care that I might be burned at the stake for what the Devil made my body do!” His last words were spoken in a wail of agony.
Thomas winced. “Indeed, my lord, you are quite right.”
“I had to kill Eadnoth. You see, I had no choice.”
“Aye, I see that, but why kill Brother Rupert?”
“After the old prioress’s death, I saw him leave the priory one day, something he rarely did anymore with his old bones. I followed him. He went to see Eadnoth. I couldn’t hear their words, but Brother Rupert came to me soon after and told me there were rumors about a monk having sinful relations with a young man. He did not accuse me but said that the guilty man should be found out and brought to Church justice. At that time, Sister Ruth was elected prioress. She is a proper woman of good birth, one who knew her place in the world of men and would never believe a villein over me. I felt safe. Then a stranger replaced her, this Eleanor, a woman I did not know. I feared Brother Rupert would tell her tales before I could gain her ear, so I told him I had found the man he sought, that he should meet me by the cave so he could see for himself as the man committed the very sin. When he arrived, I stabbed him and hid his body in the cave until I could safely carry it to the nuns’ cloister. So I would get no blood on me in the transfer, I changed his robes and buried the bloody ones.” Simeon ground his teeth.
“Why castrate him?”
Simeon laughed, his voice thin and high. “Wasn’t he a traitor to me, Thomas? Wasn’t the King’s enemy, Simon de Montfort, castrated after he was killed in battle? Should a traitor to me be treated any differently?”
“Indeed.…” Sharp bile rose into Thomas’ throat. Simeon was quite mad, he thought, swallowing quickly.
“And wasn’t it a clever thing to do! I thought of it after I had killed him. We all knew how close the priest and the old prioress were. A pious man so filled with guilt over his lust might well follow the example of some of our early saints and castrate himself in the cloister, the very center of his sin. Or, perhaps, a lustful nun might have killed him and done the deed out of revenge or guilt. Finding his body in the nuns’ cloister might suggest that too. So many reasons could be seen for such an act in such a place. It pointed everywhere. And nowhere.”
“You are a clever man, for cert!” Then Thomas turned his head. “But hush, my lord!” he whispered. “I came to warn you. The prioress is planning to trap you. She has sent for the crowner, and his men may be surrounding us as I speak.”
Simeon clutched Brother John to him more tightly. “This is loyalty?” he snarled. “To keep me here while they arrive? And how then did you find your way to me without them knowing it? And how did you propose we escape? I am no fool, Thomas.”
“Nor did I think you one, my lord. There is an entrance unnoted…”
“A man new to the priory knows an entrance I do not after all my years at Tyndal? Come, Thomas, I took you for an intelligent man. Surely you can lie better than that.”
“Begging your pardon, my lord, but I would guess it has been some time since you have had to escape a lady’s chamber when her lord did unexpectedly return.”
Simeon’s lips twisted into a smile.
“The latrine is not a pleasant ladder to safety, but few men would suspect a monk of knowing that weak point in, shall we say, this castle’s defense.”
Simeon’s throaty laugh cracked like fragile clay. “Thomas, you are a good man. Indeed, I must make up for striking you on the head that night. It was out of my own fear of what you might find out if you caught… But first we must be gone. After I dispatch this troublesome monk.…”
“My lord!” Thomas’ eyes widened in horror as he pointed behind Simeon. “The torch!”
For just an instant as he turned to look, Simeon loosened his hold on Brother John, the edge of the knife dropped slightly. John threw himself backward, knocking Simeon off balance. As the two men fell on their backs, Simeon’s knife flew out of his hand.
“Yes!” Thomas shouted as he dove for the knife.
John rolled just out of Simeon’s grasp.
As he seized the knife, Thomas heard a strange whine above him, then a thud, and a grunt. When he looked up, he saw Simeon lying lifeless in the straw, his eyes staring blankly at the ceiling. A crossbow bolt stuck out of his chest.
“How sad,” Ralf said with a half frown as he looked at the crossbowman. “I do believe the man is dead. You must learn better control of your weapon.”